Modern
Russian Governance Explained
14
February, 2019
Foreword
by Dmitry Orlov:
We interrupt our regularly scheduled programming to bring you this
translation of a very important article that describes the nature of
modern Russian governance. It is written by one of Vladimir Putin’s
close advisors who is a political expert of considerable stature. It
has been widely (though rather toothlessly) reviled in Western press
(as well wannabe-Western Russian liberal press) but without quoting
the source, which I have only yesterday translated into English. The
author definitely hit a nerve by demolishing the Western democratic
system of “checks and scoundrels” with its illusion of choice and
its ever-vigilant deep state.
——-
Putin’s Lasting State
——-
Putin’s Lasting State
by
Vladislav Surkov
“It
only seems that we have a choice.” These words are amazing in their
depth of meaning and audacity. They were uttered a decade and a half
ago, and today they have been forgotten and are not quoted. But
according to the laws of psychology that which is forgotten affects
us much more than what we remember. And these words, taken far
outside the context in which they were first uttered, have as a
result become the first axiom of the new Russian statehood upon which
have been built all theories and practices of contemporary politics.
The
illusion of choice is the most important of all illusions, the main
trick of the Western way of life in general and Western democracy in
particular, which has for a long time now adhered more closely to the
ideas of P.T. Barnum than to those of Cleisthenes. The rejection of
this illusion in favor of the realism of predestination has led our
society first to reflect upon its own special, sovereign version of
democratic development, and then to completely lose interest in any
discussions on the subject of what democracy should be like and
whether it should exist even in principle.
This
opened up paths toward the free development of the state, directed
not by imported chimeras but by the logic of historical processes, by
that very “art of the possible.” The impossible, unnatural and
counterhistorical disintegration of Russia was, albeit belatedly,
definitively arrested. Having collapsed from the level of the USSR to
the level of the Russian Federation, Russia stopped collapsing,
started to recover and returned to its natural and its only possible
condition: that of a great and growing community of nations that
gathers lands. It is not a humble role that world history has
assigned to our country, and it does not allow us to exit the world
stage or to remain silent among the community of nations; it does not
promise us rest and it predetermines the difficult character of our
governance.
And
so the Russian state continues, now as a new type of state that has
never existed here before. It took form mostly in the middle of the
2000s, and so far it has been little studied, but its uniqueness and
its viability are now apparent. The stress tests which it has passed
and is now passing have shown that this specific, organically arrived
at model of political functioning provides an effective means of
survival and ascension of the Russian nation not just for the coming
years, but for decades and, most likely, for the entire next century.
In
this way, Russian history has by now known four main models of
governance, which can provisionally be named after their creators:
the government of Ivan the Third (the Great Principality/the Kindom
of Moscow and of All Rus, XV-XVII century); the government of Peter
the Great (Russian Empire, XVIII-XIX century); the government of
Lenin (USSR, XX century); and the government of Putin (Russian
Federation, XXI century). Created by people who were, to use Lev
Gumilev’s term, possessed of “long-term willpower,” one after
another these large-scale political machines repaired themselves,
adapted to circumstances along the way and provided for the
relentless ascent of the Russian World.
Putin’s
large-scale political machine is only now revving up and getting
ready for long, difficult and interesting work. Its engagement at
full power is still far ahead, and many years from now Russia will
still be the government of Putin, just as contemporary France still
calls itself the Fifth Republic of de Gaulle, Turkey (although now
ruled by anti-Kemalists) still relies on the ideology of Atatürk’s
“Six Arrows,” and the United States still appeals to the images
and values of its half-legendary “founding fathers.”
What
is needed is a comprehension and a description of Putin’s system of
governance and the entire complex of ideas and dimensions of Putinism
as the ideology of the future—specifically of the future, because
present-day Putin can hardly be considered a Putinist, just as, for
example, Karl Marx was not a Marxist and we can’t be sure that he
would have agreed to be one had he found out what that’s like. But
we need this explanation for the sake of everyone who isn’t Putin
but would like to be like him—and to have the possibility of
applying his methods and approaches in the coming times.
This
description must not be in the form of dueling propagandas—ours vs.
theirs—but in a language that would be perceived as moderately
heretical by both Russian and anti-Russian officialdoms. Such
language can be made acceptable to a sufficiently large audience,
which is exactly what is needed, because the political system that
has been made in Russia is fit to serve not just future domestic
needs but obviously has significant export potential. Demand for it
and for certain specific components of it already exists, its
experience is being studied and partially adopted, and it is being
imitated by both ruling and opposition groups in many countries.
Foreign
politicians accuse Russia of interfering in elections and referenda
throughout the planet. But in reality the situation is even more
serious: Russia interferes with their brains, and they don’t know
what to do with their own transformed consciousness. After the
disastrous 1990s, once Russia turned away from all borrowed
ideologies, it started generating its own ideas and began to
counterattack the West. Since then European and American experts have
been erring in their predictions more and more frequently. They are
surprised and vexed by the paranormal preferences of the electorates.
