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Vladimir Putin has moved from being president to prime minister. He is also chairman—I nearly wrote General Secretary—of the ruling party. Together with his ex-KGB colleagues, he presents a profound challenge to the West, and never more so than now. Our economy is slumping just as theirs is booming. The idea that economic prosperity depends on political freedom seems to have been exploded. Russia has a system of authoritarian bureaucratic capitalism that at least on the surface seems to deliver the goods: high living standards, decisive leadership, and none of the messy complications of Western-style electoral democracy and separation of powers.

Even when the real shortcomings of the Kremlin’s crony capitalist system are pointed out, we in the West flinch from telling it like it is. So Russia’s economy and politics are distorted, monopolistic and corrupt? Surely that’s just like Italy — particularly with Mr Putin’s chum Silvio Berlusconi back in charge. So Russia incarcerates dissidents in psychiatric hospitals? Well, America has flung the innocent into the prison camps of Guantánamo Bay.

It is certainly true that the worst aspects of the Russian system are often a concentrated form of our own worst shortcomings. Indeed, the West has largely lost the moral authority that it enjoyed during the last Cold War. Once it was the Russian elite who feared us, and ordinary Russians who admired us. Now the elite despises us for our corruption and weakness, and ordinary Russians see little difference between one lot of rulers and another.

But just because we have many flaws does not mean that we are always wrong, or that somewhere else can’t be worse. Without some kind of moral self-confidence in our own system, we cannot defend it: we are in the same position as the kind of leftwingers who believe that mugging is a political action by the poor against the rich. The squirming reaction to the praise lavished by Nicolas Sarkozy on Britain’s dynamism, efficient institutions and deep historical traditions was a good example. His audience were so used to moaning about Britain’s crowded, vulgar, discredited (fill in blanks from either The Guardian or Daily Mail leader columns according to your choice) that they could hardly believe that a foreigner was coming here to tell us that we had something to be proud of.

Moral timidity is a gift to Kremlin propagandists. During the Cold War they were trained to use a technique that I dubbed “what-about-ism”. Any criticism of the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan, martial law in Poland, political persecutions or censorship was met with a “what about” apartheid South Africa, (or trade union rights, American-supported dictatorships in Latin America, etc, etc).

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Chipfield
August 19th, 2008
8:08 AM
Dictator Putin is showing his true evil nature with the vicious Russian invasion of tiny Georgia. We can only hope NATO gets their act together and forces Moscow's barbarian horde back into Russia, another 500 miles north!

Richardlith
July 15th, 2008
11:07 AM
The problem with Anonymous is that his comments are out of date, from about 30 years for British Guiana (now called Guyana and an independent state) to about 300 years for the monarch's right to sack the government. Also, if Scotland and Wales are still part of the British Empire, that woulld make Russia's Black Sea Coast (including the beloved Sochi), most of Siberia and the Far East, including Vladivostok and Sakhalin, remnants of the Russian Empire which should be given up to reduce the Russian Man's Burden. Indeed, Russia is still an imperialist state, bringing the total in the world to two after the US. Russia holds territory that it gained during the great age of European imperial expandion (about 1600-1900), and has not given it up, arguing that the Black Sea Coast, Siberia and the Pacific Coast are intergral parts of the country. Mind you, that is what the French used to say about Algeria!

Rob
July 14th, 2008
10:07 AM
It's interesting that someone raised the residual powers of the Queen in the UK. The plain fact is, however, that these powers continue to exist for the simple reason that no monarch would dare to try and use them, at least without direction from government. If they did, they would be removed. Also, it is wrong to say that Britain does not have a constitution. We do not have a written constitution, but our system of government is the sum of our laws. The irony of Russia, of course, it that Putin rigs elections he would easily win anyway.

Michael
June 27th, 2008
2:06 PM
I note that Anonymous' contribution is... well, anonymous. I wonder why?

Anna
June 24th, 2008
7:06 AM
Wholeheartedly agree with PG. As for Russia - Aleksandr Yakolev wrote in his book, "A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia" that Russia will never be a normal country until it deals with the crimes of its Communist Soviet past.

Anna Pihta
June 23rd, 2008
8:06 PM
Diatribe by "anonymous" reminds me of the wackos who blame the US for all the problems of the world. What drives these folks, one wonders. Excellent article, Edward Kucas! As Alexander Yakovlev wrote in "A Century of Violence in Soviet Russia" that country will never be normal until the Russians face and deal with their past, with the evil and the crimes of the USSR. Just as Germany has had to deal with the crimes of its Nazi past. Ronald Reagan must be spinning in his grave - he actually rolled back Communism, but the West blew it. We won the Cold War, but failed to capitalize on this important victory. Ex-Soviets were let off the hook,no war criminals were punished, no compensation to the victims, no acknowledgement of their suffering, no monuments to the tragedy. And Putin's Russia glorifies Stalin, exploiting the youth and thereby dooming the future of that potentially great country by keeping the monstrous truth of what really happened from them.

Chipfield
June 21st, 2008
10:06 AM
If energy prices were to seriously reverse, Putin's corrupt energy fueled empire would collapse the entire Russian economy.

PG
June 19th, 2008
2:06 PM
Spot on, Ed, as usual! A stirring defense of democracy.

Brett
June 6th, 2008
3:06 PM
No, no need to continue. Despite your valid criticisms of the state of British democracy, the fact still remains that Russia has a uniquely rich history of despotism. It is only prudent, especially as Russia emerges (once again) as a dominant world player, to firmly condemn any behavior (such as the Kremlin's murdering of reporters) that harkens back to a time that Russia should be anything but proud of.

Anonymous
June 3rd, 2008
10:06 AM
Herr Lucas, look in the mirror and tell me if you like what you see. Is the UK, a ridiculously retrogade monarchy without any constitution, indeed more "democratic" than Putin's Russia? At least Russia's head of state is popularly elected, which cannot be said either of the UK's hereditary head of state, a Queen with enormous political powers such as being commander-in-chief, head of the state-imposed Anglican Church, etc. (not to mention her extraordinary hidden powers to reject or even overthrow cabinet governments and parliaments), or even of the UK's head of government, the Prime Minister? Russia at least has a Supreme Court and a Constitutional Court, while the UK has nothing but a still predominantly hereditary House of Lords, which occasionally pretends to perform such an unusual for it function. And the UK is still trying to maintain an antiquanted though hugely shrunk empire, stretching from Northern Ireland, Scotland and Wales all the way to British Guiana and the Argentinian Falkland Islands. And you still have operating concentration camps (which the British pioneered as part of their "White Man's burden")more than a 100 years ago during the Boer War) ready to detain any troublemaker in Northern Ireland. Under UK's electoral system, you can still "win" the election, even if you have lost the popular vote. And if the supposedly "independent" British Broadcasting Corporation dares to criticize the Prime Minister, the latter can fire--and has fired in the past--the BBC's CEO (which is why other Europeans often joke about the "British Buggery Corporation"). Need I continue?

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