By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Putins Grip
On June 17,
2023, Russian President Vladimir Putin staged a special ceremony on the
St. Petersburg waterfront to mark the anniversary of three flags: the flag of
the Russian Federation, otherwise known as Peter the Great’s tricolor, formally
unfurled in 1693; the imperial Russian flag, introduced by Tsar Alexander II in
1858; and the Red Banner, the Soviet Union’s hammer and sickle, adopted by the
Soviet state 100 years ago and later used by Joseph Stalin. Putin watched the event from a boat as the
National Philharmonic and the St. Petersburg State Choir performed the national
anthem, which, thanks to a law Putin enacted in 2000, has the same melody as
its Stalin-era counterpart. The portentous rite unfolded in front of the Lakhta
Center tower, the country’s tallest building, and Gazprom's $1.7 billion
headquarters. This state-run gas company has become another crucial symbol of
Putin’s Russia
In some respects, the
choice of flags was not surprising. Since the launch of Russia’s “special
military operation” in Ukraine in February 2022, Stalinist nationalist imperialism
has become the de facto ideology of the Putin regime. Tsar Peter I,
who styled himself the first emperor of all Russia after his victory in the
Great Northern War in 1721, and Alexander II, emperor of Russia, king of
Poland, and Grand Duke of Finland, are closely associated with Russia’s
imperial aspirations. And Putin has emphasized
that the Soviet Union—especially in its triumph over Nazi Germany in World War
II, when Stalin appealed to nationalism rather than Marxism to consolidate
support and rally the population—carried out Russia’s imperial destiny under a
different name. Of course, Putin has not openly referred to Stalin or declared
himself Stalin’s heir. But for over a decade, the Kremlin has presented the
Stalinist period as an era of greatness in which imperial traditions were
respected and national values cherished. More recently, in his language of
power and intolerance of dissent, Putin has come to resemble Stalin in his
final phase in the late 1940s and early 1950s.
Yet the two tsars and Stalin also
viewed the empire as a means to what they understood to be a modern state. In
the early eighteenth century, Peter borrowed Western innovations, including
advances in shipbuilding and other technologies, and Western ideas about government
management and dress styles. A century later, Alexander abolished serfdom and
carried out progressive judicial reforms influenced by European examples. As
for Stalin, in the 1930s, he pushed for Western-style industrialization and
catch-up development even as he transformed Marxism, a modern European
ideology, into Soviet Marxism-Leninism at the cost of countless human lives. By
contrast, Putin’s opening to the West was short-lived, more or less ending in
2003, less than four years after he came to office when he took complete
control of parliament and the authorities arrested Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the
billionaire investor and one of the symbols of a free market and independent
thinking in Russia, on trumped-up charges.
Now, Putin seeks
something different from any of these predecessors: an empire without
modernization. It is necessary to recognize this impulse to fully apprehend
Russia’s continuing intervention in Ukraine and how it has been presented to
the Russian people. Putin resurrected the Russian imperial idea with the
annexation of Crimea in 2014 and expanded it with the “special operation”
launch eight years later. Buttressed by the abstract and archaic teachings of
the Russian Orthodox Church, he has also embraced an older strain of
nationalist ideology in which the decadent West is the enemy, and Russia has a
messianic destiny to oppose its harmful influence. If Peter I, as Pushkin once
said, cut a window to Europe, 300 years later, the man who sits in the Kremlin
is boarding up that window.
Putin’s dramatic
reorientation of the Russian state is not unprecedented. At least since the
beginning of the nineteenth century, Russia has repeatedly swung toward and
away from the West, between modern Western-style conceptions of state power and
Russia’s place in the world and nationalist, reactionary ones. Much the same
has happened with the state’s attitudes toward Stalinism. Three times in the
last 70 years—under Soviet Premier Nikita Khrushchev in the 1950s and 1960s,
under Premier Mikhail Gorbachev in the 1980s, and under Russian President Boris
Yeltsin in the 1990s—Soviet and Russian leaders have sought to rid the country
of Stalinist ideas and Stalinist discourse, only to have those precepts return,
even if just tacitly. For much of the past century, Russia’s political views
have been shaped by the struggle between liberal and totalitarian tendencies,
or what could be called de-Stalinization and re-Stalinization.
