Lex Fridman Podcast - Stephen Kotkin: Stalin, Putin, and the Nature of Power
Episode Date: January 3, 2020Stephen Kotkin is a professor of history at Princeton university and one of the great historians of our time, specializing in Russian and Soviet history. He has written many books on Stalin and the So...viet Union including the first 2 of a 3 volume work on Stalin, and he is currently working on volume 3. This conversation is part of the Artificial Intelligence podcast. If you would like to get more information about this podcast go to https://lexfridman.com/ai or connect with @lexfridman on Twitter, LinkedIn, Facebook, Medium, or YouTube where you can watch the video versions of these conversations. If you enjoy the podcast, please rate it 5 stars on Apple Podcasts, follow on Spotify, or support it on Patreon. This episode is presented by Cash App. Download it (App Store, Google Play), use code "LexPodcast". Episode Links: Stalin (book, vol 1): https://amzn.to/2FjdLF2 Stalin (book, vol 2): https://amzn.to/2tqyjc3 Here's the outline of the episode. On some podcast players you should be able to click the timestamp to jump to that time. 00:00 - Introduction 03:10 - Do all human beings crave power? 11:29 - Russian people and authoritarian power 15:06 - Putin and the Russian people 23:23 - Corruption in Russia 31:30 - Russia's future 41:07 - Individuals and institutions 44:42 - Stalin's rise to power 1:05:20 - What is the ideal political system? 1:21:10 - Questions for Putin 1:29:41 - Questions for Stalin 1:33:25 - Will there always be evil in the world?
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The following is a conversation with Stephen Cotkin, a professor of history at Princeton University
and one of the great historians of our time, specializing in Russian and Soviet history.
He has written many books on Stalin and the Soviet Union, including the first two of
a three-volume work on Stalin, and he is currently working on volume three.
He may have noticed that I have been speaking with not just computer scientists, but physicists,
engineers, historians, neuroscientists, and soon much more.
To me, artificial intelligence is much bigger than deep learning, bigger than computing.
It is our civilization's journey into understanding the human mind and creating echoes of it in
the machine.
To me, that journey must include a deep, historical, and psychological understanding
of power. Technology puts some of the greatest power in the history of our civilization
into the hands of engineers and computer scientists. This power must not be abused. And
the best way to understand how such abuse can be avoided is to not be blind to the lessons of history.
As Stephen Codkin brilliantly articulates, Stalin was arguably one of the most powerful
humans in history.
I read many books on Joseph Stalin, Vladimir Putin, and the Wars of the 20th century.
I hope you understand the value of such knowledge to all of us, especially to engineers and
scientists who build the tools of power in the 21st century.
This is the Artificial Intelligence Podcast.
If you enjoy it, subscribe on YouTube, give us 5 stars in Apple Podcasts, follow us
Spotify, support on Patreon, or simply connect with me on Twitter, Alex Friedman spelled
F-R-I-D-M-A-N.
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And now here's my conversation, Stephen Kotkin. Do all human beings crave power?
No.
Human beings crave security.
They crave love.
They crave adventure.
They crave power, but not equally.
Some human beings nevertheless do crave power.
For sure.
What words is that deeply in the psychology of people?
Is it something you're born with?
Is it something you develop?
Some people crave a position of leadership or of standing out or being recognized. And that could be starting out in the school years,
on the school yard.
It could be within their own family,
not just in their peer group.
Those kind of people we often see
craving leadership positions from a young age
often end up in positions of power,
but they can be varied positions of power. You
can have power in an institution where your power is purposefully limited. For example,
there's a board or a consultative body or a separation of powers. Not everyone craves power
whereby they're the sole power or they're their unconstrained power.
That's a little bit less usual.
We may think that everybody does, but not everybody does.
Those people who do crave that kind of power,
unconstrained the ability to decide as much as life or death of other people.
Those people are not every day people. They're
not the people you encounter in your daily life for the most part. Those are extraordinary
people. Most of them don't have the opportunity to live that dream. Very few of them in fact
end up with the opportunity to live that dream.
So percentage wise, in your sense, if we think of George Washington, for example, most
would most people given the choice of absolute power over a country versus maybe the capped
power that the United States president presidential role, at least at the founding of the country
represented, what do you think most people would
choose? Well, Washington was in a
position to exercise far greater
power than he did. And in fact, he
didn't take that option. He was
more interested in seeing
institutionalization of seeing
the country develop strong institutions rather than an individual
leader like himself have excess power. So that's very important. So like I said, not everyone
craves unconstrained power even if they're very ambitious. And of course, Washington was
very ambitious. He was a successful general before he was a president. So that clearly
comes from the influences on your life where you grow up, how you grow up, how you raised,
what kind of values are imparted to you along the way. You can understand power as the
ability to share, or you can understand, or the ability to advance something for the collective in
a collective process, not an individual process.
So power comes in many different varieties, and ambition doesn't always equate to despotic
power.
The spotting power is something different from ordinary institutional power that we see.
The president of MIT does not have unconstrained power.
The president of MIT rightly must consult with other members of the administration, with
the faculty members, to a certain extent with the student body and certainly with the
trustees of MIT.
Those constraints make the institution strong and enduring and make the decisions better
than they would be if he had unconstrained power.
But you can't say that the president is not ambitious.
Of course, the president is ambitious.
We worry about unconstrained power. We worry
about executive authority that's not limited. That's the definition of authoritarianism or
tyranny. Unlimited or barely limited executive authority. Executive authority is necessary
to carry out many functions. We all understand that. That's why MIT has an executive,
has a president. But unlimited or largely unconstrained executive power is detrimental to even the person
who exercises that power. So what do you think it's an interesting notion? We kind of take it for granted that constraints on executive power is a good thing.
But why is that necessarily true?
So what is it about absolute power that does something bad to the human mind?
So the popular saying of absolute power corrupts absolutely absolutely. Is that the case that the power in itself
is the thing that corrupts the mind in some kind of way where it leads to a bad leadership
over time? People make more mistakes when they're not challenged, when they don't have to
explain things and get others to vote and go along with it when they can make a decision
without anybody being able to block their decision or to have input necessarily on their
decision. You are more prone to mistakes. You are more prone to extremism. There's a
temptation there. For example, we have separation of powers in the United States. The Congress has
authority that the president doesn't have, as for example, in budgeting, the so-called
power of the purse. This can be very frustrating. People want to see things happen, and they
complain that there's a do nothing Congress or that the situation is
stalemated, but actually that's potentially a good thing. In fact, that's how our
system was designed. Our system was designed to prevent things happening in
government. And there's frustration with that, but ultimately that's the
strength of the institutions we have.
And so when you see unconstrained executive authority, there can be a lot of dynamism,
a lot of things can get done quickly, but those things can be like, for example,
what happened in China under Mao, or what happened in the Soviet Union under Stalin,
or what happened in Haiti under Papadok and then Baby Doc or fill in the blank,
right? What happens sometimes in corporations, we're a corporate leader, is not constrained by the
shareholders, by the board or by anything. And they can seem to be a genius for a while, but
eventually it catches up to them. And so the idea of constraints on executive powers is absolutely fundamental to the American
system, American way of thinking, and not only America.
Obviously large other parts of the world that have a similar system, not an identical system,
but a similar system of checks and balances on executive power.
And so the case that I study, the only checks and balances on executive power are circumstantial.
So for example, distances in the country.
