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Фёдор Иванович Тютчев
“Putin and the Rebuilding of Great Russia” represents
the first attempt by an appreciated mainstream editorialist and diplomat, the
former ambassador of Italy to Russia, Sergio Romano, to depict President Putin
not as an “autocrat”, “tyrant” or simply one “who every week finds new
ways to scare the world”, but as a “leader of a big country that has legitimate
interests and understandable ambitions”. Romano, who is a columnist of the
Corriere della Sera, tries to interpret the western anger against Putin and his
Russia as a problem of the same western democracies: “We may deplore some
aspects of his character and his politics, but I see always less people in the
West with the right to impart to him lessons of democracy.” He adds: “I ask
myself if democracy is still a virtuous model that the Europe of sick
democracies and the US of the wicked Middle East adventures and the new racism
have the right to propose to Russia?”. The result is therefore that: “we might
ask ourselves if the very bad image that democracies are actually showing isn’t
at the origin of the ‘authoritarianism’ of Putin”.
The book has to be considered not simply a biography
of President Putin or a sort of humble apology of his figure. It is more than
this: it is a well documented summary of the last 30 years of Russian history
and a succession of brilliant considerations about how the distorted western
perception has been unable to understand the “Putin phenomenon”. One of the
axes of the book is the attempt to define Putin’s strategy to “rebuild Russia”.
According to Romano we must go beyond the typical consideration on the
reconciliation with the past, the restoration of the Church, and the
edification of national consciousness. He actually believes that we have to consider
a sort of new political and geopolitical ideology underneath Putin’s politics.
Romano quotes in this case the annual address to the federal assembly that
Putin delivered in 2012, specifically this part of his speech: “I would like
all of us to understand clearly that the coming years will be decisive. Who
will take the lead and who will remain on the periphery and inevitably lose
their independence will depend not only on the economic potential but primarily
on the will of each nation, on its inner energy, which Lev Gumilev termed
passionarnost: the ability to move forward and to embrace change.”
This word “passionarnost” is able, according to
Romano, to explain the “theories of the originality of Russia in a world
dominated by trends and models made in the West, often with a clear American
origin”. Passionarnost is for Gumilev - a major historian, son of the poetess
Anna Akhmatova deported to Soviet labor camps during his early life - the
essential power of ethnogenesis: “‘The formation of a new ethnos is always
linked with the existence among some individuals of an uncontrollable internal
drive towards a single-minded activity, always related to changes in either
social or natural environment”.
Therefore, Romano believes that “Putin is probably convinced that is easiest to
govern Russia from the Kremlin, if someone explains to citizens their
originality.”.
Passionarnost also has to be considered the reason for
Putin’s intervention in Crimea in 2014: “The Ukrainian coup, which as any coup
is always judged with the criteria of convenience, was convenient for the
states that preferred to keep Ukraine in the western field and avoid the
possibility of it becoming a member of the Eurasian Economic Union.” Therefore,
the decision of Putin to intervene in Crimea was in order to protect the
“Russian diaspora” and to enhance the consciousness of the Russian nation.
Naturally, the passionarity of Russia in the attempt to rebuild national
consciousness is also a reaction to the threats posed by the West, in particular
by NATO and what Romano in a recent interview defined as the “anti-Russian
lobby”. In fact, “the mistake of the West was to let into the EU and NATO - two
linked aspects - an anti-Russian lobby composed by four-five countries that
consider Russia ‘the enemy’”. This anti-Russian lobby is mainly composed,
according to the former ambassador, of the Baltic republics and Poland.
This assumption is confirmed, for example, by the recent approval by the
European Parliament of a quite astonishing resolution that condemned
“Russian propaganda”, considered at the same level of “ISIS propaganda”. This
resolution was proposed by a Polish bureaucrat, Anna Fotyga, that clearly
demonstrate how the EU and NATO are hostages of this powerful Russophobic
lobby.
The action of this lobby is, however, a sort of swan
song of the “unipolar world” - to use a classic Putin expression - led by the
United States. So if we might admit that “the United States isn’t anymore a
guide to the world”, then we must also ask ourselves “is this really a bad
thing?” And also: “A country that loses two wars, that is directly responsible
for the financial crisis of 2007/2008, that, when it tries to reconsider its
ambitions, makes new mistakes…can we leave to them the world leadership?”. NATO
provocations assume a new perspective if we consider them to be final attempts
to preserve US world leadership: “In his insatiable bulimia, NATO is ready to
swallow two northern states - Finland and Sweden - that weren’t involved in the
Cold War. Facing these maneuvers, Russia, not without reason, has launched a
cry of alarm”. At the end, it seems that the West and mainly Europe are the
victim of a wrong perspective: “With its fears and its dramatic history, Poland
constrains us to see Russia with its eyes and the United States, together with
other countries, are happy to still have an enemy”.
This new “Cold War” is not only a mistake, according
to Romano, but a confrontation “that lost any nobility”: “it may seems a bit
rhetorical, but there was in that clash of giants [the Cold War] a certain
amount of nobility. Two big ideas - the dictatorship of proletariat and
democratic capitalism - offered to the world two different routes toward a
better future.” Today, “communism failed but also capitalist democracies are not
in better conditions”. Summarizing his views, Romano thinks that if we want to
understand the politician, the strategist, and the man Vladimir Putin, we must
make a preliminary self-criticism of the conditions of our allegedly democratic
systems. And we also must enter into the landscape of Russia, a complex and
unique country that as poet Fyodor Tyutchev said: “cannot be understood with
the mind alone” since “in Russia one can only believe”.
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