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The Realist Bibliophile: Getting to
Know Vladimir Putin
Guest Reviewer: Peter Lavelle
A textbook on current political affairs can be a
publisher's nightmare. However, coming out in its second
edition, Putin's
Russia: Past
Imperfect, Future Uncertain
(edited by Dale R. Herspring -- 2nd ed., Rowman &
Littlefield Publishers) has stood the test of quickly
changing events. Whether this volume is commenting on
the latest breaking news or on the origins of nagging
unsolved problems, it has the analytical scope and
intellectual rigor needed for those asking the
questions: "who is Putin?" and "where is Russia going?"
For most observers of contemporary
Russia,
Vladimir Putin remains an unexplained political figure.
There appear to be two overriding issues about Putin
found throughout this volume: the necessity of Putin's
reform project for Russia (and the hope that he will
succeed) and the growing concern that his reform project
may be slowly, but very surely, drifting away from core
Western values concerning the importance of democratic
principles, an open and free civil society, an
independent media and a competitive market economy.
The scholars contributing chapters address both these
issues. All of them, to one degree or another, possess
an understanding of the motives behind Putin's
decision-making mindset. However, there is little
consensus on the thorny question of whether Putin's
vision for Russia is good for the country's future and
that of the rest of the world.
Timothy J. Colton and Michael McFaul grapple with one of
the most pressing issues concerning Western publics,
politicians and analysts in this area: to what degree is
Russia a democracy? In "Putin and Democratization,"
Colton
and McFaul have no clear answer, but are clearly of the
opinion that Russia is moving away from earlier trends
that are believed to have been signs of democratic
development during the 1990s.
Thomas F. Remington's "Putin, the Duma, and Political
Parties" asks the same question in terms of the
institutionalization of democracy found or not found in
the Russia's Parliament, the Duma, and comes to, more or
less, to the same conclusion.
Nikolai Petrov and Darrell Slider, in "Putin and the
Regions," are even more alarmist in their concerns
surrounding Kremlin ploys to crush regional autonomy.
In what is otherwise superb analysis, Colton, McFaul,
Remington, Petrov and Slider tend – as Western scholars
often do – to over ideologize what should be expected of
Russia's democracy during a time when the direction of
the country's economic development remains far from
clear. Putin's Russia is not a country to be merely
measured by textbook edicts or homespun hopes that its
form of democracy should eventually resemble that of the
United States
and/or other Western countries.
Putin is clearly not anti-democratic. However, he has
shown himself to be indifferent toward democratic
institutions or a democratic ethos to the extent that he
believes that they will hinder his implementation of his
vision of a more dynamic and modern Russian economy.
Putin is often severely criticized for his
interventionist approach toward Russia's mass media,
particularly the electronic media. McFaul and journalist
Masha Lipman, in "Putin and the Media," present a
detailed review of the history of the relations between
Putin and the media -- the latter once controlled by the
oligarchs. They also inject a dose of skepticism as to
whether Putin respects anything resembling a Western
understanding of free expression in his country.
However, both get carried away a bit. They make a very
counterfactual, intriguing claim, which is never
followed up: "Putin could have disciplined or brought to
justice Russia's oligarchs without destroying their
media empires." Additionally, virtually all critics of
Putin's media approach fail to ask a fundamental
question when it comes to the media's role in any
society: are citizens provided enough information about
the condition of society to make informed decisions? In
fact, they are. If Lipman and McFaul approached Russia
media from this perspective, their assessment would not
sound as catastrophic as it seems they would have
readers believe.
James R. Millar, in "Putin and the Economy," and Peter
Rutland, in "Putin and the Oligarchs," discuss the
essence of Putin's economic strategy. Millar makes the
claim that Putin is explicitly aware of the reasons for
economic failure under the different leaderships of
Nikita Khrushchev, Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin
and is consciously seeking an alternative policy. (Most
probably, Putin is using the economic chaos of the 1990s
as a negative model when making economic decisions.)
The strength of this chapter lies in Millar's
understanding of the "Yukos affair" as it started to
unfold. He draws attention to what is probably the most
vexing issue concerning Yukos and its core shareholder:
"After the fact, and especially five to 10 years after
the fact, de-privatization poses a true dilemma for the
leadership: Legitimacy of private ownership and
protections of property rights in general versus popular
demand for an equitable distribution of property that
was, under the Soviet state, public property."
