By now we all have heard the
news, the entire Russian government has resigned and a new Prime Minister,
Mikhail Mishustin, has been appointed. And we also know that the Internet
has exploded with all sorts of speculations about what this all could mean.
Alas, until we know who will
be included in the new government, there is very little we can really
say. I mean, yes, in theory, we could hold our breath and expect Glaziev
appointed to a top position in the so-called “economic block” of the
government, but how do we know that it will not be Kudrin instead?!
We don’t.
One thing we do know for
sure is what Putin announced in his speech. You can read the full text here for yourself, but here are two things I
want to single out:
- Putin has announced a major effort to deal with
the (still appalling) poverty suffered by many Russians
- Putin has announced a major effort to truly
re-sovereignize Russia
In the first case, Putin has
proposed a number of major government programs to deal with the appalling
poverty many Russians still live in including a much beefed up maternity
capital (which will also deal with the demographic issue), reduced mortgage
rates, free healthy hot meals in schools, etc.
In the second case, Putin
announced the following:
“Russia can be and can
remain Russia only as a sovereign state. Our nation’s sovereignty must
be unconditional. We have done a great deal to achieve this. We
restored our state’s unity. We have overcome the situation when certain
powers in the government were essentially usurped by oligarch clans. Russia
has returned to international politics as a country whose opinion cannot be
ignored. “
and
“I suggest formalizing at
the constitutional level the obligatory requirements for those who hold
positions of critical significance for national security and sovereignty.”
At the very least, this is a
very good sign. As I have suggested many times, the slogan of “restore
full sovereignty” can be a battle cry for both Russian and US American
patriots. And we also all know who will be absolutely appalled by all
this talk of “sovereignty”, don’t we?
And yet.
I feel like I have to
caution everybody and remind you all that the problem in Russia (and in the
USA) is not so much one of personalities, but one of a bad system first and
foremost. I won’t touch upon the US side of this problem, but let me
quickly spell out what has happened in Russia over the past decades.
Today’s Russia is a product
of several factors:
- The unreformable Soviet Union of the 1980s which
turned into a “cake” of sorts for the Soviet “Nomenklatura” which, when it realized that it would lose
control of the country, decided to break up the Soviet Union into 15
different countries (including quite a few totally fictional ones) and
re-branded itself from “defenders of the Party and the USSR” into “fervent
nationalists”. That was just about as fake a rebranding as ever but
there was nothing the majority of the people (who wanted to maintained the
Soviet Union) could do about it.
- Then came the horrors of the 1990s during which
Russia (and the rest of the newly minted republics) were drowned into an
orgy of lawlessness, violence, corruption and total, absolute,
subservience to the AngloZionist Empire.
- Finally, during the 2000s we saw a period of
shared power between the Atlantic Integrationists lead by Medvedev and the
Eurasian Sovereignist lead by Putin. This was an uneasy partnership
in which the Atlantic Integrationists were in control of the “economic
block” while the Eurasian Sovereignists were tasked with Russia’s foreign
affairs and defense.
As their name suggests, the
Atlantic Integrationists want to integrate Russia
(and themselves!) into the AngloZionist sphere of control while the
Eurasian Sovereignists want a truly sovereign Russia.
Now just imagine what that first group felt when they heard Putin declare:
I suggest formalizing at the
constitutional level the obligatory requirements for those who hold positions
of critical significance for national security and sovereignty. More
precisely, the heads of the constituent entities, members of the
Federation Council, State Duma deputies, the prime minister and his/her
deputies, federal ministers, heads of federal agencies and judges should
have no foreign citizenship or residence permit or any other document that
allows them to live permanently in a foreign state. The
goal and mission of state service is to serve the people, and those who enter
this path must know that by doing this they inseparably connect their lives
with Russia and the Russian people without any assumptions and
allowances. Requirements must be even stricter for presidential
candidates. I suggest formalizing a requirement under which presidential
candidates must have had permanent residence in Russia for at least 25 years
and no foreign citizenship or residence permit and not only during the election
campaign but at any time before it too.
This is clearly a death
sentence passed on the supreme hope of the Atlantic Integrationists who from
now on won’t be able to integrate Russia or even themselves (by
means of passports, bank accounts or real estate) into the AngloZionist
elites. There is now even a joke running on the Runet (Russian Internet):
13:00 – Путин заявил, что госслужащие должны быть только гражданами России
16:30 – Правительство в полном составе ушло в отставку
translation:
1:00pm – Putin says that civil servants should only have a Russian citizenship
4:30pm – the full Government resigns
And while there is an
element of hyperbole here, there is also much truth too!
Still, we always need to
remember that in Russian history the internal enemy was always much more
dangerous to the leader of Russia than any foreign enemies. In our case,
not only will these Atlantic Integrationists resist any and all forms of true
sovereignization of Russia, they will be backed by a very powerful and rich
Russian political class which make millions by robbing Russia blind in the
1990s, they are also supported by every single western government and the real
“deep state” leaders of the AngloZionist Empire.
Then there are those in the
putatively pro-Russian blogosphere who were quite happy all these past years to
see Russia as a western-style social democracy with a very, shall we say,
“liberal” (I prefer the word “capitalist” as it is both more honest and less
ambiguous) economy and they will now also feel threatened by what appears to be
a pretty hard turn to the Left, meaning that the Kremlin is finally listening
to the will of the people and that turbo-capitalism will now be gradually
replaced by a sharp increase in social solidarity. I look forward to the
mental yoga these folks will now have to engage in to pretend to support Putin
while, at the same time, being a propaganda outlet for Atlantic
Integrationists.
As I also said it many
times, Putin is a very good man at the head of a very bad system and truly reforming
a very bad system is an extremely difficult task.
So while, yes, it IS
possible that what will happen next will (finally!) be a purge of all the 5th
columnists sitting in the top echelons of power in Russia, this is by no means
a done deal and we ought to wait and see what kind of people actually get they
key positions in the Russian government and, especially, in the “economic
block”.
Some in Russia are already
daydreaming about a real, Stalin-style, purge of the political ruling
elites. They even noticed that the new Prime Minister does have a more
than tiny resemblance to Lavrentii Beria, Stalin’s chief of the secret police,
see for yourself:
Mikhail
Mishustin
Lavrentii Beria
Okay, yes, there is a
resemblance, but the TIMES have totally changed! For all the western
propaganda about Russia being some kind of autocratic/despotic “Mordor”, the
truth is that Russia is a country of law and that Putin is a President who does
act strictly withing the confines of Russian law. There will be no mass
purges, no nightly arrests, no secret executions.
Personally, I am cautiously
optimistic. The language used in Putin’s address has all the right words
and expressions, and his suggested reforms all make perfectly good sense.
But in the past there were other such Presidential addresses with no less lofty
goals, and then the immensely powerful Russian bureaucracy (yes, that is the
non-existing 5th column too) made sure that these goals would never be reached.
The new Prime Minister has
promised that the full list of appointees to the new government will be made
public before the 21st. I suggest that we wait until we have all the
facts before making any predictions.
The
Saker
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