However, what is
particularly striking about Putin’s Russia is the extent to which it has combined
re-Stalinization with antimodern imperialism. In reviving some of the most
extreme versions of what in the nineteenth century was called “the Russian
Idea”—a concept originally meant to convey the country’s separateness and
exalted moral stature, but that in practice came to stand for raw militarized
expansionism—Putin has drawn on a pernicious ideological tradition to shape
both the campaign in Ukraine and his long-term vision of power. Although Putinism may be finite, its advanced state of development and
its deep roots in anti-Western thought suggest that it may take more than the
outcome of war for Putin’s hold over Russian society to break.
Holy Russian Empire
For much of Russian
history, the twin pillars of the Russian state were the Russian Orthodox Church
and the military. In ancient times, the daily life of Russians was organized
and regimented by church bells. Their sounds were later complemented by those
of Russia’s cannons on the battlefields of early modern Europe. If the bell
embodied the controlling order of the state, the artillery backed that order by physical
force—and sometimes superseded it. In the late seventeenth and eighteenth
centuries, church bells in provincial Russian towns and monasteries were melted
to make cannons for the Russian army. In reviving and glorifying the
archconservative values of the Russian Orthodox Church and steadily
remilitarizing the country, Putin has forged his own bell and cannon doctrine.
As Russia emerged as
a major empire in the eighteenth century, these symbols of power were
complemented by broader visions of the Russian state. At first, the
contradictions of Russia’s swing toward Europe and the Enlightenment were
ignored: Russian Empress Catherine II could correspond with Voltaire even as
she continued to enslave the peasants. After its victory over Napoleon in 1812,
Russia gained a new sense of patriotism, unity, and a place in the European
order despite its retrograde autocracy. The failed Decembrist revolt of
1825—led by aristocratic Russian officers who refused allegiance to the new
tsar, Nicholas I, and sought to abolish
autocratic rule—exposed the need for European-style modernization. But during
his reign, the conservative Nicholas (1825–55) opted for reaction rather than
reform. In this era, Russian thinkers began to formulate a comprehensive state ideology.
In 1832, the
education minister, Count Sergey Uvarov, introduced a doctrine called
“Orthodoxy, Autocracy, and Nationality.” In some respects, it bore the imprint
of Europe. Like other Russian aristocrats, Uvarov thought and wrote in French;
he also spoke German and communicated with Goethe. But Uvarov believed that
Western ideas posed a threat to Russia. He sought to keep in check any
modernizing impulses that could undermine the foundations of tsarist power, or
what he called autocracy—in his model, orthodoxy, or the Russian Orthodox
Church, protected Russia’s separate identity. In contrast, nationality provided
the link between the tsar and the people. Even before he had given the doctrine
its final formulation, he had made clear his expansionist aims. In a letter to
Nicholas in 1832, Uvarov wrote that “the energy of autocratic power is a
necessary condition for the existence of the Empire.”
Meanwhile, a second
tendency in Russian thinking about the state emerged in this same period with
the birth of the Slavophile movement. Beginning in the 1840s, the debate
between “Westernizers” and “Slavophiles” became a central theme in the
political conceptualization of Russia. The Westernizers viewed the tsarist
state as backward and argued that Russia could only compete with the great
powers of the West through European-style modernization and constitutionalism.
The Slavophiles were also dissatisfied with the tsar’s absolute power but
believed that Russia, founded on its unique values, stood apart from the West
and was morally superior to it. But that romantic vision gradually evolved into
something else. Unlike the early Slavophiles, who opposed despotism, their
successors in the second half of the nineteenth century defended it, arguing
that any attempts to limit autocracy would weaken or undermine Russia’s place
in the world.
In the second half of
the nineteenth century, these ideas were pushed in a new direction with the
work of the Russian philosopher and ideologue Nikolai Danilevsky.
In his influential Russia and Europe (1869), Danilevsky argued that Russia and the Slavic countries
belonged to a particular cultural-historical category or type. This widely
debated theory marked the beginning of the pan-Slavic movement. He envisioned a
union of all Slavic nations ruled from Constantinople, or what the Russians
called Tsargrad—emperor city. Danilevsky
was also deeply suspicious of the West and its modernizing ideas. “Europe is
not only something alien to us, but even hostile,” he wrote. These theories
have long found echoes in Putin’s rhetoric about Russia as a “state
civilization” defined in opposition to its European counterparts. In the
October 2022 meeting of the Valdai Club, the annual forum that Russia has
hosted since 2004 that has in the past included prominent foreign analysts and
scholars, Putin invoked Danilevsky directly to
explain why the West must be resisted.
