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Steve Gutterman's Week In Russia

Russia’s search for a national idea is over, Vladislav Surkov (left) suggests: The idea is Vladimir Putin.
Russia’s search for a national idea is over, Vladislav Surkov (left) suggests: The idea is Vladimir Putin.

Editor's Note: To receive Steve Gutterman's Week In Russia each week via e-mail, subscribe by clicking here.

Last spring, longtime Kremlin aide and “managed democracy” architect Vladislav Surkov said Russia faces 100 years or more of geopolitical solitude -- and suggested that’s a good thing. Now he’s predicting it will be “Putin’s state” for just as long, comparing the “supreme ruler” to leaders like Ataturk, Lenin, and the U.S. Founding Fathers.

Analysts interpret the wordy court figure’s latest article, and poke big holes in some of his main premises.

A State Of Putin

Putin forever. Or actually, Putinism forever – or at least for a century or so. Vladimir Putin may go, but longtime Kremlin aide Vladislav Surkov says that “Putin’s state” is here to stay. For a very long time. In fact, “not just years but decades, and probably the whole century to come.”

That’s one of the main messages in a lengthy article by Surkov – Putin’s influential deputy chief of staff from 2000-08 -- that was published in the daily Nezavisimaya Gazeta on February 11.

Surkov, who is believed to have written at least one novel under a pseudonym, is no stranger to long reads. Last April, he penned an article telling Russians that their “half-blood” country’s “epic journey toward the West” was over – without reaching its destination – and that it now faced at least 100 years of “geopolitical solitude.” In a good way.

That was after Putin was elected to a new six-year term that will see him in power as president or prime minister for a quarter-century, but before he was inaugurated in May.

In the new article, headlined Putin’s Long State, Surkov spends a lot of time expanding on the idea that Russia is not part of the West -- and shouldn’t want to be.

The West is a place where choice itself is an illusion – “the crowning trick of the Western way of life...and Western democracy,” which Surkov says owes more to American showman-politician P.T. Barnum than to Cleisthenes, who – as I found out by looking it up -- is considered the father of Athenian democracy.

Russians, he says, have rejected such illusions “in favor of realism” and have “lost all interest in discussing what kind of democracy” they should have -- or whether they need it at all.

'Managed Democracy'

Does that mean that even the “managed democracy” that Surkov – a behind-the-scenes Barnum himself -- is famous for promoting during Putin’s first two terms is too democratic for Russia today? Probably, but so what, he suggests: Jettisoning finicky and misguided notions about democracy has opened the way for state-building “guided not by imported chimeras but by the logic of historical processes.”

In Surkov’s book – or at least in this article – that logic leads inexorably to Putin.

In Russian terms, Surkov puts Putin on a level with just three other leaders in the past millennium: Tsar Ivan III, Tsar Peter the Great, and Bolshevik revolutionary Vladimir Lenin, who founded the Soviet Union. In global terms, he seems certain that Putin’s legacy is destined to be as strong and long-lasting as those of Charles de Gaulle, Ataturk, and the Founding Fathers of the United States.

“Many years from now, Russia will still be the state of Putin,” he writes.

“Many years from now, Russia will still be the state of Putin.”
“Many years from now, Russia will still be the state of Putin.”

Why stop at mortals, though? Surkov aims higher, at one point saying Russians are too smart to want the classic “good tsar,” a kind-hearted softy, favoring instead a ruler who is “like Einstein said of god: ‘subtle but not malicious.’”

Matter Of Trust

But while Putin may be godlike in Surkov’s estimation, he is no distant deity. Rather, the Kremlin aide asserts -- as Putin has sought to suggest through exercises such as an annual call-in show in which he fields questions from regular folks across the country -- the president is profoundly in tune with the people.

“The ability to hear and understand the people – to see through them and all their depth and act accordingly – is the unique and main virtue of Putin’s state,” Surkov writes.

The rapport between Putin and the people is mutual, Surkov claims. And like priests who bring god’s word to the faithful, the role of everyone in the middle – all state institutions -- is to facilitate “trusting communication and interaction between the supreme ruler and the citizens.”

“In essence, society trusts only the leader,” Surkov writes, adding: “The modern model of the Russian state begins with trust and relies on trust. This is where it differs most from the Western model, which cultivates distrust and criticism. And this is where its strength lies.”

