Inside Putin’s circle — the real Russian elite |
As the west focuses on oligarchs, a far smaller group
has its grip on true power in Moscow. Who are the siloviki — and what motivates
them?
Anatol
Lieven MARCH 11 2022
https://www.ft.com/content/503fb110-f91e-4bed-b6dc-0d09582dd007
Five of
Putin’s inner circle
Sergei
Lavrov, 71, foreign minister
Sergei
Naryshkin, 67, foreign intelligence chief
Nikolai
Patrushev, 70, secretary of Russia’s security council
Igor
Sechin, 61, chief executive of Rosneft
Sergei
Shoigu, 66, defence minister
In
describing Vladimir Putin and his inner circle, I have often thought of a
remark by John Maynard Keynes about Georges Clemenceau, French prime minister
during the first world war: that he was an utterly disillusioned individual who
“had one illusion — France”.
Something
similar could be said of Russia’s governing elite, and helps to explain the
appallingly risky collective gamble they have taken by invading Ukraine.
Ruthless, greedy and cynical they may be — but they are not cynical about the
idea of Russian greatness.
The western
media employ the term “oligarch” to describe super-wealthy Russians in general,
including those now wholly or largely resident in the west. The term gained
traction in the 1990s, and has long been seriously misused. In the time of
President Boris Yeltsin, a small group of wealthy businessmen did indeed
dominate the state, which they plundered in collaboration with senior
officials. This group was, however, broken by Putin during his first years in
power.
Three of
the top seven “oligarchs” tried to defy Putin politically. Boris Berezovsky and
Vladimir Gusinsky were driven abroad, and Mikhail Khodorkovsky was jailed and
then exiled. The others, and their numerous lesser equivalents, were allowed to
keep their businesses within Russia in return for unconditional public
subservience to Putin. When Putin met (by video link) leading Russian
businessmen after launching the invasion of Ukraine, there was no question of
who was giving the orders.
The force
that broke the oligarchs was the former KGB, reorganised in its various
successor services. Putin himself, of course, came from the KGB, and a large
majority of the top elite under Putin are from the KGB or associated state
backgrounds (though not the armed forces).
This group
have remained remarkably stable and homogenous under Putin, and are (or used to
be) close to him personally. Under his leadership, they have plundered their
country (though unlike the previous oligarchs, they have kept most of their
wealth within Russia) and have participated or acquiesced in his crimes,
including the greatest of them all, the invasion of Ukraine. They have echoed
both Putin’s vicious propaganda against Ukraine and his denunciations of
western decadence.
As Russia
plunges deeper into a military quagmire and economic crisis, a central question
is whether — if the war is not ended quickly by a peace settlement — Putin can
be removed (or persuaded to step down) by the Russian elites themselves, in
order to try to extricate Russia and themselves from the pit he has dug for
them. To assess the chances of this requires an understanding of the nature of
the contemporary Russian elites, and above all of Putin’s inner core.
By way of
illustrating the depth of the Russian catastrophe of the 1990s and identifying
with all those who suffered from it, Putin has said that at one stage he was
reduced — while still a serving lieutenant colonel of the KGB — to moonlighting
as a freelance taxi driver in order to supplement his income. This is plausible
enough. In 1994, while I was working as a journalist for The Times in Russia
and the former USSR, my driver in the North Caucasus was an ex-major in the
KGB. “We thought we were the backbone of the Soviet Union,” he said to me
bitterly. “Now look at us. Real Chekists!”
Despite
amassing immense wealth and power, Putin and his inner circle remain intensely
resentful of the way the USSR collapsed
“Real
Chekist” (nastoyashchy chekist) was a Soviet propaganda phrase referring to the
qualities of ruthless discipline, courage, ideological commitment and honesty
supposedly characteristic of the Cheka, the first Soviet secret police formed
by Lenin and his associates. It became the subject of many Soviet jokes, but
there is little doubt that Putin and his top elite continue to see themselves
in this light, as the backbone of Russia — though Putin, who is anything but a
revolutionary, appears to identify much more strongly with the security elites
of imperial Russia.
An
interesting illustration of this comes from Union of Salvation (Soyuz
Spaseniya, 2019), a film about the radical Decembrist revolt of 1825, made with
the support of the Russian state. To the considerable shock of older Russian
friends of mine who were brought up to revere the Decembrists, the heroes of
this film are Tsar Nicholas I and the loyal imperial generals and bureaucrats
who fought to preserve government and order against the rebels.
Although
they have amassed immense power and wealth, Putin and his immediate circle
remain intensely resentful of the way in which the Soviet Union, Russia and
their own service collapsed in the 1990s — and great power mixed with great
resentment is one of the most dangerous mixtures in both domestic and
international politics.
