The Economist December 18th 2021 Holidayessay 33
MrPutin’sreturntothepresidencyin 2012 cameata timewhen
theglobalfinancialcrisishadchokedtheRussianeconomy.The
riggingofRussia’sparliamentaryelectionstheyearbefore,and
theprospectofMrPutin’sreturn,hadseentensofthousandstake
tothestreets. AndtheWest,spookedbytheincreasedbelligerence
RussiahadshowninGeorgia,wastakinga keeninterestinUk
raine.Theeuofferedthecountryanassociationagreementwhich
wouldallowUkrainianstoenjoythebenefitsofa deepandcom
prehensivefreetradeagreementandfreetravelacrossEurope.
Ayearearliera groupofeconomistshadtoldMrPutinthata
customsunionwithUkrainewouldbea smartmove.Whatwas
more,sucha dealwouldprecludeUkraine’sassociationwiththe
eu. Pursuingit wasthusa wayforMrPutintoachievethreethings
atonce:pushbackagainsttheWest;giveRussiaa victorythat
wouldproveitsimportance;andhelptheeconomy.
TimeforsomeSlavicunity.WhenMrPutinflewtoKyivfora
twodayvisitinJuly2013,hisentouragecontainedbothhischief
economicadviserandthepatriarchofRussia’sOrthodoxChurch,
whosejurisdictioncoveredbothcountries. Thetripcoincided
withthe1,025thanniversaryoftheconversiontoChristianityof
PrinceVladimiroftheKyivanRus,andsubsequentlyofthepeople
asa whole,in988:the“BaptismofRus”.WithMrYanukovychhe
visitedthecathedralinChersonesus,thesiteinCrimeawhere
PrinceVladimirissaidtohavebeenbap
tised.HeandthepatriarchalsovisitedKyiv
PecherskLavra,amonasteryfoundedin
cavesa millenniumago.
Thecommitmenthegavetheretopro
tecting “our common Fatherland, Great
Rus”wasnotwithoutirony.Whenin 1674
monksattheLavrapublishedthe“Synop
sis”,thefirstdemotichistoryofRussia,the
citywasunderthreatofattackbytheOtto
manempireanddesperatelyneededsup
portfromtheRussianlandstothenorth.
The“Synopsis”soughttoencourageSlavic
solidaritybystressingtheimportanceof
VladimirandhisvirtuousKyivanRusto
KyivandMuscovyalike—somethinghisto
rianslikeMrPlokhynowseeasexpedient
mythmaking.MrPutinwascynicallymin
ing a mythos itself contrived for political ends.
Mr Yanukovych did not want to be Russia’s vassal. Nor did he
share western Europe’s values—especially when applied to mat
ters of anticorruption. But eventually he had to choose a side. At a
secret meeting in Moscow in November 2013, as European leaders
were preparing to sign their agreement with Ukraine, he was
promised a $15bn credit line with $3bn paid up front. He ditched
the European deal. And at 4am on November 30thhis goons blud
geoned a few dozen students protesting against his betrayal in Ky
iv’s Independence Square, known as Maidan.
By “turning into Lukashenko”, as one journalist put it, Mr Ya
nukovych crystallised the choice facing Ukraine: dignity? Or sub
servience? Tents sprang up on Maidan. Volunteers distributed
food and clothes. Oligarchs, afraid that a deal with Russia would
see their illgotten gains stolen from them, tried to restrain Mr Ya
nukovych. Mr Putin pressed him to use force. Mr Yanukovych
dithered until, on February 18th, Kyiv went up in flames. Nobody
agrees on who fired the first shot. But by the third day of violence
around 130 people were dead, mostly on the protesters’ side, and
Mr Yanukovych—to everyone’s surprise—had fled Kyiv.
This was far worse, for Mr Putin, than the Orange revolution.
Ukraine had made geopolitical reality, to coin a phrase, of the in
dependence it had claimed two decades before. Its demands for
dignity resonated with Russia’s middle class and some of its elite,
making it a genuinely dangerous example. So Mr Putin annexed
Crimea and started a war in Donbas.
economy was a condition for freedom, not a substituteforit.His
successor, Vladimir Putin, also embraced capitalism.Buthesaw
no need for it to bring freedom with it, and hadnoproblemwitha
state run through repression and lies. He thusreversedYeltsin’s
democratic project and, though not at first territoriallyimperialist
himself, took the country down the other side ofBrzezinski’sfork.
It is that which puts Russia and its Slavic neighboursinsucha par
lous position today.
One of Brzezinski’s problems with Yeltsin’sRussiawas“that
the emerging capitalist class in Russia is strikinglyparasitic”.By
the time Mr Putin became president in 2000 Russiawasrunbyan
oligarchic elite which saw the state as a source ofpersonalenrich
ment. But when pollsters asked people what theyexpectedoftheir
incoming president, reducing this corruption wasnottheirhigh
est priority. The standing of the state was. Russianswanted a
strong state and one respected abroad. As MrPutin’ssuccessful
manifesto put it, “A strong state is not an anomalytofightagainst.
Society desires the restoration of the guiding,organisingroleof
the state.” When, shortly after his election, MrPutinrestoredthe
Soviet anthem, it was not as a symbol of revertingtocentralplan
ning or rebuilding an empire. It was a signal thatthestrongstate
was back. State power did not mean the rule oflawora climateof
fairness. It did not have, or need, an ideology. Butitdidhaveto
take on some of the “geopolitical reality”
that the meeting in Viskuli had stripped
from the Soviet Union.
The strong state which provided an ef
fective cover for kleptocracy in Mr Putin’s
Russia was not an option for Mr Kuchma’s
similarly oligarchic Ukraine. It had no real
history as a state, let alone a strong one. Its
national myth was one of Cossacks riding
free. So in Ukraine the stealing was instead
dressed up in terms of growing into that
distinctive national identity. The essence
of the argument was simple. As Mr Kuch
ma put it in a book published in 2003, “Uk
raine is not Russia”.
This was not an attack on Russia. Ukrai
nians liked Russia. Polls showed that they
admired Mr Putin more than they did Mr
Kuchma. It was just a way of defining things that put the nation
first. And Mr Putin had no problem with it. Ukraine might not be
Russia, but it was not significantly different from Russia, let alone
threateningly so. It was just a bit more corrupt and chaotic.
The degree to which Ukraine was not Russia became clearer,
though, in 2004, when a rigged presidential election saw hun
dreds of thousands of Ukrainians protesting in the streets. Mr
Kuchma could have used force against them; Mr Putin encouraged
him to do so. But various considerations, including Western op
probrium, argued against it. Perhaps most fundamental was his
sense that, as a Ukrainian president, he could not thus divide the
Ukrainian nation. He stayed his hand and allowed a second vote.
Viktor Yushchenko, proWestern and Ukrainianspeaking, beat
Viktor Yanukovych, a corrupt thug from Donbas (the easternmost
part of the country and, save Crimea, the most ethnically Russian)
who had claimed victory the first time round. The “Orange revolu
tion”, as the protest came to be known, was a serious setback for
Mr Putin—all the more so when a similar uprising in Georgia, the
Rose revolution, put another proWestern state on his borders.
In 2008 Mr Putin took a constitutionally enforced break from
the presidency, swapping jobs with Dmitri Medvedev, his prime
minister. The shift did not stop him from overseeing a war against
Georgia that summer. In 2010, though, the Orange revolution be
came, in retrospect, a somewhat Pyrrhic victory. Mr Yushchenko
proved a sufficiently poor president that in 2010 Mr Yanukovych
was able to beat him in a free and fair election.
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