In 1856, the novelist
Fyodor Dostoyevsky added his vision of Russia’s
unique destiny with his concept of the Russian Idea. Although a great
connoisseur of European culture, Dostoyevsky, like other Slavophiles, believed
that the West was declining and that an ascendant Russia would take its place.
He described this conceit in a letter to the poet Apollon Maykov
in which he admired the poet’s allusion to Russia’s ability “to complete what
the West began.” As Dostoyevsky saw it, the state should serve as the guardian
of the country’s unique path and revive the system of universal Christian
morality that had preceded the Enlightenment—values that reigned before
Europeans became obsessed with ideas of progress, freedom, and individual
rights. But this vision gradually took on more radical forms. During the World
War I era, a wave of patriotic philosophers, liberal and conservative, embraced
the idea of a purifying war through which the nation could rejuvenate itself,
unify its people, and push back against the decadent modernity that had overrun
Europe. Intertwined with pan-Slavism and the
dream of a Slavic empire, these notions fed a new nationalist imperialism.
Yet another strand of
nineteenth-century state ideology that would cast a long shadow on the Russian
state is the “Third Rome” thesis. In the 1860s, Russian imperial thinkers began
to promote the old sixteenth-century idea that Moscow was the successor of Rome
and Constantinople as the center of world Christianity, the legitimate heir to
the Byzantine Empire, and the last Christian kingdom, thus bearing a messianic
destiny. Indeed, to many on Russia’s far right, the state has always had a
mission to defend and spread its traditional values and spirituality worldwide.
In a speech in April, Patriarch Kirill, the head of the
Russian Orthodox Church and a crucial mouthpiece for the Kremlin, traced
this messianic vocation back to Russia’s defeat of the Teutonic knights in 1242
and its victory over the Mongols in 1380: “Wasn’t this what the holy prince
Alexander Nevsky fought for? Wasn’t this why our
great predecessors fought on the Kulikovo Field?”
Putin Vs. Satan
Paradoxically, little
of this reactionary tradition held much sway when Putin came to power 23 years
ago. At the time, post-Soviet Moscow was awash in Western ideas. Under
Gorbachev in the 1980s, the Soviet government had progressively abandoned
social controls and opened up to liberal thinking. Then, after the Soviet
Union’s dissolution, the economist and acting Russian prime minister Yegor
Gaidar, with the backing of Russian President Boris Yeltsin, undertook dramatic
reforms that transformed the shell of a 70-year-old Marxist empire into a
market economy with modern Western-style political institutions. Although this
wholesale restructuring was controversial, it helped usher in a new concept of
Russia: One of Gaidar’s principles was that it was impossible to build a
liberal economy on the scale of an empire and that for the reforms to succeed,
the country would have to redefine itself as a nation-state.
In his early years,
Putin did not oppose continued modernization based on market principles. But
from the outset, he has publicly regretted the collapse of the Soviet empire
and sought new ways to regain control of Russian society. He took advantage of
the country’s economic liberalization and its lucrative natural resources,
which allowed him to lavishly reward loyalists and strengthen the state’s grip
on the political and economic system. When he returned to the presidency in
2012 after Dmitry Medvedev’s one-term administration, he began to dismantle the
liberal reforms that he and Medvedev had earlier supported. By then, he was
already openly embracing authoritarianism and repression and had started using
conservative ideology to justify the shift. He was also increasingly irritated
by the West—he claimed the United States and its allies did not treat Russia as
an equal partner or consider its interests and were fomenting internal
opposition and turning civil society organizations against the government—and
he felt less need to maintain the appearance of political pluralism and free
speech. As the Kremlin now saw, Russia’s liberal economists served solely to
preserve macroeconomic stability and could be reduced to mere technocrats.
Rather than driving
Putin’s changing conception of power or the evolution of the Russian political
system, the annexation of Crimea in 2014 was the result of those developments.
