The Strategy of Eurasianism
Introduction
This video will be about
the strategy of Eurasianism, a set of cultural, philosophical and political concepts
centered on the idea that Eurasia – defined as the former Soviet space minus
the Baltics and plus Mongolia and sometimes northwest China – has an
independent civilizational identity and developmental path. In particular, we
will answer the following questions:
- How
does Eurasianism define power?
- What
is the global distribution of power?
- And
how can power be organized and manipulated to achieve Eurasianism’s goals?
Subsets of Eurasianism
To be honest, there isn’t
actually a ‘standard’ form of Eurasianism that reconciles all its major strands
of thought. No ‘State Eurasianism’ has ever existed to translate theory into actual
policy. So while most Eurasianists share the video’s strategic logic, the
precise details, emphasis and policies will inevitably vary.
Nevertheless, we can group
Eurasianist theory into three subsets. The first is 1920s Classical
Eurasianism, including the post-Revolution exiles Petr Savitsky and Nikolai
Trubetzkoy. Viewing Czarist Westernization as the root cause of Russia’s
collapse, and wary of the challenge that post-WWI ‘self-determination’ posed to
its integrity, Classical Eurasianism focuses on establishing Russia’s
geographical and philosophical separation from the West.
Eurasianism
during the Soviet period pretty much consisted solely of the work of Lev Gumilev,
whose work on history and ethnography underlay a desire to reject what he saw
as a Western-oriented view of Russian history in favor of linking Russia with
the peoples of Central Asia.
Lastly,
Neo-Eurasianism was a response to disillusionment with the results of Soviet collapse. Rejecting
the idea that Russia’s rejuvenation lies in the West, political and
geopolitical thinkers such as Aleksandr Panarin and Aleksandr Dugin seek to
carve out new ideological and political niches where Russia could reestablish its
relevance.
Power According to
Eurasianism
Eurasianism focuses on
four levels of analysis: the state; the ‘people’ or ethnos to use the Gumilevian term; the ‘culture group’ or superethnos; and the ‘civilization’. ‘People’
and ‘culture group’ are groupings based on shared behavior; and the
‘civilization’ encompasses them all through a set of shared values and what is
referred to as ‘common historical destiny’.
Day-to-day political power
rests with the state, but this is underwritten by the civilizational values of
the peoples and culture groups it governs: should their values change, the
state loses legitimacy and collapses. Therefore, organizing and maintaining
ideological power in the form of civilizational values is a key, if not the key
aspect of Eurasianist strategy.
Distribution of Power – Geography
and Civilization
For Eurasianism, geography
determines the global distribution of power, but not in the sense of resource distribution.
Instead, geography shapes the existence, size, and compatibility of peoples,
culture groups and civilizations.
Gumilev’s theory of
ethnogenesis states that humanity adapts to local environments by changing
behavior and values. Each people, culture and civilization therefore
corresponds to a specific mestorazvitie or
‘place of development’, and their values represent a specialized and unique
adaptation to Earth’s geography.
Civilizational-level mestorazvities generally consist of
continental-sized ecological blocs: Europe’s wooded peninsulas for the Western
European civilization, the desert plains of the Arabian Desert for the Arab
Muslim civilization, and so on.
But in Europe and Asia’s
northern reaches, Classical Eurasianists claimed the existence of not simply a
bloc, but a complete geographic system. Here, regional bands of tundra, taiga,
steppe and desert span nearly half the globe in a regular progression, hosting
the culture groups of the Uralics, Russians, Northern Turkics and Southern
Turkics respectively.
These bands are bound
together thanks to three ‘zones of interaction’: the Russian plain, the
Turkestani plain, and the West Siberian plain. Acting as regions of ecological
and intercultural exchange, these plains eventually induced what Gumilyov
called komplimentarnost or mutual
trust between the culture groups, from which emerged a unified ‘Eurasian
civilization’.
But if plains create komplimentarnost between Eurasians, then
perhaps similar trust would be created with the Western Europeans as well?
This possibility was
strongly denied by the Classical Eurasianists, who came up with a host of
differences – temperature differentials, linguistic phonology, agricultural
practice – to assert a geographic and civilizational separation between Eurasia
and Western Europe.
So from geography,
Eurasianists derive several points: Eurasia exists naturally as an independent
system, meaning that the Eurasian civilization it birthed possesses its own
unique values. These values represent a unique adaptation to their environment,
as do the values of other civilizations. Ideological differences are therefore
a reflection of Earth’s diversity, and any talk of ‘universal values’ is
largely meaningless.
