The Economist - UK (2022-03-26)

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The Economist March 26th 2022 Culture 83

will eventually clash”, he predicted. But he
judged this “liberal Chekist” to be more re­
liable than his predecessor, Boris Yeltsin.
The  comparison  was  widespread:  out­
siders’  sanguine  views  of  Mr  Putin  were
initially  coloured  by  a  feeling  that  things
had been worse, and could yet be again. He
seemed caught in a familiar Russian alter­
nation  between  embracing  and  rejecting
the  West.  The  question  seemed  to  be  how
useful  or  obstructive  he  would  prove  to
Western  plans—not  whether  he  might  try
to remake the world.


Darkness and the don
David  Satter  was  among  the  first  Anglo­
phone analysts to gauge the evil in the sys­
tem. In “Darkness at Dawn” he accused the
fsbof  orchestrating  a  string  of  bombings
in  Russia  in  1999  that  killed  around  300
people  and  ignited  the  second  Chechen
war—thus helping Mr Putin, who oversaw
the fighting, to secure the presidency. Few
were  ready  to  digest  that  theory;  several
Russians  who  pursued  it  came  to  a  sticky
end.  (Swap  the  word  “Ukraine”  for
“Chechnya”,  and  Mr  Putin’s  comments  on
the  war  in  “First  Person”  eerily  fit  today’s
carnage  and  lies.  His  “historical  mission”
was  to  prevent  Russia’s  collapse,  he
claimed;  what  might  look  like  aggression
was really self­defence.)
In  time  writers  understood  that  all  of
Mr Putin’s Russia, not just Chechnya, was
ruled  through  power  rather  than  by  the
law.  As  the  rackets  and  redistribution  of
wealth became brazen, and the lifestyles of
insiders pharaonic, greed ousted greyness
as  the  main  motif  in  commentary.  The
mafia became the preferred analogy for Mr
Putin’s clique of siloviki, or strongmen.
In “The Man Without a Face” (2012), for
instance,  Masha  Gessen  characterised  Mr
Putin,  then  set  to  reclaim  the  presidency
after  a  pro­forma  stint  as  prime  minister,
as a killer and extortionist. This version of
him—a kgbthug turned mafia godfather—
had  been  “hidden  in  plain  sight”,  but  ob­
scured  by  wishful  thinking  and  that  grey
veneer.  Death  and  terror  were  politically
useful  to  Mr  Putin,  the  author  wrote.  He
made  no  distinction  between  the  state’s
interests and his own.  
The  gangster  network  was  definitively
elaborated  in  “Putin’s  People”  (2020).  In
the system of “kgbcapitalism” that Cather­
ine  Belton  described,  government  in  Rus­
sia was a machine for extracting rents and
expropriating  assets,  politics  a  squabble
over  who  got  them,  and  the  president  its
referee. The silovikiwere bound together by
a regime of mutual blackmail, in which se­
crets were both weapons and liabilities; for
his  part,  Mr  Putin  had  spilled  too  much
blood  and  made  too  many  enemies  to  re­
tire.  Besides  self­enrichment,  the  spoils
were  used  to  undermine  the  West,  black
cash  sloshing  around  the  world  to  fund


