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Facing up to illiberal democracy (and not just in Central Asia)

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  • Facing up to illiberal democracy (and not just in Central Asia)

    Facing up to illiberal democracy (and not just in Central Asia)

    by Christopher Schwartz on
    3/10/2012 · 1 comment



    In the last two months, we've born witness to more incidents of illiberal
    democracy or democracy's
    `doubles' here
    in Central Asia/Eurasia, from Kazakhstan's parliamentary elections
    which many say was an experiment in pseudo-pluralism; to Turkmenistan's
    surreal presidential election that has left those of us on the outside
    (and, indeed, many of those on the inside) scratching their heads wondering
    what it was all about to begin with; to Russia's intriguingly complex
    and probably historical presidential poll
    .
    Still to come in the next few years are parliamentary elections in Armenia
    and Tajikistan, and presidential elections in Armenia, Azerbaijan, and
    Tajikistan, none of which are expected by Western observers to be free and
    fair. The question I hear a lot from non-specialists is: *why are these
    societies even bothering with the charade?* At the moment, this is the
    shape of my answer:

    Central Asian/Eurasian politics can be easily dismissed as tired Sovietisms
    re-worked into cynical caricatures of the West. Unfortunately, as I get to
    know this part of the world better, I'm increasingly not so convinced that
    it's us Westerners who are being mocked; instead, what's happening to the
    concept of liberal democracy here is actually very much part of a universal
    phenomenon. Just ask any civil society activist and they'll tell you how
    `liberal democracy' can and is frequently bastardized to mean `popular
    legitimacy', and `popular legitimacy' is, in turn, bastardized to mean
    `approval for the regime's policies'. The uncomfortable reality is that
    this as true in the archetypal liberal democracy, the United States of
    America, wherein elected officials routinely and conveniently distort
    the widespread (albeit diminishing) voter apathy of the
    countryto mask the
    hijacking of policy-making by special interests, as it is true
    in, say, Kazakhstan, whose consistently high voter
    turnout(in
    comparison to the USA), masks the authoritarian tendencies of the
    dominant ruling party (all the more so if the turnout figures prove to be
    false). In both cases, what we're really dealing with is
    legitimacy-engineering, intended to buttress a constellation of elites and
    their related pet institutions and industries by a transference of moral
    authority from the grassroots to the top.

    Make no mistake, the target of the legitimacy-engineering is primarily
    internal: the grassroots itself (particularly the electorate), as well as
    rivals for power (real or perceived). The electorate, thanks to a terrible
    education and media system, simply don't know any better; the rivals,
    having achieved a position of relative elitism to have access to more
    information, *do* know better but catch the hint and respond accordingly
    (i.e., silence and subterfuge). Insofar that the legitimacy-engineering has
    an external orientation, this is a secondary, although not unimportant
    goal, namely, to deflect criticism via the logic of national
    self-determination. Indeed, democratic elections can accomplish what divine
    right of kings or Marxist dialectical materialism never could, namely, to
    give the impression of collective agreement with respect to a regime's
    choices. And yes, in all of this I am talking as much about my homeland as
    I am about the Central Asian/Eurasian states (I am probably sounding like a
    very bitter expatriate right now). The benefactor of the
    legitimacy-engineering is not as clear in the American context as in the
    Central Asian/Eurasian one, but in both cases, it's really a system that's
    receiving the moral authority, not just the man on top.

    Yet, speaking of the men on top, just as presidents of the United States
    can be prone to messianic depictions of themselves - either of the Terror
    or Hope variety of eschatology - Central Asian/Eurasian presidents
    notoriously have a penchant for the salvific. Besides the late Niyazov,
    Karimov spring to mind, and in his own way, Bakiyev had a tinge of the
    deliverer to his administration, as well, and Putin and Aliyev frequently
    co-opt still-fresh memories of societal turmoil in their favor. Along these
    lines, I actually have a begrudging respect for Nazarbayev: his golden
    handprint in the Baiterek is actually not so much an expression of
    megalomania as it is a statement of fact, namely, that he has left an
    indelible mark upon his country, like it or not, for better and for worse.
    That's more than I can say for all the `Change' that's happened in
    the
    United States since 2008 (at least in my cynical moments). But again, in
    all cases, the target is internal, the goal still is and always is
    legitimacy-engineering. The era of elections setting the course of a nation
    rather than approving a pre-set path - if it ever existed - is fast
    receding into the past here and in the West.

    But then there's Turkmenistan. I think, unfortunately, *this* country is an
    outlier. I've got a sinking feeling in my gut that it is increasingly
    fruitless to seek any kind of rationality oriented toward the outside world
    from the Turkmen president, even vis-à-vis his immediate neighbors, much
    less the West. If there is any logic to his behavior, then it's most likely
    in response to internal power dynamics, the nature of which are invisible
    to the outside eye (although there are
    clues).
    But before we start thinking that this is still in keeping with the overall
    trends in managed democracy, we should consider the thoughts of my
    colleague Annasoltan, who has come to
    fearthat
    what we're really looking at in Turkmenistan is the possible mental
    deterioration of Berdimuhammedov. The presidential election, then, may have
    really been driven by the illogic of ego and insecurity: this time around,
    the legitimacy-engineering was directed not at the grassroots, but by the
    establishment toward the president himself.

    Power-plays and madness are not mutually co-exclusive, of course, and in
    fact the latter can sometimes be a pretty good tool in the former, just ask
    Caligula. Moreover, determining how much of this exercise in megalomania
    was the initiative of Berdimuhammedov and how much of it arose from the
    overall regime, and for which purposes, could be enlightening. Until those
    facts can come to the light of history, unfortunately, all the rest of us
    can do is stand outside Turkmenistan's parallel universe and wonder about
    its strange physics, a political physics in which the logic of liberalism
    and democracy are twisted to reduce an entire society into instrumental
    extensions of one single ego.

    http://registan.net/index.php/2012/03/10/facing-up-to-illiberal-democracy-and-not-just-in-central-asia/comment-page-1/


    From: Baghdasarian
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