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Vladimir Putin Might Fall. We Should Consider What Happens Next.
The New Republic ^ | August 6, 2014 | Julia Ioffe

Posted on 08/07/2014 8:33:31 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet

In July, the United States and the European Union finally bridged their differences and slammed Russia with severe sanctions in the wake of the shootdown of Malaysia Airlines Flight 17. The pincers and scalpels of the previous rounds were discarded; this time, it was whole industries—defense, finance, and energy—that were targeted, including Sberbank, Russia’s largest commercial bank.

If the first round of U.S. sanctions was met with ridicule among the Kremlin elite—Vladimir Putin’s gray cardinal Vladislav Surkov, sanctioned back in March, joked that what he likes in the United States is Tupac Shakur, dead since 1996—there’s not much bluster this time around. Now, Gennady Timchenko, who magically became a billionaire many times over since his old friend Putin came to power, is overcoming his allergy to the limelight to moan publicly about how he can’t go on vacation to southern France with his family or visit his 19-year-old son at university in Switzerland. “Our public opinion is given to underestimating them, but these sanctions are much more serious,” says Sergei Markov, a Putinist hawk who sits on the foreign affairs committee in the Russian Civic Chamber. “They’re not personal, they’re sectoral. So they’ll affect a fairly large number of people. Additionally, they will affect businesses that are most crucial to the Russian economy. And they’ll hit the population. Maybe it won’t be immediate, but it will happen.”

However, leaving aside the question of whether or not sanctions are necessary punishment for Putin’s reckless policy in eastern Ukraine, has the West really considered what will happen if they are successful? The reservations expressed on both sides of the Atlantic have mostly been about the impact on Western economies, rather than on what would happen inside Russia. Here’s a hint: “Russia’s economy would collapse faster and quicker” than Europe’s, says Chris Weafer, a prominent (and normally bullish) Russian market analyst and senior partner with Macro-Advisory.

And that brings with it a huge problem. Putin’s tacit social contract with the Russian people is based on a very basic exchange: Putin makes sure the Russian people become materially better off, and the Russian people leave the politics to Putin. So far, both sides have delivered. The crushing majority of Russians support the Kremlin’s line or avoid politics like the plague, and the GDP per capita has increased from $1,771 when Putin came to power in 2000, to more than $14,000 today. That’s a faster growth rate than China’s. “If there were a material change in the way people live in Russia,” says Weafer, “we’d see a change in the political dynamic like we’ve never seen before.”

Geopolitics and the economy are Putin’s two sources of strength, and both are failing him now. In eastern Ukraine, he is increasingly boxed-in, and the economy has been sputtering for about a year, thanks to corruption, inefficiency, and the Sochi Olympics. Capital flight has already reached $75 billion for the first half of 2014, according to the Russian government’s own data, and that’s before the real sanctions were introduced. (By comparison, capital flight for all of 2013 was $63 billion, and in 2012, it was $49 billion.) Russia is not technically in a recession, but that’s because growth has been hovering at zero all year. The Ministry of Economic Development has been using the term “stagnation” since December. Stagnation felled the Soviet Union, and, if the economy dips into recession, it could easily topple Putin, too.

But before the West celebrates the possibility of Putin being forced from the throne, we should consider what might come after him. This is not an argument against sanctions or against political change in Russia. But the country’s history tells us that prolonged economic malaise often brings about political turmoil, the result of which has never been a democratic Russia.

This has been a summer haunted by invocations of 1914, with analogies drawn between the season’s geopolitical chaos and the beginning of World War I exactly 100 years ago. But for Russia, it’s worth recalling that 1914 ended in 1917. The corrupt and overly centralized regime of Czar Nicholas II blustered its way into the Great War, which created massive food and fuel shortages back home. Nicholas bankrupted the country fighting his cousin Wilhelm, and bread riots soon forced Nicholas’s abdication. The brief and confused rule of the bourgeois provisional government in turn quickly gave way to the brutal and bloody Soviet regime. To this day, Russians, especially the anti-Soviet Moscow intelligentsia, look back fondly to the czarist era, even though those were days of poverty for the overwhelming majority of the population.

The Soviet regime collapsed like the one before it: bankrupted by a war, one that existed mostly in the jungles of the Third World and in the minds of Washington and Moscow. Lines for food and other essentials took up an increasing proportion of the average Soviet’s workday, further slowing the already moribund economy. It was not Ronald Reagan who brought about the regime’s collapse, nor was it the dissidents, not for all their diligence cobbling together reams of samizdat. It was the economy.

