Why aren't Russians protesting (more)?
It's time to challenge some myths about Russian politics
When Vladimir Putin announced the “partial mobilization” of some 300,000 reservists — and officials began speaking privately of calling up as many as 1,200,000 troops — many observers began asking how long it would take for Russians to rise up in resistance to a state that was willing to sacrifice their lives in a senseless war. Those questions have stopped. What Twitter and the commentariat want to know now is why that resistance appears to be absent.
Russians, of course, are protesting. The pictures are there for all to see, as are the arrests (2,398 and counting at the time I wrote this). But the point is nonetheless taken: we are not seeing anything approaching a mass mobilization against Putin’s mass mobilization. For many commentators, it was damning enough that Russians in their hundreds of thousands did not come out to oppose the war in February and March — evidence, it seemed, that the majority of Russians did in fact support Putin’s invasion of Ukraine. The fact that more people are not coming out even in defense of Russians’ own lives would thus seem proof positive that the bulk of the population backs the Kremlin and its bloodshed.
Repression isn’t the whole story
In making this argument, it has become popular to compare the small scale of the protests in Moscow, St. Petersburg and dozens of other Russian cities to the much larger protests that brought down regimes in Kyiv in 2004-5 and 2014, and nearly brought down a regime in Minsk in 2020. This, certainly, is true: even in happier times, when tens of thousands and even a hundred thousand opposition protesters took the streets in Moscow, those of us who write about such things could only call the gatherings “large” if we added “by Russian standards”, casting a wary eye to our Ukrainian friends and colleagues, smirking in the corner.
One common objection to these comparisons is that Ukrainians and even Belarusians didn’t face the level of repression that Russians do — and have, for years now. There is, of course, some truth to this. Ukraine at the time of the Euromaidan had some 172,000 police officers, or about 390 per 100,000 population; Belarus at the time of the 2020 uprising had about 46,000 police, or some 490 per 100,000; Russia has approximately 1,000,000 police officers, or 695 per 100,000 population — and that’s not including the Rosgvardia riot police, the prison service, and the border guards, and various other security services.
That, though, is not a fully satisfactory explanation. Regardless of the size of the police force, Ukrainian and Belarusian protesters faced real violence — and still they mobilized. Look at Iran right now, or at Egypt in 2011, where physical repression was brutal and yet the streets kept coming. (In fact, the streets in some cases kept coming because of the violence, but that’s another story.) In other words, we still need an explanation for why Ukrainians and Belarusians and others can mobilize in the face of violence, and Russians, seemingly, cannot.
Repression, of course, need not be violent to be effective. For all of the faults of the Kuchma and Yanukovych governments, they never exercised the degree of control over politics, media and civil society that Putin built since his very first days as president. Living in an a tightly controlled environment makes organization and coordination harder, and the Kremlin and lower-level authorities in Russia have spent decades disrupting the kind of horizontal institution-building that can form the bedrock of mobilization, giving people reliable networks of trust and solidarity before the first shots are fired. Add to that the distances involved in a place like Russia, and the propensity of the state both to interdict physical travel and to surveil electronic communication, and mobilizing at anything other than the local level becomes very difficult indeed.
And yet even that isn’t a satisfactory answer. Lukashenka has done at least as much to undermine civil society in Belarus as Putin has done in Russia. And again, look at Iran, where the geographical and infrastructural challenges can also be formidable (as they can be in Ukraine). Yes, this kind of thing makes mobilization harder, but it doesn’t rule it out.
Russians aren’t passive
Olha Onuch, one of the keenest scholars of Ukrainian protest movements and social mobilization more broadly, draws attention to the importance of what she calls “cross-cleavage coalitions” — protest groups that span the divides that pertain to common politics, such as class, geography, ethnicity, religion, and so on. Ukraine and Belarus had them, she rightly points out, Russia does not. And that gets us some distance to an explanation, but not all of the way there.
Most importantly, it leaves open the question of why Russia doesn’t have a cross-cleavage coalition for political change, or even for just stopping the military draft. After all, if we look at the pictures from the anti-war and anti-draft protests, and from the borders where men of all stripes are fleeing the country, it’s abundantly clear that anti-draft sentiment (if not anti-war sentiment) does in fact stretch across most of the salient dividing lines in Russian politics. And yet we are not — or not yet, at least — seeing a viable protest coalition.