Distribution of Power –
the Thalassocratic Challenge of the West
In an ideal Eurasianist
world, every civilization would thus leave each other alone to develop in its
own way. But alas, there is one civilization that will not do that.
Classical Eurasianists
identified it as the ‘Romano-Germanic’ civilization of Western Europe, while for
the Neo-Eurasianists it is the ‘Atlantic’ civilization of the Anglophone
states. The key feature of their mestorazvities
is a peninsular or islandic geography, whose sea-based or thalassocratic nature
encouraged commerce and trade. These in turn produced civilizational values of
individual competition, materialism and standardization, underlying modern-day Western
liberal, rationalist, and universalist ideology.
Eurasianists have no
problem with Western values within their own civilization. But universalism by
definition has larger ambitions, so the West insists on exporting its values globally.
This insistence comes in two ways: first, a quest to convert others to Western
values; and second, the creation of a values discourse that judges
civilizations as ‘progressive’ or ‘backward’ depending on how closely they
match Western society.
Furthermore, universalism goes
hand-in-hand with Western global hegemony, exemplified in the colonial empires,
American unipolarity and global capitalism. It does this in two ways: firstly,
by encouraging other civilizations to waste energy unlearning their own values,
and becoming imitators always one step behind the actual Westerners.
Secondly, since Atlantic
values come from a distinct environment, adopting them in a different
geographic context disassociates civilizations from their own environment,
creating internal splits that allow Westerners to divide and conquer.
In such a way, Classical
Eurasianists argued that Czarist Westernization created schisms between the
aristocracy and the masses, and between the Russians and the other peoples,
which with the victory of Western-originated revolutionary Marxism finally tore
the civilization apart in class and ethnic war. The Neo-Eurasianist Dugin saw
similar results coming out of de-Stalinization, perestroika and Yeltsin-era shock therapy.
Eurasianists see the
logical conclusion of all this as the global dominance of a Western oligarchy
that enriches itself by exploiting a subjugated and chaotic world. There is
therefore not just a Russian, but also a global imperative to resist Western
universalism.
Organization of Power – A
Strong and Unified Eurasia
Unsurprisingly,
Eurasianism sees Eurasia as the natural leader of the anti-Western resistance.
Taking a page from Mackinder’s Heartland Theory, Eurasianists argue that
Eurasia’s geographic nature as a self-contained, inner continental ‘tellurocracy’
makes it far less vulnerable to Western sea-based ‘thalassocratic’ pressure
compared with other coastal civilizations. Only a unified Eurasia can assist
other civilizations without worrying about its own back.
So how can Eurasia’s
unification be brought about?
First, we need to define
‘unification’, which to Eurasianism isn’t necessarily complete political
unification. Because each people represents a specialized adaptation to its
environment, local autonomy should be protected, with unity needed only on
issues of civilizational importance, such as foreign policy, inter-group
relations, macroeconomics and a common ideological infrastructure. It’s
possible that Eurasianists would be satisfied with a bloc of Russia-aligned
states that are generally sovereign but reliably defer to Moscow in select
areas.
Secondly, Eurasianism
places great stock in the idea that political arrangements trend towards a
‘natural order’, most of all the idea that geographical unity naturally leads
to political unity. The fact that it doesn’t in reality is therefore the result
of nature-violating ‘artificial forces’, i.e. Western material power, or the
spread of Western values such as ‘self-determination’.
Drawing on these ideas,
Eurasianists recommend Russia – always the unifying state thanks to its size
and extensive interaction with all other Eurasian peoples – pursue policies
that defend or cordon off Eurasian states against Western power, allowing
nature to take its course. Dugin proposes a neutral bulwark stretching across
Eastern Europe and the Middle East: not only does this physically separate
Eurasia from Western power, it also shifts the focus of Western energies away
from Eurasia proper. Ideologically, even without total communications control, cordoning-off
could take the form of alternative media and facts or outright disinformation and
conspiratology.
Eurasian unification also
requires proper internal organization. To defend the unity against future
Western universalist attempts, the Classical Eurasianists in particular called
for ideological conformity and mobilization under what they called an
‘ideocracy’. Here Classical Eurasianists saw the policies of Fascist Italy as a
potential model, while Dugin looks to Stalinism.
The exact content of
Eurasian ideology is significantly more debated. Most Eurasianists agree on two
concepts: first, rejecting Western values discourse on universal rights,
individualism, materialism, and ‘progress’, and instead promoting ‘natural
values’ of collectivism, spirituality, and civilizational uniqueness.