Even as Russia continued to supply much of Europe’s gas and oil and to draw on
Western investments and technologies, Putin gave voice to an older, more
spiritual idea of the state as an empire. In 2013, he had already begun to portray
the Russian Orthodox Church as the bedrock of Russia, including the historic
lands lost in 1991. “At the heart of the Russian nation and the Russian
centralized state,” he said, “are the common spiritual values that unite the
entire large European territory, on which Russia, Ukraine, and Belarus are
located today. This is our common spiritual and moral space.”
By 2022, Putin and
many around him were actively adopting the most extreme forms of Russian
nationalist-imperialist thought. A common refrain in Putin’s circle is that the
West is in moral and spiritual decline and will be replaced by a rising Russia.
Since the “special operation” in Ukraine began, the Kremlin has used these
claims to justify the disruption of ties with Europe and the United States and
ever more sweeping repression of Russia, including attacks on Western-oriented
human rights organizations, the promulgation of laws targeting gay and
transgender people, and broad new restrictions on organizations and individuals
identified as “foreign agents.” Putin’s ideologues now suggest that Russia can
only uphold its status as the defender of civilization by combining a
reinvigorated empire with the conservative church precepts. “We are fighting a
war to have peace,” Alexander Dugin, the ultranationalist
thinker and self-styled Kremlin philosopher, said in June.
Today, Kyiv has
replaced Constantinople/Tsargrad in right-wing
discourse, with Putin effectively assigning the role of lost Byzantium to
Ukraine. According to Kremlin propaganda, Ukraine is slipping into the grip of
a dangerous and “satanic” West that has been encroaching on the historical
lands of Russia and the canonical territory of the church. In a post on
Telegram, a messaging service popular among Russians, in November 2022, Medvedev
cast Russia’s fighting in Ukraine as a holy war against Satan, warning that
Moscow would “send all our enemies to fiery Gehenna.”
The Emperor Unclothed
Part of what makes
the Putin regime so threatening is its simplified traditional ideas to the
extreme. As the historian Andrei Zorin has observed, in Count Uvarov’s era in
the early nineteenth century, “the past was called upon to replace a dangerous
and uncertain future for the empire,” In Uvarov’s view, Russian autocracy and
the Orthodox Church were “the last alternative to Europeanization.” By the
early twentieth century, however, nationalist ideologues were already using the
concept of Russian exceptionalism to defend an unvarnished militarism.
“Russia’s national idea . . . has become incredibly crude,” the Russian
philosopher Georgy Fedotov, who had left Soviet Russia for France, wrote in
1929. “Epigones of Slavophilia . . . have been
hypnotized by naked force, which made them miss the moral idea.”
When Fedotov wrote
these words, the Soviet state was already practicing them. Stalin called 1929
“the year of the great turning point”—the beginning of forced
industrialization, which required forced labor and forced collectivization
and drained the peasantry of all its resources. A year later, the Soviet
authorities established the Gulag, and a period of mass repression soon
followed. But Fedotov’s insight may have even greater relevance today.
As the struggle in
Ukraine continues, the Kremlin’s obsession with naked force has become
increasingly apparent. In Putin’s version, the Russian Idea amounts to little
more than territorial expansion and the repression of domestic dissent to
defend a sacralized state. The regime’s embrace of this concept in its most
primitive form has coincided with a shift from soft into what is now closer to
a hybrid totalitarianism modeled on Stalinist precepts. In addition to the
complete suppression of civil society and independent media and the brutal
repression of dissent, the state now makes new political demands of Russians
themselves. In many situations, it is no longer acceptable for people to just
passively acquiesce to the regime, as they could in past years; they must
express their support loudly. Russian schools now include mandatory “patriotism”
lessons, textbooks dictate the correct interpretation of Putin’s actions, and
citizens sometimes must participate in pro-Putin rallies. By such means, Putin
is imposing a totalitarian regime that seeks to control how events are
explained to the country—and what Russians are supposed to think about them.
Putin attending an Orthodox Christmas service near
Moscow, January 2022
Perhaps most
revealing is the effort to suppress knowledge of the political persecutions of
the Soviet era. In late 2021, just before the invasion of Ukraine, the Russian
government shut down Memorial, an organization devoted to preserving the memory
of Stalin-era crimes; after all, the Putin regime no longer regards Stalin’s
purges as an adverse event. But the closure of the Memorial is only one example
of a much broader erasure. Already in 2020, authorities in the city of Tver removed a memorial plaque from the site of a mass
shooting of Polish prisoners of war in World War II, part of the notorious mass
killings by agents of the NKVD, Stalin’s secret police and the predecessor
to the KGB, in the spring of 1940 known as the Katyn massacre. Since then,
the Russian media and parliament have sought to rewrite the history of Katyn,
rehashing false Soviet narratives that blame the Nazis.
