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Go Home The Putin Generation

WORLD APRIL 20, 2012

The Putin Generation

Maxim Katz is an unlikely Russian politician. There is his Jewish surname, his youthful age of 27, and his long, flowing dark hair. There is also his choice of profession: A former poker national champion, Katz now makes his living by staking promising poker players to big-pot tournament games, in return for a cut of the winnings. He didn’t even live in Russia for an eight-year stretch, from 1993 to 2001, when he resided in Tel Aviv. (“I didn’t like Israel—it’s hot,” he told me, explaining why he came back.) And yet, on March 4, the very same day that Vladimir Putin claimed a presidential election victory, Katz won a seat on a local district council in Moscow.

I met Katz at his office suite a week after the vote. Like many twentysomething Russians, Katz was active in the grassroots movement that has emerged in recent months to challenge Putin’s autocratic rule. Indeed, the day before our interview, he had spoken at a street rally attended by thousands of Muscovites disaffected with Putin. But, contrary to what you might expect, Katz is not particularly strident in his criticism of Russia’s longtime leader. “Putin is not an enemy,” he told me in his fluent English. “Life in Russia is much better than twelve years ago”—at the dawn of the Putin era—and “this is a fact.”

Katz is hardly unusual. Americans might be tempted to assume—based on the Arab Spring–style protests that have recently taken place in Moscow—that the young people of Russia have turned completely against Putin. But the generation of Russians who form the backbone of the protests have political instincts that are actually quite complicated. These are people—call them the Putin Generation—who came of age during the near-chaos of the 1990s and have known no leader other than Putin for perhaps the entirety of their adult lives. Having grown up in an atmosphere of upheaval, they are generally wary of dramatic change—and are more apt to sound like pragmatic gradualists than fervent revolutionaries.
 

CONSIDER A RUSSIAN born, like Maxim Katz, in 1984. Glasnost and perestroika are remembered as positive developments in the West, but what many Russians recall about those times were the food shortages. With his affinity for numbers, Katz, the future poker champ, used to count in his head the number of people in the queue to buy eggs at Moscow stores. There was the threat, too, of civil war, when, in August 1991, a group of hard-line Russian leaders attempted a coup to depose Mikhail Gorbachev. Katz’s mom brought the six-year-old to the city center to see the tanks.

The traumas were just beginning. Russia’s new president, Boris Yeltsin, embarked on a series of free-market experiments that, however well intentioned, ended up turning over control of the economy to a band of oligarchs who manipulated the state to their own selfish ends. The experiment collapsed with the financial crisis of August 1998—when the ruble plunged in value against the dollar and the banks failed, causing many Russians to lose their life savings.

Older members of Katz’s generation watched their parents struggle to make ends meet and often had no good idea themselves of what their future might hold in a country that seemed to be collapsing from within. TV images conveyed the bloody carnage of Yelstin’s failed bid to subdue the rebellious province of Chechnya. More young people became addicted to narcotics, which were more widely available than in Soviet times.

The circumstances, in short, were ripe for a figure like Putin—a former KGB colonel who projected an image as a tough guy and who eventually managed to break the back of the Chechen uprising and cut the oligarchs down to size. A black belt in judo, buff, and reputedly sober, Putin offered a sharp contrast to the flabby, alcoholic Yeltsin. It was an image designed to appeal, not least, to youth. In 2002, Russian radio stations played a song by a previously unknown girl band, possibly put together by a Kremlin propaganda team. “And now I want a man like Putin,” sang one girl, having jettisoned her old boyfriend, a drunken loser:

A man like Putin, full of strength.
A man like Putin, who doesn’t drink.
A man like Putin, who doesn’t hurt me.
A man like Putin, who won’t run away. 
 

ON THE EVENING AFTER the March 4 election, I filed into Moscow’s Pushkin Square to attend a rally with some 20,000 others—most of whom looked to be in their twenties and thirties—that had been organized by the anti-Putin opposition. The city, at that moment, felt like an armed encampment. Military trucks and vans filled with riot police lined the boulevards leading to the plaza. Police helicopters buzzed overhead. The authorities apparently feared a march on the Kremlin, a 15-minute walk away, but there was no real danger of that, for the main mood of the crowd was somber and reflective, not aggressive. There were cries of “Rossiya bez Putina”—“Russia without Putin”—but few responded to the urging of Sergey Udaltsov, a young, black-clad far-leftist with a buzz cut, to chant in unison “hatred, hatred” against Putin.

