Angus Roxburgh writes:
As we began our descent across southern Moscow,
our plane skimmed just above the blocks that symbolise Soviet-era living, then
banked west towards the airport, crossing mile upon mile of “town hauzy”
and “kottedzhy” – the gaudy dwellings, replete with turrets and
swimming pools and multiple garages, of Russia’s thriving middle classes.
We
used to call them “New Russians”, but that’s so Yeltsin-era. The people who
have feathered their out-of-town nests under Vladimir Putin are a different
breed – and there are hundreds of thousands of them.
I asked a friend what kind
of people lived here. Small entrepreneurs, he said . . . bankers, people from the
oil and gas business and government officials: “With the bribes they take, they
can live in real style!”
In theory, these are the kinds of people who
would have much to lose if western sanctions against Russia were to
shake the economy hard.
But I doubt it would shake their faith in Putin,
who gave them their loot and whose policies they love. I found myself at a
barbecue last summer at one of these country piles. All the neighbours came
round to meet the foreign guest.
A thoroughly unpleasant experience it
was, as they began by denouncing the pro-democracy protesters and the central
Asians who clean Moscow’s streets, and ended by insisting that we British would
never solve our problems until we throw out all our Muslims.
The sanctions announced by the US and EU so far
are aimed at much bigger fish – men who own yachts and banks, not a measly
five-bedroomed villa and a couple of BMWs.
The idea (and one has to assume this
has been thoroughly thought through) is to put pressure on Putin not via his natural
constituents but his closest buddies: those he helped to become billionaires,
with whom he served in the KGB and, in some cases, plotted the invasion of
Crimea.
So far the sanctions have been laughed off.
In
truth, I cannot imagine them reining in whatever further plans Putin may have.
The Kremlin, it should be remembered, tends to react to western pressure in
what it likes to call an “asymmetric” – some might say perverse – fashion.
Take
the US “Magnitsky law”, which imposed visa bans and asset freezes on officials
said to be involved in the death of Sergei Magnitsky, the whistleblowing lawyer
who uncovered large-scale fraud (committed by the same officials who then had
him arrested and jailed).
If this was intended to force the authorities finally
to bring the officials to justice, then sadly nothing of the sort happened.
The
Kremlin’s asymmetric response was to drop all charges against the only
officials being investigated, and to ban the adoption of Russian children by
Americans.
I would hazard a guess that Putin’s response to the west’s sanctions
over Crimea will be something we had never thought of.
It seems to me that the sanctions have produced
the kind of atmosphere that dictators love.
The Soviet Union used to exploit
western pressure to unite the nation against a perceived outside threat and now
something similar is happening again.
Alexey Pushkov, a TV presenter and Duma
member whom I have known for many years, has said that the return of Crimea to
Russia marked a quantitative leap in the nation’s self-awareness:
“It is
overcoming the inferiority complex that was forced on us for years both from
within and without the country, when they tried to convince us that Russia was
no use for anything other than to be dependent and subjugated, following the
‘real’ leaders of the modern world.”
You need broad shoulders to carry around a chip
as big as that.
The presenter of a television debate the other day summed up
the new situation: “The world has changed. Russia is no longer going to take
its orders from ‘HQ’.”
The question is, where will it end, this
new-found Russian confidence?
The concept of the Russian World (“Russkiy
Mir”) has been gaining strength, especially since 2006, when Putin
exhorted young people to “use this phrase more often”.
Now there is a Russian
World Foundation, which aims to promote Russian language and culture, as well
as something more amorphous – a sense of “Russianness” and a community that
covers the entire Russian-speaking world.
That includes territory in Ukraine,
Moldova, Kazakhstan and elsewhere. Is that where Kremlin eyes are gazing?
It is only a small step from nationalism to
chauvinism. In the wake of the Ukraine crisis, it is rampant – and it already
ran deep in Russian veins.
I recall hearing a very senior member of Putin’s
circle (one of those whom foreign journalists describe as sophisticated and
westernised) privately describing the Ukrainians as a nation of devious,
untrustworthy crooks.
Aleksandr Dugin, one of the ideologists of the
Eurasian movement, wrote this week that “mature Putinism” would be marked by
the emergence of “Russia as a distinct civilisation, independent of Europe”, in
which the “fifth column” of dissident voices (specifically the liberal radio
station Ekho Moskvy) would be “liquidated”.
The atmosphere is about as nasty as I
have ever known it in Moscow.
There is, of course, another Russia,
westernised and outward-looking, that watches all of this with apprehension.
Many people have moved on too far to contemplate a return to the isolationist
days of the communist period.
Yet the likely beneficiary of recent events will
be – who else? – Vladimir Putin, his popularity bolstered by each new western
sanction.
Do we really want to ensure he is with us for another ten
years?
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