Second, reinforcing komplimentarnost between the Eurasian
peoples. Gumilev, in particular, rejected what he saw as the ‘Black Legend’ of
the Mongol and Tatar Yoke on medieval Rus, seeing it as Western exaggeration to
sow division between the Russians and the Central Asians.
There is significant
disagreement on how ‘Russian’ Eurasianist ideology should be. Classical
Eurasianists insisted on retaining Orthodox values, while the Neo-Eurasianist
Panarin considered the idea of an Orthodox-Turkic Islam synthesis. Dugin’s
‘Fourth Political Theory’ advocates a general idea of civilizational
distinctiveness and spirituality.
The Eurasian agenda for
domestic politics and the economy generally reflects the Classical Eurasianist
Savitsky’s idea of ‘masterocracy’. Masterocracy rejects the idea that good
policy can be reduced to one or two metrics. Instead, ‘masters’ need to
exercise a benevolent stewardship over society and the environment, not
accountable to their subjects but nevertheless ideologically motivated to
promote the development of people in harmony with natural order.
Masterocracy therefore
promotes top-down guidance over society: on the economy, Dugin translates this
into state control over strategic sectors – defence, natural resources,
communications, finance – to ensure that profit does not override
civilizational values or unity. On politics, he mirrors this by calling for an
‘organic democracy’ where, instead of vote-counting, local elites rule and
guide society with popular feedback.
Bound together by ideology,
Eurasianism’s ideal society blends strategically-directed top-down government
with strong local autonomy. But this forms only the beginning of Eurasianism’s
historical task; the next objective is the rollback of Western influence across
the globe.
Organization of Power –
Global Multipolarity
A unified Eurasia,
in the Neo-Eurasianist Dugin’s view, faces a world that is dominated by
Atlanticism in three ways. Geographically, Atlanticism’s control of both the
Atlantic and Pacific rims allows it to pressure all other coastal civilizations
in an ‘Anaconda Strategy’. Institutionally, Atlantic dominance is cemented in a
range of formal and informal structures from NATO to the US reserve currency to
its transnational companies. Finally, there is informational dominance,
exemplified in Atlanticism’s use of its influential mass media to spread its
value discourse.
Eurasianism’s
operational response is asymmetric warfare. Avoiding contests in sectors or
against enemies with an unfavorable balance of power, Dugin proposes redirecting
competition into areas that are more favorable, such as natural or energy
resources, or else striking at the meta-dimensions of power like international
law and political decision-making.
Here Dugin
particularly emphasizes the cyber realm’s ability to bypass the formal
institutions of Atlanticist hegemony. Asymmetric internet warfare undermines
Atlanticist informational hegemony and allows Eurasianist supporters to present
civilizational and values alternatives to Atlanticism.
But on a
strategic level, where should the rollback begin? The first answer is:
everywhere, in what Dugin calls a ‘Coalition of the Dissatisfied’. Eurasianism
needs to make common cause with anti-Atlanticist movements regardless of
ideology, because even the most irrelevant or futile movement serves two
purposes: firstly, it presents an alternative to Atlanticism, and secondly, it
draws Atlanticist resources away from the key areas of competition.
Which brings us
to the second answer, where Eurasia gradually replaces Atlanticist hegemony
with a new system of global multipolarity. A unified Eurasia will already have
bulwarks in Eastern Europe and the Middle East; now the Anaconda’s constriction
has to be broken decisively via a strategic partnership with India, which also
grants the Eurasian bloc a ‘central position’ regulating interaction between
Europe, Asia and Africa.
Eurasia can then
exploit the advantages of the central position to speed up the erosion of
Atlanticist power in Western Europe and East Asia, encouraging their return to
civilizational independence in a grand alliance linking Germany, Japan, India
and Eurasia. Penned back into its own environment, Atlanticism will resume its
proper position as only one of four power poles involved in global management:
Western Europe, East Asia, the Atlantic Civilization, and Eurasia.
This system is
only sustainable with global economic and social reorganization. Dugin argues
that the previous model of geographic and economic integration, with
Atlanticism at the center and everybody else at the periphery, has to be
replaced by a model of ‘Vertical Belts’ where each ‘Northern’ civilization is
more linked to its ‘Southern’ counterparts rather than with each other. The
idea is presumably to hasten the civilizational development and integration of
the ‘global South’, resulting in an international system where all
civilizations are strong and independent enough to participate as equals – a
reflection of Earth’s natural order.