At the rally, I met a young Muscovite named Vladimir Ivanov who had once been a Putin enthusiast—and, a few days later, in the quiet of a café across the street from the Moscow Zoo, he obligingly traced the arc of his disillusionment. Born in 1981, Ivanov attended the Moscow Aviation Institute—a school at which his father had once been a professor before being forced, in the ’90s, to take a lesser job as an auditor. His parents, Ivanov recalled, supported the breakup of the Soviet Union and initially were hopeful about “the new times.” But, by the end of the Yeltsin era, they were, like their son, gung-ho backers of Putin’s strong-leader policies, especially the crackdown on the oligarchs.

Ivanov’s enthusiasm began waning in the mid-2000s. His main objection was to the disparity between the image of Putin on state-controlled television—strong, confident, seemingly willing to entertain all points of view in society—and the reality on the ground, which amounted to intolerance of dissenting voices. It was the “concentration of control” in Putin’s hands that bothered him—not Putin’s particular economic or other policies. “I don’t think of myself as a revolutionary,” he told me. “I am just against the rules of the game.”

Another protester, Andrey Ershov, an international relations student at a Moscow university, told me that his motivation for attending the rallies was to register his keen disappointment with the parliamentary elections held last December, which he viewed as rigged in favor of Putin’s United Russia Party. But he was not, he stressed, part of any anti-Putin opposition. “I think Putin is the person who is the most fit for this political system, which is now in Russia,” Ershov said—a system in which a tiny elite rules both the political and business realms. “Me personally, I would like the system to change and for a president to be more democratically oriented. But, for now, I think it is logical that Putin won.”

The lack of radicalism from many protesters may be partly a function of the economy. Russia is not an economic disaster, like Greece. With oil exports pouring tax revenue into the federal treasury, the economy is expected to grow by some 4 percent annually for the foreseeable future—and nowhere are material conditions more favorable than in Moscow, the heart of the anti-Putin movement. Putin’s Moscow—the mayor, Sergey Sobyanin, is Putin’s former chief of staff—affords plentiful opportunities for talented and ambitious young people in finance, advertising, marketing, sales, media, music, fashion, hotels, restaurants, tourism, and other realms of an expanding capitalist business sector.

To feel both upwardly mobile and disenfranchised—this is the lot of the young Russian alienated from Putin’s regime. “These are not bread riots,” Olga Zeveleva, a 24-year-old graduate student in Moscow who has studied at universities in both the United States and Germany and who has participated in the rallies, told me. “People are really comfortable,” she explained. “I think I have much more job opportunity ... than I do in other countries that are having problems with their economies. ... I don’t have friends sitting here sending résumés and résumés out, and thinking, ‘When can I get into the system?’ like I have friends in the States doing.”

To be down on Putin is taken, in certain circles, as a badge of sophistication and good taste. Yuri Saprykin, one of the anti-Putin movement’s leaders, is a top editor at a lifestyle and entertainment-listings magazine, Afisha, which caters to Moscow’s in-crowd. A Moscow intellectual in his early thirties—skeptical of the protesters, whom he regards, with their symbolic white ribbons tied to handbags or backpacks, as slaves to a momentary fashion—told me: “The nice thing is that the protesters have something to lose. It’s not the Arab revolution of impoverished people.”

Of course, plenty of the protesters are more strident in their views. But these activists, too, sometimes have complicated politics that seem to have been shaped by the events of the ’90s— specifically, the national humiliation of the Soviet Union’s disintegration. Alexey Navalny, a 35-year-old lawyer and anti-corruption activist with a following among some young Russians, has vehemently attacked Putin from the right on issues related to ethnicity—for instance, criticizing Putin’s regime for pouring aid into the Muslim-dominated Caucasus region. Last year, in comments to journalists at a rally staged by nationalist groups, he said, with apparent reference to nationalist skinhead participants at the event: “These teenagers in masks are a lot less scary than those who have usurped power in the country today. So these radical schoolchildren, whom we need to bring up, pose an incomparably smaller threat than those who are in power today.” A university student in Moscow from a Muslim region in Russia told me she had not attended a demonstration for fear of being treated rudely because of her non-Slavic, Tatar appearance.