And when the Soviet system vanished in December 1991, what replaced it was more economic chaos, with people turning into kings or paupers seemingly overnight. The oligarchs used the increasingly frail and unsober President Boris Yeltsin to become ever richer, stashing much of their money abroad. It was such a rough time for most Russians, especially pensioners whose savings and pensions evaporated as the currency ballooned, that many still think back to the privations of the Soviet era with longing. To them, it was a time of stability. Even if the country wasn’t rich, everyone was basically poor, and at least the country was still a force to be reckoned with internationally. That is why the Communist Party of the Russian Federation is still genuinely popular, scoring a consistent second behind Putin’s United Russia.

It was out of this mess that Russia created Putin, a man promising to reverse Russia’s humiliation and rein in the oligarchs stripping the country bare. He delivered on those promises, but he simply created new oligarchs, like Timchenko, from his childhood friends or KGB comrades. He also eviscerated, with Surkov’s brilliant engineering, the fledgling forms of democracy and free speech that had developed in the nine years that preceded him. Which is why certain bourgeois urban liberals now miss the freewheeling 1990s, even though many of them voted for Putin in 2000.

Given this history, the Western narrative of an evil, shirtless tyrant suppressing a society hungering for freedom and democracy is a wild fantasy. Putin is not popular only because he controls the television. He is also popular because he is giving Russia something that is quintessentially Russian. Putin is just a variation on the Soviet Union, which was just a variation on the monarchy.

What made the Soviets so ruthless and Manichaean was the czar. Nicholas was fiercely averse to any kind of political sphere between him and the peasant masses. He created a parliament only to immediately disband it and relied heavily on censorship and the secret police. And so, when he handed in his crown, there was nothing there to replace him. The only people strong enough to fill the vacuum were the Bolsheviks, hardened and disciplined by years of underground resistance. After all, it was the czars who instituted forced exile; Joseph Stalin, who escaped from Nicholas’s exile five times as a young revolutionary, simply improved upon their brutality in his gulags.

Similarly, when the Soviet Union fell, it wasn’t the pro-Western dissidents who replaced Gorbachev, but a high-ranking Party boss named Yeltsin. No one else had the organizational or political know-how; nobody else had been allowed to learn.

And so it is now. The liberal opposition that rose up from the Internet ghetto in December 2011 was only 100,000 strong in a city of twelve million. Six months later, Putin cracked down. Now, the only plausible leader of the opposition, Alexei Navalny, is under house arrest, barred from using the Internet and thus from talking to the people who want political change. Which will make things all the worse when Putin inevitably leaves the Kremlin. Knowing the weakness of the liberal opposition and the strength of Putin’s security apparatus, it’s hard not to fear that his replacement will make us long for the days of his thuggishly predictable unpredictability.

Last December, I met up with Gleb Pavlovsky, the man who helped Putin cruise to victory in 2000. “It’s impossible to say when this system will fall, but when it falls, it will fall in one day,” he told me. “And the one to replace it will be a copy of this one.”

Back in February 2012, a month before Putin was elected president of the Russian Federation for the third time, his supporters released a YouTube video that indulged the desire of the tens of thousands of Muscovites protesting in the streets that winter. “The opposition is chanting, ‘Russia without Putin!’ ” the narrator says. “So let’s imagine that there is no more Vladimir Putin.” The immediate result, says the narrator, is elections, hundreds of parties, and the West praising the dawn of real democracy in Russia. But then the hypothesis gallops on through 2013: the rise of militant Russian nationalists, their clashes with Russia’s large Muslim population, nato troops in Kaliningrad, the Chinese in Khabarovsk, the Georgians in Krasnodar, and skinhead rule in St. Petersburg. A hungry winter, chaos and inter-ethnic violence, the departure of major international companies, and hyperinflation. The leaders of the opposition beg for asylum in the United States. By February 2014, there is no electricity, mobile service, or Internet in Moscow. Russians are advised to stay in their homes. “Russia without Putin?” the narrator concludes. “You decide.”

