Medvedev's diatribes make sense if we consider that from Putin's standpoint the real threat must be coming from those already in power, rather than from the cartoonish & powerless opposition. And among those already in power, his own courtiers are by far the most dangerous
Like where else the threat may be coming from? From nowhere. People can never beat the army
1. Street protests? Well, they can't beat the army 2. Rebels (e.g. Caucasus). Same story. They can't beat the army 3. Regional barons. Same story, unless they have their own armies
4. Army itself. YES! Absolutely, yes. And that is a major reason for the Russian military setbacks. The army in Russia is not optimised for winning a foreign war. It is optimised for presenting as little threat to the regime as possible. At cost of the fighting power, of course
People can never beat the army -> You are secure from every internal threat possible, as long as you keep your grasp over the army. Now how do you do that?
(a) Direct control. Make your sons generals
(b) Political control. Fill it with commissars
(c) State security control.… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
4. Which brings us to the control over state security. FSB, FSO and SVR are the keystone in the Russian system of power. State security controls the army -> army can (and will) crush any internal threat. Control Siloviki and you are absolutely and 100% secure. Or are you?
In reality the Siloviki agencies which constitute the true keystone in the Russian power (as they control the army) are not a monolith. It is a complex system of factions, each maximising their own benefit at the cost of everyone else. The ruler Kremlin may incite or encourage… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
The problem with Siloviki however, is that they cannot speak in their own name. It is not impossible, it just doesn't really happen. Direct rule by Siloviki seems logical, but in reality it would be too illegitimate and therefore, too unstable for that to plausibly materialise
Illegitimacy of the potential direct Siloviki rule should not be understood as the lack of "democratic legitimacy" (that crap is intangible here), but as the lack of real, actual legitimacy in the eyes of the ruling class. Like imagine some FSB general made a coup and took power.… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
If there is no good answer to this question, it means anyone could potentially take his place. Which means anyone around is a potential danger to the ruler. A very unstable construction. For a regime to be stable, it needs to exclude (or minimise) potential claims to the throne
Putin has an answer to this question. He has been personally chosen and appointed by the previous ruler. Consequently, Putin is the legitimate ruler. His claim for the throne is unique (official heir), nobody else can make as good one -> his rule is stable
Now imagine if the legitimate ruler (Putin) is overthrown and some rando takes his place. The rando's power would be illegitimate. It could be this rando, it could be that rando, it could be any rando. The regime would be unstable as any rando could now potentially push a claim… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Now let's assume that
A. Those who have something to lose are afraid of instability. Destabilising the country has a huge downside for have gots
B. It is up to have gots to threaten/not to threaten the Putin's rule. Have nots do not have this chance even hypothetically
1. Now Siloviki are the main have gots in Russia 2. Their leadership has the most to lose under any instability 3. And it is up to them to decide whether to threaten Putin
Overthrowal/not-overthrowal of Putin depends upon people who have every reason to fear destabilisation
For this reason, should a Siloviki faction try to kill/overthrow Putin, it is highly unlikely they would try to put one of their own on the throne. Why? A rando problem. Could be this rando, could be that rando -> any rando can press a claim -> destabilisation
Terrifying
Should a dissatisfied faction kill or overthrow Putin, they would most likely seek for a *legitimate heir* to replace him. No randos. No nonames. No competing claims for the throne. Legitimacy, stability, order
That's what have gots would do, rationally speaking
In the imperial era, they could have killed a Tsar and replaced him with his son. Or wife. Or cousin. Or another close relative. They would seek for a legitimate candidature. It is up for have gots to make a coup and have gots seek for legitimacy which secures stability
Should an elite faction rise against Putin now, whom would they replace him with? From a have got's perspective, you must optimise for legitimacy as legitimacy secures stability of the political and thus socio-economic order. You need a candidate with a legitimate claim
Now nobody in Russia has as good claim as Medvedev. His claim is technically as good as Putin's. Putin was appointed by the previous Tsar and Medvedev was. Yeah, he was chosen as the proxy. But it is the formality that makes the difference here. And Medvedev has *far* better… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Which makes Medvedev an obvious replacement for Putin from the have gots perspective. He has a strong legitimate claim -> no rando can challenge it -> His regime could be stable -> His candidature is acceptable for have gots
And it is for have gots to even try a coup
Irrespectively of what Medvedev thinks or wants or aspires to, he is the mortal threat to Putin. The legitimate heir that could replace him without destabilising the political and thus socio-economic order. An acceptable candidate for have gots (the only who could do the coup)
"Popularity among the masses" is irrelevant. How many Russians would vote for the newly appointed Prime Minister Putin on presidential elections, based on August 1999 opinion polls? 1,5%? It doesn't matter. Putin did not need popularity, he needed:
