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Pondering Putin

16 Sep 2007 10:46 am

putin.jpg

Re-reading that Starobin profile I mentioned, and then this article from the Times of London (via Larison), I thought of the memorable Perry Anderson essay on Putin's Russia from earlier this year - and particularly this passage:

... there is another, less obvious side to his charisma. Part of his chilly magnetism is cultural. He is widely admired for his command of the language. Here, too, contrast is everything. Lenin was the last ruler of the country who could speak an educated Russian. Stalin’s Georgian accent was so thick he rarely risked speaking in public. Khrushchev’s vocabulary was crude and his grammar barbaric. Brezhnev could scarcely put two sentences together. Gorbachev spoke with a provincial southern accent. The less said of Yeltsin’s slurred diction the better. To hear a leader of the country capable once again of expressing himself with clarity, accuracy and fluency, in a more or less correct idiom, comes as music to many Russians.

In a strange way Putin’s prestige is thus also intellectual. For all his occasional crudities, at least in his mouth the national tongue is no longer obviously humiliated. This is not just a matter of cases and tenses, or pronunciation. Putin has developed into what by today’s undemanding standards is an articulate politician, who can field questions from viewers on television for hours as confidently and lucidly as he lectures journalists in interviews, or addresses partners at summit meetings, where he has excelled at sardonic repartee. The intelligence is limited and cynical, above the level of his Anglo-American counterparts, but without much greater ambition. It has been enough, however, to give Putin half of his brittle lustre in Russia. There, an apparent union of fist and mind has captured the popular imagination.

I think there's little question that Putin has been one of the most successful world leaders of the new century, and I've always had the impression that this success is related to his being smarter, in some meaningful way, than most of his rivals and partners on the world stage. But sometimes I wonder if my high estimation of his intelligence isn't partially a function of the freedom that he's afforded by his semi-autocratic position - a freedom to be honest, to talk explicitly in the language of power politics, and to eschew the kind of pious cant that's required of politicians in the West (and particularly in America). I remember being particularly struck by this passage from the Starobin profile, describing Putin's response to the Beslan massacre:

On the day after the bloodbath Putin addressed the nation on television from the Kremlin. He seemed stripped raw; the brief clip I caught on the news was painful to watch. "It is a difficult and bitter task for me to speak," he began. "During these last few days each one of us suffered immensely." The thrust of his message was shame and embarrassment that Russians, "living in conditions formed after the disintegration of a huge, great country," had failed to pay enough attention to their defenses. "We demonstrated weakness, and the weak are beaten." His face was drained of color. I wondered if he was in shock.

Now obviously this kind of language, and the worldview it betokens, is connected to many of the Putin era's excesses, from the Chechen war to the partial rehabilitation of Stalin. But even so, it's hard to help feeling a sneaking admiration for a leader who can respond to a tragedy without resorting to either bluster or bathos, and who can acknowledge weakness and humiliation without immediately seguing into the narrative of self-congratulation and moral uplift that American Presidents automatically reach for in such circumstances.

It will be very interesting to watch what he does after 2008 - both how he continues to exercise power in Russia (as he assuredly will), and what his de facto political dominance will mean for the leaders who succeed him. He will only be fifty-six when his term ends - younger than any of the front-runners for the GOP nomination, it's worth noting - which means that the Putin era, in one fashion or another, probably still has decades left to run.

Photo by the Presidential Press and Information Office.

Comments (17)

This seems correct and something that isn't remarked upon enough. I'm not exactly sure how intelligent Putin is, but if you can understand him in Russian, he certainly comes across as above average for a politician.

It is also worth noting that he is the first Russian leader since Czarist times from St. Petersburg. My impression is that people from Petersburg tend to speak more clearly and crisply than in other parts of Russia. Poor enunciation is a big problem especially with Russian men . . .

Putin, unlike most world leaders of our time, is very interested in the arts. He awarded Maya Plitseskaya, the great Russian ballerina, a special medal of honor at the gala in Moscow on the occasion of her 80th birthday. Putin also visited the great Russian cellist, Rostropovich in the hospital a few weeks before he passsed away.

Putin is also responsible for getting the funds to restore the Bolshou Theatre to its former glory.

Putin, unlike most world leaders of our time, is very interested in the arts. He awarded Maya Plitseskaya, the great Russian ballerina, a special medal of honor at the gala in Moscow on the occasion of her 80th birthday. Putin also visited the great Russian cellist, Rostropovich in the hospital a few weeks before he passsed away.

Putin is also responsible for getting the funds to restore the Bolshou Theatre to its former glory.


Putin not only speaks Russian like an aristocrat, he is also very interested in the arts and wants to restore Moscow to its former glory. Through his efforts the Bolshoi Ballet Company is number one in the world and he has raised the money to restore the Bolshoi Theatre.