It’s extreme and, to a non-Putinist, even laughable; the sun will not stop shining if Vladimir Putin is no longer president. But this is a key part of the Putin worldview when it comes to both foreign and domestic affairs: There’s not much separating you, or anyone, from the void. And, ironically, it’s this fear of the future that keeps Putin in power. It’s a fear that’s not all that ridiculous when you consider that all of the footage illustrating the horrors of a Putinless future is the real footage of Russia’s recent past.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; Russia
KEYWORDS: antifracking; billionsires; putin; putinsbuttboys; russia; russianstooges; ukraine; ukrainecrisis; vladtheimploder
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To: FreeReign

I believe that, if Obama had Putin’s mannerism, he would have an 80% approval rating, too.

The people in Russia are convinced that Putin loves Russia.

Can we say the same about Obama and his feelings for the US?

Hell, we don’t even know where he is from and he doesn’t want to officially divulge his origins.


21 posted on 08/07/2014 9:26:20 PM PDT by 353FMG
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

“might fall”????

With an 85% approval rating?


22 posted on 08/07/2014 10:02:17 PM PDT by tcrlaf (Q)
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To: Perdogg

I think I have a better chance with Kate Upton than Putin falling.
*****
Ditto,I second that.

Libs are deluding themselves.


23 posted on 08/07/2014 10:56:57 PM PDT by Finalapproach29er (luke 6:38)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Putin is getting desperate. As all of his policies turn to caca, there is a real risk that he will commit further acts of terrorism to punish the world for his failures.


24 posted on 08/07/2014 11:02:11 PM PDT by Tau Food (Never give a sword to a man who can't dance.)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
It was not Ronald Reagan who brought about the regime’s collapse, nor was it the dissidents, not for all their diligence cobbling together reams of samizdat. It was the economy.

It was Reagan, because it was he who killed the economy by deregulating American oil production, thereby dropping the price, and therefore killing Russian foreign exchange cash flow with which to supply its massive new navy.

25 posted on 08/07/2014 11:20:34 PM PDT by Carry_Okie (ObamaCare IS Medicaid: They'll pull a sheet over your head and send you the bill.)
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To: Kennard
But James Wormold (of "Our Man in Havana" fame) says we're the lesser of two weevils!!

How could we possibly be ill when everything is going so well?

26 posted on 08/07/2014 11:45:32 PM PDT by Rashputin (Jesus Christ doesn't evacuate His troops, He leads them to victory.)
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To: Carry_Okie

The arms race is what bankrupted the USSR in the short term and communism in the long term.


27 posted on 08/08/2014 1:08:59 AM PDT by DB
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To: 2ndDivisionVet
I'm reading Blowing Up Russia by Alexander Litvinenko and Yuri Felshtinsky. Putin came to power on the 1999 Moscow apartment bombings blamed on Chechens. Litvinenko was murdered with Polonium for writing the book from inside knowledge as a Russian intelligence defector.

Putin's last political rival was General Alexander Lebed who died in a helicopter crash in 2003.

Putin's popularity rating has soared of late.

He extracted concessions from Obama regarding European missile defense. Now Obama cuts U.S. defense spending and seeks to reduce the nuclear arsenal.

Russia and China are engaged in energy and arms agreements certain to solidify an anti-American stance.

Europe can be easily blackmailed by energy starvation--look at what Putin's idol Stalin did to Ukraine which Walter Duranty covered up.

Obama's poll numbers fall as his unconstitutional action increases.

Neither Putin nor Obama has any serious threat to power.

Stalin may have said, "(Deleted) the Pope; how many divisions does he have?"

Ukraine disarmed due to promises of Western protection.

We shall see.


28 posted on 08/08/2014 1:33:41 AM PDT by PhilDragoo (Hussein: Islamo-Commie from Fakistan)
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To: GeronL
I hope Putin, the EU and Obama all fall. Best case scenario if you ask me.

Can we throw in the UN for good measure?

29 posted on 08/08/2014 3:14:56 AM PDT by Smokin' Joe (How often God must weep at humans' folly. Stand fast. God knows what He is doing.)
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To: SatinDoll

You are on target. While Putin tries to recreate old Russia by threatening Western Europe China is eying everything east of the Ural Mountains

Last time the Chinese got a long way west before running out of steam. They may have a 1950’s army but it is much bigger than Russia’s and they can afford huge losses of men and not blink an eye

Vladimir better look over his shoulder


30 posted on 08/08/2014 3:43:23 AM PDT by Jimmy Valentine (DemocRATS - when they speak, they lie; when they are silent, they are stealing the American Dream)
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

Russians was HUMILIATED in the 1990s, when our Cowboy presidents bombed what was Yugoslavia with impunity. Those days are over under Putin and now Russia keeps its powder dry for Europe, playing the tit-for-tat game, until “technical issues” magically take out their natural gas pipelines just as winter is starting to bite. Just watch.

