A Brewing Storm in Russia
Can Russian liberalism survive the Putin/Medvedev regime?
A year ago, Russia was in an odd place between oppressive stagnation and a glimmer of possible change. The ruling party, United Russia, had just consolidated its hold on the parliament in a rigged election; the presidential transition was revealed as the farcical anointment of a handpicked successor to Vladimir Putin—the docile Dmitry Medvedev, who quickly promised to make Putin prime minister. Yet some Russian liberals, and sympathetic Westerners, harbored at least modest hopes that Medvedev might prove more liberal than Putin and that the division of power between president and prime minister might weaken Russia's neo-autocracy.
Today, the winds of change in Russia are blowing again—harsh winds that may yet turn into a storm.
The liberalization from above turned out to be a non-starter, despite Medvedev's declaration that "freedom is better than non-freedom." Any hopes of a thaw, or a Putin-Medvedev fissure, were crushed when Medvedev's first 100 days ended with the war in Georgia. (Whatever Georgia's responsibility for triggering this war, it was preceded by years of provocation and manipulation by the Kremlin—intended to destabilize a government perceived as unfriendly and send an assertive message to the West.)
The surge of "patriotic" sentiment that followed Russia's victory threatened to take the country even further down the authoritarian road. But history works in mysterious ways.
While Western sanctions in response to the war proved short-lived, Russia paid a heavy price for its victory in the flight of foreign capital—which both predated October's financial crisis and exacerbated its effects in Russia.
The crisis revealed the clay feet of the Putin/Medvedev regime, not only showing the extent to which its relative prosperity was tried to high oil prices but also exposing the fakery of its feelgood propaganda machine. While state-controlled television news avoided the word "crisis"—except with regard to the West—Russian citizens rushed to convert rubles to dollars. Polls by the Public Opinion Fund found a sharp drop in confidence in the mainstream media. By late December, close to half of Russians said that media reports on the economy were biased and minimized economic problems; 30 percent (up from 23 percent in November) said that "journalists know the real state of the economy but are not allowed to tell the truth."
Trust in Putin and Medvedev may suffer as well. Bizarrely, over 80 percent of those polled recently still approved Putin's performance as prime minister—though only 43 percent thought Russia was headed in the right direction. Yet, of the 17 percent of Russians who watched Putin's live televised question-and-answer session on December 4, fewer than half were satisfied with his answers.
The first rumblings of discontent came after the government announced a hike in custom duties on imported used cars to help Russia's auto companies (run mostly by Putin cronies). Importing used cars from Japan is a major source of livelihood in the Far East, which responded with major protests that quickly became political. Some demonstrators openly denounced Putin, Medvedev, and United Russia; many angrily demanded television coverage. After a week of protests, a peaceful rally in Vladivostok was brutally broken up by the riot police on December 21; several journalists, too, were beaten and arrested. While television news ignored the incident, many mainstream newspapers did not. Remarkably, several local legislatures in the Far East have backed the protesters' demands. So far, the government has refused to budge. But what will happen if the ranks of protesters swell from hundreds to hundreds of thousands?
So far, the Kremlin's strategy for dealing with political opposition is a carrot-and-stick approach. Among the carrots: an effort to co-opt the opposition with the creation of a Kremlin-funded "liberal" party, the Right Cause, and the appointment of a prominent liberal politician, Nikita Belykh, to a governorship. The sticks include proposed legislation that would make it easier to convict dissenters of treason or espionage, at least if they have any foreign contacts, and to take such cases out of jurors' hands. These laws have drawn objections even from the governmental Public Chamber, a monitoring body meant to function as a collective ombudsman—though whether these objections will have any effect remains doubtful.
Unlike the Communist regime, the authoritarian Russian state still has room for some legal resistance—from the independent media to pro-democracy movements to judges who refuse to convict government critics under vague "extremism" laws. These small islands of freedom face a vastly unequal battle against the forces of repression; but the outcome in this battle is more uncertain than it has been in a long time.
Cathy Young is a contributing editor at Reason magazine. A shorter version of this article originally appeared in the Boston Globe.
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...harsh winds that may yet turn into a storm.
Right, unlike the serene calm that prevails here.
Extra! Extra! Read all about it! Cathy Young discovers that Putin is a totalitarian schmuck! Extra! Extra! Read all about it!
In Soviet Russia, libtards troll you!
The Revolution is coming. Any day now.
Prince and the Revolution? When?
Caption Contest!
"Don't hate me because I was born with bitch tits."
I respond to statements that have not been made.
Can't we just come up with some sort of legislation that will outlaw Russia forever?
It's amazing that Russians still vote Stalin as one of their greats. Where is the outcry?
Hans Morganthau had a point.
Putin is a douche that is taking a massive dump on any hopes Russians had for a free society in a long time, but I'll hand it to him, for a world leader that dude's pretty built, I wonder when was the last time we had a President like that. He looks like he would so kick most of our leader's asses in a fight.
He had a point? Where? On his head? Ohhh, you're talking about his penis!
MNG - he's a judo black belt, and he was a KGB operative so, yeah, if any world leader were to go into MMA, it'd be him.
Baked-I'd heard he had some judo skillz. He strikes me as a legit badass. I wonder if we've ever had any executive even historically who could take that guy. Maybe T.R.?
Not that I don't appreciate the whole macho thing, but do they really think people in other nations are going to look at Putin's muscular chest and be intimidated by that?
I'm a lot more scared by a leader's prowess at chess than at beating other guys in hand-to-hand combat. Putin's KGB past freaks me out, not his Judo skills.
MNG-
How about GWB vs. Saddam in a steel cage match to the death? My money is on the Buthcer of Baghdad.
MNG - If any of our Presidents could take him, it'd be TR. He was teh suck from a libertarian perspective, but a guy who gives a speech after being shot is a serious badass.
BakedPenguin-
How do you think your boy TR would have fared against Peter the Great? Perhaps a Bruno Samartino vs. Andre the Giant match?
And, not surprisingly, there's an ad for mail-order brides on this page.
Well shit, given the rubble's.. er ruble's current rate of devaluation it's about time to mail a few postcards to Moscow and move to Utah!
Do brides generally come via FedEx or UPS?
putin would absolutely rape t.r. the whole point of judo is taking out the macho workout guys
How about Lincoln?
"Skinny guys fight til their burger"
How about GWB vs. Saddam in a steel cage match to the death? My money is on the Buthcer of Baghdad.
George W. is a highly-trained athlete. He's really in amazing shape for a man his age.
Saddam Hussein was a fat guy with a really bad back.
Libertymike,
Oh, please. Whatever George W. Bush's failings--and they are legion--his spider-sense in dodging that shoe demonstrates that he would be a formidable opponent in personal combat.
"to help Russia's auto companies (run mostly by Putin cronies)."
What's good for AutoVAZ is good for Russia.
Marcvs,
Hans Morganthau argued during the early Cold War that the USSR's foreign policy was best understood as a continuation of Russia's longstanding goals and way of perceiving the world, and that the internationalist, socialist revolution stuff was just an overlay.
"putin would absolutely rape t.r."
What a disturbing sentence...
Meet the new tzar, same as the old tzar.
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