'Deep People'

Oh, another difference? While in the United States a shadowy and cynical “deep state” runs the show beneath a veneer of democracy, he claims, Russia has no deep state – only a “deep people.”

Largely due to the wisdom of Putin and the people, and to their alleged rapport, Russia is in a great place right now, he claims, standing at the very beginning of a promising new era.

“The ability to hear and understand the people – to see through them and all their depth and act accordingly – is the unique and main virtue of Putin’s state,” Surkov writes.
“The ability to hear and understand the people – to see through them and all their depth and act accordingly – is the unique and main virtue of Putin’s state,” Surkov writes.

“Our new state…will have a long and glorious history. It will not break,” he writes, ending the article with a warning that Russia – hit with Western sanctions over what U.S. officials say are an array of “malign activities” abroad – will not bend to Western pressure to “change its behavior.”

And by the way, that meddling? It's worse than you think, Surkov proudly suggests. Politicians abroad accuse Russia of interfering in elections worldwide, he writes, but “in reality it’s more serious than that – Russia is messing with their minds.”

So what’s it all about -- what is the point of this paean to Putin and complex trolling of the West?

To some, it looks like little more than a mixture of old tropes left over from the Soviet era and tsarist times: The West is corrupt, Russia – or the Soviet Union – will follow its own path to a bright future, guided by a sage, shrewd, and dynamic leader who has the interest of the people at heart.

'Playing Games'

“Putin lived, Putin lives, Putin will live,” Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the former oil tycoon who was imprisoned for a decade and now lives abroad, wrote on Twitter, updating a saying about Lenin in what he called “a short summary of a long article.”

Opposition politician Yevgeny Roizman, the mayor of Yekaterinburg from 2013-18, had an even shorter summary.

“Piece-of-shit article,” he tweeted.

Some speculated that Surkov, whose position and profile are substantially lower than they were during Putin’s first years in office, is seeking to get back into the game.

Sam Greene, director of the Russia Institute at King’s College London, laid out the argument of the piece eloquently: In a nutshell, it’s that “Russia isn’t a democracy. (Surprise!) Never has been, never will be. And, of course, there aren’t really any democracies at all. Choice is an illusion. Everywhere and always. Western societies work, he says, because they let people revel in that illusion.

“But the fiction has never really worked in Russia, which has tied itself into knots trying to maintain it. But – and here’s the kicker – Russia doesn’t need the fiction, because it has Putin. Putin has built a system capable of ruling Russia for 100 years. Why? Because that system understands its people. From top to bottom, right to left, inside and out.”

Greene added that “there’s no evidence for this whatsoever,” though, and that “Surkov’s playing games. It’s what he does.”

In this case, Greene suggested, the goal is to draw attention away from “the difficult policy questions facing the Kremlin (including how to justify spending on infrastructure rather than social services).”

He wrote wryly that “thanks to Surkov’s missive, instead of focusing on 2019, we can set our sights on 2024” – the year Putin’s current term – which could be his last, because the constitution bars him from serving more than two in a row -- is due to end.

That is the point, according to Mark Galeotti, an author on Russia and a senior associate fellow at the Royal United Services Institute in London.

The Succession

Surkov, he wrote, has “turned to the topic that is as central to Moscow political class chatter as it is absent from the official media: the succession, and the potential for life after Putin.”

“Viewed in this light, Surkov would seem to be beginning to give permission for this sensitive topic to be broached more widely,” Galeotti wrote.

And like Pravda articles that were pored over in the Soviet era by bureaucrats looking for the hidden message, this one also requires reading between the lines. Because “buried within the grandiose rhetoric of his article, Surkov is trying to reassure three important constituencies that the end of the Putin era need not be the end of the world.”

Those constituencies are Putin himself, the “system insiders around him,” and the rest of the Russian people.

Putin is being told that the state will literally still be his long after he surrenders power and that Putinism is “the ideology of the future” – “encouraging stuff” for Putin as he seeks “to manage a transition…that guarantees the security of his self, his lifestyle, and his legacy,” Galeotti wrote.

To the elite surrounding Putin – those “who have much to gain but potentially all to lose from change” – the message is that “the ‘Putin system’ can and will endure” without its creator.

The “Russian masses,” meanwhile, “can be reassured that the elites are thinking about the future and preparing to ensure an orderly transition,” he wrote, and that “Russia may be run by elites, but at least they are elites who share the same interests as the people.”