It's hard to do something over 5,000 miles.
Or the amount of time in a day, it's hard for a leader to get to every single thing.
The leader wants to get to because there are only 24 hours in a day.
Those are circumstantial constraints on executive power.
They're not institutional constraints on executive power.
One of the constraints on executive power that United States has versus Russia, maybe something
you've implied and actually
spoke directly to is there's something in the Russian people and the Soviet people that
are attracted to authoritarian power, that psychologically speaking, or at least the
kind of leaders that saw authoritarian power throughout its history. And that desire for that kind of human is a lack of a constraint.
In America, it seems as people we desire somebody not like Stalin, somebody more like George Washington.
So that's another constraint to the belief that people, what they admire in a leader, what they seek in a leader.
they admire an elite or what they seek an elite. So maybe you can speak to, well, first of all, can you speak briefly to that psychology of, is there a difference between the Russian
people and the American people in terms of just what we find attractive in a leader?
Not as great a difference as it might seem. There are unfortunately many Americans who
would be happy with an authoritarian leader in the country. By no means a majority,
it's not even a plurality, but nonetheless it's a real sentiment in the population.
Sometimes because they feel frustrated, because things are not getting done,
Sometimes because they feel frustrated, because things are not getting done, sometimes because they're against something that's happening in the political realm, and they feel it has
to be corrected and corrected quickly.
It's a kind of impulse.
People can regret the impulse later on, that the impulse is motivated by reaction to their
environment.
In the Russian case, we have also people who crave,
sometimes known as a strong hand, an iron hand,
an authoritarian leader, because they want things to be done
and be done more quickly, that align with their desires.
But I'm not sure it's a majority in the country today.
Certainly in Stalin's time, this was a widespread sentiment,
and people had few alternatives that they understood or could appeal to.
Nowadays in the globalized world, the citizens of Russia can see how
other systems have constraints on executive power, and the life isn't so bad there.
In fact, the life might even be
better. So the impatience, the impulsive quality, the frustration, does sometimes people reinforce
their craving for the unconstrained executive to quote, get things done or shake things up or
to quote, get things done or shake things up. Or yes, that's true.
But in the Russian case, I'm not sure it's cultural today.
I think it might be more having to do with the failures,
the functional failures of the kind of political system
that they tried to institute after the Soviet collapse.
And so it may be frustration with the version of constraints
on executive power they got and how it didn't work the way it was imagined, which has led to a sense
in which non-constrained executive power could fix things. But like, I'm not sure that that's a majority
sentiment in the Russian case, although it's hard to measure because under authoritarian
regimes, a public opinion is shaped by the environments in which people live, which is
very constrained in terms of public opinion.
But on that point, why at least from a distance does there seem to nevertheless be support
for the current Russian President Vladimir Putin?
Is that have to do with the fact that measuring, getting good metrics and statistics on support
is difficult, authoritarian governments, or is there still something appealing to that kind of power
to the people? I think we have to give credit to President Putin for understanding the psychology
of the Russians, to whom he appeals. Many of them were the losers in the transition from communism.
They were the ones whose pensions were destroyed by inflation or whose salaries didn't go
up or whose regions were abandoned.
They were not the winners for the most part.
And so I think there's an understanding on his part of their psychology.
Putin has grown in the position.
He was not a public politician when he first started out.
He was quite poor in public settings.
He didn't have the kind of political instincts that he has now.
He didn't have the appeal to traditional values and the Orthodox Church and some of the
other dimensions of his rule today.
So yes, we have to give some credit to Putin himself for this, in addition to the frustrations
and the mass of the people.
But let's think about it this way, in addition, without taking away the fact that he's become
a better, a retail politician over time, and that sentiment has shifted because of the
disappointments with the transition with the
population.
When I ask my kids, am I a good dad?
My kids don't have any other dad to measure me against.
I'm the only dad they know, and I'm the only dad they can choose or not choose. They think if they don't
choose me, they still get me as dad, right? So with Putin today, he's the only
dad that the Russian people have. Now if my kids were introduced to alternative
fathers, they might be better than me. They might be more loving, more giving, funnier, richer, whatever it might be.
They might be more appealing.
There are some blood ties there, for sure, that I have with my kids, but they would at
least be able to choose alternatives, and then I would have to win their favor in that
constellation of alternatives.
If President Putin were up against real alternatives,
if the population had real choice
and that choice could express itself
and have resources and have media and everything else,
the way he does,
maybe he would be very popular
and maybe his popularity would not be as great as it currently is.
So the absence of alternatives is another factor that reinforces
his authority and his popularity. Having said that, there are many authoritarian leaders
who deny any alternatives to the population and are not very popular.
So denial of alternatives doesn't guarantee you the popularity. You still have to figure out the mass psychology and be able
to appeal to it. So with the in the Russian case, the winners from the transition, live primarily in the big cities and
are self-employed or intrepidorial.
Even if they're not self-employed, they're able to change careers.
They have tremendous skills and talent and education and knowledge,
as well as these entrepreneurial or dynamic personalities
Putin also appealed to them. He did that with Medvedyev and it was a very clever ruse
He
himself appealed to the losers from the transition the small towns the rural
the people who were not well off, and he had them for
the most part.
Not all, we don't want to generalize to say that he had every one of them because those
people have views of their own sometimes in contradiction with the president of Russia.
And then he appealed to the opposite people, the successful urban base, through the so-called reformer
Medvedyev, the new generation, the technically literate prime minister who for a time was
president.
And so that worked very successfully for Putin.
He was able to bridge a big divide in the society and gain a greater mass support than
he would otherwise have had by himself. That
ruse only worked through the time that Medvedev was temporarily president for a
few years because of the Constitution Putin couldn't do three consecutive
terms and step the side in what they call castling in chess.
When this was over, Putin had difficulty with his popularity.
There were mass protests in the urban areas,
precisely that group of the population
that he had been able to win in part
because of the mid-Vidya of castling.
And now had had their delusions exposed and were
disillusioned and there were these mass protests in the urban areas, not just in the capital
by the way.
And Putin had to, as it were, come up with a new way to fix his popularity, which happened
to be the annexation of Crimea from which he got a very significant bump.
However, the trend is back in the other direction. It's diminishing again, although it's still high
relative to other leaders around the world. So I wouldn't say that he's unpopular with mass in Russia. There is some popularity there, there is some success, but
I would say it's tough for us to gauge because of the lack of alternatives. And Putin is
unpopular inside the state administration.
At every level the bureaucracy of leadership.
Because those people are well informed and they understand that the country is declining, that the human
capital is declining, the infrastructure is declining, the economy is not really growing,
it's not really diversifying, Russia is not investing in its future.
The state officials understand all of that and then they see that the Putin clique is stealing everything in
sight. So between the failure to invest in a future and the corruption of a narrow group
around the president, there's disillusionment in the state apparatus because they see this
more clearly or more closely than the mass of the population. They can't necessarily yet oppose this in public
because they're people, they have families, they have careers, they have children who want to go
to school or want a job. And so there are constraints on their ability to oppose the regime
And so there are constraints on their ability to oppose the regime based upon what we might call cowardice or other people might call realism.
I don't know how courageous people can be when their family, children, career are on the
line.
