All the meticulous plotting to avoid Ukraine’s
Orange Revolution resulted in -- Russia’s very own coloured one. But
Russia is not Ukraine...
Russia’s electoral scene has been transformed in the
past two months, without a doubt inspired by the political winds from
the Middle East and the earlier colour revolutions in Russia’s “near
abroad”. Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s casual return to the
presidential scene was greeted as an effrontery by an electorate who
want to move on from Russia’s political strongman tradition, and to
inject the electoral process with ballot-box accountability.
Putin’s legendary role in rescuing Russia from the
economic abyss in the 1990s, staring down the oligarchs, reasserting
state control over Russian resource wealth, and repositioning Russia as
an independent player in Eurasia (not to mention in America’s backyard)
-- these signal accomplishments assure him a place in history books. He
and Dmitri Medvedev are considered the most popular leaders in the past
century according to a recent VTsIOM opinion poll (Leonid Brezhnev comes
next, followed by Joseph Stalin and Vladimir Lenin, with Mikhail
Gorbachev and Boris Yelstin the least popular). He will very likely pass
the 50 per cent mark in presidential elections 4 March, despite all the
protests during the past two months calling for “ Russia without
Putin”. So why is he back in the ring?
It appears he was caught by surprise when the
anti-Putin campaign exploded in November, fuelled by his decision to run
again and the exposure of not a little fraud in the parliamentary
elections in December. For the first time since the collapse of the
Soviet Union, the opposition was able to unite and stage impressive
rallies, one after another. Despite the chilling Russian winter, they
keep coming -- this week saw four gathering around Moscow, totalling
130,000.
The opposition poster children even include Putin’s
minister of finance Alexei Kudrin. Presidential hopefuls are Communist
leader Gennadi Zyuganov (backed for the first time by the independent
left forces), nationalist Vladimir Zhirinovsky, A Just Russia’s Sergei
Mironov and the oligarch playboy Mikhail Prokhorov -- none of whom stand
a chance of defeating Putin. This time there are 25 televised debates
which began 6 February among the contenders, who are sparring with each
other and “Putin’s representative”.
Is this quixotic march back to the Kremlin heights a
case of egomania? Or is it a noble attempt to both cast in stone Russia
as the Eurasian counterweight to an increasingly aggressive US/NATO, and
shaking up the domestic political scene to make sure it will not slump
into apathy when he himself passes the torch? And if things go wrong, is
this Russia’s very own White Revolution, long feared by the Russian
elite, and long coveted by Western intriguers?
Russian politics has always confounded Western
observers, and continues to do so. Putin is famously imperious and gets
away with it. He taunted the opposition by saying he thought the
original demonstrations were part of an anti-AIDS campaign, that the
white ribbons were condoms. But he nonetheless sanctioned the largest
political opposition rallies in the past 20 years.
US democracy-promotion NGOs such as the National
Endowment for Democracy -- a key player in Ukraine’s 2004 Orange
Revolution -- are active in Russia’s opposition, but Putin is clearly
gambling that Russians can see past US efforts to manipulate them.
Besides, the winners in the Duma elections were the Communists and
nationalists, with pro-Western liberals placing a distant fourth --
hardly the results NEDers would have wanted.
He is also famously willing to tell US politicians
they wear no clothes -- the latest, last week in Siberia: “Sometimes I
get the impression the US doesn’t need allies, it needs vassals.”
Russian foreign policy is now firmly anti-NATO, both with respect to the
West’s misguided missile system and its eagerness to turn Syria into a
killing fields. Rumours that a Russian Iran-for-Syria deal with the West
have proved empty. There are even hints that Iran may still get its
defensive S-300 missiles from Russia in exchange for Russian access to
the downed US drone. Iran claims to have four already and recently
announced they have developed their own domestic version.
