Interview
by Margarita Liutova. Abridged translation by Emily Laskin.
Sociologist
Grigory Yudin was one of just a few Russian experts who believed in February
2022 that a military clash between Russia and Ukraine was inevitable. In an article published
just two days before the invasion, Yudin predicted that a major war loomed in
the near future, that Russians would follow the Kremlin in blaming the West,
and that sanctions would do nothing to stop Putin — all of which came
true.
In
February 2023, Meduza special correspondent Margarita Liutova spoke to Yudin
about why Putin needs a “forever war,” and what might ensure the emergence of a
broad anti-war movement in Russia.
There’s a widespread view about
contemporary Russian politics that says war is an endless process for Putin,
and Putin himself seemed to confirm the
idea in his recent Federal Assembly address: He said nothing about how Russia
will win and what will happen after that. Do you think that Putin’s plan is
really eternal war?
Yes, of course,
the war is now forever. It has no goals that can be achieved and lead to its
end. It continues simply because [in Putin’s imagination], they are enemies and
they want to kill us, and we want to kill them. For Putin, it’s an existential
clash with an enemy set on destroying him.
There
should be no illusions: while Putin is in the Kremlin, the war will not end. It
will only expand. The size of the Russian army is increasing rapidly,
the economy is reorienting toward
guns, and education is
turning into a propaganda tool and war preparation. They’re preparing the
country for a long and difficult war.
And then it’s obviously
impossible for Putin to win?
It’s
absolutely impossible. No one has set any goal [for the war] or offered any
definition of victory.
So, can we consider the point to
be the preservation of Vladimir Putin’s authority?
They’re
almost the same thing. He thinks of his rule as constant war. Putin and the
people who surround him told
us long ago that there’s a war against us. Some preferred not
to mark their words, but they seriously think that they’ve been at war for a
long time. It’s just that now this war has entered such an aggressive phase,
and there’s obviously no exit.
War
itself is normal, in their worldview. Stop thinking that peace is the natural
state, and you’ll see the situation through their eyes. As the governor of
Khanty-Mansi [Natalya Komarova] said,
“War is a friend.”
On February 22, 2022, you published an article on
openDemocracy, in which you described an upcoming major war and Putin’s
dismissive attitude toward the sanctions that Western countries imposed in
response. In the second half of the article, you argued that “the war with
Ukraine will be the most senseless of all the wars in our history.” Do you
think Russian society has started to realize this over the past year?
No,
in my view, it hasn’t. It was clear to many, many people from the very
beginning, but since then that category has barely grown. In Russia today, you
find this powerful feeling, and it’s one of those rare occasions when Vladimir
Putin connects with a significant part of society. It’s far from everyone who
shares his wild theories, but he does connect with people.
Even
more importantly, he produces this emotion himself. And that emotion is
resentment — monstrous, endless resentment. Nothing can mollify this
resentment. It’s impossible to imagine what could compensate for it. It doesn’t
allow people to think about establishing any kind of productive relationships
with other countries.
You
know, it’s like a young child who gets deeply offended and then hurts those
around him. The harm grows greater and greater, and at some point, he seriously
begins destroying others’ lives, as well as his own. But the child isn’t
thinking about that; he isn’t thinking that he somehow needs to build
relationships.
I
think that the feeling of resentment, which has been overflowing lately in
Russia, is supported at a very high level, and we haven’t yet reached the point
where someone might realize that we [Russians] have normal, legitimate
interests, and we need to reach them by building relationships with other
countries in the right way.
There’s
a good saying in Russia: “Water is borne on the shoulders of the offended,”
[meaning, roughly, that a grudge is a heavy burden]. At some point, we’ll
understand that this resentment works against us, that we’re harming ourselves
because of it. But at the moment, too many of us want to be offended.
Whom do Vladimir Putin and Russian society resent? The
whole world? The West? The U.S.?
[They resent] a world order that seems unfair, and,
accordingly, whoever takes responsibility for being “superior” in this world
order, meaning the United States of America.
I always remember something Putin said in mid-2021.
He said,
completely unprovoked, that there’s no happiness in life. It’s a strong
statement for a political leader, who of course doesn’t have to bring people
into heaven but should in theory make their lives better.
But it’s as if he says: “There’s no happiness in life. The
world is a bad, unjust, difficult place, where the only way to exist is to
struggle constantly, to fight, and, at the outer limit, kill.”
Resentment of the outside world is deeply rooted in Russia,
and it gets projected onto the U.S., which seems responsible for the
world. At some point, the United States really did take responsibility for the world — not completely
successfully. And we see that the resentment I’m talking about is definitely
not only in Russia (where it of course exists in a catastrophic, horrible
form).
A significant part of the world has well-founded complaints
about the current world order, and against the U.S., which took responsibility,
became a hegemon, and has benefited from the world order in many ways. We see
that parts of the world that are engulfed by this resentment are more understanding
toward Vladimir Putin.
I wouldn’t say that this understanding becomes support,
simply because Putin offers nothing [to the world]. Putin wants to do the same
things for which he criticizes the United States. So, supporting him is
difficult, but many want to join in the resentment.
Is resentment rooted in Russian society from before Putin,
in the nineties? Or has it been cultivated under Putin?
There are some grounds for resentment [in Russian society].
It’s related to the instructive role that the U.S. and some parts of Western
Europe took on. Ideologically, [that role] was framed in terms of modernization
theory, which said that there are developed countries and developing countries,
and the developed countries — kindly and supportively — will teach the
developing ones: “Guys, you should be arranged like so.” Generally speaking, no
one likes to be lectured. Especially a big country that has its own imperial
past.
In fact, the situation that developed in the 1990s was much more complicated. [After the collapse of the USSR,] Russia was invited to join a whole host of key international clubs, and Russia influenced decisions on key global questions.
But that
instructive tone [in relation to Russia] was there. It was the result of a
profound ideological mistake: In the conditions of the socialist project’s
collapse, it seemed [to many] that there was only one correct path, the famous
“end of history.” So, there were preconditions for resentment, but there were
also preconditions for other emotions.
There were [also] many competing narratives [about the
meaning of the USSR’s collapse for its citizens]. One held that it was a people’s revolution, a glorious moment in Russian history and the
history of other nations, because they managed to take control of a hateful,
tyrannical regime. That conception, of course, doesn’t lead to resentment.
But Putin chose resentment. In part, probably, because of his own personal qualities. And resentment is contagious. It’s a convenient emotion: you always feel, first of all, in the right, and second, you feel undeservedly trampled on.
You’ve said more than once that Putin won’t stop at Ukraine.
What exactly do you anticipate? Moldova, the Baltic states, a self-destructive
war with the U.S.?
His worldview sees no borders. This formula has become a
practically official line: Russia ends nowhere. This is the standard definition
of an empire because an empire recognizes no borders.
I’ll remind everyone of [Putin’s] ultimatum [to the U.S. and NATO] in December of 2021 — it’s crystal clear, it says in plain text that all of Eastern Europe is Vladimir Putin’s sphere of influence. How that will be worked out, whether it means a formal loss of sovereignty or not, what difference does it make?
And this zone without a doubt includes East Germany, just because Putin has personal memories of it. It’s really hard for me to imagine that he truly thinks of that territory as not his. Putin definitely intends to restore the Warsaw Pact zone [the former Eastern Bloc countries under Soviet influence]…
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