Meanwhile, there are a reasonable number of educated Russian young people who still support Putin—that is, who actually support him and are not merely brainwashed members of the pro-Putin youth groups that are propped up by the Kremlin. Putin has articulate advocates, like Alexey Potemkin, a student in his early twenties studying foreign languages at Moscow State University. The son of an apolitical physicist, he was turning nine years old when Putin came to power, and, he made a point of telling me, he has arrived at his opinions about Putin on his own.

Potemkin’s views, too, seem to be heavily influenced by his memory of the recent past. As he sees it, the rallying cry of his peers for free and fair elections, for liberalization of the political sphere, for greater depth to civil society—all of these claims grow organically out of the success of the Putin regime in stabilizing Russian society after the chaotic Yeltsin years. In other words, Putin’s own policies have created the basis for such classically bourgeois demands. “He was able to sustain the country,” says Potemkin. “He was able to make it prosperous.”

Moreover, the way Potemkin and other young Putin supporters see it, Russia has in recent years recovered both geopolitical strength and, crucially, independence from the West that was sapped in Yeltsin’s time. Potemkin quoted a maxim of Alexander III, a nineteenth-century czar, to the effect that Russia, ever alone in the world, as all great powers are fated to be, has only two reliable allies—“the Army and the Navy.”
 

FOR THE PROTESTERS in their twenties and thirties who flooded into the streets in recent months, the question now is what their movement might become. Is it possible that their generation simply feels insufficiently aggrieved—or at least too complicated in its feelings about recent history—to stand up to the powers that be and insist on meaningful reforms? Moscow’s refurbished Domodedovo and Sheremetyevo international airports are perpetually crowded with young Russian business and holiday travelers; surely, this generation of young adults is the most cosmopolitan in Russian history. Might some of them simply leave Russia in search of a more “normal” life?

There is an additional problem for the young Russians who aim to make the country more democratic: They have no figure of large moral stature—someone like the dissident nuclear physicist Andrey Sakharov, who courageously defied the Soviet Union. The only possibility, a 30-year-old hedge-fund manager in Moscow told me, is the jailed oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky, who is due to be released from prison in 2017, one year before the next presidential election. Some Russians feel he has more than paid for whatever crimes he committed.

It is also possible that activists now in their twenties and thirties will eventually produce their own new class of leaders. A heartening sign is a willingness of some young political figures to experiment with ideological approaches that break out of the usual Russian molds. Along with Maxim Katz, Muscovites in March made another surprising choice in elections to the local district councils: They voted in favor of Vera Kichanova, a 20-year-old journalism student who works at an opposition newspaper, Novaya Gazeta, partly owned by Gorbachev. Her political mission is the advancement of the Libertarian Party—currently a negligible presence in Russia. (Yes, she acknowledged in an interview, she is an admirer of Ron Paul and his minimalist-government views.)
 

A FEW DAYS AFTER the election, I traveled from Moscow to the town of Sergiyev-Posad, an hour’s train ride to the northeast of Moscow. The area was blanketed in soft snow; on the town’s outskirts, cross-country skiers glided through still pine-and-birch forests.

The young priests and seminarians at the golden-and-blue-domed Holy Trinity Lavra monastery, in the center of town, also are members of the Putin Generation, and their views, too, will shape Russia’s future. On the political drama in Moscow, Priest Alexander, 25, sounded a fatalistic note. “Apostle Paul said any power is from God,” he explained. “If I were at these squares, I would tell these young people, it is time to have something else, to cultivate your spiritual life. Create and acquire peace around yourself, and thousands around you will be rescued.”

But Nikolai, a 27-year-old live-in student at the seminary, sounded a different note. Stressing that he was speaking for himself, not the Church, he began: “I agree with our great writer, Solzhenitsyn, that power can be different—it can be monarchy, it can be democratic—but irrespective of form, the power has to be strong.” That said, he continued, “power has to be based on moral values that serve the people. It shouldn’t be a power that dominates people.” He added, “The more often the young generation stands up for its rights, the more often the government will take into account the opinion of the young people and of the country.” It was a near-perfect summation of the contradictory instincts I discerned from many Russians his age: a certain appreciation for the status quo combined with a restive sense that something needs to change. 