So it's very interesting dynamic to see the disillusionment inside the government with the president Which is not yet fully public for the most part but could become public and once again if there's an alternative if an alternative
Appears things could shift quickly and that alternative could come from inside the regime
From inside the regime, but the leadership the the party the people that are now, as you're saying, opposed to Putin,
they're nevertheless, maybe you can correct me, but it feels like there's
structurally is deeply corrupt. So each of each of the people we're talking about are
I don't feel like a George Washington.
Once again, the circumstances don't permit them to act that way necessarily, right?
George Washington did great things, but in certain circumstances.
A lot of the state officials in Russia, for certain, are corrupt.
There's no question.
Many of them, however, are patriotic. And many of them feel badly about where the country has been
going.
They would prefer that the country was less corrupt.
They would prefer that there were greater investment in all
sorts of areas of Russia.
They might even themselves steal less if they could be guaranteed that everybody
else would steal less. There's a deep and abiding patriotism inside Russia, as well as inside
the Russian regime. So they understand that Putin in many ways rescued the Russian state
from the chaos of the 1990s. They understand that
Russia was in very bad shape as an incoherent failing state almost when Putin
took over and that he did some important things for Russia's stability and
consolidation. There's also some appreciation that Putin stood up to the West and stood
up to more powerful countries and regained a sense of pride and maneuverability for Russia
and the international system. People appreciate that and it's real. It's not imagined that
Putin accomplished that. The problem is the methods that he accomplished it with.
He used the kind of methods, that is to say,
taking other people's property, putting other people in jail for political reasons.
He used the kind of methods that are not conducive to long-term growth and stability.
So he fixed the problem, but he fixed the problem, and then created even bigger long-term growth and stability. So he fixed the problem, but he fixed the problem,
and then created even bigger long-term problems, potentially.
And moreover, all authoritarian regimes
that use those methods are tempted to keep using them
and using them and using them until they're the only ones
who are the beneficiaries.
And the group narrows and narrows, the elite
gets smaller and narrower, the interest groups get excluded from power and their ability
to continue enjoying the fruits of the system and the resentment grows.
And so that's the situation we have in Russia.
Russia is a place that is stuck. It was to a certain extent
rescued. It was rescued with methods that were not conducive to long term success and stability.
The rescue referring to is the sort of the economic growth when Putin first took office.
Yes, they had 10 years. They had a full decade of an average of 7% growth a year, which was phenomenal and is not
attributable predominantly to oil prices. During President Putin's first term as president, the average price of oil was $35 a barrel.
During his second term as president, the average price was $70 a barrel.
During his second term as president, the average price was $70 a barrel. So during those two terms, when Russia was growing at about 7% a year, oil prices were
averaging somewhere around $50 a barrel, which is fine, but is not the reason, because
later on, when oil prices were over a hundred dollars a barrel Russia stagnated
So the initial growth you think Putin deserves some credit for that yes
He does because he introduced some important
liberalizing measures
He lowered taxes
He allowed land to be bought and sold
He deregulated many areas of the economy. And so there was a kind
of entrepreneurial burst that was partly attributable, partly attributable to government policy
during his first term. But also he was consolidating political power. And as I said the methods he used overall for the long term were
not able to continue sustain that success.
In addition we have to remember that China played a really big role in the success of Russia
in the first two terms of Putin's presidency, because China's phenomenal growth created insatiable demand
for just about everything that the Soviet Union used to produce.
So fertilizers, cement, fill in the blank, chemicals, metals, China had insatiable demand
for everything the Soviet Union once produced.
And so China's raising of global demand overall brought Soviet era industry back from the dead.
And so there was something that happened.
Soviet era industry fell off a cliff in the 1990s.
There was a decline in manufacturing and industrial production greater than in the Great Depression
in the US.
But a lot of that came back online in the 2000s, and that had to do with China's phenomenal
growth.
The trade between China and Russia was not always direct, so this was an indirect effect.
But raising global prices for the commodities and the products, the kind of lower and lower value products in manufacturing, not high-end stuff, but lower-end stuff like steel or iron or cement or fertilizer, where the value added is not spectacular, but
nonetheless, which had been destroyed by the 1990s and after the Soviet collapse.
This was brought back to life.
Now you can do that once.
You can bring Soviet era industry back to life once.
And that happened during Putin's first two terms in addition to the liberalizing policies
which spurred entrepreneurialism in some small and medium business.
The crash of the rubble in 1998, which made Russian products much cheaper abroad and made
imports much more expensive, also facilitated the resuscitation, the revival of
domestic manufacturing. So all of this came together for that spectacular 10-year, 7% on average economic
growth, and moreover, people's wages after inflation, their disposable income grew more even than GDP grew.
So disposable income after inflation,
that is a real income, was growing greater than 7%,
in some cases 10% a year.
So there was a boom, and the Russian people felt it,
and it happened during Putin's first two terms, and people were
grateful, rightly so, for that. And those who don't want to give Putin credit, give oil prices
all the credit. But I don't think that oil prices can explain this. Having said that, that doesn't
mean that this was sustainable over the long term.
Right.
So you've briefly mentioned sort of implying the possibility, you know, Stalin held
power for let's say 30 years.
You've briefly mentioned that as a question, will Putin be able to beat that record, to
beat that?
So can you talk about your sense of, is it possible that Putin holds power for that kind
of duration?
Let's hope not.
Let's hope not for Russia's sake.
The primary victims of President Putin's power are Russians.
They're not Ukrainians, although to a certain extent, Ukraine has suffered
because of Putin's actions, and they're not Americans. They're Russians.
Moreover, Russia has lost the great deal of human talent. Millions and millions of people
have left Russia. Since 1991, overall, somewhere between five and 10 million people have left the country,
and are beyond the borders of the former Soviet Union, so they left the Soviet space entirely.
Moreover, the people who left are not the poor people, they're not the uneducated, they're
not the losers.
The people who've left are the more dynamic parts of the population.
The better educated, the more entrepreneurial. So that human capital loss that Russia has
suffered is phenomenal. And in fact, right here, we're sitting at MIT. We have examples
of people who are qualified, good enough for MIT and have left Russia to come to MIT.
You're looking at one of them.
And the other aspect just to quickly comment
is those same people like me,
I'm not welcome back.
No, you're not under the current regime.
It was a big loss for Russia, if you're patriotic,
but not from the point of view of the Putin regime.
That has to do also factors into popularity.
If the people who don't like you leave, they're not there to complain, to protest, to vote
against you.
And so your opposition declines when you let them leave.
However, it's very costly in human capital terms.
Emerging that much human capital is damaging,
it's self-damaging.
And we've seen it accelerate, it was already high,
but we've seen it accelerate in the last
of seven to eight years of President Putin's rule.
And those people are not going back of their own
volition, but even if they wanted to go back,
as you just said, they'd be unwelcome.
That's a big cost to pay for this regime.
And so whatever benefits this regime might or might not
have given to the country, the disadvantages, the downside,
the costs are also really high.
So we don't want Putin lasting in power as long as Stalin.
It would be better if Russia were able to choose among options,
to choose a new leader among options.
Many people speculate that President Putin will name a successor,
the way Yeltsin named Putin as his successor, successor, the way Yeltsin named Putin
as his successor, Boris, President Boris Yeltsin, and then Putin will leave the stage and
allow the successor to take over.
That might seem like a good solution, but once again, we don't need a system where you
hang on for as long as possible and then nominate who's going to take over.
We need a system that has the kind of corrective mechanisms
that democracies and markets have along with rule of law.
A corrective mechanism is really important,
because all leaders make mistakes.
