Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 28 – During the last
few days, there have appeared a plethora of articles in both Russia and the
West suggesting that Vladimir Putin is about to leave office either voluntarily
or under compulsion. But many of these
articles appear to confuse that which they would very much like to see with
what will or even must happen.
Consequently, it is useful to listen
to a Russian analyst who, while profoundly critical of Putin’s policies, does
not see any occasion for the departure of the Kremlin leader now and thus does
not expect it. That analyst is Moscow
economist Vladislav Inozemtsev (znak.com/2016-01-21/putin_vechen_pochemu_oprokinut_ego_i_sest_na_ego_mesto___nekomu).
In the course of a lengthy interview
with Znak.com in which he repeats his criticism of Putin’s failures in economic
and foreign policies, Inozemtsev directly addresses the issue of whether as
many appear now to think these failings will so weaken his rule that he will be
forced one way or another from office.
The “degrading system” in Russia is “quite
stable because [Russians] have become accustomed to view it as being in a
degrading state.” As a result, Inozemtsev says, they do not react as Europeans
do, seek to identify those who are to blame, and then demand that they be
replaced in office by others.
Moreover, he continues, “when you
live over the course of decades in a country where the government absolutely
spits on the people, where force always was the norm, where 70 years ago the
authorities killed 20 million of their own population, where you never lived in
a wealthy manner or saw the rest of the world, why should you be afraid” of
such problems?
Given such experiences of the
population, Putin and those in power don’t have to begin a new war or engage in
broader repressions. Neither is necessary, and Inozemtsev says, “neither is in
prospect.”
It is true that life is becoming
more difficult for Russians and that they understand that this is the case. But
the problem is that that understanding “does not have any consequences. No one
tries to blame Putin for the fact that the population lives worse, and with the
help of propaganda, he can convince them that all the problems are the result
of the efforts of the West.”
Yeltsin’s experience in the 1990s
provides confirmation of this pattern, Inozemtsev says. Despite disaster after disaster, he was not
challenged “because people in general didn’t expect anything normal from life
and from the authorities if anything less.” Consequently, they weren’t
disappointed and certainly weren’t ready to drive him from office.
This pattern, the Moscow economist
says, is “the fundamental cause of the firmness of the system of Russian power.”
Putin’s ratings may fall, but this
is irrelevant because ratings are one thing and elections are quite another:
political technologists ensure that the latter are quite predictable.
Consequently, even if there is a fall in expressed support for Putin,
Inozemtsev argues, nothing really threatens Putin and Putin knows this.
That doesn’t mean that Putin will be
in office forever, but his departure will either be his own choice or the
result of the collapse of his system as a whole. The current powers that be “will
end just as the Soviet one did.” Even in
1991, there was no palace coup; and the CPSU had a far more collective
leadership than does Putin.
“No one in the president’s entourage
views himself as capable of running the country,” and “all understanding
perfectly that there exists a common esprit de corps, that all are connected
with one another and that this is one command.” The divisions others impute to
them are clearly secondary.
As a result, Inozemtsev says, he “does
not see a chance for palace coups or a popular uprising or anything of the
kind. It seems to [him] that there is only one variant of a way out of this situation:
the system collapses on its own when there will be nothing left to steal. It
should die because of its own senselessness.”
Putin could of course decide to
leave in 2018, although it would have been better for him and for Russia if he
had done so in 2008. “But this chance wasn’t used.” And everyone needs to
recognize that there are today no people who really want to “overthrow Putin” –
and he knows that. Instead, elites and the population will put up with him more
or less forever.
There is a microscopically small
chance that Putin will decide not to run in 2018, Inozemtsev concludes; but it
is so small as to be meaningless. Putin won’t leave because he “is convinced
that he is doing everything correctly, and he believes that all difficulties
are temporary, and he does not see any reasons for departing.”
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