But should any of the above really be reassured? Commentators have pointed to holes both big and small in Surkov’s proclamations about the present, casting doubt on his conclusions about the future.

Survey Says…

Take, for example, Surkov’s talk about the bond between Putin and the people: Surveys show it’s not as strong as it may have been in the past, both in terms of the longtime president’s approval rating and the level of trust people place in him and his government.

Poll results issued on January 31 found that for the first time since 2006, more Russians believe that “Putin’s state” is on the wrong course than the right one.

And then there’s Surkov’s assertion that “Putin’s state” has a kind of magnetic attraction even beyond its borders, that the average “resident of the West is starting to turn his head in search of other models and other ways of being. And he’s seeing Russia.”

A trio of tweets from Bloomberg Opinion columnist Leonid Bershidsky seem to indicate that Surkov is exaggerating the attraction abroad.

“If Russia were a functioning democracy, it would be displacing the U.S. as the European countries' security partner now,” he tweeted, adding that the EU is sick of the United States and is looking for an alternative but that “Putin isn’t it.”

“Putin and his coterie don't get it: There's no way to compete with the U.S. as a tinpot dictatorship with a population the size of Japan's,” Bershidsky wrote. “As a democracy that size? Sure; one can get allies.”

'No Longer Essential'

Also, Surkov seems to have skipped a crucial step in the creation of Putin’s legacy, or found a convenient answer to Putin’s search for a fresh idea that could bind Russians together and help the country thrive in the coming decades. That idea, Surkov suggests, is Putin himself.

Russia-watchers sometimes talk of the present stage in Russia’s development as “late Putinism,” while Surkov asserts that the Putin era has barely even begun.

“Putin’s big political machine is just getting into gear and tuning up for long, hard, and interesting work. Its transition to full power is still far ahead,” he writes, claiming the system Putin has put in place will ensure “the survival and rise of the Russian nation” for many years to come.

Surkov may not be too concerned about the flaws in his argument, though.

“The point is not the specifics of this flamboyant rhetorical exercise,” Galeotti wrote.

"Rather, that this bellwether of the Kremlin is willing to broach transition in a context that suggests that Putin himself is no longer essential,” he wrote. “Bit by bit, he is being turned from a president to a precedent, from hetman to history.”

Russian tycoon Yevgeny Prigozhin's claim that he met with anticorruption campaigner Aleksei Navalny made waves in Russia this week.
Russian tycoon Yevgeny Prigozhin's claim that he met with anticorruption campaigner Aleksei Navalny made waves in Russia this week.

Editor's Note: To receive Steve Gutterman's Week In Russia each week via e-mail, subscribe by clicking here.

"Putin's chef" serves up a poisonous allegation against prominent Putin foe Aleksei Navalny, who accuses him of lying, while an upbeat economic report prompts suspicion that the Russian statistics agency is cooking the books, and pro-Putin witches try to brew up trouble for the Kremlin's enemies. 'Nastya Rybka' speaks to the media, but raises questions about what she says by saying she's been told what to say. Viktor Yanukovych breaks a long silence to say ... not very much, and Vladimir Zhirinovsky's call for followers on Instagram suggests the voluble politician is getting less mileage from his motormouth in the Internet age.

Here are some of the key developments in Russia over the past week and some of the takeaways going forward.

'Nothing To Do With Anything'

In Russia and perhaps in other countries as well, some of the less credible denials go like this: It didn't happen and it's not my fault.

A classic of the genre comes from Yevgeny Prigozhin, commenting for an article in The Bell that traced the roots of the "private military company" known as Vagner and outlined evidence pointing to his extensive ties to the outfit.

Vagner "does not exist," Prigozhin contended, so he could not have been involved.

Despite the evidence, Prigozhin has also denied involvement in the Internet Research Agency, a St. Petersburg "troll farm" that U.S. investigators say meddled in the 2016 presidential election by placing politically divisive posts and ads that reached millions of U.S. voters on Facebook, Twitter, and other social media.

But for a guy who says he has nothing to do with anything -- не при чем is the Russian term -- Prigozhin has popped up in an awful lot of Russia stories lately, abroad and at home.

Front And Center

Late last month, Reuters reported that Russian military contractors linked to Vagner had been flown to Venezuela to step up security for embattled President Nicolas Maduro, who has given Moscow its biggest foothold in Latin America.

