Putin vs Putin: Vladimir Putin Viewed from the Right

Putin vs Putin: Vladimir Putin Viewed from the Right

According to Prof Alexander Dugin, Vladimir Putin stands at a crossroads. Throughout his career as the President of Russia, Putin has attempted to balance two opposing sides of his political nature: one side is a liberal democrat who seeks to adopt Western-style reforms in Russia and maintain good relations with the United States and Europe, and the other is a Russian patriot who wishes to preserve Russia's traditions and reassert her role as one of the great powers of the world. According to Dugin, this balancing act cannot go on if Putin wishes to enjoy continuing popular support among the Russian people. Putin must act to preserve Russia's unique identity and sovereignty in the face of increasing challenges, both from Russian liberals at home and from foreign powers. Russia is no longer strong enough to stand on her own, he writes. In order to do this, Russia must cooperate with other dissenting powers who oppose the new globalist order of liberalism to bring about a multipolar world, in which no single nation wields supreme power, but rather several major powers keep each other in balance. Russia is crucial to this effort, in Dugin's view, and indeed, its own survival as a unique and independent civilisation is dependent on a geopolitical shift away from the unipolar world represented by America's unchecked supremacy. This fascinating book, written by an informal advisor to Putin and a Kremlin insider, is the first of its kind in English.

Table of Contents

Editor’s Note

1. The Making of Putin
Putin: The Unknown Revealed
Patriot Plays
The Twelve Labours of Putin
Putin becomes an Ideal Ruler of the Period

2. Putin’s Ideology
Putin Owes Us All
Ideological Expertise of the Political Environment
Putin’s Formula: Evolution of a Political Image
On Putin’s Responsibility before Christ and on Elite Rotation
The Anti-American Consensus
Putin’s Munich Speech — a Turning Point in Russian History
Putin’s Mandate for a Revolution in Consciousness

3. Putin’s Test
Putin against the ‘Sisters’
Temptation by the Void
Putin and the Void II: Political Solitude
Putin’s Grey Zone
Unexpected Visitors
No Time to Relax: New Network Challenges
The Objective and Subjective in Putin’s Course
If Spring Comes Tomorrow

4. Putin’s Geopolitics
Shift in Foreign Policy
Territorial Thinking
Patriotic Enlightenment
Putin: I Renounce the Devil
President Putin’s Liberal Reform
Vladimir Putin as a Man of Destiny

5. Putin’s Eurasian Revolution
Vladimir Putin and the Conservative Revolution
Putin, Conservatism and the Siloviki
Vladimir Putin and the Empire
Eurasianism as the New President’s Ideology
Putin and Eurasian Integration
Eurasianism
The Russian Order: The Relevance of the New Oprichnina

6. Putin: What Next?
Putin’s First Eight Years: A Conservative’s Balance
The Crisis of Representation
End of a Political Cycle: Beyond the Grey Pole
A Chain Reaction of the Authorities’ Legitimacy
A People’s Front without the People
Putin’s Dead End
The Putin that we have Lost: Criticisms from Above

7. Criticism of Putin from Above
Hegemony and Counter-Hegemony: A Battle of Minds
The Historical Pact
4PT
Conclusion

 

Appendix I
Appendix II
Index

 

Alexander Dugin (b. 1962) is one of the best-known writers and political commentators in post-Soviet Russia, having been active in politics there since the 1980s. In addition to the many books he has authored on political, philosophical, and spiritual topics, he is currently a professor in the Department of Sociology at Moscow State University, and is the intellectual leader of the Eurasia Movement, which he founded. For more than a decade, he has also been an advisor to Vladimir Putin and others in the Kremlin on geopolitical matters, being a vocal advocate of a return of Russian power to the global stage to act as a counterweight to American hegemony. Arktos published his book, The Fourth Political Theory, in 2012.

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