As Putin’s
autocratic tendencies have grown, real power (as opposed to wealth) within the
system has come to depend more and more on continual personal access to the
president; and the number of those with such access has narrowed — especially
since the Covid pandemic led to Putin’s drastic physical isolation — to a
handful of close associates.
In his
first years in power, Putin (who was a relatively junior KGB officer) could be
regarded as “first among equals” in a top elite of friends and colleagues. No
longer. Increasingly, even the siloviki have been publicly reduced to servants
of the autocrat — as was graphically illustrated by Putin’s humiliation of his
foreign intelligence chief, Sergei Naryshkin, at the televised meeting of the
National Security Council on the eve of war. Such contemptuous behaviour towards
his immediate followers could come back to bite Putin, as it has so many past
autocrats.
The inner
core includes defence minister Sergei Shoigu (former emergencies minister and
not a professional soldier); Nikolai Patrushev, former head of domestic intelligence
and now secretary of Russia’s National Security Council; Naryshkin; and Igor
Sechin, the former deputy prime minister appointed by Putin to run the Rosneft
oil company. Insofar as top economic officials with “patriotic liberal”
leanings were ever part of this inner core, they have long since been excluded.
These men
are known in Russia as the “siloviki” — “men of force”, or perhaps even, in the
Irish phrase, “hard men”. A clear line should be drawn between the siloviki and
the wider Russian elites — large and very disparate and disunited congeries of
top businessmen, senior officials outside the inner circle, leading media
figures, top generals, patriotic intellectuals and the motley crew of local
notables, placemen and fixers who make up the leadership of Putin’s United
Russia party.
Among some
of the wider Russian elites, unease at the invasion of Ukraine and its
consequences is already apparent. Naturally enough, this has begun with the
economic elites, given their deep stakes in business with the west and their
understanding of the catastrophic impact of western sanctions on the Russian
economy. Roman Abramovich, his discomfort clear enough as he sought buyers for
Chelsea Football Club, found the sale halted this week when his UK assets were
frozen. Mikhail Fridman, chairman of Alfa Group (already severely hit by
western sanctions) and one of the surviving former “oligarchs” from the 1990s,
has called for an early end to the war, as has aluminium magnate Oleg
Deripaska.
If there is
no peace agreement and the war drags on into a bloody stalemate, the economy
declines precipitously and the Russian people see a steep fall in their living
standards, then public unrest, state repression and state attempts to dragoon
and exploit business will all inevitably increase radically, and so will the
unhappiness of the wider elites.
These,
however, lack the collective institutions and, perhaps more importantly, the
collective identities that would allow them to combine easily to unseat Putin.
The Duma, or lower house of Russia’s parliament, was succinctly described to me
by a Russian friend as “a compost heap full of assorted rotten vegetables”.
This is a bit too unkind — the Duma does contain some decent people — but it
would be futile to look to it for any kind of political leadership.
The army,
which elsewhere in the world would be the usual institution behind a coup, has
been determinedly depoliticised, first by the Soviet state and now by Putin’s,
in return for huge state funding. It is also now committed to military victory
in Ukraine, or at least something that can be presented as victory.
On the
other hand, Putin’s ruthless purging of the upper ranks of the military, along
with the apparent incompetence with which the high command has steered the
invasion of Ukraine, could lead to considerable future discontent in the army,
including lower-rank generals. This means that while the military will not
itself move against Putin, it is also very unlikely to move to save him.
Some of the
most effective pressure on Putin’s elite may come from their own children. The
parents almost all grew up and began their careers in the final years of the
Soviet Union. Their children, however, have in many cases been educated and
lived largely in the west. Many agree, at least in private, with Elizaveta
Peskova, daughter of Putin’s press spokesman Dmitry Peskov, who protested
against the war on Instagram (the post was quickly removed). Dinner conversations
in the Peskov family must be interesting affairs these days.
The
siloviki, however, are so closely identified with Putin and the war that a
change in the Russian regime would have to involve the departure of most from
power, possibly in return for a promise that they would not be arrested and
would retain their family’s wealth (this was the guarantee that Putin made with
his predecessor Yeltsin).
I think one
reason [the siloviki] steal on such a scale is they see themselves as
representatives of the state, and feel that to be poorer than a bunch of
businessmen is a humiliation, even an insult to the state
A senior
former Soviet official
Yet this change
may be a long time coming. The siloviki have been accurately portrayed as
deeply corrupt — but their corruption has special features. Patriotism is their
ideology and the self-justification for their immense wealth. I once chatted
over a cup of tea with a senior former Soviet official who had kept in touch
with his old friends in Putin’s elite. “You know,” he mused, “in Soviet days
most of us were really quite happy with a dacha, a colour TV and access to
special shops with some western goods, and holidays in Sochi. We were perfectly
comfortable, and we only compared ourselves with the rest of the population,
not with the western elites.