Paul Starobin, a former Moscow bureau chief of Businessweek, is developing a documentary film on Russia. This article appeared in the May 10, 2012 issue of the magazine.

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18 comments

So, some young Russians wish to return to Czarist Russia and some young Russians wish to return to Yeltsin Russia, but none wish to return to Soviet Russia, unlike many older Russians who long for the latter. Is that reassuring or worrying? No more worrying than many Americans wish to return to George W. Bush America.

- rayward

April 25, 2012 at 12:26pm

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After the fall of the Soviets, Russia, with its colossal amount of natural resources in Siberia and other areas, was destined to become the world's top power in the 21st Century. It's on its way. But, after the anarchy under Yeltsin, Russia was also destined to return to authoritarianism. Russians don't trust themselves to behave, and they mistrust foreigners. That's why even the rebellious young want a strong man in charge in Russia. Alexey Navalny shouldn't be so quick to jump on Putin for his "pro-Muslim" economic policies in the Caucasus. Navalny has a touch of Tatar in his visage. Maybe he's projecting something about himself that he doesn't like. Hitler did that, too. He was convinced he was part Jewish. rayward, some young Russians still admire Stalin, because the Man of Steel was the ultimate strong man. But, you're right. Nobody who didn't live under the Soviets wants the communists back in power. But there's a Russian immigrant in my building, a senior, who left Russia in the Nineties, because it was becoming capitalist. "I love Soviet Union!" he declares. "I hate capitalism! In Soviet Union streets are clean! In America they are dirty!" I can't argue with that. But I can argue with his emigration to America. If he hates capitalism, he's in the wrong country. He would have been better served to stay in Russia. But I think he feels betrayed by his original country. I may feel that way if Romney wins in November.

- magboy47.

April 25, 2012 at 1:14pm

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Human beings are weird creatures. We supposedly mate for love, but many people are drawn to and subject themselves to abusive relationships. This applies not only to couples, but, apparently, to entire populations. It can take a while to detach oneself from such fraught tendencies. Germany and Japan, for example, seem to be relatively well-behaved after their frenzied excesses of the 1930s-1940s. It will probably take Russia a while to damp down its wild oscillations. The big question is our species -- can human beings get their sex-mad, murder-mad tendencies under control in time?

- skahn

April 25, 2012 at 3:56pm

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skahn "Human beings are weird creatures" Here comes another worthless sermons by useless Kahn.

- arnon1

April 25, 2012 at 5:09pm

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This was a good article and the author makes the young Russian dissidents sound very thoughtful. I wish our own young demonstrator were as thoughtful.

- arnon1

April 25, 2012 at 5:10pm

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It's relatively early. I presume Arnon's blood pressure has not reached a high enough level yet. So let's see him at his best[?]. From the best of Arnon. Words to be proud of. But the Olympics are coming up. Everyone should always strive to do better. 04/22/2012 - 7:03am EDT | arnon1 Go fuck yourself, kahn. Your persona opinion about me or any topic doesn't interest me. 04/22/2012 - 1:50pm EDT | arnon1 Fuck off, Kahn, you ignorant old runt. It is hard to surpass the above. I think "gilding the lily" is the expression. See (or ignore) the next comment.

- skahn

April 25, 2012 at 6:25pm

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As I am old, I no longer have much to hide. I am 68 years old. I am about 5' 11" tall, though as we get older, we shrink so I may be a half inch down from that. However, that is fairly average in height for a Caucasian [sort of Jewish] North American. Runt? How tall are you Arnon? Do you have some sort of height complex? The use of "fuck" as an insult is interesting from an semantic/anthropological point of view. Ideally, "fucking" refers to an activity associated with love, joy, and pleasure; one of the most pleasant and gratifying experiences human beings can engage in. So in saying "Fuck off," Arnon may be expressing lustful feelings toward me. I mean him no harm, and, in fact I don't know if Arnon is a man, a woman, a neuter, or a deranged artificial intelligence program gone very very very bad, but frankly, whatever "Arnon" is, I cannot not imagine a more repellent object to direct lust toward. Perhaps there is someone who feels lust and love toward Arnon. On the other hand, judging from his frequent behavior on the TNR board, I would think that Arnon is pathetic that he would be repelled at the very thought of engagine in what used to be called [in the dark old days] "self-abuse." Oh, dear, Arnon, you have unleashed my inner troll once again. Fortunately, everyone at TNR (except you and I, locked in our loveless embrace) ignores all our comments. There! I've "fluffed" you again. I expect you to come up with new heights (depths) of invective. I await your efforts with anticipation.