In all of Russia, Medvedev is the only person with anything close to the legitimate claim. If we focus on *formality*, his claim would be no worse than Putin's. And it is the formality that guides the return to normality. Medvedev is an obvious candidate to replace Putin, as his… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
Medvedev is a danger because his succession has the least downside from the elite's perspective. Replace a legitimate ruler with another legitimate candidate (-> maximise stability) and make peace with the West as an upside
What can Putin do? Well, he can minimise the upside
If Medvedev will be unable to make peace with the West, there is no upside in his succession. Meanwhile, the downside of replacing a legitimate ruler (Putin) with some rando can be too large. It may have a too strong destabilising effect -> would be unacceptable for have gots
In other words, Putin's personal security largely depends upon minimising the upside of Medvedev's succession. As his is the only living person with a legitimate claim, it is in Putin's best interest to secure that Medvedev would not be able to make peace with the West. Or at… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
The end
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There's a subtle point here that 99,999% of Western commentariat is missing. Like, totally blind to. And that point is:
Building a huuuuuuuuuuge dam (or steel plant, or whatever) has been EVERYONE's plan of development. Like absolutely every developing country, no exceptions
Almost everyone who tried to develop did it in a USSR-ish way, via prestige projects. Build a dam. A steel plant. A huge plant. And then an even bigger one
And then you run out of money, and it all goes bust and all you have is postapocalyptic ruins for the kids to play in
If China did not go bust, in a way like almost every development project from the USSR to South Asia did, that probably means that you guys are wrong about China. Like totally wrong
What you describe is not China but the USSR, and its copies & emulations elsewhere
What I am saying is that "capitalist reforms" are a buzzword devoid of any actual meaning, and a buzzword that obfuscated rather than explains. Specifically, it is fusing radically different policies taken under the radically different circumstances (and timing!) into one - purely for ideological purposes
It can be argued, for example, that starting from the 1980s, China has undertaken massive socialist reforms, specifically in infrastructure, and in basic (mother) industries, such as steel, petrochemical and chemical and, of course, power
The primary weakness of this argument is that being true, historically speaking, it is just false in the context of American politics where the “communism” label has been so over-used (and misapplied) that it lost all of its former power:
“We want X”
“No, that is communism”
“We want communism”
Basically, when you use a label like “communism” as a deus ex machina winning you every argument, you simultaneously re-define its meaning. And when you use it to beat off every popular socio economic demand (e.g. universal healthcare), you re-define communism as a synthesis of all the popular socio economic demands
Historical communism = forced industrial development in a poor, predominantly agrarian country, funded through expropriation of the peasantry
(With the most disastrous economic and humanitarian consequences)
Many are trying to explain his success with some accidental factors such as his “personal charisma”, Cuomo's weakness etc
Still, I think there may be some fundamental factors here. A longue durée shift, and a very profound one
1. Public outrage does not work anymore
If you look at Zohran, he is calm, constructive, and rarely raises his voice. I think one thing that Mamdani - but almost no one else in the American political space is getting - is that the public is getting tired of the outrage
Outrage, anger, righteous indignation have all been the primary drivers of American politics for quite a while
For a while, this tactics worked
Indeed, when everyone around is polite, and soft (and insincere), freaking out was a smart thing to do. It could help you get noticed
People don’t really understand causal links. We pretend we do (“X results in Y”). But we actually don’t. Most explanations (= descriptions of causal structures) are fake.
There may be no connection between X and Y at all. The cause is just misattributed.
Or, perhaps, X does indeed result in Y. but only under a certain (and unknown!) set of conditions that remains totally and utterly opaque to us. So, X->Y is only a part of the equation
And so on
I like to think of a hypothetical Stone Age farmer who started farming, and it worked amazingly, and his entire community adopted his lifestyle, and many generations followed it and prospered and multiplied, until all suddenly wiped out in a new ice age
1. Normative Islamophobia that used to define the public discourse being the most acceptable form of racial & ethnic bigotry in the West, is receding. It is not so much dying as rather - failing to replicate. It is not that the old people change their views as that the young do not absorb their prejudice any longer.
In fact, I incline to think it has been failing to replicate for a while, it is just that we have not been paying attention
Again, the change of vibe does not happen at once. The Muslim scare may still find (some) audience among the more rigid elderly, who are not going to change their views. But for the youth, it is starting to sound as archaic as the Catholic scare of know nothings
Out of date
2. What is particularly interesting regarding Mamdani's victory, is his support base. It would not be much of an exaggeration to say that its core is comprised of the young (and predominantly white) middle classes, with a nearly equal representation of men and women