Pro-Putin rallies are as large as the opposition’s,
with an official count of 140,000 attendees at the festive gathering
Saturday. The Putinistas even bill theirs as the Anti-Orange rally. “We
say no to the destruction of Russia. We say no to Orange arrogance. We
say no to the American government…let’s take out the Orange trash,”
political analyst Sergei Kurginyan exhorted at Moscow’s Poklonnaya Gora
war memorial park. Putin thanked organisers, commenting modestly, “I
share their views.”
The real reason for Putin’s return is due to the
failure during his first two terms of his “sovereign democracy” to limit
corruption in post-Soviet Russia. Instead, of producing a modernising
authoritarianism along the lines of post-war South Korea, Putin’s rule
deepened corruption -- the bane of late Soviet and early post-Soviet
society. Instead of trading political freedom for effective governance,
he clipped Russians’ civil and political rights without delivering on
this vital promise. Neither did he end collusion between the state and
the oligarchs. That was the handle that badboy Alexei Navalni used to
catalyse the opposition around his slogan that United Russia is the
“party of swindlers and thieves”.
This was the scene in the 2000s in Ukraine, where it
was possible for the NEDers to undermine the much weaker Ukrainian state
and install the Western candidate Viktor Yushchenko in 2004. However,
instead of addressing the problems that led to the Orange Revolution,
Putin focused on foreign threats to Russian political stability rather
than paying attention to domestic factors, creating patriotic youth
organisations such as Nashi (Ours) and the 4 November Day of Unity
holiday – the latter quickly hijacked by Russia’s nationalists.
But Russian fears of Western interference are hardly
naïve. Russia was sucked into the horrendous WWI by the British empire,
suffered devastating invasions in 1919 and 1941, and another half
century of the West’s Cold War against it. Further dismemberment of the
Russian Federation is indeed a Western goal, which would benefit no one
but a tiny comprador elite, Western multinationals and the Pentagon.
Putin’s statist sovereign democracy – with
transparent elections – might not be such a bad alternative to what
passes for democracy in much of the West. His new Eurasian Union could
help spread a more responsible political governance across the
continent. It may not be what the NED has in mind, but it would be
welcomed by all the “stan” citizens, not to mention China’s beleaguered
Uighurs. This “EU” is striving not towards disintegration and weakness,
but towards integration and mutual security, without any need for
US/NATO bases and slick NED propaganda. The union will surely eventually
include the mother of colour revolutions, Ukraine, where citizens still
yearn for open borders with Russia and closer economic integration. The
days of dreaming about the other EU’s Elysian Fields are over. The
hard, cold reality today has bleached the colour revolutions, making
white the appropriate colour for Russia’s version of political change.
Of course, the big problem -- corruption -- is what
will make or break Putin’s third term as president. At the Russia 2012
Investment Forum in Moscow last week, Putin outlined plans to move
Russia up to 20th spot from its current 120th in the World Bank index of
investment attractiveness, by reducing bureaucracy and the associated
bribery. “These measures are not enough. I believe that society must
actively participate in the establishment of an anti-corruption agenda,”
he vowed. Reforming the legal system and expanding the reach of
democracy will be key to fighting corruption, not just via presidential
decrees, but through empowering elected officials and voters. He
confirmed this in his fourth major pre-election address this week by
promising to provide better government services by decentralizing power
from the federal level to municipalities and relying on the Internet.
So far things look good. For the first time since
1995 there will be a hotly contested transparently monitored
presidential election, with the distinct possibility of a runoff (unless
the new US Ambassador Michael McFaul keeps inviting NED darlings to
Spaso House). The sort-of presidential debates, large-scale opposition
rallies and the new independent League of Voters intending to ensure
clean elections are a fine precedent, making sure that this time and in
the future there will be an opportunity for genuine debate about
Russia's future.
Despite all attempts to forestall Russia’s colour
revolution, it has begun -- Russian-style -- with no state collapse, but
with a new articulate electorate, wise to both Kremlin politologists
and Western NGOlogists. Its final destination is impossible for anyone
to predict at this point.
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