Surviving Russia’s Drift
– Democracy to Fascism
By Alexander J. Motyl
Back in 1993-1994, Vladimir Zhirinovsky’s sudden rise to
prominence and the resonance that his openly chauvinistic and revanchist
views found among elements of the Russian public gave rise to talk of a “Weimar Russia.”
Zhirinovsky quickly self-destructed, and the Weimar Russia image soon faded.
Unfortunately, it may be time to speak of a far more worrisome phenomenon — a
post-Weimar, or even fascist Russia.
Contemporary Russia is remarkably similar to post-World
War I Germany. Both countries emerged from imperial collapse and regime change
and experienced massive economic hardship and political chaos. Their
populations felt humiliated and their imperial identities were battered, and
they responded by blaming their enemies, former colonies, disloyal minorities —
and democracy. Both countries turned to nationalist, chauvinist, revanchist
and neo-imperialist rhetoric, and embraced charismatic leaders promising to
re-establish national glory, rebuild state power, and command international
respect. Both rulers promptly abandoned democracy — to the applause of the
majority of their populations.
These similarities suggest that it may be time to
abandon such terms as managed or sovereign or hybrid democracy for today’s Russia. Even
the term “authoritarian” may not be fully adequate. There are good reasons to
think that PresidentVladimir Putin’s Russia is acquiring all the
characteristics of a fascist state.
Fascist states are non-democratic and
hyper-nationalist and they glory in their greatness, but the most striking
thing about them is their leader and his relationship with the population. The
“supreme leaders” of fascist states always exude vigour and, by playing on
popular fears, manage to implicate the population in its own repression.
Fascist leaders claim to be youthful, manly, and active, and they form mass
movements based on the young. And fascist leaders are wildly popular,
successfully presenting themselves as embodiments of a nation’s best qualities.
Putin’s Russia shares most of these
features. As the recent parliamentary elections showed, its democratic
institutions have become pliant tools of The Kremlin. The siloviki
dominate all ruling elites, Putin is the undisputed “national leader,” the
Nashi youth movement has taken off, the Russian state is the object of official
glorification. Hyper-nationalism, mistrust of foreigners and glorification of Russia’s
Stalinist past have become official.
Although Putin’s Russia possesses many of the
defining characteristics of fascism, they have not yet congealed into a
consolidated political system. Russia
today resembles Germany in
1933 or Italy
in the mid-1920s. Russia
could follow in their footsteps, or it could falter and find its way back to
some form of democracy. Everything depends on whether Putin stays or really
goes in the spring of 2008. If he stays, Russia will have taken another step
toward full-fledged fascism. If he goes, Russian democracy will have gotten a
slight reprieve.
Although fascism makes Russia look strong, it is also the
source of several weaknesses. All fascist states scare their neighbours by
their proclivity to engage in chest-beating. The tougher Russia gets, the
tougher it sounds, and the more it gets involved in playing the great power that
it no longer is—the greater the gap between its aspirations and capabilities
and the greater the likelihood of overreach and foreign-policy disaster. The
resulting militarism, fear of encirclement and tensions will, in the medium- to
long-term, deplete and distort the economy, waste scarce resources and
ultimately undermine the state.
Leadership cults only work as long as the
founding leaders are still vigorous. When supreme leaders falter — as they
inevitably do — or leave the scene, successor elites engage in cutthroat
competition to assume the mantle of authority. The next two years will be
especially difficult for Russia,
as it copes with a genuinely post-Putin political system or with a seemingly
post-Putin system still run by Putin.
Humiliation is a weak foundation on which to
build state and leader legitimacy. Although Russians currently want the
reassuring guidance of a “vozhd” (chief), sooner or later they will
cease feeling humiliated.
The West should learn from its response to
Hitler. The democracies of interwar Europe may not have been able to prevent
his rise, but they could have prevented Germany’s
expansion into the Rhineland, Austria,
and Czechoslovakia.
Today’s democracies — and above all Germany
and France — must finally
realize that Russia
is not democratic.
The West must also appreciate that a fully
fascist Russia is an
immediate threat to its neighbours — the non-Russian states of the former
Soviet Union and Eastern Europe. Russia’s neighbours — and Ukraine and Belarus
in particular — must therefore become at least as important to the
foreign-affairs and business establishments of Europe and the US as is Russia.
If Ukraine,
Belarus, and Russia’s other non-Russian neighbours remain
prosperous, stable, and sovereign, Russia’s
fascist tendencies will play themselves out within Russia — possibly leading to the
country’s implosion. Russians, who deserve better, will be the losers, but at
least they’ll be the only losers.
Alexander J. Motyl is a professor of political
science at Rutgers University in Newark, NJ.