In confusion, they have sounded the alarm about an outbreak of
populism. They can call it that, if they happen to be at a loss for
words.
Meanwhile,
the interest of foreigners in the Russian political algorithm is easy
to understand: there are no prophets in their lands, but everything
that is happening to them today has been prophesied from Russia a
long time ago.
When
everyone was still in love with globalization and made noise about a
flat world without borders, Moscow pointedly reminded them that
sovereignty and national interests are important. Back then many
people accused us of “naïve” attachment to these old things,
which had supposedly fallen out of fashion long ago. They taught us
that it’s futile to hold on to XIX-century values, but that we
should bravely step into the XXI century, where there supposedly
won’t be any sovereign nations or nation-states. However, the XXI
century is turning out the way we said it would. British Brexit,
American #GreatAgain, anti-immigrant enclosure of Europe—these are
but the first few items in a long list of commonplace manifestations
of deglobalization, re-sovereignization and nationalism.
When
on every corner someone lauded the Internet as an inviolable space of
unlimited freedom, where everyone is allowed to be anyone and all are
equal, it was specifically from Russia that came a sobering question
for Internet-addled humanity: “Who we are on the World Wide Web,
spiders or flies?” And now everyone, including the most
freedom-loving of bureaucracies, is busy trying to untangle the Web
and accusing Facebook of accommodating foreign interlopers. The once
free virtual space, which had been advertised as a prototype of the
coming heaven on Earth, has been seized and cordoned off by
cyber-police and cyber-criminals, cyber-armies and cyber-spies,
cyber-terrorists and cyber-moralists.
When
the hegemony of the “hegemon” was not contested by anyone, the
great American dream of world domination was close to being
fulfilled, and many people hallucinated the end of history with the
final comment of “the people are silent,” in that silence there
came Putin’s Munich speech. At the time it sounded as dissenting,
but today everything in it seems self-evident: nobody is happy with
America, including the Americans themselves.
The
previously little-known Turkish political term derin
devlet has
been popularized by American media. Translated into English as “deep
state” it was then picked up by the Russian media. The term
indicates a harsh, absolutely nondemocratic networked organization of
real authoritarian structures hidden behind showy democratic
institutions. This mechanism, which in practice exerts its authority
through acts of violence, bribery and manipulation, and remains
hidden deep beneath the surface of a hypocritical and simple-minded
civil society which it manipulates while bribing or repressing all
who accuse it.
Having
discovered in their midst an unpleasant “deep state,” Americans
were not particularly surprised, since they have long suspected that
it exists. If there is a “deep net” and a “dark net,” then
why not a “deep state” or even a “dark state”? From the
depths and darkness of this un-exhibited and unadvertised power there
float up shining mirages of democracy special-made for mass
consumption that feature the illusion of choice, the feeling of
freedom, delusions of superiority and so on.
Mistrust
and envy, which democracy uses as prioritized sources of social
energy, inevitably lead to a sharpening of criticism and an increased
level of anxiety. Haters, trolls and the angry bots that have joined
them have formed a screechy majority that has forced out the once
dominant, respectable middle class which once upon a time set quite a
different tone.
Nobody
believes any more in the good intentions of public politicians. They
are envied and are therefore considered corrupt, shrewd, or simply
scoundrels. Popular political serials, such as “The Boss” and
“The House of Cards,” paint correspondingly murky scenes of the
establishment’s day-to-day.
A
scoundrel must not be allowed to go too far for the simple reason
that he is a scoundrel. But when all around you (we surmise) there
are only scoundrels, one is forced to use scoundrels to restrain
other scoundrels. As one pounds out a wedge using another wedge, one
dislodges a scoundrel using another scoundrel… There is a wide
choice of scoundrels and obfuscated rules designed to make their
battles result in something like a tie. This is how a beneficial
system of checks and balances comes about—a dynamic equilibrium of
villainy, a balance of avarice, a harmony of swindles. But if someone
forgets that this is just a game and starts to behave
disharmoniously, the ever-vigilant deep state hurries to the rescue
and an invisible hand drags the apostate down into the murky depths.
There
is nothing particularly frightening in this proposed image of Western
democracy. All you have to do is change your perspective a little,
and it would no longer seem scary. But it leaves a sour feeling, and
a Western citizen starts to spin his head around in search of other
models and other ways of being. And… sees Russia.
Our
system, as in general everything else that’s ours, is no more
graceful, but it is more honest. And although the phrase “more
honest” is not a synonym of “better” for everyone, honesty does
have its charms.
Our
state is not split up into deep and external; it is built as a whole,
with all of its parts and its manifestations facing out. The most
brutal constructions of its authoritarian frame are displayed as part
of the façade, undisguised by any architectural embellishments. The
bureaucracy, even when it tries to do something on the sly, doesn’t
try too hard to cover its tracks, as if assuming that “everyone
understands everything anyway.”
