By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
The Beginning Of The End For Putin?
While Prigozhin's
plane Landed in Belarus, Russia’s war against Ukraine has destroyed Putin’s mystique as an untouchable
autocrat. Before February 24, 2022, Putin may have looked unscrupulous and
aggressive, but he could seem like a capable strategist through his military
moves in Syria, Crimea, and beyond. Then, in one stroke, Putin showed his
ineptitude by invading a country that posed no threat to Russia and by
witnessing failure after failure in his military enterprise—the latest of is
the short-lived armed rebellion the mercenary leader Yevgeny Prigozhin carried
out this weekend, which has just undermined Putin’s mystique autocrat.
Putin abetted the
rise of Prigozhin and ignored the warning signs about the Wagner Group,
Prigozhin’s out-of-control private military company. As the Russian military
struggled in Ukraine, Prigozhin’s star rose, reaching a high point when Wagner
took the city of Bakhmut for Russia in May. Prigozhin exploited Russia's last
remaining uncensored political space to address the Russian public—the social
media app Telegram. For months, he had been openly plotting a coup: carrying
out public spats with the leadership of Russia’s military forces, offering
populist critiques of the war effort, and casting doubt on Putin’s official
justifications for the war that Putin himself has articulated. And yet Moscow
was nevertheless taken by surprise when Prigozhin asked his soldiers to rise
and join a rebellion against the Russian Ministry of Defense.
Putin’s hubris and
indecisiveness have been the story of the war. They are now the story of
domestic Russian politics. Whatever Prigozhin’s motives and intentions may be,
his rebellion has exposed an acute vulnerability of Putin’s regime: its
contempt for the common man. Putin was too clever to let the war affect Moscow
and Saint Petersburg or adversely affect these cities' elite populations. Yet
his cleverness imposed a war of choice on the country’s nonelite populations.
They have been dragged into a horrific colonial struggle, and when Moscow has
not been reckless with their lives, it has often been callous. Many soldiers
still have no idea what they are fighting and dying for. Prigozhin came to
speak for these men. He has no political movement behind him and no discernible
ideology. But by directly contradicting government propaganda, he highlighted
the miserable situation at the front and the visible aloofness of an
out-of-touch Putin, who enjoys hearing from the Ministry of Defense about
Russian military glory.
If Putin’s contempt
and the anger of Russian soldiers converge and come to symbolize the country
Putin rules, the Kremlin is in real trouble even without a coup in the works.
Prigozhin’s mutiny may be the first significant challenge to the Putin regime,
but it will not be the last. His rebellion is likely to be followed by
heightened repression in Russia. A nervous leader who inelegantly survived a
domestic coup is more dangerous than a wartime autocrat who believes himself to
be secure at home.
For the West, there
is little to do apart from letting this political drama—which has some of the
trappings of a farce—play out in Russia. The West has no interest in preserving
the Putinist status quo, but neither should it seek a
sudden toppling of the Putin regime. For the West, upheaval in Russia may
matter mostly for what it signifies in Ukraine, where the potential for
instability in Russia may open fresh military options. Apart from exploiting
these options with Kyiv, the West can do little more than start bracing itself
for instability within and beyond Russia’s borders.
A House Of Cards?
The irony of the
Prigozhin insurgency is that it originated in Putin’s efforts to “coup-proof”
his regime. The foundation for Putin’s power has been a pro-Putin-or at least
quiescent—Russian population. On top of this solid foundation, there have
always been rival factions among the elites and security services, which Putin
played off against each other.
To keep this
structure together, Putin has had to forestall popular discontent and keep the
political elite in line. He preferred to work with men he had known from his
KGB days in the 1980s and his days in the Saint Petersburg government in the
1990s, which served as the launching point for his political career. These men
were loyal because they could enjoy wealth and power only with Putin at the
helm. A greater risk to Putin were those who had gained access to the security
services and the military yet were not long-time Putin cronies. They had to be
supervised and controlled through constant machinations that became routine.
Other countries have a stock market that goes up and down. The Kremlin has an
internal stock market in which the political fortunes of the mighty rise and
fall.
At first, the war
continued this routine. Military leaders were shuffled in and out of positions
partly because the battle was not going well and in part because Putin had to
make sure that no Napoleon could emerge from among the generals and challenge
him. Putin pitted Wagner and the Russian Ministry of Defense against one
another, seeing which could achieve better results in Ukraine and seeking to
check the power of the army and the minister of defense. Prigozhin
counterbalanced the military high command and did what he was asked to
do—taking the Ukrainian city of Bakhmut, for example, Russia’s most significant
battlefield success last year. Prigozhin’s efficiency put pressure on the
highly inefficient Russian military.
Putin could stand
above it all as he had for years, the chess master expertly moving pieces. Or
so it seemed until someone came along and threw over the chessboard.