At home, the ex-convict who has been called "Putin's chef" made a bigger splash, wading right into a conflict with one of Putin's most prominent foes, Aleksei Navalny.

Yevgeny Prigozhin (left) with Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2010.
Yevgeny Prigozhin (left) with Russian President Vladimir Putin in 2010.

Prigozhin normally tends to fade into the background even when he is at the center of things, as demonstrated in footage that appeared to show him standing off to the side at a high-level military meeting with a Libyan delegation in Moscow -- though he then appears seated at the table.

After a report said that Navalny had met with him at a St. Petersburg hotel, Prigozhin did not linger long on the sidelines: His office told the BBC Russian Service that the meeting -- swiftly and directly denied by Navalny -- did take place. And it went much further than that, adding a detail that, if true, could severely damage Navalny's reputation.

It alleged that Navalny offered to stop publishing compromising material about Prigozhin's business in exchange for support for the opposition politician's allies in upcoming municipal elections in St. Petersburg. And it added a little piece of trolling, saying that Prigozhin responded with a belittling quip: "I don't exchange soldiers for a marshal."

Navalny's response: "Prigozhin is lying and no meeting took place."

It's hard to know what to believe these days -- and analysts say that's the point of a lot of what Russia has been saying in the past half-decade, from the now-debunked suggestion that MH17, the passenger jet that crashed in the conflict zone in eastern Ukraine in July 2014, was shot down by a Ukrainian warplane to the assertion that the two Russians accused of poisoning Sergei Skripal and his daughter with a deadly nerve agent in England last March were merely tourists interested in the soaring spire of the cathedral at Salisbury.

When there's so much conflicting information, it can be hard to keep track of what's been said, let alone what may or may or not be true.

Take the story of Nastya Rybka -- please.

The Belarusian escort, whose real name is Anastasia Vashukevich, made waves a year ago. when Navalny published an exposé based largely on photos and video she had posted on social media. They showed her on a yacht with Kremlin-connected tycoon Oleg Derispaska and Sergei Prikhodko, a Russian deputy prime minister at the time and a longtime former foreign-policy aide to Putin.

'Missing Link'

After her arrest in the Thai beach resort of Pattaya in February, Vashukevich fueled further speculation when she said, in a video shot in a police van and posted on Instagram, that she had 16 hours of audio and video proving ties between Russian officials and Donald Trump's campaign in the 2016 U.S. election

"I am the only witness and the missing link in the connection between Russia and the U.S. elections," Vashukevich said.

Nearly a year later, that link is still missing -- and seems unlikely to turn up, if it exists.

After being arrested upon arrival in Moscow following months behind bars in Thailand, Anastasia Vashukevich suggested that she was finished talking, but then gave several interviews. They shed little light on the claim that got the most attention -- that she had information about Russia's role in the U.S. election.

In part, that's because she said she had been told what to say, suggesting that "she may have traded her silence for security," as an Associated Press (AP) article about its interview with Vashukevich put it.

The Escort And The Oligarch: 'Nastya Rybka' Goes From Accusation To Apology
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Contradicting earlier reports that said she had destroyed the recordings, Vashukevich told AP that she has turned the material over to Deripaska. But that statement was undermined by what she said in a BBC interview a little earlier: That she had been told -- presumably by the Russian authorities -- what to say.

"I was explained how I can talk about it," Vashukevich told the BBC. "And I have to live here. The official version is that I haven't got any records and whatever records there were are gone."

The interviews came in the days after Vashukevich failed to show up at her own widely anticipated and well-attended press conference in Moscow on January 23.

In Absentia

Another Moscow press conference that failed to impress was the one held by ousted former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych on February 6, two weeks after a Kyiv court convicted him in absentia of treason and "complicity in waging an aggressive war against Ukraine" -- the latter charge a reference to Russia's seizure of Crimea and role in a war that has killed more than 10,000 people since April 2014.

Yanukovych did show up, breaking more than a year of virtual silence. But anyone expecting a bombshell -- let alone a piece of hard news amid the talk of the soul and values, and a message echoing Kremlin criticism of Ukraine's current president ahead of a March 31 election -- would have been disappointed. One Moscow reporter sought to capture the mood by tweeting a photograph of a journalist who seemed to be fast asleep.