And as others have said, Putin is NOT going anywhere, not with 83% approval.


31 posted on 08/08/2014 4:15:32 AM PDT by BobL
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To: GeronL

“I hope Putin, the EU and Obama all fall. Best case scenario if you ask me.”

Good point...I think Europe has a LOT MORE to worry about than Russia regarding their future - considering their Open Borders (not as bad as ours, but their immigrants mean business).

I suspect that Putin will be sitting tight in power while civil wars start up in Europe.


32 posted on 08/08/2014 4:18:15 AM PDT by BobL
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To: Carry_Okie

“It was Reagan, because it was he who killed the economy by deregulating American oil production, thereby dropping the price, and therefore killing Russian foreign exchange cash flow with which to supply its massive new navy. “

A number of other things too, of course. My favorite was when we figured out the Russians were stealing our software used to run natural gas pumping stations. Rather than stopping them, we simply added a bit of code and let them have it. A bit later the largest recorded non-nuclear explosion occurred west of the Urals. Needless to say, the Russians were done stealing code after that. CIA director William Casey gets credit for that little stunt.


33 posted on 08/08/2014 4:22:27 AM PDT by BobL
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To: 2ndDivisionVet

So we’re supposed to give him everything he wants to keep him from falling????

Tell him to take out some Obamacare insurance —


34 posted on 08/08/2014 4:44:44 AM PDT by Uncle Chip
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To: DB
The arms race is what bankrupted the USSR in the short term and communism in the long term.

They supported that race just fine when oil was selling for a high price under the Carter Administration.

35 posted on 08/08/2014 6:30:15 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (ObamaCare IS Medicaid: They'll pull a sheet over your head and send you the bill.)
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To: BobL
My favorite was when we figured out the Russians were stealing our software used to run natural gas pumping stations. Rather than stopping them, we simply added a bit of code and let them have it. A bit later the largest recorded non-nuclear explosion occurred west of the Urals. Needless to say, the Russians were done stealing code after that. CIA director William Casey gets credit for that little stunt.

That was GOOD!!! I'd never heard that story, thanks!

36 posted on 08/08/2014 6:35:25 AM PDT by Carry_Okie (ObamaCare IS Medicaid: They'll pull a sheet over your head and send you the bill.)
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To: GeronL

So you like the idea of a Red Chinese dominated world?


37 posted on 08/08/2014 6:51:01 AM PDT by dmz
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To: dmz

??

The article said Putin would just be replaced by a carbon copy, so that means it wouldn’t change much.

The EU is nothing, it’s member countries would be better off without it.

The US would thrive if we could throw off Obama and the leftists.


38 posted on 08/08/2014 9:19:10 AM PDT by GeronL (Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
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To: Smokin' Joe

I really hope the UN falls, but what would that look like? They don’t actually have anything. They are just a global community organizer of dictators.


39 posted on 08/08/2014 9:34:48 AM PDT by GeronL (Vote for Conservatives not for Republicans)
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To: SatinDoll

If there’s a quart of oil or an ounce of strategic minerals to be mined from the vast expanse of Siberia, Russia will find a way to maintain its control of it.

It’s a petrostate. What I don’t understand about Putin is how he’s learned very little from what the Saudis learned in the 1970’s - if you prove to be an unreliable supplier of energy, your customers will pivot and figure out another way to do it.

The US used to buy as much as 35% of its oil from the Saudis. Today it is 4% and dropping, and on top of that’ we’ve learned to frack.

Now everybody in Western Europe has started fracking, and the US is going to become an exporter.

There’s a reason why Putin banned western food shipments to Russia - they knew we would do to Russia what we did to the Saudis in the 70’s to break the embargo - we cut off corn and wheat shipments to SA.

He was telegraphing that a food embargo wasn’t going to do the trick this time. Figure out something else.


40 posted on 08/08/2014 9:59:49 AM PDT by RinaseaofDs ((What is the R0 of Ebola Guinea?))
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