Watch The Throne, Watch Your Back
The events of the past
three days portend a dark future for Russia. In a few short hours, Prigozhin’s
armed rebellion generated enormous chaos. The war has stretched the Russian
state's capacity thin, and the revolt has stretched it further, presenting
Moscow with a new domestic challenge. For years the Kremlin has devised ways of
heading off a liberal, urban revolution. But the more significant threat turned
out to be an illiberal revolution: a highly militarized populist uprising
driven not by cosmopolitan reformers but by Russian nationalists. The top-down
nationalism cultivated in the war could cut against the Putin regime, and
Prigozhin may not be the last of his kind.
Prigozhin has proven
that the fortress of Putinism can be assaulted.
During this very brief rebellion, elites’ expressions of loyalty to Putin were
nearly uniform, but they were remarkably flat. Other cannier actors might learn
from Prigozhin, melding his populism with a political program that has some
purchase beyond mutinous mercenaries and that might attract a cadre within the
Russian elite. The elites would not be among the intelligentsia or the business
world. They would be connected to the security services. Their motivations
might be the spoils of power, a perception of Putin’s weakness, or a fear of a
coming purge. If Putin seems destined to be toppled, then there is an incentive
for the one who topples him—or at least close to that person. There is a
comparable disincentive to wait, especially if Putin is bent on exacting
revenge. Were a night of the long knives to play out among Russian elites, it
could consolidate powerful figures behind a plan to oust Putin.
Prigozhin’s rapid
advance on Moscow could inspire other potential warlords or a string of
disruptive political entrepreneurs seeking local advantage, none strong enough
to unseat the tsar in Moscow but each eager to chip away at the power and
prestige of the state. The consequences could paralyze the government and
weaken Russia’s military position in Ukraine. Over time, Prigozhin went from
criticism of the war’s execution to criticism of the war’s purpose. What has
now been said in the open—that a botched war may be an existential threat to
Russia’s pride but not Russia itself—cannot be unsaid.
Prepare For The Worst
Putin and his cronies
might try to pin Prigozhin’s rebellion on outsiders. But even for a regime that
has mastered the art of blaming the West, this would be a stretch. Washington
has next to no leverage in domestic Russian politics, and it is not 1991 when
President George H. W. Bush traveled to Ukraine and, in his famed “chicken
Kyiv” speech, recommended that the revolution go slow. Instability within
Russia is not something that the United States can turn on or turn off. It can,
however, be used to good effect on the battlefields of Ukraine. What will
follow this rebellion is an interlude of distraction, recrimination, and
uncertainty, as Putin deals not just with the logistics of getting things back
to normal but also with the humiliation he has just been dealt and the revenge
he is likely to pursue. None of this will pass quickly.
Although Ukraine
launched a long-awaited counteroffensive recently, it has not had a major military
advance since November 2022. Russian soldiers are dug in many places, and the
counteroffensive has been slow. Ukraine is poised to attack Russian positions,
has high morale, an array of committed backers, and a clear strategic course.
Without political instability, Russia’s military role in Ukraine is
intrinsically precarious. With political instability, it might collapse.
Putin’s near-death
experience paradoxes the United States and its allies. His regime represents an
immense security problem for Europe, and his exit from the international stage,
whenever it comes, will not be mourned. Yet a post-Putin Russia, which could
come much sooner than had commonly been expected just a week ago, would call
for great caution and careful planning.
While hoping for the
best, which would be an end to the war in Ukraine and a less authoritarian
Russia, it makes sense to plan for the worst: a Russian leader more radical
than Putin and more overtly right-wing and reactionary, someone perhaps with
more military experience than Putin ever had; someone who the brutality of war
has shaped. In February 2022, Putin opted for a criminal war. It would be
poetic justice for him to be the political victim of this war, but his
successor cannot help but be the child of this war, and wars produce troubled
children.
The United States and
its allies must manage and mitigate the consequences of instability in Russia.
In all scenarios, the West will need to seek transparency about the control of
Russian nuclear weapons and the potential proliferation of weapons of mass
destruction, signaling that it has no intention and no desire to threaten the
existence of the Russian state. At the same time, the West must send a strong
message of deterrence, focusing on protecting NATO and its partners.
Instability in Russia is unlikely to stay within Russia. It could spread across
the region, from Armenia to Belarus.
Prigozhin’s mutiny
has already inspired a spate of historical analogies. Perhaps this is Russia in
1905, the small revolution before the big one. Or maybe it is the Soviet Union
in 1991, making Putin into a version of Gorbachev, someone destined to lose an
empire.
A better analogy
places Prigozhin in the role of Stenka Razin, a rebel
against tsarist power who mustered an army of peasants and attempted to march
on Moscow from southern Russia in 1670-71. Razin was eventually apprehended and
quartered in Red Square. But he became a fixture of Russian political folklore.
He had revealed weakness in the tsarist government of his time, and in the
centuries to come, others took inspiration from his story. It holds a clear
lesson for Russia's autocrats: even an unsuccessful rebellion plants the seed
for future attempts.
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