The
great internal tension caused by the need to control huge,
heterogeneous geographic areas, and by the constant participation in
the thick of geopolitical struggle make the military and policing
functions of the government the most important and decisive. In
keeping with tradition, they are not hidden but, quite the opposite,
demonstrated. Businessmen, who consider military pursuits to be of
lesser status than commercial ones, have never ruled Russia (almost
never; the exceptions were a few months in 1917 and a few years in
the 1990s). Neither have liberals (fellow-travelers of businessmen)
whose teachings are based on the negation of anything the least bit
police-like. Thus, there was nobody in charge who would curtain off
the truth with illusions, bashfully shoving into the background and
obscuring as much as possible the main prerogative of any
government—to be a weapon of defense and attack.
There
is no deep state in Russia—all of it is on display—but there is a
deep nation.
On
its shiny surface sparkles the elite which, century after century
(let’s give it its due) has involved the people in its various
undertakings—party conferences, wars, elections, economic
experiments. The deep nation takes part in these undertakings, but
remains somewhat aloof, and doesn’t appear at the surface but leads
it own, completely different life down in its own depths. Two lives
of the nation, one on the surface and one in the depths, sometimes
run in opposite directions, sometimes in the same direction, but they
never merge.
The
deep nation is always as cagey as can be, unreachable for
sociological surveys, agitation, threats or any other form of direct
influence. The understanding of what it is, what it thinks and what
it wants often comes suddenly and too late, and not to those who can
do anything about it.
Rare
is the sociologist who would venture to define whether the deep
nation is equivalent to its population or is a part of it, and if a
part of it, then which one. At different times it was taken to be the
peasants, the proletariat, the non-party-members, the hipsters, the
government employees. People searched for it and tried to engage it.
They called it the executor of God’s will, or just the opposite.
Sometimes they decided that it is fictional and doesn’t exist in
reality, and launched galloping reforms without looking back upon it,
but quickly bashed their foreheads against it and were forced to
concede that “something really does exist.” More than once it
retreated under the press of domestic or foreign conquerors, but it
always came back.
With
its gigantic mass the deep nation creates an insurmountable force of
cultural gravitation which unites the nation and drags and pins down
to earth (to the native land) the elite when it periodically attempts
to soar above it in a cosmopolitan fashion.
Nationhood,
whatever that is taken to mean, is a precursor of the state. It
predetermines its form, restricts the fantasies of theoreticians and
forces practitioners to carry out certain acts. It is a powerful
attractor, and all political trajectories without exception lead back
to it. In Russia, one can set out from any position—conservatism,
socialism, liberalism—but you will always end up with approximately
the same thing. That is, with the thing that actually exists.
The
ability to hear and to understand the nation, to see all the way
through it, through its entire depth, and to act accordingly—that
is the unique and most important virtue of Putin’s government. It
is adequate for the needs of the people, it follows the same course
with it, and this means that it is not subject to destructive
overloads from history’s countercurrents. This makes it effective
and long-lasting.
In
this new system all institutions are subordinated to the main task:
trust-based communication and interaction between the head of state
and the citizens. The various branches of government come together at
the person of the leader and are considered valuable not in and of
themselves but only to the extent to which they provide a connection
with him. Aside from them, and acting around formal structures and
elite groups, operate informal methods of communication. When
stupidity, backwardness or corruption create interference in the
lines of communication with the people, energetic measures are taken
to restore audibility.
The
multilayered political institutions which Russia had adopted from the
West are sometimes seen as partly ritualistic and established for the
sake of looking “like everyone else,” so that the peculiarities
of our political culture wouldn’t draw too much attention from our
neighbors, didn’t irritate or frighten them. They are like a Sunday
suit, put on when visiting others, while at home we dress as we do at
home.
In
essence, society only trusts the head of state. Whether this has
something to do with the pride of an unconquered people, or the
desire to directly access the truth, or anything else, is hard to
say, but it is a fact, and it is not a new fact. What’s new is that
the government does not ignore this fact but takes it into account
and uses it as a point of departure in its undertakings.
It
would be an oversimplification to reduce this theme to the oft-cited
“faith in the good czar.” The deep nation is not the least bit
naïve and definitely does not consider soft-heartedness as a
positive trait in a czar. Closer to the truth is that it thinks of a
good leader the same way as Einstein thought of God: ingenious but
not malicious.
The
contemporary model of the Russian state starts with trust and relies
on trust. This is its main distinction from the Western model, which
cultivates mistrust and criticism. And this is the source of its
power.
Our
new state will have a long and glorious history in this new century.
It will not break. It will act on its own, winning and retaining
prize-winning spots in the highest league of geopolitical struggle.
Sooner or later everyone will be forced to come to terms with
this—including all those who currently demand that Russia “change
its behavior.” Because it only seems as if they have a choice.
Translated
from Russian by Dmitry Orlov, ClubOrlov.com
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