This campaign has
accelerated over the past year. In April, residents in Russia’s Perm region
discovered that a monument commemorating Poles and Lithuanians who had been
deported there from Lithuania in 1945 had been demolished. A few weeks later, a
memorial and a cross marking the mass graves of Lithuanians shot by
the NKVD near the eastern city of Irkutsk in the 1930s were destroyed.
And in July, a Polish memorial at Levashovo Memorial
Cemetery in St. Petersburg—a cemetery that was established in 1990 to
commemorate the victims of Stalin’s political repressions—was removed. Local
authorities are likely the instigators of these actions: amid Ukraine's
conflict, they sensed the change in Russia’s ideological climate. Putin is
waging a war against memory. As his Kremlin sees it, victims of past political
persecution were opponents of the Russian state, just as their present-day counterparts—opponents
of Putin—are now. To affirm a just cause for Putin’s reprisals, the regime must
repress the record of Stalin’s.
Stalin’s
dictatorship, based on nationalism, imperialism, naked force, and what became
a growing anti-Westernism, led to millions of deaths in the gulag and set back
the country’s development by decades while causing multitudes to live in
constant fear of arrest. Putin’s autocracy, by adding a messianic, anti-Western
worldview to these currents, has now plunged into a senseless quagmire in
Ukraine, resulting in vast destruction, the reversal of Russia’s economic
development, and the imposition of an antimodern consciousness on the elite and
the general population. The return of the Russian Idea in today’s Kremlin is
thus the product of two centuries of ideological corruption—a process that
recurring fears of the West have spurred.
As George Kennan
observed in his “Long Telegram” from Moscow to the U.S. Secretary of State in
1946, Russian rulers “have always feared foreign penetration, feared direct
contact between the Western world and their own, feared what would happen if
Russians learned the truth about world without or if foreigners learned the
truth about world within.” As a consequence, he wrote, “they have learned to
seek security only in patient but deadly struggle for destruction of rival
power, never in compacts and compromises with it.” In Putin’s Russia, this kind
of thinking has led to the “special operation” in Ukraine—a cynical perversion
of the idea of “defending the fatherland” from the West at a time when no one
has attacked the fatherland. Citizens are being asked to risk their lives for
this idea, and Russian boys have become cannon fodder.
The Plot Against Russia
In entering a world
of ideological necessity, the Kremlin has unleashed forces it cannot always
contain. One surprising example is Yevgeny Prigozhin, a convicted thief and
fraudster who reinvented himself as a serial entrepreneur, eventually running a
Kremlin-favored catering business and, later, the Kremlin-backed Wagner
mercenary outfit. His rebellion in June 2023 should not be misunderstood as a
direct challenge to Putin’s system. Prigozhin, as much as any of the other characters
around the president, is a product of that system and an embodiment of the
concept of naked force. If he had any disagreements with Putin, they were—as
the dissident and writer Andrei Sinyavsky, parodying
his differences with the Soviet regime, once put—“stylistic.”
At the same time,
Prigozhin is a product of Putin-style state capitalism, in which the Kremlin
distributes tax revenues to various outsourcers. This is why Putin’s Russia has
been reduced to a feudal system in which the supreme leader hands out pieces of
property to his vassals to manage or delegate functions to them at his
subjects’ expense. As one of these outsourcers, Prigozhin was paid more than $1
billion in state—that is, taxpayer—money to create a private army that was not
fully controlled by the state. He was allowed to cause chaos briefly and, in
the end, was not punished for his antics. Such an anomalous situation can be
explained only by the extreme personalist nature of Putin’s autocracy and the
need to defend the homeland from Western attacks and promote Russia’s military
influence abroad, for example, in Africa. Prigozhin was valuable because he was
a supplier of expendable human material. In this case, he felt he might be
losing his government contract and decided to show his capabilities. His goal
was not to displace Putin but to be recognized as an equal partner of the
president. But he made a false start and overplayed his hand. In his eruption,
Prigozhin malfunctioned, frightening Putin but not significantly shaking
his hold on power.
