“I
have conquered an empire; but I have yet to conquer myself”
Peter
the Great
Riga. Latvia. 22
September. The news that United Russia,
the party President Putin backs won 54.2% of the vote in last week’s elections
for the Duma, Russia’s parliament, hardly
came as a great political surprise. United Russia now holds 343 of the 450
seats in the Duma, with the nearest
rivals having gained only 13% of the vote, whilst the ‘liberal’ failed to
surpass the 5% threshold and lost their last remaining seats. President Putin
really has kicked the 1990s into the long, long grass of Russian history. President
Putin also rules (or is that reigns) supreme and is thus free to further
cultivate the Russian strongman image he has carefully crafted both at home and
abroad. It is an illusion, but seen here from Latvia it is an exceptionally dangerous
illusion.
In reality Russia is
growing relatively weaker than most of its European and Western partner-adversaries
in every area that matters, save armed force. The facts speak for themselves.
According to the UN in 2016 Russia has an economy worth some $1.8 trillion,
which is about the same size of that of Canada, and slightly bigger than that
of Australia. This compares with a US economy worth $17.3 trillion, a German
economy worth $3.7 trillion, and a British economy worth $3 trillion. And yet,
SIPRI suggests that whilst the US in 2015 spent 3.3% of its gross domestic
product (GDP) on defence or $597 billion and the UK spent 2% or $55.5 billion,
Russia spent $66.4 billion or 5.4% of its GDP on defence. In fact, the true ‘burden’
of the Russian security state on the Russian economy is closer to, if not more
than, 10% of GDP.
Why is Putin committing
so much Russian taxpayer’s money to defence and other ‘security-related’ expenditure?
For many Russians ‘strength and greatness’ means a strongman leader backed up
by armed forces geared for aggression. For them history has taught that forcing
supplicant respect from neighbouring others is the only way Russia can be
secure. Consequently, Russia is an aggressive isolationist power that sees
itself and sets itself apart from contemporary European/Western ideas of mutual
interdependence. It is a profoundly Russian sense of isolationism twinned with exceptionalism
that runs deep in the Russian soul, reinforced by President Putin’ belief that
the disastrous Yeltsin years simply confirmed that closeness to the West simply
makes it easier and cheaper for the perfidious West to confound Russia.
However, there are other
factors driving President Putin’s over-mighty security state, not least the
sheer size of Russia. President Putin is determined to instil centralising political
discipline on regional governors and oligarchs in an enormous country that
covers 13 time zones, suffers from poor infrastructure, and in which
Vladivostok is roughly the same distance from Moscow as London is distant from
Chicago. In a conversation I had with Mikhail Khodorkovsky a couple of years
back I was struck by the extent to which even the illusion of threat instils a
fierce loyalty to Mother Russia.
If there is an illusion
of threat, there is also an illusion of power. Russia has simply been unable to
come to terms with the twenty-first century and instead reached for those two
great comforting balms beloved of many Russians; nostalgia and illusion.
President Putin appeals to a sense of false nostalgia that afflicts many
Russians outside relatively more liberal Moscow and St Petersburg. An idea that
somehow the Soviet Union was the ‘good old days’ when Russia had the respect of
the world, even its Western enemies. It is an illusion that President Putin is
brilliantly (for the moment) and ruthlessly fostering. It is also why Moscow
engages in lethal strategic grandstanding in Ukraine, Syria and elsewhere, even
if contemporary Russia simply lacks the power fundamentals to be a true twenty-first
century Great Power over the medium to longer-term.
This illusion of power
runs right through the Kremlin. In a recent interview with the BBC Russian
Deputy Prime Minister Arkady Dvorkovich warned that Brexit would weaken Europe
and that no individual European state could anymore influence world affairs
alone. Russia? For example, Britain is an intrinsically stronger power than
Russia so why does Moscow think weaker Russia can influence world affairs when
stronger Britain cannot? President Putin believes Russia is at its ‘strongest’
outside a rules-based world order and that Moscow’s very unpredictability is
Moscow’s strength.
Whilst I am a fierce
critic of President Putin I have a genuine respect for the man. Indeed, I find
it nauseating when European political leaders express shock at his actions. He
is not, and has never claimed to be, a woolly European liberal democrat. He is
a Russian nationalist who will act in what he sees as the Russian national interest
whatever that takes and we in the West had better come to terms with that. His
world-view is the product of Russia’s war-winning, land-grabbing sacrifice in
World War Two which fashioned a love of country from the dark, dark crucible of
destruction. In other words, President Putin believes he IS Russia and that is
all the political legitimacy he needs. He is not alone in this belief. For
several years I educated Russian officers and diplomats at the Geneva Centre
for Security Policy and I never ceased to be impressed by their love of country,
their profound belief in Mother Russia, and their determination to defend her.
The Russians have a
saying, “umom Rosiya neponjat” or one can never understand Russia. For the sake of friends and allies such as
Latvia the West must stop trying to look at President Putin through ‘why can’t
he be likes us’ Western eyes and quickly. The very disconnect between Russia’s
weak power fundamentals and Russia’s vaunting power ambition that is driving
Russian policy means Russia’s power illusion is as much a danger to itself as
to its neighbouring others. Unless President Putin changes course Russia will
again sink under the burden over its own over-securitized insecurity. The reckoning
may take a little longer to arrive than some Western commentators believe
because Russians are willing to sacrifice longer for what they believe to be Russian
‘greatness’ than most ‘soft’ Westerners. However, catastrophe will come.
President Putin is hoping
that by then he will have re-established Russian influence over its near-abroad
to such an extent that his place in Russian history will be assured, and that
whatever test Russia must ultimately face durable Russians will outlast weak
Westerners. In preparing the ground for this great ‘test’ of strength President
Putin sees himself as the natural heir of Peter the Great. However, President
Putin should remember that the use of the suffix ‘Great’ was not simply because
Tsar Peter understood power. He also understood that to make Russia a real eighteenth
century Great Power he had to transform Russia from a fifteenth century
state.
If President Putin is to
make Russia a real twenty-first century Great Power then he will have to
transform Russia from a twentieth century state. At present there is no sign he
understands that precisely because he has failed to reform, which is precisely
because he has failed to conquer himself and his many prejudices about Russia
and the ‘other’. Yes, much of President Putin’s power is but an illusion, but when
viewed from here in Latvia it is a very real and a very dangerous illusion.
Julian
Lindley-French
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