Three great ideas run through this work. The first is Russian exceptionalism: the idea that Russia has its own unique spiritual status and purpose. The second is devotion to the Orthodox faith. The third is belief in autocracy. Mashed together, these philosophers point to a Russia that is a quasi-theocratic nationalist autocracy destined to play a culminating role on the world stage.
Putin Can’t Stop
International New York Times | 3 March 2014
Even
cynics like to feel moral. Even hard-eyed men who play power politics
need to feel that their efforts are part of a great historic mission. So
as he has been throwing his weight around the world, Vladimir Putin has
been careful to quote Russian philosophers from the 19th and 20th
centuries like Nikolai Berdyaev, Vladimir Solovyov and Ivan Ilyin.
Putin
doesn’t only quote these guys; he wants others to read them. As Maria
Snegovaya pointed out recently in The Washington Post, the Kremlin
recently assigned three philosophic books to regional governors:
Berdyaev’s “The Philosophy of Inequality,” Solovyov’s “Justification of
the Good” and Ilyin’s “Our Tasks.”
To
enter into the world of Putin’s favorite philosophers is to enter a
world full of melodrama, mysticism and grandiose eschatological visions.
“We trust and are confident that the hour will come when Russia will
rise from disintegration and humiliation and begin an epoch of new
development and greatness,” Ilyin wrote.
Three
great ideas run through this work. The first is Russian exceptionalism:
the idea that Russia has its own unique spiritual status and purpose.
The second is devotion to the Orthodox faith. The third is belief in
autocracy. Mashed together, these philosophers point to a Russia that is
a quasi-theocratic nationalist autocracy destined to play a culminating
role on the world stage.
These
philosophers often argued that the rationalistic, materialistic West
was corrupting the organic spiritual purity of Russia. “The West
exported this anti-Christian virus to Russia,” Ilyin wrote, “Having lost
our bond with God and the Christian tradition, mankind has been morally
blinded, gripped by materialism, irrationalism and nihilism.”
You
can hear echoes of this moralistic strain in Putin’s own speeches,
especially when he defends his regime’s attitude toward gays and the
role of women. Citing Berdyaev, he talks about defending traditional
values to ward off moral chaos. He says he is defending the distinction
between good and evil, which has been lost in the outside world.
Most
important, these philosophers had epic visions of Russia’s role in the
world. Solovyov argued that because Russia is located between the
Catholic West and the non-Christian East, it has a historic mission to
lead the way to human unification. Russia would transcend secularism and
atheism and create a unified spiritual kingdom. “The Russian messianic
conception,” Berdyaev wrote, “always exalted Russia as a country that
would help to solve the problems of humanity.”
Russia
is frequently seen as a besieged fortress. The West is thought to be
rotten to the core and weak yet so powerful that it can be blamed for
everything that goes wrong. Russia has immeasurable spiritual potential
yet is forever plagued by a lack of self-respect, lack of self-assertion
and unmet potential.
In
his 1948 essay, “What Dismemberment of Russia Entails for the World,”
Ilyin describes the Russian people as the “core of everything
European-Asian and, therefore, of universal equilibrium.” Yet the West,
he argues, is trying to “divide the united Russian broom into twigs to
break these twigs one by one.” The West is driven by “a plan of hatred
and lust for power.”
All
of this adds up to a highly charged and assertive messianic ideology.
If Putin took it all literally, he’d be a Russian ayatollah. Up until
now, he hasn’t taken it literally. His regime has used this nationalism
to mobilize public opinion and to explain itself to itself. But it has
tamped down every time this nationalistic ideology threatens to upend
the status quo.
The
danger is that Russia is now involved in a dispute in Ukraine that
touches and activates the very core of this touchy messianism. The tiger
of quasi-religious nationalism, which Putin has been riding, may now
take control. That would make it very hard for Putin to stop in this
conflict where rational calculus would tell him to stop. Up until now,
we have not been in a Huntingtonian conflict of civilizations with
Russia. But with passions aroused and philosophic zealotry at full boil,
it may temporarily appear that we are.
The
implication for Western policymakers is that we may not be dealing with
a “normal” regime, which can be manipulated by economic and diplomatic
carrots and sticks. Threatening to take away inclusion in the Group of 8
or freeze some assets may become irrelevant because the Russian regime
will have moved up to a different level. The Russian nation may be
motivated by a deep, creedal ideology that has been wafting through the
culture for centuries and has now found an unlikely, cynical and
cold-eyed host.
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