Paradoxically, the
Kremlin has seemed less concerned about the possibility of more rebellions from
within than imagined dangers from without. The regime’s primary ideological
precept revolves simply around a single imaginary threat: the West is out to
destroy the Russian state. In the words of Sergey Kiriyenko, the first deputy
chief of the presidential administration and a chief Kremlin spin doctor, “The
goal of those who are trying to fight against Russia today is obvious. . . .
They want Russia to cease its existence.” Russian officials bombastically call
this a “civilizational challenge” or “existential threat.” The simplicity of
this premise has made it a key rationale for continuing the “special
military operation” in Ukraine, which officials, including Putin, are finally
calling a war, even as they punish ordinary Russians for doing so.
Russians did not seek
to sacrifice themselves for the state before February 2022. The government’s
promotion of a heroic death “for the fatherland” emerged only after the “special military operation” began. Putin argues
that death on the battlefield means a life not lived in vain. As he told a
group of mothers whose sons had been killed in the fighting in November 2022,
“With some people... it is unclear why they die—because of vodka or something
else. . . . Their lives passed without notice. But your son did live—do you
understand? He achieved his goal.” Already, this idea has permeated Russian culture.
Consider the Russian pop star Shaman, transformed by the Kremlin’s propaganda
machine into a mouthpiece of military expansionism. In his recent hit “Let’s
Rise,” he not only claims that “God and truth are on our side” but calls on
Russians to praise the fallen—“those who found themselves in heaven and are no
longer with us.”
Helping advance a
warrior cult, the Russian Orthodox Church has become a crucial ideological and
propaganda instrument of the regime. But it has also lost its Christian message.
Consider the case of Father Ioann Burdin, a pacifist village priest in the
Kostroma region northeast of Moscow: after his parishioners informed him, he
was fined for discrediting the army in his sermons and, in March 2023, was
banned from leading services. Russia’s diocesan court ruled that his pacifism
was inconsistent with the teachings of the Russian Orthodox Church. (Burdin
correctly pointed out that the church serves the state rather than Christ.)
However, an even more
powerful tool than church decrees may be the Kremlin’s rewriting of history. As
the sociologist Lev Gudkov has observed, long before the invasion of Ukraine,
the government began nurturing the idea in Russian textbooks that the country
is “a national unit that emerges as the empire expands.” In this framing, the
colonization of neighboring territories serves as a projection of Russian
national superiority while “conflating regime interests with the interests of
the people.” (As a joke making the rounds in Moscow has it, “Russia borders on
whatever country it wants.”) Like Stalin-era textbooks, many of which were
compiled with Stalin’s involvement, today’s books betray the extraordinary
lengths that officials and educators loyal to the regime have gone to adapt
history to Putin’s nationalist-imperialist ideas.
The government’s new
“Concept of Teaching Russian History to Non-History Higher Education
Institutions,” introduced in the winter of 2022–23, makes two key points.
First, it stresses the importance of a strong centralized authority, which is
“essential for maintaining national statehood.” Second, in interpreting the
events that brought about Russia’s actions in Ukraine—including, according to
the document, the “attempt to create a ‘belt of instability’ around Russia” and
the “refusal” of the United States and NATO to “discuss threats to
Russia’s security”—it asserts that they were all instigated by the West.
According to the document, Ukraine’s leadership “had turned [Ukraine] into
‘anti-Russia’ and, with the help of NATO, was preparing for the ‘return of
Crimea and Donbas’” to Kyiv. It was this existential threat, the government
says, that “led to the inevitability of a special military operation by Russia
in 2022.”
After The Autocrat
Putin’s attempt to
resurrect an empire by naked force is failing. The imperial model is on its
last legs and can no longer be revived. The question is: For how much longer
will ordinary Russians be receptive to Putinism,
Russian messianism, and the state’s increasingly flimsy justifications for
using military power? The evidence is contradictory: According to the Levada
Center, an independent research organization, Prigozhin’s mutiny has had little
effect on Putin’s approval ratings. In the eyes of ordinary Russians, Putin won
that battle, and the country has remained relatively calm. Russian society may
be mobilized, but not all citizens are involved in the fighting, and Putin has
shown that for those not on the battlefield, the state can continue to provide
relatively tolerable living conditions. People may not trust the authorities,
but that does not prevent them from supporting the regime and its uncontested
leader and even showing their loyalty when necessary.
