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Putinism May Be Fading

The history of authoritarian rule in Russia displays a certain depressing regularity. Such regimes rarely perish from external shocks or opposition pressure. Typically, they die unexpectedly from some internal disease, from irresistible existential disgust at themselves and from their own exhaustion.

Tsarist rule withstood many harsh tests during its long history: peasant revolts, conspiracies and the alienation of the educated class. In January 1917, Vladimir Lenin noted with bitterness and hopelessness from his Swiss exile: “We, the old, will hardly live till the decisive battles of that forthcoming revolution. But … the young maybe will be lucky not only to fight, but finally win in the approaching proletarian revolution.” By the following March, however, Tsar Nicolas II was forced to abdicate.

General Secretary Yury Andropov died in 1984, leaving behind a country cleansed of dissidents. But when one of his former regional first secretaries, Boris Yeltsin, signed a decree banning the Communist Party, none of the 18 million party members took to the streets to protest.

Today, before our very eyes, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s once seemingly impregnable regime may be fading in the same way as its predecessors’ regimes. In just 10 years, Putinism, which was consciously designed by its image-makers as a representation of a great ideological style, has run through all of the classical stages of Soviet history. Indeed, Putinism now seems like a trite parody of all of them.

First comes the creation of a myth for the new system, one that generates a national hero, the nation’s father. Where the Bolsheviks had the October Revolution and the subsequent civil war to deify Lenin, Putinists used the second Chechen war, triggered by the blowing up of Moscow apartment buildings, to raise up Putin as national savior.

The second stage is the time of the tempest, the period in which the country is stoically remade through the leader’s iron will. Where Josef Stalin had his barbarous yet monumental drive toward industrialization, Putin boasted of making Russia a great energy power.

Next comes heroic triumph. The Soviets had the great victory over Adolf Hitler in World War II, which left Russia one of the world’s two superpowers. Putin’s supposedly heroic victory came in the war with Georgia in 2008, followed by the subsequent de facto annexation of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

At the onset of the financial crisis, Putin tried to bestride the world, portraying Russia as an island of stability and demanding the creation of a new global financial order, with the ruble to become one of the world’s reserve currencies. But that megalomaniac position was quickly reversed. Putinomics, however, proved to be even more vulnerable to the financial crisis than the economies of the West.

At such moments of decline in Russia, clans always come to the fore in a mad scramble for self-preservation and self-enrichment. Even Putin’s truest followers are now beginning to speak of their leader and the results of his governance in disrespectful ways.

Of course, no one should think that Putinism will disappear tomorrow, even though its jackals are already circling. Let us remember that Soviet communism took four decades to rot away —decades during which the inner circle knew that the regime was disintegrating from within but lacked any real idea of how to save it.

So now we hear pathetic echoes of all the reform Communist efforts of the long years of Soviet decline. There is much talk of great leaps forward, of modernization, innovations and nanotechnologies — the sort of myths with which fading rulers console themselves as they look for magical solutions to cure the dysfunctions of their regimes.

And on the street, other echoes are heard. Our “father” did not turn out to be a father at all. Even among Putin’s kleptocracy of former KGB men, there is a growing realization that the jig is nearly up, and that it is time to look after oneself — not unlike the Communist apparatchiks in the dying days of Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev

So as Putinism atrophies, the great hope among his immediate circle is that they will be able to do what the Communist elite did in the early 1990s — hijack whatever new system emerges and put it to work in the service of their own interests.

Andrei Piontkovsky is a political scientist and a visiting fellow at the Hudson Institute in Washington. © Project Syndicate

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