“active  measures”  and  the  “restoration  of
the country’s global position”.
The  third  characteristic—grievance—
was  always  visible  too.  Notoriously,  in
2005  Mr  Putin  described  the  fall  of  the
Soviet  Union  as  “the  greatest  geopolitical
catastrophe of the 20th century”. After an­
nexing  Crimea  in  2014,  he  said  the  Soviet
collapse  had  left  Russia  pillaged  and
shamed.  But  the  fact  that  his  imperial
bluster  was  much  more  than  camouflage
for graft, and where it might lead, took far
too long to sink in.
In  “The  New  Tsar”  (2015),  Steven  Lee
Myers  perceptively  identified  the  Orange
revolution  in  Ukraine  in  2004  as  a  break­
ing­point.  Huge  protests  overturned  the
result of an election rigged in favour of Mr
Putin’s  candidate.  The  reversal  combined
personal  humiliation  with  a  geopolitical
rebuff; his fear of crowds, and sense of the
jeopardy of democracy, were inflamed.
He  “nursed  the  experience  like  a
grudge”,  Mr  Lee  Myers  wrote,  tightening
the screws in Russia, ramping up his pro­
paganda and setting up tame youth move­
ments  to  dominate  the  streets.  Mr  Putin’s
bleak Chekist mindset could not admit the
possibility  that  Ukrainians  were  turning
West—and rejecting him—of their own vo­
lition.  Convinced  that  the  ciahad  paid  or
cajoled  them,  he  embarked  on  a  spiral  of
meddling that culminated in the latest in­
vasion. By 2014, thought Mr Lee Myers, he
had  found  a  “millenarian”  mission  as  the
indispensable  leader  of  an  exceptional
power.  “The  question  now  was  where
would Putin’s policy stop?”
Among chroniclers of the Putin imperi­
um,  Clifford  Gaddy  and  Fiona  Hill  best
guessed  the  answer.  In  “Mr  Putin:  Opera­
tive  in  the  Kremlin”  (2015),  they  saw  his
efforts  to  make  Russia’s  economy  more
resilient, and to eliminate domestic oppo­

sition, as a long­haul preparation for con­
fronting  the  West.  His  bid  to  undermine
Western democracies through fifth colum­
nists,  bribery  and  kompromatwas  part  of
the  same  strategy.  The  greyness,  they
wrote,  had  always  been  tactical:  Mr  Putin
was  “the  ultimate  political  performance
artist”, his mercurial public persona a way
to keep his adversaries off­balance.
Mr Gaddy and Ms Hill—who became the
top  Russia  adviser  in  Donald  Trump’s  Na­
tional  Security  Council—concluded  that
he  was  more  than  an  avaricious  gangster.
His objective was to survive and overcome
his foes, who, in his view, were Russia’s en­
emies  too;  to  that  end  he  was  waging  a
long,  hybrid  war  against  the  West.  He
would  pounce  on  weaknesses,  the  pair
warned,  and  fulfil  his  threats.  “He  won’t
give  up,  and  he  will  fight  dirty.”  Yet  even
these  authors  judged  that,  if  only  for
reasons  of  trade,  Mr  Putin  “does  not  want
Russia to end up being a pariah state”.  

The tsar’s ratchet
In  retrospect,  only  the  optimists  got  it
wrong. As the novice president, squirming
in his suit, aged and ossified into a Botoxed
monster—if  with  the  same  villainous
smile—the greyness faded out of his bibli­
ography.  Greed  and  grievance  took  over.
What  outside  observers  missed,  though,
was  how  much,  over  two  decades,  the
ratcheting  effects  of  power  would  exacer­
bate these old features.
According  to  the  inexorable  logic  of
authoritarianism,  Mr  Putin’s  domestic  re­
pression  grew  ever  more  severe.  He  be­
came  more  isolated,  both  diplomatically
and among his advisers. He threw off mor­
al  constraints  in  his  military  campaigns.
The  nationalist  rhetoric  hardened  into  an
apocalyptic  ideology,  which  reached  deep
into  history  and  cast  Russia  as  a  bulwark
against  the  decadent  West.  His  fear  of
crowds became a sort of narcissistic para­
noia.  He  accumulated  grudges—not  least,
against  Ukraine—and  stuck  around  long
enough to avenge them. 
Meanwhile the costs to his people—real
Russians,  rather  than  those  of  a  stylised
past—have  mounted.  His  regime  has  al­
ways  looted  the  country’s  resources  and
lied to its citizens, with a contempt typical
of authoritarians. As Russia’s soldiers per­
ish  on  a  needless  battlefield  and  its  civil­
ians  face  ostracism,  the  callousness  has
become  starker.  Beyond  books  about  the
Kremlin,  one  insight  into  that  treatment
comes from the school of German histori­
ans,  including  Sebastian  Haffner,  who
found  a  psychological  rationale  for  the
devastation Hitler visited on Germany: his
rage,  they  concluded,  had  always  been
partly directed at his own country. The ruin
Mr Putin is inflicting on Russia (even as he
terrorises  Ukraine)  can  be  viewed  in  the
Voting like it’s 1999 same  light.  He  says  he  loves  the  mother­
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