Ordinary Russians,
long conditioned to ignore their opinions, tend to follow the arguments the
state gives them. Consider the law designating specific Russian individuals,
including this author, as “foreign agents.” According to a poll conducted by
the Levada Center in October 2021, shortly after the law was expanded, just 36
percent of respondents supported the government’s claim that it seeks to limit
the “negative influence of the West on our country.” But by September
2022—eight months into the “special operation”—57 percent of those polled
agreed that the government had good reasons for designating prominent Russians
as foreign agents. In short, ideology does work, but only when reduced to
simple points hammered into people’s heads.
Yet the mutiny,
during which no one seemed to rally around Putin, also exposed the extent of
public ambivalence toward the regime. Putin can count on the population's
indifference, allowing him to take the country into and sustain a disastrous
military adventure and, in this case, to quickly end a failed rebellion. But
that indifference could be fatal if the regime truly comes under threat. Having
been conditioned for so long to be passive observers of events, Russians are
unprepared to defend their president. Similarly, many condemn those who have
fled the country to avoid mobilization yet fear being conscripted themselves.
They also find the archaic conceits that the state feeds them about the satanic
West and the unique destiny of Russia at odds with their modern, urban Western
lifestyles.
Despite the Putin
regime glorifying arms and empire, financial well-being remains far more
critical to most Russians. Before 2022, sociologists found that a substantial
majority felt the country’s greatness lay in its economic rather than military
might. To some extent, the government has bridged this ideological gap between
the state and the people by offering better pay to those who serve in the
military. Moscow is now plastered with posters conveying that fighting in
Ukraine is a “real job” for “real men,” unlike driving a taxi or working as a
security guard. Another financial incentive is the benefits that families of
soldiers receive if they are killed or permanently disabled. In June, Putin
boasted about the growth of real incomes in Russia, but the private sector is
withering. Rising incomes are driven instead by ever-greater transfers from
state coffers, whether through social payments or higher salaries, especially
for security forces, service members, and mercenaries. This is growth due to
destruction and death, not innovation or productivity.
People celebrating Russia’s victory over Nazi
Germany in World War II, Moscow, May 2023
One sign of Russia's
proximity to totalitarianism is the imposed dominance of official thought. Russian
society enjoyed diverse political currents and debates earlier in the Putin
era. Liberal opinion in various forms, embraced by several Russian politicians,
was very influential; policy debates and alternative points of view could be
heard. But liberalism has become Putin’s main enemy. Its public supporters are
now in prison or thrown out of the country, and its information channels have
been destroyed. Now, questioning government policy is not just forbidden; it is
viewed as an anti-state act.
At the end of earlier
totalitarian phases, Russia has traditionally reversed course: Alexander II’s
Great Reforms of 1861, Khrushchev’s de-Stalinization of 1956, Gorbachev’s
perestroika of 1985, Yeltsin’s reforms of 1992. But an end to Russian actions
in Ukraine is unlikely to mean the end of Putinism as
a political and ideological phenomenon. Putin will find words to present defeat
as victory. For citizens, in any case, the Russian Idea will remain a
sledgehammer that the state can continue to wield against them. In a
personalized dictatorship, the pendulum will swing the other way only when the
dictator himself steps aside or leaves the scene. Putinism
has a chance to outlive Putin, but Russian history, including the history of
Stalinism, shows that as soon as an autocrat disappears, a new era of
liberalization can begin. After Stalin, people had the opportunity to think and
breathe, although the regime remained communist. Similarly, the end of Putin
would inevitably start a de-Putinization cycle,
though the state's underlying structure would likely survive for some time.
Of course, change
could come from within the system itself: at least historically, all political
transformation in Russia has come from the top. It is possible that a new group
of reformers could emerge from among the moderate members of the existing
elite—liberals who are still serving in government or the civil service. This
new group would have to decide how radically they want to change the country.
If they embarked on a new course of modernization and opening to the West, it
could provoke conflicts between former Putinist
circles and the counter-elite returning from abroad or being released from
prisons.
Still, a pragmatic or
conciliatory path could also be followed, resulting from a compromise between
elite and counter-elite. If such an outcome is hard to imagine now, it cannot
be ruled out. But before a more constructive, less messianic vocation for the
Russian state can be born, the Russian Idea must die.
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