By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, February 21, 2024
Alexei
Navalny didn’t simply die. He wasn’t just murdered. He was tortured to death.
It
didn’t happen on the rack or mid-beating, but Vladimir Putin—who had tried to
eliminate him before—slowly killed Navalny all the same.
Putin
sent the Russian dissident and anti-corruption activist to the gulag with the
aim of grinding him down with hard labor, isolation, hunger, and shabby medical
care until he died. Russia’s claims that he died from “sudden death syndrome,”
even if true, change nothing, given that being
poisoned with a Soviet-era nerve agent (2020) and thrown
into an Arctic labor camp (2023) presumably increases one’s chances of
falling prey to SDS.
The
question of whether the timing of Navalny’s death was deliberate matters
geopolitically, but not morally.
If
Putin ordered Navalny’s death Friday, it might shed light on his state of mind.
Was Putin sending a message in advance of next month’s “election” in Russia?
Does that message reflect confidence or insecurity? Was Putin buoyed by his
recent military successes in Ukraine or his related political victories in the
U.S. Congress? Perhaps Navalny’s death was a thumb in the eye of the West timed
to coincide with the Munich Security Conference?
Or,
was he, as some Russian
propagandists have speculated, somehow motivated by the insidiously
insipid comments of Tucker Carlson a
few days earlier?
On
his way back from interviewing Putin and celebrating Russia’s superiority to
America in a series of embarrassing videos about Moscow supermarkets and
subways, Carlson appeared at a forum in Dubai. Asked why he hadn’t questioned
Putin about the then-still-alive Navalny, Carlson shrugged, “Every leader kills
people. Some kill more than others. Leadership requires killing people.” No
doubt Putin agrees.
At
minimum, if Putin didn’t want the world to know about Navalny’s death last
Friday, the world would not know about it. The revelation is a statement unto
itself.
What
Navalny’s death—and his life!—says
about Putin’s Russia should be obvious to anyone who doesn’t believe
“leadership requires killing.”
What
it says about the moral rot on parts of the American right is another matter.
For numerous right-wing and Republican figures, the real lesson of Navalny’s
killing is that “Navalny = Trump,” in the words of Trump-pardoned writer
Dinesh D’Souza. “The plan of the Biden regime and the Democrats is to
ensure their leading political opponent dies in prison. There’s no real
difference between the two cases.”
Former
House Speaker Newt Gingrich concurred,
saying Navalny’s death “is a brutal reminder that jailing your political
opponents is inhumane and a violation of every principle of a free society.
Watch the Biden Administration speak out against Putin and his jailing of his
leading political opponent while Democrats in four different jurisdictions try
to turn President Trump into an American Navalny. The hypocrisy and corruption
of the left is astonishing.”
D’Souza
and Gingrich were hardly alone in
indulging this grotesque exercise in Soviet-style propaganda. On Monday, Trump
himself invoked the comparison on social media. His first mention of Navalny’s
name wasn’t to condemn his death or Putin’s role in it, but to cast himself
as an American Navalny. “The sudden death of Alexei Navalny has made me
more and more aware of what is happening in our Country,” he declared before
spewing the usual self-serving grievances.
Condemning
such false moral equivalence was once central to American conservatism. Ronald
Reagan’s U.N. ambassador, Jeane
Kirkpatrick, and National Review founder William
F. Buckley led those denouncing the anti-Americanism inherent in
equating undemocratic and democratic regimes. When someone told
Buckley that the U.S. and USSR were the same because they both spend a
lot on the military he replied, “That’s like saying that the man who pushed old
ladies out of the way of an incoming bus is like the man who pushes old ladies
into the way of an incoming bus. Both push old ladies around.”
Trump
is not an innocent anti-corruption crusader brutalized and murdered for
championing democracy and the rule of law. Nor does Moscow’s subway system—built
with slave labor—pose some grand indictment of America, as Carlson insinuated.
There
are ample plausible criticisms of the legal cases against Trump, but even if
you agree with all of them (I don’t), the notion that Joe Biden is the moral
equivalent of Vladimir Putin is a slander, not merely of Biden but of America
itself. Indeed, one reason we know it’s not true: Publicly criticizing Putin’s
treatment of Navalny can land you in a Russian jail cell. Criticizing Biden’s
(alleged) treatment of Trump can land you in a Fox News studio.
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