Putin not only speaks Russian like an aristocrat, he is also very interested in the arts and wants to restore Moscow to its former glory. Through his efforts the Bolshoi Ballet is number one in the world and he has raised the money to renovate the Bolshoi Theatre.

“We remain a hunted people. Now you think you have a destiny to fulfill in the land that historically has been ours for forty thousand years. And we’re a new Mestizo nation.”

“Our devil has pale skin and blue eyes…”

“We have got to eliminate the gringo, and what I mean by that is if the worst comes to the worst, we have got to kill him.”

– Professor Jose Angel Gutierrez, founder of La Raza

"Around the year 2040, whites will become a minority in the United States and, believe me, it will be 'payback time'."

- Pro-Immigration Activist, Jorge Sanchez

“And the one idea is, how we are going to exterminate white people because that in my estimation is the only conclusion I have come to. We have to exterminate white people off the face of the planet to solve this problem.”

- African Studies professor, Dr. Kamau Kambon


"Blond hair and blue eyes are a biological defect."

"The white race is a disease, and the only cure is a bullet. The rule of whites is history. Soon they will be our serfs. It's now the Age of the Brown Man."

- Hindu nationalist, Ramesh Sharma


“The goal of abolishing the white race is on its face so desirable that some may find it hard to believe that it could incur any opposition other than from committed white supremacists. Make no mistake about it we intend to keep bashing the dead white males, and the live ones, and the females too, until the social construct known as ‘the white race’ is destroyed–not ‘deconstructed’ but destroyed."

- Jewish studies professor, Dr Noel Ignatiev


.

hey david,

given what the white race has done to non-white people, be glad that these guys just TALK about killing whites, rather than actually doing it. not to excuse anti-white racism, but it didn't just come from nowhere.

la raza, btw, exists to reclaim the land that the u.s. stole from Mexico with less than a farcical excuse for provocation. their cause may be lost and even somewhat absurd, but the US claim to the southwest basically boils down to 'might makes right'. given that, i'm not surprised that this guy thinks his devil has blue eyes and white skin. much the same was that in some european languages, 'The Black Man' is a nickname for the Devil.

btw, exactly how much influence do any of these guys have, anyway? i follow extreme left movements pretty closely (as a partisan of the far left myself, at least on some issues) and i have never heard of any of these people.

Well, the other shoe that may drop is the price of energy. It's hard to imagine Putin accomplishing 10% of what he's accomplished without fat petrochecks in recent years. I personally don't buy the hype about oil remaining dear ad infinitum. Oh sure, in the long run we're no doubt running out of the stuff, and over the long term it will likely get more expensive. The short and medium terms, however, are a different story. Price spikes in the past have prompted conservation efforts. They're doing so again. When you follow this process with the inevitable recession (we still haven't managed to repeal the business cycle, by the bye), the price of oil drops. Usually quite substantially. And so, too, will Russian economic prospects, and the received wisdom about how great a leader Vladimir Putin has been.

Jasper is right about this, of course. The real test of Putin's economic management will come after his administration if and when the price of oil falls substantially. However, the Russian government seems to have saved up a big stabilization fund in preparation for this day. So I wouldn't be surprised if Putin's policies in this respect end up looking fairly good in retrospect as well. Which is a good thing for him since some of the other things that he has done are simply appalling . . .

By the way, someone should delete the totally off-topic comments here.

I don't understand it, but that white nationalist group has been putting multiple posts on Atlantic blogs recently, probably just spam.

There are other factors besides conservation and recession affecting the short-term picture, though. If America actually attacks Iran the price of oil goes up, and Putin continues to look like a genius.

Besides continuing the quagmire in Chechnya;which inspired the likes of Al Midhar, Al Hamzi &
Moussaoui among others to jihad. The fumbling over the Nord Ost theatre takeover pales in comparison to the Beslan fiasco. Imagine the converse, if Saudi/Iraqis had taken the Met or
Kennedy Center hostage and the police had literally poisoned the theatre, follow it up with
an attack on a school in Wichita or Des Moines, see how that would be considered a victory. The assasination of exiled Chechen chieftain Zandarbichev in Doha, Quatar, with nary a complaint; reminiscent of the dispatching of the
Qumari war lord in the West Wing could possibly be considered a plus. However payback from Saudi and/or Iranianballies of the Chechens is likely to be very brutal

It's a little arresting to read something published under the banner of The Atlantic expressing admiration for a nascent fascism. Actually it's kind of shocking. It escapes me entirely how one can read this statement, "We demonstrated weakness, and the weak are beaten." and not be repulsed by not only it's neanderthalic qualities, it's historic context, but also it's obvious illogic. Ross, I have to admit I do not often agree with you, but this time I think you are simply missing the 1,000 pound homicidal elephant in the corner.

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