The Economist - UK (2022-03-26)

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82 The Economist March 26th 2022
Culture


UnderstandingRussia’spresident

Greyness, greed and grievance


H


e warned us. Vladimir Putin gave no­
tice  of  who  he  was,  and  what  he  was
capable of, in “First Person”, a transcript of
interviews  published  in  2000,  at  the  start
of  his  overlong  rule.  In  his  youth,  he  re­
called, he had been a tough little hoodlum
who fought rats in the stairwell of his com­
munal­apartment  building  and,  later,
brawled  with  strangers  on  the  streets  of
Leningrad. “A dog senses when somebody
is afraid of it,” he had learned, “and bites.”
He  prized  loyalty  and  feared  betrayal.  He
was  hypersensitive  to  slights,  to  both  his
country  and  himself  (concepts  which,  in
the  decades  that  followed,  became  peril­
ously blurred). He bore grudges.
One of them was over the collapse of the
Soviet  Union.  In  the  interviews  he  remi­
nisced about a jaunt to Abkhazia and a judo
tournament in Moldova: the Soviet empire
had been his wealth and pride, and when it
fell,  he  took  it  hard.  “I  wanted  something
different to rise in its place,” he said of the
lost  Soviet  influence  in  eastern  Europe.

Frantically burning papers as a kgbofficer
in Dresden in 1989, grieving the “paralysis
of  power”  that  seemed  to  have  afflicted
Moscow,  he  came  to  associate  protesting
crowds  with  disintegration.  Corruption,
meanwhile,  was  only  to  be  expected  in
Russia,  he  implied—“and  if  somebody
thinks that somebody stole something, let
him go and prove it.”
Sometimes  the  Mr  Putin  of  “First  Per­
son”  appears  frank,  at  others,  cagey  and
withdrawn. Few people knew him well; he
was seen as a grey man, inscrutable. Grey­
ness, grievance and the greed of corruption
have  been  the  dominant  themes  in  books

The West has struggled to grasp the threat posed by Vladimir Putin,
as a bibliography of his long rule shows

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written  about  him  in  English  since.  As  he
amassed  resentments,  secrets,  assets  and
fears,  the  emphasis  on  these  features  has
shifted.  Looking  back  at  a  bibliography  of
Mr  Putin  shows  how  he  has  been
changed—or  exaggerated—by  power,  and
how  haltingly  the  world  has  grasped  the
threat he poses. 
As Mr Putin rose without trace from St
Petersburg  to  Moscow  in  the  1990s,  then
from the leadership of the fsb(the princi­
pal successor to the kgb) to the presidency,
greyness was the main tone. Given his oxy­
moronic  slogans,  such  as  “managed
democracy”  and  the  “dictatorship  of  the
law”,  and  his  moves  to  neuter  Russia’s
media,  courts,  parliament  and  oligarchs,
observers rarely mistook him for a genuine
democrat.  But  some  saw  his  co­operation
with  the  West  after  the  September  11th
attacks as the start of a permanent realign­
ment,  not  just  a  tactical  feint.  Many  were
slow to realise that his abuses were bound
to seep across Russia’s borders.
In “Putin: Russia’s Choice” (2004) Rich­
ard Sakwa thought the country had shaken
off  nationalism  and  imperialism;  he  was
confident its economic modernisation and
global  integration  would  continue.
Andrew  Jack  was  warier  in  “Inside  Putin’s
Russia”  (2004),  noting  Mr  Putin’s  demo­
cratic backsliding and disregard for human
rights.  The  “contradictions  of  economic
liberalism  and  political  authoritarianism
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