Eurasianism in Practice
With this overview of
Eurasianism’s strategic logic, we now turn to a brief look of the theory in
practice. Certainly aspects of Russian strategy, such as its emphasis on
civilizational separateness and sovereignty, special Russian values and the use
of asymmetric and informational warfare, are in line with Eurasianist thinking.
But does that mean Russia is now putting Eurasianist theory in practice?
Two things to note:
firstly, Eurasianism is not necessarily popular within Russia, as ethnic
nationalists and the broader populace suspect that such a strategy would have
Russia send resources to and receive immigrants from the poorer Central Asian
states.
Secondly, Eurasianist
tropes are frequently used to justify non-Eurasianist ends. Kazakhstan, for
example, has been a consistent promoter of Eurasianist ideology, but its
emphasis has always been on Kazakh distinctiveness and sovereignty as a counter
to Russian-led integration. This may also be the case for Putin’s ‘pragmatic
Eurasianism’, where Russia engages in Eurasian integration but justifies it in
liberal or even Atlanticist terms. Dugin claims that this is deception, but
it’s possible to promote regional integration without buying into Eurasianism.
An example of this is the
Eurasian Economic Union, established in 2015 and so far involving Armenia,
Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Russia. Putin stressed that the EEU is not
a tool for political unification: instead, by banding together the EEU’s
members get to negotiate from a stronger position and thus get more out of
globalization – clearly not a Eurasianist move.
At the same time, however,
the EEU – by taking down barriers, creating a single capital and labor market
and coordinating macroeconomic policy – clearly also encourages a Eurasian
economic unity whose development can be directed from a single strategic
center.
Furthermore, despite all
the talk about globalization, Putinist Eurasian integration tends to reject
Western influence – most notably denying Ukraine’s 2013 proposal to be
integrated into both the EU and the Eurasian Customs Union, sparking off the
Euromaidan protests.
All in all, while Russia
has made Eurasian integration a foreign policy goal, this is not necessarily
the same thing as Eurasianism. Putin’s pragmatism and domestic constituency
prevent him from associating with something as explicitly pro-Central Asia and
anti-Western as Eurasianism. It is unlikely that the ideology will become
formal state policy in the years to come, if ever.
Conclusions
In conclusion, Eurasianism
defines power not just politically but also in terms of civilizational values.
These values reflect a distinct adaptation to their environment, which is why
the universalism promoted by Western hegemony has to be rejected. To achieve
this, Eurasianism proposes a united, ideologically mobilized civilization that
takes the lead in establishing a multipolar world.
It’s probably safe to say
that nobody who isn’t already attracted to Eurasianism will find its reasoning particularly
convincing. Eurasianism has been criticized as a theory that first assumes
Eurasia exists, then analyzes the world on that basis. Reject its assumptions
on geography, civilization and values, and the theory looks like mere
justification for Russian expansionism and authoritarianism.
Even then, Eurasianism is still
worthy of analysis. For starters, its declarations on civilizational uniqueness
and universalism’s corrosive effects attract support, Russian or otherwise. It
also reminds Western strategymakers that the benefits of universal values are
not self-evident and can actually be perceived as harm, if not a mortal threat
to society.
Recognizing this prevents
strategic blunders like the EU’s Eastern Partnership Program, where its
self-assured promotion of political and economic reforms in Eastern Europe discounted
Russia’s reaction to what it saw as a perceived assault on its interests,
catching the EU unprepared and off-guard during the 2014 Ukrainian Crisis.
At the same time,
Eurasianism also blinkers Russia’s strategic perception. By portraying Western
values as incompatible yet uniquely aggressive, Russia loses the chance to
reflect on what makes them attractive and powerful. The contest between Russia
and the West also becomes eternal and there is no room for any permanent compromise.
Eurasianists also discount
the power of material strength, confident in overcoming it via ideological
mobilization or asymmetric warfare. Unfortunately, reality seems to indicate
otherwise. Even the ‘natural order’ of Eurasian economic integration was
reversed in 2015 and 2016 thanks to the impact of Western embargoes.
Ultimately, Eurasianism’s
rich intellectual diversity masks a theory that is short on practical political
experience. But its ideal of a world filled with independent, distinct
civilizations is an enticing one to many, and it would be interesting to see if
the world moves in that direction with the continued relative decline of
Atlantic power.
Thanks for watching the
video, and please like and subscribe! If you have any questions, I’ll be happy
to answer them in the comments section.
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