But when you can't correct for the mistakes, then the mistakes
get compounded.
Putin could well, he seems to be healthy.
He could well last as many years as Stalin.
It's hard to predict because events intercede sometimes and create circumstances that are
unforeseen, and leaders get overthrown or have a heart attack
or whatever. There's a palace insurrection where ambitious leaders on the inside for both
personal power and patriotic reasons try to push aside an aging leader. There are many
scenarios in which Putin could not last that long, but unfortunately, right
now, you could also imagine potentially him lasting that long, which, as I said, is not
an outcome if you're patriotic about Russia, is not an outcome you would wish out to the
country.
I guess a very difficult question, but what practically do you feel is a way out of the
Putin regime, is the way out of the corruption that's deeply underlies the state?
If you look from a history perspective, as a revolution required, is some, is violence required is from a violence within or external to the country. Do you see or is it
as a powerful is a inspiring leader enough to step in and bring democracy and kind of the free world to Russia.
So Russia is not a failed country.
It's a middle-income country with the tremendous potential
and has proven many times in the past
that when it gets in a bad way,
it can reverse its trajectory.
Moreover, violence is rarely ever a solution. Violence rarely, it may break
an existing trend, but it's rare that violence produces a non-violent, sustainable, positive
outcome. It happens, but it doesn't happen frequently.
Societal upheaval is not a way always to institutionalize a better path forward because you need institutions.
People can protest as they did throughout the Middle East and the protests didn't necessarily
lead to better systems because the step from protest to new strong consolidated institutions is a colossal leap, not a small step.
What we need and what we see from history and situations like this is a group within the
power structures, which is a patriotic, that sees things going down, that is to say that
sees things not developing relative to neighbors,
relative to richer countries, relative to more successful countries.
They want to change the trajectory of Russia, and if they can, in a coalition fashion, unseat
the current regime for a new power sharing arrangement, which once again
can be frustrating because you can't do changes immediately, you can't do things overnight,
but that's the point.
Constraints are your ability to change everything immediately and to force change overnight
is what leads to long-term success potentially.
That's the sustainability of change.
So Russia needs stronger institutions.
It needs court system, as well as democratic institutions.
It needs functioning open dynamic markets rather than monopolies, it needs meritocracy and banks to award loans on the basis of business
plans, not on the basis of political criteria or corrupt, bribery or whatever it might be.
So, Russian needs, those kind of functioning institutions that take time are sometimes slow,
that take time are sometimes slow, don't lead to a revolutionary transformation, but lead to potentially long-term sustainable growth without upheaval, without violence,
without getting into a situation where all of a sudden you need a miracle again.
Every time Russia seems to need a miracle and that's the problem. The solution would be not needing a
miracle. Now having said that, the potential is there. The civilization that we call Russia is
amazingly impressive. It has delivered world-class culture, world-class science. It's a great power. It's not a great power with a strong
base right now, but nonetheless it is a great power as it acts in the world. So I wouldn't underestimate
Russia's abilities here, and I wouldn't write off Russia. I don't see it under the current regime,
a renewal of the country, but if we can have from within the regime an
evolution, rather than a revolution, in a positive direction, and maybe get a George
Washington figure who is strong enough to push through institutionalization rather than
personalism.
So, if I could ask about one particular individual, it would be just interesting to get your
comment, but also as a representative of potential leaders.
I just on this podcast, Dr. Gary Kasparov, who I'm not sure if you're familiar with his
ongoing.
So besides being a world class chess player, he's also a very outspoken activist, sort of seeing
Putin, truly seeing Putin as an enemy of the free world of democracy, of balanced government
in Russia. What do you think of people like him specifically, or just people like him,
trying as leaders to step in to run for president
to symbolize a new chapter in Russia's future.
So we don't need individuals.
Some individuals are very impressive and they have courage and they protest and they criticize
and they organize.
We need institutions. We need a Duma or a parliament
that functions, we need a court system that functions. That is to say where there are
a separation of powers, impartial professional civil service, impartial professional judiciary, those are the things Russia needs.
It's rare that you get that from an individual no matter how impressive, right?
We had Andrei Sokhorov, who was an extraordinary individual, who developed the hydrogen bomb
under Soviet regime, was a world-class physicist, was then upset about how his
scientific knowledge and scientific achievements were being put to use, and rebelled to try to put
limits, constraints, civilizing humane limits and constraints on some of the implications
civilizing humane limits and constraints on some of the implications of his extraordinary science.
But Sakharov, even if he had become the leader of the country, which he did not become,
he was more of a moral or spiritual leader, it still wouldn't have given you a judiciary,
it still wouldn't have given you a civil service, it still wouldn't have given you a duma
of functioning parliament. You need a leader in coalition with other leaders.
You need a bunch of leaders, a whole group, and they have to be divided a little
bit so that not one of them can destroy all the others. And they have to be
interested in creating institutions, not solely or predominantly in their personal
power.
And so I have no objection to outstanding individuals and to the work that they do.
But I think in institutional terms, and they need to think that way too in order to be successful.
So, if we go back to the echoes of that
after the Russian Revolution was Stalin,
or Lenin Stalin, maybe he can correct me,
but there was a group of people there
in that same kind of way looking to establish institutions
that were built in a beautifully built around an ideology
that they believed is good for the world.
So, sort of echoing that idea of what we're talking
about what Russian needs now,
can you, first of all, you've described a fascinating thought
which Stalin is having amassed arguably more
power than any man in history.
Just interesting things to think about.
But can you tell about his journey to getting that power after the Russian Revolution, how
does that perhaps echo to our current discussion about institutions and so on.
And just in general, the story I think is fascinating
of how one man is able to get more power
than any other man in history.
It is a great story, not necessarily
from a moral point of view,
but if you're interested in power, for sure,
it's an incredible story.
So we have to remember that Stalin but if you're interested in power, for sure, it's an incredible story.
So we have to remember that Stalin is also a product of circumstances,
not solely his own individual drive, which is very strong, but for example, World War One breaks the Zaraist regime, the Zaraist order, Imperial Russian state. Stalin has no participation whatsoever in World War
One. He spends World War One in exile in Siberia. Until the downfall of the Zara's
Dottocracy in February 1917, Stalin is in Eastern Siberian exile. He's only able to leave Eastern Siberia when that regime falls.
He never fights in the war.
He's called up briefly towards the end of the war
and is disqualified on physical grounds
because of physical deformities from being drafted.
The war continues after the Tsar's regime has been toppled in the
capital and there's been a revolution. The
war continues and that war is very
radicalizing. The peasants begin to seize
the land if the Tsar falls, essentially
destroying much of the gentry class.
Stalin has nothing to do with that.
The peasants have their own revolution, seizing the land, not in law, but in fact, defect
or not de jure land ownership.
So there are these really large processes underway that Stalin is alive during, but not a driver of. The most improbable thing
happens, which is a very small group of people around the figure of Vladimir
Lenin, announces that it has seized power. Now by this time in October 1917, the government that has replaced the ZAR, the so-called provisional
government, has failed.
And so there's not so much power to seize from the provisional government.
What Lenin does is he does a coup on the left.
That is to say, Soviets or councils,
as we would call them in English,
which represent people's power
or the masses participating in politics,
a kind of radical grassroots democracy,
are extremely popular all over the country
and not dominated by any one group,
but predominantly socialist or predominantly leftist.
Russia has an election during the war, But predominantly socialist or predominantly leftist.