Some commentators will be tempted — indeed, many commentators are tempted — to answer that question with generalizations about Russians and Russian politics, most of which come down to fatalistic explanations for what is generally understood to be Russian passivity: Russians are argued to be passive because they are culturally adapted to authoritarianism, or because they have low levels of trust, or because they are cognitively unaware of their own potential political agency.
The problem with all of these arguments is that Russians are not passive. I have spent the past 20 years, give or take, studying the ways in which Russian citizens resist the state, ranging from small-scale sabotage to large-scale (“by Russian standards”) protests, and the reality is plain: Russians can resist the state, they not infrequently do resist the state, and when they do, the state usually backs down.
Individual resistance in Russia
Russian citizens have spent most of the past 30 years (or more) growing increasingly distant from their state — though it might be more accurate to say that their state has been growing more and more distant from them. The end of the USSR and the reforms of the 1990s brought about the wholesale withdrawal of the Russian state from the lives of its citizens, ranging from the removal of ideological restrictions, to the dismantling of a cradle-to-grave welfare state. What remained of the state became heavily predatory, using its position and remaining regulatory powers to extract money and leverage from the citizenry and the economy.
Russian citizens have responded to this, broadly speaking, in two ways. One, as I wrote in an article in Social Research, was to develop an increasing understanding of power as something local, not in the geographical sense, but in the social one. The real power to create beneficial outcomes for an individual’s prosperity and security is understood not to rest in the distant and abstract institutions of the state or the practices of formal politics, but in resources much closer to hand: in relationships with people you can reach out and touch, in a deep knowledge of how things work within the context of your life, and in the coping mechanisms that allow you, as an individual, to succeed.
The second response has been what I call aggressive immobility — the firm and purposeful defense of all of that individualized, localized power, and the coping mechanisms through which that power flows. In an article in Post-Soviet Affairs, I showed the myriad ways in which Russians, acting both as individuals and groups, have time and again stymied the power of the state, forcing it to reverse course on education reform, housing reform, and regional policy. Had I written that article two years later, I could have included the remarkable (if tragic) resistance that Russians put up to the state’s attempts at Covid-19 restrictions, which entirely upended the government’s pandemic response.
Collective resistance in Russia
Russian citizens, then, are not generally passive in the face of threats to their livelihoods, their security, their personal freedom or even their general quality of life. — and they are particularly likely to mobilize against any encroachment on the coping mechanisms that allow them to create at least a modicum of prosperity and security for themselves and their families in the confines of a predatory and fundamentally unpredictable state.
And while aggressive immobility often gives rise to individual resistance, it does frequently turn into collective action. Despite what the commentariat might believe, the difference between a cause that provokes individual resistance and one that provokes collective resistance is not the moral significance of the regime’s infraction, but the way in which that infraction is structured.
As I showed in my first book, Moscow in Movement, we can expect a collective response when the state’s intervention is concerted and coherent — if it affects people as a group, in more or less the same way and at more or less the same time. This is, of course, a matter of perception: an attack on a single individual can be perceived as an attack on a group and provoke a response (such as the movement that defended the journalist Ivan Golunov), while a policy aimed at a group may be enforced haphazardly enough that people see it as an individual problem, not a group one (such as the lack of any organized response to the repressive ‘Foreign Agents’ law). Nonetheless, the general principle stands.
Because mobilization and resistance is not a one-off affair — I like to describe it as a kind of dance, in which the state makes the first move, society responds, the state responds to that response, and so on until the music stops — successful mobilization also requires a coherent response from the state to the challenge thrown up by citizens. If the state responds by repressing resisters as a group, those resisters will coalesce, generating solidarity and strengthening their sense of common cause. If, by contrast, the state’s response is incoherent, allowing some people to get what they want while others are repressed, people are more likely to seek individualized solutions to the problem.
Resistance to Putin’s mobilization
So, how does Putin’s “partial mobilization” stack up against these thresholds? Very clearly, the military call-up is a transgression against many Russians’ sense of security and wellbeing. Every single person who has left the country or headed for the border is performing an act of individual resistance. So is anyone who is trying to get a medical, educational or professional exemption. It is early days, but the level of individual resistance is reminiscent of the fight Russians put up against Covid-19 restrictions and may, in and of itself, be enough to sabotage Putin’s draft.