“Now today,
of course, the siloviki like their western luxuries, but I don’t know if all
this colossal wealth is making them happier or if money itself is the most
important thing for them. I think one reason they steal on such a scale is that
they see themselves as representatives of the state and they feel that to be
any poorer than a bunch of businessmen would be a humiliation, even a sort of
insult to the state. It used to be that official rank gave you top status. Now
you have to have huge amounts of money too. That is what the 1990s did to
Russian society.”
The
siloviki are naturally attached to the idea of public order, an order that
guarantees their own power and property, but which they also believe is
essential to prevent Russia falling back into the chaos of the 1990s and the
Russian revolution and civil war. The disaster of the 1990s, in their view,
embraced not just a catastrophic decline of the state and economy but socially
destructive moral anarchy — and their reaction has been not unlike that of
conservative American society to the 1960s or conservative German society to
the 1920s.
In this,
Putin and the siloviki have the sympathy of very large parts of the Russian
population, who remain bitterly resentful — both at the way they were betrayed
and plundered in the 1990s and what they perceive as the open contempt shown
towards ordinary Russians by the liberal cultural elites of Moscow and St
Petersburg.
On one
memorable occasion in the mid-1990s, I was asked to give an after-dinner talk
at a conference held by a leading western bank for western investors and
Russia’s financial elite. The dinner took place at a famous Moscow nightclub.
When I ran out of time, there was no question of a polite note from the
chairman; instead, a jazzed-up version of a Soviet patriotic song started
blaring, and behind me on the stage appeared someone in a bear costume waving the
Russian military ensign and leading a line of dancers clad in very abbreviated
versions of Russian national dress.
The
siloviki and the Russian official elite in general are utterly, irrevocably
committed to the idea of Russia as a great power
Faced with
this competition, I didn’t even try to carry on with my carefully considered
summing-up, but retired bemused to my table. Then, however, I began to get a
distinctly cold feeling. I remembered a scene from the 1972 film Cabaret, set
in a nightclub in Weimar Berlin not long before the Nazis’ rise to power, in
which dancers perform a parody of a parade before a giggling audience to the
tune of a famous German military march. I wondered whether in Russia, too,
there was going to be a terrible bill to pay for all this jollity — and I fear
that Ukraine, and Russian soldiers, are now paying it.
One of the
worst effects of this war is going to be deep and long-lasting Russian
isolation from the west. I believe, however, that Putin and the siloviki
(though not many in the wider elites) welcome this isolation. They are becoming
impressed with the Chinese model: a tremendously dynamic economy, a disciplined
society and a growing military superpower ruled over with iron control by a
hereditary elite that combines huge wealth with deep patriotism, promoting the
idea of China as a separate and superior civilisation.
They may
well want the west to push Russia into the arms of China, despite the risk that
this will turn Russia into a dependency of Beijing. And of course they believe
the war in Ukraine will consolidate patriotic feeling in Russia behind their
rule, as well as permitting them to engage in intensified repression in the
name of support for the war effort. This repression has already begun, with the
closing of Russia’s last remaining independent media and laws punishing as
treason any criticism of the war.
Above all,
for deep historical, cultural, professional and personal reasons, the siloviki
and the Russian official elite in general are utterly, irrevocably committed to
the idea of Russia as a great power and one pole of a multipolar world. If you
do not believe in that, you are not part of the Russian establishment, just as
if you do not believe in US global primacy you are not part of the US foreign
and security establishment.
Ukraine’s
place in this doctrine was accurately summed up by former US national security
adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski: “Without Ukraine, Russia ceases to be a Eurasian
empire.” The Russian establishment entirely agrees. They have also agreed, for
the past 15 years at least, that America’s intention is to reduce Russia to a
subservient third-rate power. More recently, they have concluded that France
and Germany will never oppose the US. “To the west, we have only enemies,” as
one establishment intellectual told me in 2019.
The Russian
establishment sees encouragement of Ukrainian nationalism as a key element in
Washington’s anti-Russian strategy. Even otherwise calm and reasonable members
of the Russian establishment have snarled with fury when I have dared to
suggest in conversation that it might be better for Russia itself to let
Ukraine go. They seem prepared, if necessary, to fight on ruthlessly for a long
time, and at immense cost and risk to their regime, to prevent that happening.
Anatol
Lieven is a senior fellow of the Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft
and author of ‘Ukraine and Russia: A Fraternal Rivalry’
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