Russia has an election during the war, a free and fair election for the most part,
despite the war, at the end of 1917 and December 1917,
and three quarters plus of the country votes socialist
in some form or another.
So the battle was over the definition of socialism and who had the right to participate in defining
socialism, not only what it would be, but who had the right to decide.
So there's a coup by Lenin's group known as the Bolsheviks against all the other socialists. And so Lenin declares a seizure of power whereby the old government has failed.
People's power, the councils, known as the Soviets, are going to take their place.
And Lenin ceases power in the name of the Soviets.
So it's a coup against the left, against the rest of the left,
not against the provisional
government that has replaced the Tsar, which has already failed. And so Stalin is able to come to
power along with Lenin in this crazy seizure of power on the left against the rest of the left
in October 1917, which we know is the October Revolution, and I call
the October coup as many other historians call.
The October Revolution happened after the seizure of power.
What's interesting about this episode is that the leftists who seized power in the name
of the Soviets, in the name of the masses, in the name of people's power,
they retain their hold.
Many times in history there's a seizure of power by the left, and they fail.
They collapse, they're cleaned out by an army or what we call forces of order,
by counter-revolutionary forces.
Lenin's revolution, Lenin's coup is successful. It is able to hold
power, not just seize power. They win a civil war and they're entrenched in the heart of
the country already by 1921. Stalin is part of that group. Lenin needs somebody to run
this new regime in the kind of nitty-gritty way.
Lenin is the leader, the undisputed leader in the Bolshevik party,
which changes their name to communists in 1918.
He makes Stalin the general secretary of the Communist Party.
He creates a new position, which hadn't existed before, a kind of day-to-day
political manager, a right-hand man. Not because Lenin is looking to replace himself, he's
looking to institutionalize a helpmate, a right-hand man. He does this in the spring of 1922. Stalin is named to this position which Lenin has created expressly
for Stalin. So there has been a coup on the left whereby the Bolsheviks who become communists
have seized power against the rest of the socialists and anarchists and the entire left.
And then there's an institutionalization of a position known as General Secretary
of the Communist Party, right hand man of Lenin. Less than six weeks after Lenin has created
this position and installed Stalin, Lenin has a stroke, a major stroke, and never really returns as a full actor to power before he dies of a fourth
stroke in January 1924. So a position is created for Stalin to run things on Lenin's behalf
and then Lenin has a stroke. And so Stalin now has this new position general secretary,
So Stalin now has this new position, General Secretary, but he's the right hand of a person who's no longer exercising day-to-day control over affairs.
Stalin then uses this new position to create a personal dictatorship inside the Bolshevik
dictatorship, which is the remarkable story I tried to tell.
So is there anything nefarious about any of what you
just described? So it seems conveniently that the position is created just for Stalin. There
was a few other brilliant people, arguably more brilliant, installing in the vicinity of Lenin.
Why was Stalin chosen? Why did Lenin and all of a sudden fall ill?
It's perhaps a conspiratorial question,
but is there anything that varies
about any of this historical trajectory to power
that Stalin took in creating the personal dictatorship?
So history is full of contingency and surprise.
After something happens, we all think it's inevitable,
it had to happen that way.
Everything was leading up to it.
So Hitler sees his power in Germany in 1933,
and the Nazi regime gets institutionalized
by several of his moves after being named Chancellor.
And so all German history becomes a story
of the Nazi rise to power, Hitler's rise to power.
Every trend, tendency, is bent into that outcome,
things which don't seem related to that outcome.
All of a sudden get bent in that direction.
And all the trends that were going on
are no longer examined because they didn't lead to that outcome.
But Hitler's becoming chancellor of Germany in 1933
was not inevitable, it was contingent.
He was offered the position by the traditional conservatives.
He's part of the radical right and the traditional right named him Chancellor.
The Nazi Party never outright won an election that was free and fair before Hitler came to power.
And in fact, its votes on the's illness, his stroke, the neurological
and blood problems that he had, were not a structure in history.
In other words, if Lenin had been a healthier figure, Stalin might never have become the
Stalin that we know.
That's not to say that all history is accidental, just that we need to relate the structural,
the larger structural factors to the contingent factors.
Why did Lenin pick Stalin?
Stalin was a very effective organizer, and the position was an organizational position.
Stalin could get things done. He would carry
out assignments, no matter how difficult he wouldn't complain that it was hard work
or too much work. He wouldn't go off womanizing and drinking and ignore his responsibilities.
Lenin chose Stalin among other options because he thought Stalin was the better option.
Once again, he wasn't choosing his successor because he didn't know he was going to have
this stroke.
Lenin had some serious illnesses, but he had never had a major stroke before.
So the choice was made based upon Stalin's organizational skills and promise
against the others who were in the regime.
Now, they can see more brilliant than Stalin,
but he was more effective,
and I'm not sure they were very brilliant.
Well, he was exceptionally competent,
actually at the tasks for running a government
of the executive branch right of a dictator.
Yes, he turned out to be very adept at being a dictator.
Yes.
And so if he had been chosen by Lenin and had not been very good,
he would have been pushed aside by others.
Yeah.
You can get a position by accident.
You can be named because you're someone's friend or someone's relative.
But to hold that position, to hold that position in difficult circumstances, and
then to build effectively a superpower on all that bloodshed, right? You have to
be skilled in some way. It can't be just accident that brings you to power because if accident brings you to power,
it won't last. Just like we discovered with Putin, he had some qualities that we didn't foresee at
the beginning, and he's been able to hold power, not just be named into... Now, Putin and Stalin are
very different people. These are very different regimes. I wouldn't put them in the same sentence.
My point is not that one resembles the other.
My point is that when people come to power for contingent reasons,
they don't stay in power unless they're able to manage it. And Stalin was able to build a personal
dictatorship inside that dictatorship.
He was cunning, he was ruthless, and he was a workaholic.
He was very diligent.
He had a phenomenal memory, and so he could remember people's names and faces and events.
And this was very advantageous for him as he built the machine that became the Soviet state in bureaucracy.
One of the things maybe you can correct me from wrong, what you've made me realize is this
wasn't some kind of manipulative personality trying to gain more power solely, like kind
of an evil picture of a person, but he truly believed in communism. As far as I can understand,
again, you can correct me if I'm wrong, but he wanted to build a better world by having
infused in communism into the country, perhaps into the whole world. So, maybe my question is, what role does communism as an idea,
as an ideology playing all of this? And his rise to power and the people of the time,
and the Russian people actually just the whole 20th century.
You're right. Stalin was a true believer, and this is very important. He was also hungry for power
and for personal power, but just as you said, not for power's sake, not only for power. He was
interested in enacting communism in reality and also in building a powerful state. He was a status, a traditional Russian status in the imperial sense. And this won him a lot of followers.
The fact that they knew he was a hardcore true believing communist won him a lot of followers among the communists.
And the fact that he was a hardcore defender of Russian state interests now in the Soviet
guise, also won him a lot of followers. Sometimes those groups
overlap, the communists and the Russian patriots, and sometimes
they were completely different groups, but both of them shared
an admiration for Stalin's dedication to those goals and his
abilities to enact them. And so it's very important to understand
that however thirsty he was for power and he was very thirsty for power, that he was also driven
by ideals. Now I don't necessarily think that everyone around Stalin
shared those ideals.