We are also seeing the beginnings of collective resistance, most clearly in protests around the country — but also in organized efforts to help people avoid the draft and, if need be, to get out of the country. On a national level, informal coalitions of civil society groups, media outlets and individual activists have banded together to provide guidance and material support. Similar things appear to be happening on a local level, in towns and villages, universities, enterprises and professional communities.
This collective response is happening because the draft is concerted and coherent: as a policy, it is clearly targeted at a large group of people, rather than at individuals as individuals, and it affects them in the same way and at the same time. Whether that collective response turns into a powerful protest movement depends on what the state does next. If people — individually or in small groups — are allowed to carve out exceptions for themselves, the powerful incentive will be for people to stick to their “localized” power, and to defend themselves as individuals. If, however, the state decides that it cannot allow such exceptions (and especially if the draft does indeed balloon to 1.2 million), it will demonstrate the limits of “localized” power, and the result will almost certainly be nationwide protest and a direct challenge to the regime.
What next?
The evidence at the moment is mixed. Russia appears to be conducting this “partial mobilization” the way it conducts most things: poorly. Absent a strong, efficient bureaucracy, mid- and low-level officials are left to their own devices to deliver what they believe the Kremlin wants. The result has been a predictable mix of over-reach and pull-backs: officials in places from the North Caucasus to Siberia have opted to over-fill the plan by drafting anyone and everyone, while others — from Chechen leader Ramzan Kadyrov to Yakutia Governor Aisen Nikolaev — have set themselves up as defenders of their local populations. Twitter and Telegram abound with stories of high-profile public figures freeing their friends and relatives from the clutches of the military.
I’m not one for political fortune-telling — uprisings and revolutions are even more unpredictable than wars — but the future is nonetheless subject to patterns of cause and effect. Uprisings happen because regimes provoke them. If the Kremlin orders the military to tighten things up, the impact of the draft on Russian citizens will become more concerted and coherent, increasing the breadth of resistance. If he gives the order to the coercive apparatus to enforce the draft, patterns of collective response will harden, and that resistance will deepen.
The regime has opened the dance, society has responded. What happens next depends on Putin.
It just looks that Russians themselves don't want to die in the war but otherwise supported it.
I am reading vk.com and generally there was 1 post or comment against the war in Ukraine for every 10 or 20 posts pro-war.
Now the ratio is 1 post against the draft versus 1 post pro-draft.
You see the change? Russians mostly supported the war and those few people who were ready to protest against the war were simply overwhelmed and suppressed by those who supported it. Some people live in bubble where they see that everybody around them thinks similarly to them but that doesn't seem to be the whole reality in Russia.
I am not convinced about the resistance against covid restrictions in Russia. Russia had its own share of lockdowns and restrictions. It wasn't as free as Sweden. It avoided some most stupid ones like vaccine mandates. But the UK also didn't have vaccine mandates. Was it due to people actively resisting? Possibly, but I don't think you had something so active as Canadian convoy in Spring 2022. It can rather be explained that the authorities were not really very eager to introduce those measures in the first place. When they encountered even lukewarm resistance, they gave up because vaccine mandates were not effective at all.
Look, Russia had abysmal vaccination rates among elderly (the only measure that really mattered). That shows the failure of public health institutions. The UK (no mandates) and Canada (strong mandates) both had very good vaccine coverage among elderly – which shows that regardless of mandates, it is possible to ensure high vaccination uptake among risk groups. Russia doesn't have that and mandates wouldn't have helped anyway. No wonder authorities gave up so quickly even with a moderate resistence to those measures.
The resistance of Russians seem to be little more than passive-aggressive behavior, making initiatives more difficult to implement to the point that the people in charge back down. Doubtful that as a rule that kind of resistance particularly scales up.
Too, I wouldn’t underestimate the harm of centuries of powerlessness and lack of agency to create a culture of submission, where there’s no strength to oppose beyond passive-aggressive behavior. Russia has had a culture of individual impotence forever. As always, breaking things -- here, a society and social norms -- is far easier than fixing them, let alone to a point that they’re good as new. Russia has had the former, has yet to experience the latter to any extent that matters.
Too, Prof. Greene’s theory at or around the time of the invasion was that it was motivated less by security concerns and more by economics issues. So query whether that theory is still operative. I believe it still is.