- skahn

April 25, 2012 at 6:39pm

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One more thought. On my computer screen (at least) I see a picture of Putin, with a visage and expression I interpret as vicious, arrogant, and domineering. Perhaps this is what Arnon looks like? From now on, whenever I read your comments addressed toward me, my mind will bring up a picture of Putin. [I have some Russian and Ukranian genes. Perhaps they are responding.]

- skahn

April 25, 2012 at 6:42pm

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Kahn take your Russian genes and shove them there where the sun don't shine. Your Russian genes must be from Russian pogromists who while giving you their worthless genes they took away your Jewish brains.

- arnon1

April 25, 2012 at 10:50pm

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Let's see...where do we put this in the Arnon raves Olympics? Not quite at the top. Even so, as he seems to be the only competitor (is this the narcissist division?) in this particular event, I think he wins all three places on the winner's stand. (Can you clone yourself, Mr. Runt?) Gold standard goes to "Fuck off, Kahn, you ignorant old runt"; Silver goes to "Go fuck yourself, kahn./Your persona opinion about me or any topic doesn't interest me"; and "Your Russian genes must be...Jewish brains" gets Bronze. Though one of the judges gave the latter a score of "10" on the basis of "self-hating Jew" excellence. Arnon, I am going to bed very soon. You have all night to invent a new routine. Frankly, now that I think of it, I think you are skating on very thin ice. I look forward to seeing your frozen zombie self arising out of the icy water and carving a comment of superb vitriolic venom in the morning. Sweet dreams, big runt.

- skahn

April 25, 2012 at 11:49pm

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I never can leave not well enough alone. "Your persona opinion about me or any topic doesn't interest me" is kind of a flame war triple axel. That is, by the very action of saying over and over "you don't interest me" you prove how interested you are in me. It's kind of a mental Moebius strip. You do know what that is, don't you? Have you considered seeking mental health counseling? It's hard to diagnose from a distance, but there are a lot of indications of something seriously wrong. Perhaps you will set a new Olympic record -- being the first person (as far as I know) to be banned from the TNR web site. You may not be interested in me, but I suspect you now have an non-audience of thousands, if not millions.

- skahn

April 25, 2012 at 11:57pm

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Frankly, I am a bit worried about JC, but I think it much more likely there is somebody in his life who is providing (or soon will be) the care and assistance he needs than there is in your life. In all seriousness, please talk to somebody. Or, consider shutting the fuck up. Or to use a classic flame war trope, "Get a life." (You did have one once, did you not?)

- skahn

April 26, 2012 at 12:00am

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one short post by arnon, says more than a half dozen foaming at the mouth rabid posts by Kahn.

- arnon1

April 26, 2012 at 6:42pm

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one short post by arnon, says more than a half dozen foaming at the mouth rabid posts by Kahn. Indeed. http://papadidos.org/2011/07/day-147-newark-de-to-chester-pa-24-miles/foaming-at-the-mouth/

- skahn

April 27, 2012 at 12:05am

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The incoherent old fool needs visual aids to make a very small point.

- arnon1

April 27, 2012 at 3:23pm

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Does that make you not only a runt, but a blind, coherent young fool with a very large blunt head?

- skahn

April 27, 2012 at 4:25pm

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kahn gets more bizarre with chaque post, the putz.

- arnon1

April 27, 2012 at 10:17pm

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Without a doubt. If anyone is grateful that I mostly distract you from posting on other threads, please privately encourage me by emailing me at eman_modnar@yahoo.com. I promise to keep your communication private, whether you want to encourage/applaud me or lambaste me and support Arnon, the name caller. (I presume that most readers at TNR realize that "putz" is Yiddish slang for a stupid person and for a prick. My mother knew some Yiddish, though I never heard her use such language, Arnon's mother? Is that where he learned to do the Yiddish "dozens"? Did your mother wear army boots, also?)

- skahn

April 28, 2012 at 9:48am

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