Stratfor
http://www.inmsk.ru/news/20121129/354917035.html
Viewing Russia From the Inside
DECEMBER 16, 2014 |
09:02 GMT
Last week I flew into
Moscow, arriving at 4:30 p.m. on Dec. 8. It gets dark in Moscow around that
time, and the sun doesn't rise until about 10 a.m. at this time of the year —
the so-called Black Days versus White Nights. For anyone used to life closer to
the equator, this is unsettling. It is the first sign that you are not only in
a foreign country, which I am used to, but also in a foreign environment. Yet
as we drove toward downtown Moscow, well over an hour away, the traffic, the
road work, were all commonplace. Moscow has three airports, and we flew into
the farthest one from downtown, Domodedovo — the primary international airport.
There is endless renovation going on in Moscow, and while it holds up traffic,
it indicates that prosperity continues, at least in the capital.
Our host met us and we
quickly went to work getting a sense of each other and talking about the events
of the day. He had spent a great deal of time in the United States and was far
more familiar with the nuances of American life than I was with Russian. In
that he was the perfect host, translating his country to me, always with the
spin of a Russian patriot, which he surely was. We talked as we drove into
Moscow, managing to dive deep into the subject.
From him, and from
conversations with Russian experts on most of the regions of the world —
students at the Institute of International Relations — and with a handful of
what I took to be ordinary citizens (not employed by government agencies
engaged in managing Russia's foreign and economic affairs), I gained a sense of
Russia's concerns. The concerns are what you might expect. The emphasis and
order of those concerns were not.
Russians'
Economic Expectations
I thought the economic
problems of Russia would be foremost on people's minds. The plunge of the
ruble, the decline in oil prices, a general slowdown in the economy and the
effect of Western sanctions all appear in the West to be hammering the Russian economy.
Yet this was not the conversation I was having. The decline in the ruble has
affected foreign travel plans, but the public has only recently begun feeling
the real impact of these factors, particularly through inflation.
But there was another
reason given for the relative calm over the financial situation, and it came
not only from government officials but also from private individuals and should
be considered very seriously. The Russians pointed out that economic shambles was
the norm for Russia, and prosperity the exception. There is always the
expectation that prosperity will end and the normal constrictions of Russian
poverty return.
The Russians suffered
terribly during the 1990s under Boris
Yeltsin but also under previous governments stretching
back to the czars. In spite of this, several pointed out, they had won the wars
they needed to win and had managed to live lives worth living. The golden age
of the previous 10 years was coming to an end. That was to be expected, and it
would be endured. The government officials meant this as a warning, and I do
not think it was a bluff. The pivot of the conversation was about sanctions,
and the intent was to show that they would not cause Russia to change its policy toward
Ukraine.
Russians' strength is
that they can endure things that would break other nations. It was also pointed
out that they tend to support the government regardless of competence when
Russia feels threatened. Therefore, the Russians argued, no one should expect
that sanctions, no matter how harsh, would cause Moscow to capitulate. Instead
the Russians would respond with their own sanctions, which were not specified
but which I assume would mean seizing the assets of Western companies in Russia
and curtailing agricultural imports from Europe. There was no talk of cutting
off natural gas supplies to Europe.
If this is so, then the
Americans and Europeans are deluding themselves on the effects of sanctions. In
general, I personally have little confidence in the use of
sanctions.
That being said, the Russians gave me another prism to look through. Sanctions
reflect European and American thresholds of pain. They are designed to cause
pain that the West could not withstand. Applied to others, the effects may
vary.
My sense is that the
Russians were serious. It would explain why the increased sanctions, plus oil
price drops, economic downturns and the rest simply have not caused the erosion
of confidence that would be expected. Reliable polling numbers show that
President Vladimir Putin is still enormously popular. Whether he remains
popular as the decline sets in, and whether the elite being hurt financially
are equally sanguine, is another matter. But for me the most important lesson I
might have learned in Russia — "might" being the operative term — is
that Russians don't respond to economic pressure as Westerners do, and that the
idea made famous in a presidential campaign slogan, "It's the economy,
stupid," may not apply the same way in Russia.
The
Ukrainian Issue
There was much more
toughness on Ukraine. There is acceptance that events in Ukraine were a
reversal for Russia and resentment that the Obama administration mounted what
Russians regard as a propaganda campaign to try to make it appear that Russia
was the aggressor. Two points were regularly made. The first was that Crimea
was historically part of Russia and that it was already dominated by the
Russian military under treaty. There was no invasion but merely the assertion
of reality. Second, there was heated insistence that eastern Ukraine is
populated by Russians and that as in other countries, those Russians must be
given a high degree of autonomy. One scholar pointed to the Canadian model and
Quebec to show that the West normally has no problem with regional autonomy for
ethnically different regions but is shocked that the Russians might want to
practice a form of regionalism commonplace in the West...
Read more: Viewing Russia From the Inside | Stratfor //http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/viewing-russia-inside?utm_medium=email#axzz3MFI11EIO
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