Press
PRESS RELEASE: ECFR publishes collection of views from key Russian intellectuals
25 Sep 09
The
EU's Russia
policy cannot succeed as long as it continues to rest on faulty analysis and
mistaken assumptions. This is the main
conclusion of What does Russia
think?, a collection of
politically revealing essays by intellectuals whose views influence the Kremlin
- many of whom have advised Putin or Medvedev - which the European Council on
Foreign Relations has published today. The collection includes essays by Fyodor
Lukyanov, Valery Fadeev, Vyacheslav Glazychev, Gleb Pavlovsky and Leonid
Polyakov.
Despite
a tendency toward insularity, the policy debate in Russia as reflected through these
essays is ongoing and lively. As ECFR Russia experts Ivan Krastev, Mark Leonard and Andrew Wilson write in their joint
introduction: "If we want to
influence and deal with Russia,
we need to understand it. But if we want to understand Russia, we
should be interested in it. Unfortunately, we are not. Taken together, these
essays show that the EU will only be able to develop an effective approach to Moscow if its policy makers rediscover some of the
curiosity for Russia's
internal debates that they had during the Cold War."
- According to the intellectuals: Russia does not want to be like the EU.
The overarching quest for most Russian policy-makers is not to move closer
to their Western neighbours, as many in the EU would like to think, but
rather to free themselves from the West. Leonid Polyakov is the Chair of
General Political Sciences at Moscow
State University,
and has worked on developing and publicising the controversial
"sovereign democracy" concept. In his essay, An Ideological Self-Portrait of the
Russian Regime, Polyakov writes: "the task before us is to turn Russia
from an imitator of other civilisations into a model to be imitated by
others."
- There is mounting distrust towards the EU in Russia.
Russia
fears that its borders are vulnerable, which explains the ongoing drive to
surround itself with buffer states. Fyodor Lukyanov is editor of the
journal Russia in Global Affairs,
which produces the most widely read analysis of Russian foreign
policy. As he writes in his essay Rethinking Security in 'Greater Europe',
"not a single country in the former Soviet Union, including Russia,
can say for certain that its borders are historically justified, natural
and, therefore, inviolable".
- The West has lost interest in discovering what is really going on
in Russia, and relies on obsolete perceptions going back to the end of
the Cold War. Gleb Pavlovsky is head of the Russia Institute and is one of
the Kremlin's leading strategists. He helped launch Putin as Yeltsin's
successor and ran Putin's two election campaigns in 2000 and 2004. In his
essay, Two missions in Moscow, Pavlovsky argues that western liberals
focus stubbornly on what Russia
lacks: "The West persistently repeats, like a mantra, that Russia
is "weak". The US
refuses to recognise, and the EU refuses to accept, the reality of a
global Russia.
This is the biggest problem in relations between Russia and
the West."
- Russian political debate is far more complex than a struggle
between democracy supporters and Putin followers. There is an
underlying "Putin consensus" in Russia - Putin's approval
rating hovers at around 70%, while support for the government he heads is
not even a third of this figure. But in denouncing the "Putin
consensus" as manifest authoritarianism, the West fails to appreciate
its social and political origins. To understand it, one has to look back
at the debilitating crisis resulting from the collapse of the Soviet Union and the anarchic democracy that
followed. Vyacheslav Glazychev is
the Managing Director of the Evropa
publishing house which specialises in books on Russian politics,
philosophy and history. In his essay The
'Putin consensus' Explained', he argues that "fear of empty
space" is the essential reason for Putin's majority support.
According to Glazychev, "the Putin phenomenon has only an indirect
relationship with the rational. Without a shadow of a doubt, Putin's macho
style has an almost magical effect on the majority of Russian
citizens."
- The economic crisis has strengthened Putin's Russia.
Contrary to many predictions, the economic crisis has made the Russian
state more powerful at home and abroad. Valery Fadeev is the editor of the
influential business weekly Ekspert.
In his essay, Has the economic
crisis changed the world view of the Russian political crisis, he
writes that when the economic crisis hit, "the authorities acted
quickly and nearly always correctly. They preserved the financial system
at a high level of functionality and prevented panic from entering the
banking market."
For the full text of the paper: http://ecfr.eu/page/-/documents/ecfr_what_does_russia_think.pdf
NOTES TO EDITORS
- What does Russia
think? was edited by Mark Leonard,
Ivan Krastev and Andrew Wilson.
- Andrew Wilson is a Senior
Policy Fellow at the European Council on Foreign Relations. He can be
contacted at .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)
or on +44 7920 421066.
- Mark
Leonard is the Executive Director of the European
Council on Foreign Relations.
- Ivan Krastev is a Council
Member of the European Council on Foreign Relations and Chair of Board of
the Centre for Liberal Strategies.
- This paper, like all ECFR
publications, represents the views of its authors, not the collective
position of ECFR or its Council Members.
- For all media enquiries
please email .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) or telephone
+44 20 7031 1623.
- The European Council on
Foreign Relations (ECFR) is the first pan-European think-tank. Launched in
October 2007, its objective is to conduct research and promote informed
debate across Europe on the development
of coherent and effective European values based foreign policy. http://www.ecfr.eu/
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