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May 14th, 2024

Insight

Wagner 'coup' shows how primitive Russia remains

Rich Lowry

By Rich Lowry

Published June 29, 2023

Wagner 'coup' shows how primitive Russia remains

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On the one hand, events in Russia last weekend were stunning — the leader of a mercenary group, Wagner Group leader Yevgeny Prigozhin, declaring against the country's military leadership and, for 24 hours, marching on Moscow.

On the other, they were about what you'd expect in a Russia that, across the long centuries of its existence, has never managed to achieve Western standards of self-government.

Revolutions, attempted rebellions, assassinations and coups dot the Russian historical landscape.

This isn't unusual in old nations.

What makes Russia different is that it is dealing with them to this day.

England had a no-kidding war between the king and parliament … more than 350 years ago.

Boris Yeltsin had a battle with the parliament that resulted in the parliamentary building getting shelled by tanks … in 1993.

"Getting to Denmark" is the phrase social scientists use for achieving modern standard of government.

"For people in developing countries," Francis Fukuyama has written, "‘Denmark' is a mythical place that is known to have good political and economic institutions: it is stable, democratic, peaceful, prosperous, inclusive, and has extremely low levels of political corruption. Everyone would like to figure out how to transform Somalia, Haiti, Nigeria, Iraq or Afghanistan into ‘Denmark.'"

Russia has never gotten to Denmark, either, although if it ever succeeded in taking back the Baltics by force at least it'd be geographically closer.

Russia's distance from the Western standard is why a country that is a member of the UN Security Council and the G20 could have a crisis with a distinct Third World flavor.

Those on left and right who want to appease Putin would make the world worse An ambitious military leader who has a personal following making a bid for power is what we expect in places like Paraguay, Ecuador and Honduras.

Except none of them have nuclear warheads; Russia has 6,000 of them.

Establishing a norm of the peaceful transfer of power is one of the most valuable achievements of the modern West.

Otherwise, history tells us, rival contenders for power will kill one another and cut paths of destruction through their societies.

The most extreme example is the Western Roman Empire that dissipated enormous resources on constant internal battles for power.

Opacity, conspiracy, double-dealing and lies are endemic to human nature, and all politics.

In the West, accountable government, the rule of law and norms around transparency at least limit them.

In Russia, they are so prevalent that it may be a very long time before we know everything that was going on with Prigozhin's revolt, if ever.

In a speech last year, Vladimir Putin railed against the West's "undivided dominance over world affairs" and blamed it for holding down what it regards as "second-class civilizations."

The sense of bristling defensiveness in the sentiment is understandable.

A couple millennia after Athens and a couple hundred years after the modern democratic revolution, Russia still has a de facto Tsar.

Whereas we read about poisonings in history books about medieval Europe, they still happen in Russia.

If he's going to maintain his sense of dominance, Putin isn't ultimately going to defeat Prigozhin in an election or simply fire or reprimand him; he's going to have to kill him.

The West may be naïve, feckless, foolhardy or self-destructive, but its model of stable, accountable, democratic government is a stupendous achievement.

Without it, you get a Vladimir Putin reportedly fleeing his capital in fear and a Yevgeny Prigozhin, with probably an unfortunate fall out of a window sometime soon.

Russia has only ever been able "to get to Russia," and it shows.

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