Yanukovych fled to Russia when he was pushed from power by the massive Maidan protest movement five years ago, after he scrapped plans for a landmark deal with the European Union and said Kyiv would pursue closer trade ties with Moscow. The treason charge stemmed in part from the deaths of more than 100 people in clashes between protesters and security forces, some of them shot dead by snipers.

Former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych gesticulates at his Moscow press conference on February 6.
Former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych gesticulates at his Moscow press conference on February 6.

He held a few press conferences in his first year in exile, but his remarks seemed to lose relevance quickly. More than four years later -- despite the conviction and 13-year prison sentence handed to Yanukovych, who seems unlikely to return to Ukraine to serve a day of it -- "barely made a ripple in the news flow in Ukraine," one journalist remarked on Twitter. "The nation has moved a long way past him and the wounds he inflicted."

If remarks by Prigozhin, Vashukevich, and others left Russians wondering what to believe, the same goes for an unexpectedly upbeat economic figure from the state statistics agency, which reported that Russia's gross domestic product (GDP) rose 2.3 percent -- much higher than the 1.8 percent previously forecast by the Economic Development Ministry and the biggest spike since 2012.

Wrong Way

"New miracles from Rosstat," was how one headline put it, while Russia-watchers voiced varying degrees of doubt, taking it with anything from a "pretty sizable grain of salt" to a brimming bowl of the stuff.

A Bloomberg article, however, made a case that rather than lies or damn lies, the figure may have been the product of Russia's "perennially poor statistics."

Either way, not great news for Putin, who could have used a bit of a boost.

Polls have pointed to a decline in trust and approval since he won a new six-year term last March, and a new poll result from the independent Levada Center may be more startling: It showed that, for the first time since 2006, more Russians believe the country is moving in the wrong direction than the right direction.

While Putin may not be able to count on statistics or opinion poll results, he got an avid show of support from a coven of self-styled witches who, wearing black hoods and flowing robes over their street clothes, chanted about "the greatness of Russia" and called for "foes" to be cursed.

'A Charm Of Powerful Trouble'

One of them, sounding like those curiously robotic-toned citizens one occasionally interviews while reporting ahead of an election, stated: "Of course it's necessary to support the government, and Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin first and foremost."

'Cursed Be The Foes!': Witches Cast Spells For Putin
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On Twitter, one journalist made mention of the pro-Putin witches in the context of Dennis Christensen, a Danish member of the Jehovah's Witnesses who was convicted on an extremism charge and sentenced to six years in prison on February 6 by a court in Oryol, where he has lived for years.

Acquittals are extremely rare in Russia, but the six-year sentence seemed surprising, perhaps, after Putin seemed to suggest the state might review the "extremist" designation imposed on the Jehovah's Witnesses in 2016.

Dennis Christensen (center), a Jehovah's Witness, has been sentenced to six years in Russia on extremism charges.
Dennis Christensen (center), a Jehovah's Witness, has been sentenced to six years in Russia on extremism charges.

In remarks in December, Putin said that "Jehovah's Witnesses are Christians, too," and that it is "complete nonsense" in some cases to "label representatives of religious communities as members of destructive, even terrorist, organizations."

Stop Making Sense

Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov said at the time that the Kremlin would look into the matter, but no further announcements have been made. Asked about the Christensen's verdict on February 7, Peskov's response raised eyebrows.

"In governing, we can't operate on the basis of common sense," he said. "First of all, we operate in terms of what is legal and illegal."

In retrospect, Peskov may wish he had chosen his words more carefully. Normally, the many answers he dishes out daily -- or non-answers, as the case may be -- cause little controversy.

Russian politician Vladimir Zhirinovsky (file photo)
Russian politician Vladimir Zhirinovsky (file photo)

Meanwhile, a Russian politician who has been using words to cause controversy for a quarter-century is angling for a wider audience.
Could it be a sign that, with more Russians getting their news and views from social media these days, Vladimir Zhirinovsky -- who long commanded a great deal of attention and at times sought to charge for interviews -- is having trouble finding an audience?

"Friends, read me on Telegram," Zhirinovsky tweeted on February 6, referring to the messaging app that Russia tried to shut down on its territory last year with little success. "I try to react quickly to the main events of the day."

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Week In Russia
Steve Gutterman

The Week In Russia presents some of the key developments in the country over the past week, and some of the takeaways going forward. It's written by Steve Gutterman, the editor of RFE/RL's Russia/Ukraine/Belarus Desk.

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