Kamil Galeev Profile picture
Apr 9, 2023 26 tweets 8 min read Read on X
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 Image
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… Image
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 Image
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) Image
"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:

a) legitimate claim
b)… twitter.com/i/web/status/1…
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… Image
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 Image
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…
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More from @kamilkazani

Jun 21
What does Musk vs Trump affair teach us about the general patterns of human history? Well, first of all it shows that the ancient historians were right. They grasped something about nature of politics that our contemporaries simply can’t.Image
Let me give you an example. The Arab conquest of Spain

According to a popular medieval/early modern interpretation, its primary cause was the lust of Visigoth king Roderic. Aroused by the beautiful daughter of his vassal and ally, count Julian, he took advantage of her Image
Disgruntled, humiliated Julian allied himself with the Arabs and opens them the gates of Spain.

Entire kingdom lost, all because the head of state caused a personal injury to someone important. Image
Read 4 tweets
Jun 19
On the impending war with Iran

One thing you need to understand about wars is that very few engage into the long, protracted warfare on purpose. Almost every war of attrition was planned and designed as a short victorious blitzkrieg

And then everything went wrong
Consider the Russian war in Ukraine. It was not planned as a war. It was not thought of as a war. It was planned as a (swift!) regime change allowing to score a few points in the Russian domestic politics. And then everything went wrong
It would not be an exaggeration to say that planning a short victorious war optimised for the purposes of domestic politics is how you *usually* end up in a deadlock. That is the most common scenario of how it happens, practically speaking
Read 12 tweets
Jun 18
Hard to swallow pill

Global politics are usually framed in terms of kindergarten discourse (“good guys” vs “bad guys”) with an implication that you must provide “good guys” with boundless and unconditional support

BUT

Unconditional support is extremely corrupting, and turns the best of the best into the really nasty guys, and relatively fast
Part of the reason is that neither “bad” nor “good” guys are in fact homogenous, and present a spectrum of opinions and personalities. Which means that all of your designated “good guys” include a fair share of really, really nasty guys, almost by definition.

Purely good movements do not really exist
That is a major reason why limitless, unconditional, unquestioning support causes such a profound corrupting effect upon the very best movement. First, because that movement is not all
that purely good as you imagine (neither movement is),
Read 4 tweets
Jun 14
On Trump's birthday

Let's have a look at these four guys. Everything about them seems to be different. Religion. Ideology. Political regime. And yet, there is a common denominator uniting all:

Xi - 71 years old
Putin - 72 years old
Trump - 79 years old
Khamenei - 86 years old Image
Irrespectively of their political, ideological, religious and whatever differences, Russia, China, the United States, Iran are all governed by the old. Whatever regime, whatever government they have, it is the septuagenarians and octogenarians who have the final saying in it.
This fact is more consequential than it seems. To explain why, let me introduce the following idea:

Every society is a multiracial society, for every generation is a new race

Although we tend to imagine them as cohesive, all these countries are multigenerational -> multiracial
Read 7 tweets
Jun 7
In 1927, when Trotsky was being expelled from the Boslhevik Party, the atmosphere was very and very heated. One cavalry commander met Stalin at the stairs and threatened to cut off his ears. He even pretended he is unsheathing he sabre to proceed

Stalin shut up and said nothing
Like obviously, everyone around could see Stalin is super angry. But he still said nothing and did nothing

Which brings us to an important point:

Nobody becomes powerful accidentally
If Joseph Stalin seized the absolute control over the Communist Party, and the Soviet Union, the most plausible explanation is that Joseph Stalin is exercising some extremely rare virtues, that almost nobody on the planet Earth is capable of

Highly virtuous man, almost to the impossible level
Read 7 tweets
Jun 1
Growing up in Russia in the 1990s, I used to put America on a pedestal. It was not so much a conscious decision, as the admission of an objective fact of reality. It was the country of future, the country thinking about the future, and marching into the future. Image
And nothing reflected this better than the seething hatred it got from Russia, a country stuck in the past, whose imagination was fully preoccupied with the injuries of yesterday, and the phantasies of terrible revenge, usually in the form of nuclear strike. Image
Which, of course, projected weakness rather than strength

We will make a huuuuuuge bomb, and drop it onto your heads, and turn you into the radioactive dust, and you will die in agony, and we will be laughing and clapping our hands

An old man yelling at clouds Image
Read 9 tweets

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