We have to be careful not to make everybody
into a communist true believer, not to make everybody
into a great status Russian patriot,
but they were widespread and powerful attractions
for a lot of people.
And so Stalin's ability to communicate to people, those that he was dedicated to those
pursuits and his ability to drive towards them were part of his appeal.
However, he also resorted to manipulation.
He also resorted to violence.
He lied.
He spoke out of all sides of his mouth.
He slandered other people.
He sabotaged potential rivals.
He used every underhanded method and then some in order to build his personal dictatorship.
Now he justified this, as you said, by appeals to Communism and to Soviet power.
To himself as well, to.
To himself and to others.
And so he justified it in his own mind and to others, but certainly any means were acceptable
to him to achieve these ends.
And he identified his personal power with Communism and with Russian glory in the world.
So he felt that he was the only one who could be trusted, who could be relied upon to build these
things. Now we put ourselves back in that time period. The Great Depression was a very difficult time for the capitalist system.
There was mass unemployment, a lot of hardship, fascism, Nazism, Imperial Japan.
There were a lot of associations that were negative with the kind of capitalist system that was not 100% not a monolith, but had a lot of authoritarian
incarnations. There was imperialism, colonies that even the democratic rule of law capitalist
states had non-democratic, non-rule of law colonies under their rule. So the image and reality of capitalism during that time period
between World War I and World War II was very different from how it would become later.
And so in that time period, in that interwar conjuncture, after World War I before World
War II, communism held some appeal inside the Soviet Union for sure, but even
outside the Soviet Union because the image and reality of capitalism disappointed many people.
Now, in the end, communism was significantly worse. Many more victims, and the system,
of course, would eventually implode. But nonetheless, there were real problems
that communism tried to address.
It didn't solve those problems.
It was not a solution, but it didn't come out of nowhere.
It came out of the context of that in a war period.
And so Stalin's rule, some people saw it
as potentially a better option than imperialism, fascism, and great depression.
Having said that, they were wrong.
It turned out that Stalin wasn't a better alternative to markets and private property and rule of law and democracy.
However, that didn't become clearer to people until after World War II, after Nazism had
been defeated, Imperial Japan had been defeated, Hephaestitally had been defeated, and decolonization
had happened around the world.
And there was a middle-class economic boom in the period from the late 40s through the
70s that created a kind of mass middle class in many societies.
So capitalism rose from the ashes, as it were.
And this changed the game for Stalin and communism.
Communism is about an alternative to capitalism.
And if that alternative is not superior,
there's no reason for communism to exist.
But if capitalism is in foul odor,
if people have a bad opinion, strong critique of capitalism,
that can be appealed to alternatives.
And that's kind of what happened with Stalin's rule.
But after World War II, the context changed a lot.
Capitalism was very different, much more successful,
non-violent compared to what it was in the war period.
And the Soviet Union had a tough time competing
against that new context.
Now today, we see similarly that the image and reality of capitalism
is on the question again which leads some people to find an answer in socialism as an alternative.
So you just kind of painted a beautiful picture of comparison. This is the way we think about ideologies, because we is what's working better.
Do you separate in your mind the ideals of communism
to the Stalinist implementation of communism?
And again, capitalism and American implementation
of capitalism.
And as we look at now the 21st century,
where yes, this idea, you know, of socialism being a potential political system
that we would or economic system would operate under the United States, rising up again as an
idea. So how do we think about that again in the 21st century, about these ideas, fundamental
deep ideas of communism, capitalism. Yeah, so in the Marxist schema, there was something called feudalism, which was supposedly
destroyed by the bourgeoisie who created capitalism. And then the working class was supposed
to destroy capitalism and create socialism, but socialism wasn't the end stage, the end stage was going to be communism.
So that's why the Communist Party and the Soviet Union first built socialism, transcending
capitalism, the next stage was socialism, and the end game, the final stage was communism.
So their version of socialism was derived from Marx. And Marx argued that the problem was
capitalism had been very beneficial for a while.
It had produced greater wealth and greater opportunity than feudalism had.
But then it had come to serve only the narrow interests of the so-called bourgeoisie or the
capitalist themselves.
And so for humanity's sake, the universal class, the working class, needed to overthrow
capitalism in order for greater productivity, greater wealth to be produced, for all of
humanity to flourish and on a higher level.
So you couldn't have socialism unless you destroyed capitalism.
So, that meant no markets, no private property,
no so-called parliaments or bourgeois parliaments, as they were called.
So, you got socialism in Marx's schema
by transcending by eliminating capitalism.
Now, Marx also called for freedom.
He said that this elimination of markets in private property and bourgeois
polymers would produce greater freedom in addition to greater abundance. However, everywhere this was tried, it produced tyranny and mass
violence, death and shortages. Everywhere it was tried. There's no exception in
historical terms. And so it's very interesting. Marx insisted that capitalism had
to be eliminated. You couldn't have markets.
Markets were chaos, you needed planning.
You couldn't have hiring of wage labor.
That was wage slavery.
You couldn't have private property,
because that was a form of theft.
So in the Marxist scheme, somehow you
were going to eliminate capitalism and get to freedom.
It turned out you didn't get to freedom, so then people said, well, you can't blame Marx,
because he said we needed freedom.
He was pro-freedom.
So it's kind of like dropping a nuclear bomb.
You say you're going to drop a nuclear bomb, but you want to minimize civilian casualties.
So the dropping of the nuclear bomb is the elimination of markets, private property, and
parliaments.
But you're going to bring freedom, or you're going to minimize civilian casualties. So you drop the nuclear bomb, you eliminate
the capitalism and you get famine, deportation, no constraints on executive power and not
abundance, but shortages. And people say, well, that's not what Mark said. That's not what
I said. I said, I wanted to minimize civilian casualties. The nuclear bomb goes off and there's mass civilian casualties
And you keep saying but I said
Drop the bomb but minimize civilian casualties. So that's where we are. That's history not philosophy
Yeah, I'm speaking about historical examples all the cases that we have
Marx was not a theorist of inequality.
Marx was a theorist of alienation, of dehumanization, of fundamental
constraints, or what he called fetters, on productivity and on wealth, which he all attributed to capitalism.
on productivity and on wealth, which he all attributed to capitalism.
Marx wasn't bothered by inequality. He was bothered by something deeper, something worse.
Those socialists who figured this out, who understood that if you dropped the nuclear bomb,
there was no way to minimize civilian casualties. Those socialists who came to understand that if you eliminated capitalism, markets, private property, and parliaments,
if you eliminated that, you wouldn't get freedom. Those Marxists, those socialists became
what we would call social Democrats or people who would use the state to regulate
the market, not to eliminate the market.
They would use the state to redistribute income, not to destroy private property in markets.
And so this in the Marxist schema was apostasy because they were accepting markets in private property.
They were accepting alienation and wage slavery.
They were accepting capitalism in principle, but they wanted to fix it.
They wanted to ameliorate.
They wanted to regulate.
And so they became what was announced as revisionists, not true Marxists, not real revolutionaries,
but parliamentary road, parliamentarians. We know this as normal politics,
normal social democratic politics, from the European case or from the American
case, but they are not asking to eliminate capitalism, blaming capitalism, blaming markets and private
property.
So this rift among the socialists, the ones who are for elimination of capitalism, transcending
capitalism, otherwise you could never, ever get to abundance and freedom in the Marxist schema. Versus those who accept capitalism, but want to regulate and redistribute,
that rift on the left has been with us almost from the beginning.