In more ways than one, Rutland picks up where Millar
ends. Probably the best scholar of Russian business,
Rutland first presents a panoramic history of "economic
oligarchy" in post-Soviet Russia and then assesses the
relative utility of this phenomenon in terms of Putin's
economic goals.
This chapter was written without the Yukos affair in
mind, but ends on a note that gets as close to prophesy
as possible in Russian studies: "It's not clear whether
the slow pace of change is because Putin does not
understand the need for further reform, or because he
still lacks the political authority to carry it out."
This piece certainly doesn't explain the Yukos affair,
but it does explain the probable reason for it having
unfolded in the first place.
If it had not been for some major changes in Russia's
top military brass in July of this year, many would have
read Dale R. Herspring's timely chapter "Putin and
Military Reform" with some bewilderment. Reforming
Russia's still very Soviet military establishment and
mindset has always been an important policy agenda of
Putin's presidency. In reading this chapter, readers are
presented with a comprehensive "story behind the story"
of the recent shake-up of the Russian military, which is
still in a state of enormous flux and wracked by
indecision.
Very much in the same vein, Jacob W. Kipp reviews the
most tragic -- and seemingly never-ending -- feature of
Russia's recent history in "Putin and Russia's Wars in
Chechnya." Kipp breaks no new ground in this chapter,
nor does he suggest an alternative policy agenda the
Kremlin should pursue to put an end to Chechnya's
nightmare. However, the narrative is rich in details and
puts the Chechen Wars into international perspective.
However, there is one glaring omission -- the Kremlin's
experiment with "Chechenization" under recently
assassinated strongman Akhmad Kadyrov.
"Putin and Russian Foreign Policy" by Herspring and
Rutland remind us how masterfully Putin has played the
weak hand Russia inherited from the Soviet collapse. The
Herspring-Rutland duo also looks at how Putin has
selectively (and most often successfully) engaged the
West without losing sight of Russia's desire to reassert
itself in a quickly evolving international system. Putin
-- mirroring his domestic policy -- appreciates the room
to maneuver that uncertainty and change in international
politics can bring Russia with very little commitment
and cost.
Three important areas are covered in this volume that
are rarely given much hearing beyond specialty journals
publications - culture, agriculture and demographics.
Boris Lanin's "Putin and Culture" is heavy on
description and a bit light on analysis concerning what
many in Russia and the West have come to identify as
Putin's "cult of personality." There is no doubt the
Kremlin, most likely Putin himself, demands a positive
image of the president in the electronic media. However,
we are never really told what is wrong with this or why
Putin's "cult" is really novel, given Russia's tradition
of lavishing praise on its leaders.
One of the most tightly written and focused pieces in
this volume is Stephen L. Wegren's "Putin and
Agriculture." For those interested in Russian
agriculture, Wegren's article is a sure delight.
However, for the rest of us, the value of this piece
lies in its approach, tackling as it does first the
problem, then the reform strategies and finally the
results. Unlike the rest of this book, Wegren presents a
Putin reform package that has been an overlooked success
-- a Russia that is again agriculturally self-sufficient
and a net exporter.
Most observers would agree that, under Putin's rule,
Russia has started to convincingly recover from the
chaos of the post-Soviet collapse. However, David
Powell, in his "Putin, Demography, Health and the
Environment," reminds us that Russia is far from being
out of the woods. This chapter does not directly deal
with what Powell's title suggests. Rather, the author
provides the biggest of all possible pictures of
Russia's continued demographic collapse -- with no end
in sight. Read carefully, this chapter makes other
concerns about Russia's future basically superfluous.
As a form of conclusion, the forward by former
ambassador to Russia, James F. Collins, "Putin's Russia:
Past Imperfect, Future Uncertain," provides a personal
touch on Putin's Russia few can match. Collins reminds
us in his own subtle way that Vladimir Putin is just as
much about change and continuity as his reform agenda
for Russia.
From my perspective, all writers have made an important
contribution, but I tend to favor the view of Putin
presented by Rutland, Herspring and Collins. Putin is
neither ideologically driven, nor a mere opportunist,
nor a Soviet throwback. He has shown himself to be
remarkably pragmatic.
Peter Lavelle is an
independent Moscow-based analyst and the author of the
electronic newsletter on Russia "Untimely Thoughts"
(untimely-thoughts.com). He would like to thank Chris
Doss, the great wordsmith, for his gracious review of
this text.) |