By Jonah
Goldberg
Wednesday,
June 28, 2023
Like
many people, I was glued to the news for much of Saturday, watching what
seemed, at least for a moment, to be the first stages of a coup d’état in
Russia—and it still might be.
The only
thing we know for certain is that if this is the beginning of the end of
Vladimir Putin’s rule, that story won’t begin with the mutinous mercenary
warlord Yevgeny Prigozhin leading an armored column of troops, guns a-blazing,
into Moscow.
The
funniest thing about much of the reporting and commentary of Prigozhin’s “March
For Justice,” both in real-time and afterward, is how often observers described the spectacle as “unprecedented.” The Telegraph’s “Ukraine: The Latest” podcast—the best single source for daily
coverage of the Ukraine war—described the “unprecedented coup against the
Kremlin” at the top of a special Saturday episode, only for the panelists to
start debating which coups from Russian history served as the best precedent
for the unfolding events in Russia.
Even
Putin, in his angry Saturday address, compared Prigozhin’s “stab in the
back” to General Lavr Kornilov’s attempted coup in 1917 that paved the way for the Bolshevik Revolution
and the Russian Civil War.
The
point isn’t to nitpick—“unprecedented” isn’t a synonym for “shocking” or
“momentous”—but to note that you can’t understand what’s unfolding in
Russia unless you take into account that such events have lots of precedent.
Indeed, since at least the 1700s, Russian history is really a story of coups of one sort or another.
In
Western Europe, nobles drew their power and authority from their deep roots in
their feudal territories. They answered to the throne, but they were largely
sovereign over their own holdings. This diffusion of power and legitimacy
created the space for the rise of liberalism and democracy in the West. The
Magna Carta, for instance, was essentially a power-sharing agreement between
King John and his nobles.
In
Russia, under the pomestie system, nobles ruled various regions as
emissaries of the czar, who literally owned all of Russia. Russian pomeshchiki were
more like colonial governors, or warlord-contractors, with little connection
to, or interest in, the serfs and peasants they exploited.
“All the
things that connected the nobility of feudal Europe to a village or county –
networks of charity and patronage, parish life, corporate bodies and local
government, in short everything that fosters regional identities and loyalties
– were thus missing in Russia,” writes Orlando Figes in his masterful The Story of Russia. “It was only from the middle of the nineteenth
century that these local networks and identities began to evolve – too late, as
it turned out, to sustain the development of an independent civil society or a
democratic form of government.”
Thus,
Figes observes, the “persistence of autocracy in Russia is explained less by
the state’s strength than by the weakness of society.”
A
parallel dynamic can be seen in the evolution of religion in Western Europe, where
the authority of the church and the authority of monarchs were in constant
tension. In Russia, no such tension existed because the czar was simultaneously
the supreme religious authority and secular ruler to the point where the
distinction between secular and religious did not exist.
Seen
from this perspective, Soviet rule, particularly under Stalin, was more of a
continuation of Russian history than a break with it. Putin sees himself in
this light, which explains why he lionizes both czarist and communist history
without any sense of contradiction.
This
political tradition not only makes it very hard for Westerners to understand
the Russian mind, it makes it hard to understand what the hell is going on
there. We tend to see power as something granted from below, primarily through
elections. Power is held accountable by the press but also competing spheres of
power via divided government, checks and balances, and the rule of law. In
Russia, power is unitary and seized from the top. Elections—if they occur
at all—and the press are propaganda tools used to ratify the unitary power of
the ruler.
Liberal
democracies are designed to be adaptive, flexible, or resilient under
stress. Russian autocracy is like marble, extremely strong, but also very
brittle. That’s why cracks in the perception of power, often after military
setbacks, can quickly lead to real collapses in power.
Putin
and his apologists have assumed that time is on Russia’s side in the war with
Ukraine. On paper, it can look that way militarily. But Ukraine and its Western
backers have proven strong and supple while Putin’s Russia looks more brittle
by the day. The Wagner incident is not likely to be the last crack we’ll see in
Putin’s façade.
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