It's a kind of civil war on the left between the Lennonists and the social Democrats or the
revisionists as they're known pejoratively by the Leninists.
We have the same confusion today in the world today, where people also cite marks saying capitalism
is a dead end, and we need to drop that nuclear bomb and get freedom, get no civilian casualties.
Versus those who say, yes, there are inequities, there's a lack of equality of opportunity,
there are many other issues that we need to deal with, and we can fix those issues, we
can regulate, we can redistribute.
I'm not advocating this as a political position.
I'm not taking a political position myself.
I'm just saying that there's a confusion on the left between those who accept capitalism and want to regulate it,
versus those who think capitalism is inherently evil, and if we eliminate it, we'll get to a better world,
when in fact history shows that if you eliminate capitalism you get to a worse world.
The problems might be real but the solutions are worse.
From history's lessons, now we have deep painful lessons but there's not that many of them.
You know our history is relatively short as a human species. Do we have a good answer
species. Do we have a good answer on the left of Leninist Marxist versus social Democrat versus capitalism versus any anarchy? Do we have sufficient samples from history to make
better decisions about the future of our politics and economics?
For sure. We have the American Revolution,
which was a revolution not about class, not about workers,
not about a so-called universal class of the working class,
elimination of capitalism, markets, and the bourgeoisie,
but was about the category citizen.
It was about universal humanity,
where everyone in theory could be part of it as a citizen.
The revolution fell short of its own ideals.
Not everyone was a citizen.
For example, if you did known property, you were a male but didn't own property.
You didn't have full rights of a citizen.
If you were a female, whether you own property or not,
you were in a full citizen.
If you were imported from Africa against your will,
you were a slave and not a citizen.
And so not everyone was afforded the rights
in actuality that were declared in principle.
However, over time, the category citizen could expand and slaves could be emancipated and they could
get the right to vote. They could become citizens. Non-property owning males
could get the right to vote and become full citizens. Females could get the
right to vote and become full citizens. In factales could get the right to vote and become full citizens.
In fact, eventually my mother was able to get a credit card in her own name in the 1970s
without my father having to co-sign the paperwork.
It took a long time.
But nonetheless, the category citizen can expand and it can become a universal category. So we have that,
the citizen universal humanity model of the American Revolution, which was deeply flawed at the time
it was introduced, but fixable over time. We also had that separation of powers and can strengthen
executive power that we began this conversation
with.
That was also institutionalized in the American Revolution because they were afraid of
tyranny.
They were afraid of unconstrained executive power.
So they built a system that would contain that, constrain it institutionally, not circumstantially.
So that's a great gift.
Within that universal category of citizen, which has over time come closer to fulfilling
its original promise, and within those institutional constraints, that separation of powers,
constrained on executive power. Within that, we've developed what we might call normal politics,
left-right politics.
People can be in favor of redistribution,
and government action, and people can be in favor of
small government, hands-off government,
no redistribution or less redistribution. That's the normal left-right
political spectrum where you respect the institutions and separation of powers,
and you respect the universal category of citizenship and equality before the law on everything else.
I don't see any problems with that whatsoever. I see that as a great gift, not just to this country,
but around the world, and other places besides the United States have developed this.
The problems arise at the extremes, the far left and the far right that don't recognize the legitimacy either of capitalism
or of democratic rule of law institutions.
And they want to eliminate constraints on executive power.
They want to control the public sphere or diminish the independence of the media.
They want to take away markets or private property and redistribution becomes something
bigger than just redistribution.
It becomes actually that original Marxist idea of transcending capitalism.
So I'm not bothered by the left or the right.
I think they're normal and we should have that debate where a gigantic, diverse country
of many different political points of view.
I'm troubled only by the extremes that are against the system,
quass system that want to get rid of it.
And supposedly that will be the bright path to the future.
History tells us that the far left and the far right are wrong about that.
But once again, this doesn't mean that you have to be a social Democrat. History tells us that the far left and the far right are wrong about that.
But once again, this doesn't mean that you have to be a social Democrat.
You could be a libertarian, you could be a conservative, you could be a centrist, you
could be conservative on some issues and liberal on other issues.
All of that comes under what I would presume to be normal politics. And I see
that as the important corrective mechanism, normal politics and market economies, non-monopolistic,
open free and dynamic market economies. I don't like concentrations of power politically,
and I don't like concentrations of power economically. I like competition in the political realm.
I like competition in the economic realm.
This is not perfect.
It's constantly needs to be protected and reinvented.
There are flaws that are fundamental
and need to be adjusted and addressed and everything else,
especially equality of opportunity.
Equality of outcome is unreachable
and is a mistake because it produces perverse
and unintended consequences, equality of outcome attempts.
Attempts to make people equal on the outcome side.
But attempts to make them more equal on the front end,
on the opportunity side.
That's really, really important for a healthy society.
That's where we've fallen down.
Our schools are not providing equality of opportunity
for the majority of people
in all of our school systems.
And so I see problems there.
I see a need to invest in ourselves,
invest in infrastructure, invest in human capital,
create greater equality of opportunity,
but also to make sure that we have good governance
because governance is the variable that enables
you to do all these other things.
I've washed quite a bit returning back to Putin. I've washed quite a few interviews with
Putin and conversations, especially because I speak Russian fluently, I can understand often the translations lose a lot. I find demand putting morality aside
very deep and interesting. And I found almost no interview with him to be to get at that depth. I was I was very hopeful for the Oliver Stone documentary and
with him and to me because I deeply respect Oliver Stone as a filmmaker in general but it was
a complete failure in my eyes that interview. The lack of I mean I suppose you could toss it up to a language barrier, but a complete
lack of diving deep into the person as what I saw. So my question is a strange one, but if you
were to sit down with Putin and have a conversation, or perhaps if you're Saddam was Stalin and have a conversation, what kind of questions would you ask?
This wouldn't be televised unless you want it to be. So this is only you.
So you're allowed to ask about some of the questions that are sort of not socially acceptable,
meaning putting morality aside, getting it to depth of the human
character. What would you ask?
So, once again, they're very different personalities and very different time periods and very different
regimes. So, what I would talk to Stalin about and Putin about are not in the same category
necessarily.
So let's take Putin.
So I would ask him where he thinks this is going,
where he thinks Russia is going to be in 25 years or 50 years.
What's the long-term vision?
What does he anticipate the current trends
are going to produce?
Is he under the illusion that Russia is on the up swing,
that things are actually going pretty well,
that in 25 years, Russia is going to still be a great power
with a tremendous dynamic economy and a lot of high tech
and a lot of human capital and wonderful infrastructure and a very high standard
of living and a secure borders and sense of security at home.
See, think the current path is leading in that direction.
And if not, if he understands that the current trajectory
does not provide
for those kinds of circumstances, does it bother him?
It does he worry about that?
Does he care about the future 25 or 50 years from now?
Do you don't? What do you think is the answer to the honest answer?
Either he thinks he's on that trajectory already or he doesn't care about that long-term trajectory.
So that's the mystery for me with him. He's clever. He has tremendous sources of information.
He has great experience now as a world leader having served for effectively longer than
lay in it. Brezhnev's long 18 year reign. And so Putin has accumulated a great deal of experience at the highest level compared
to where he started.
And so I'm interested to understand how he sees this long-term evolution or non-evolution
of Russia.
And whether he believes he's got them on the right trajectory or whether if he
doesn't believe that he cares. I have no idea because I've never spoken to him about
this, but I would love to hear the answer. Sometimes you have to ask questions not directly
like that, but you have to come a little bit sideways. You can elicit answers from people
by making them feel comfortable in coming sideways with them.
I know, just a quick question. So that's talking about Russia. Putin's role in Russia. Do you think
it's interesting to ask, and you could say the same for Stalin, the more personal question
of how do you feel yourself about this whole thing, about your
life, about your legacy, looking at the person that's one of the most powerful and important
people in the history of civilization, both Putin and Stalin, you could argue.
Yeah.
Once you experience power at that level, it becomes something
that's almost necessary for you as a human being. It's a drug, it's an Afro-DZAC, it's a feeling.
You know, you go to the gym to exercise and the endorphins, the chemicals get released.
The chemicals get released. And even if you're tired or you're sore, you get this massive chemical change, which
is has very dynamic effects on how you feel and the kind of level of energy you have for
the rest of the day.
And if you do that for a long time, and then you don't do it for a while, you're like a
drug addict not getting your fix.
You miss it.
Your body misses that release of endorphins
to a certain extent.
That's how power works for people like Putin.
That's how power works for people who run universities
or are secretaries of state or run corporations
fill in the blank. In whatever ways power is exercised, it becomes
almost a drug for people. It becomes something that's difficult for them to give up. It becomes
a part of who they are. It becomes necessary for their sense of self and well-being.
The greatest people, the people I admire the most, other ones that
can step away from power, can give it up, can give up the drug, can be satisfied, can be stronger
even by walking away from continued power when they had the option to continue. All right. So with
a person like Putin, once again, I don't know him personally,
so I have no basis to judge this.
This is a general statement observable
with many people and in historical terms.
With a person like Putin who's exercised
this much power for this long,
it's something that becomes a part of who you are
and you have a hard
time imagining yourself without it.
You begin to conflate your personal power with the well-baken of the nation.
You begin to think that the more power you have, the better off the country is this conflation.
You begin to be able to not imagine.
You can no longer imagine what it would be like just to be
an ordinary citizen or an ordinary person running a company even something much smaller than
a country. So I anticipate that without knowing for sure that he would be in that category of person. But you'd want to explore that
with questions with him about, so what's his day look like from beginning to end? Just
take me through a typical day of yours. What are you doing a day? How does it start? What
are the ups? What are the downs? What are the parts of the day you look forward to the most?
What are the parts of the day? You don to the most? What are the parts of the day you don't look forward to that much?
What do you consider a good day?
What do you consider a bad day?
How do you know that what you're doing is having the effects that you intend?
How do you follow up?
How do you gather the information, the reaction?
How do you get people to tell you to your face,
things that they know are uncomfortable,
or that you might not want to hear?
Those kind of questions.
And through that window, through that kind of question,
you get a window into a man with power.
So let me ask about stalling,
because you've done more research.
It's another amazing interview you've had.
The introduction was that you know more about Stalin than Stalin himself.
You've done incredible amount of research on Stalin.
So if you could talk to him, get sort of direct research.
What question would you ask of Stalin?
I have so many questions. I don't even
know where I would begin. The thing about studying a person like Stalin, who's an
immense creature, right? He's exercising the power of life and death over hundreds
of millions of people. He's making decisions about novels and films and turbines and submarines and
Pax with Hitler or deals with Churchill and Roosevelt and
Occupation of Mongolia or occupation of North Korea. He's making phenomenally
Consequential decisions over all spheres of life, all areas of endeavor, and over much of the globe, much of the
landmass of the earth.
And so, what's that like?
Does he sometimes reflect on the amount of power and responsibility he has that he can exercise?
Does he sometimes think about what it
means that a single person has that kind of power?
And does it have an effect on his relations with others, his sense of self, the kinds of
things he values in life?
Does he sometimes think it's a mistake that he's accumulated this much power?
Does he sometimes wish he had a simpler life?
Or is he once again so drunk, so enamored, so caught up with,
chemically and spiritually, with exercising this kind of power, that he couldn't live without it?
And then, what were you thinking, I would ask him, in certain decisions that he couldn't live without it. And then what were you thinking, I would ask him,
in certain decisions that he made?
What were you thinking on certain dates
and certain circumstances where you made a decision
and could have made a different decision?
Can you recall your thought processes?
Can you bring the decision back?
Was it seat of the pants?
Was it something you'd been planning?
Did you just improvise or something you'd been planning? Did
you just improvise or did you have a strategy? What were you guided by? Whose examples did
you look to? When you picked up these books that you read and you read the books and you
made pencil marks in them, is it because you absorbed the lesson there or did it really
not become a permanent lesson and was just
something that you checked and it was like a reflex.
So I have many specific questions about many specific events and people and circumstances
that I have tried to figure out with the surviving source materials that we have in abundance. But I would still like to
delve into his mindset and reconstruct his mind. The closer you get to Stalin in
some ways, the more elusive he can become. And especially around World War II, you've
already illuminated a lot of interesting aspects about Stalin's role in the war,
but it would be interesting to ask even more questions about how Cedar the you've already illuminated a lot of interesting aspects about Stalin's role in the war, but
it would be interesting to ask even more questions about how sea to the pants or deliberate
some of the decisions that have been.
If I could ask just one quick question, one last quick question, and you're constrained
in time and answering it, do you think there will always be evil in the world? Do you
think there will always be war? Unfortunately, yes. There are conflicting interests, conflicting
goals that people have. Most of the time, those conflicts can be resolved peacefully.
That's why we build strong institutions to resolve different interests and conflicts
peacefully. But the fact, the enduring fact of conflicting interests and conflicting desires
that can never be changed. So the job that we have for humanity's sake is to make those conflicting interests, those
conflicting desires, to put them in a context where they can be resolved peacefully and
not in a zero-sum fashion.
So we can't get there on the global scale.
So there's always going to be the kind of conflict
that sometimes gets violent.
What we don't want is a conflict among the strongest
powers.
Great power conflict is unbelievably bad.
There are no words to describe it.
At least 55 million people died in World War II.
If we have a World War III,
a war between United States and China
or whatever it might be, who knows what the number could be?
A hundred and 55 million,
255 million, 555 million, I don't even want
to think about it. And so it's horrible when wars break out in the humanitarian catastrophes,
for example, Yemen and Syria and several other places I could name today. It's just horrible what you see there.
And the scale is colossal for those places.
But it's not planetary scale.
And so avoiding planetary scale destruction
is really important for us.
And so having those different interests
be somehow managed in a way that they don't, that no one sees advantage in a violent resolution.
And a part of that is remembering history, so they should read your books.
Stephen, thank you so much. It was a huge honor to talk to you today. I really enjoyed it.
Thank you for the opportunity. My pleasure.
Thanks for listening to this conversation from Stephen Kotkin. And thank you to our presenting sponsor, my pleasure. If you enjoy this podcast, subscribe on YouTube, give it 5 stars and Apple podcasts, support
our Patreon or connect with me on Twitter.
And now let me leave you with words from Joseph Stalin, spoken shortly before the death
of Lenin and at the beginning of Stalin's rise to power.
First in Russian. I consider that it is not important who will be able to vote.
But what is the most important thing to know?
I consider it completely unimportant who in the party will vote or how.
But what is extra ordinarily important is who will count the votes and how. Thank you for
listening and hope to see you next time.
Thank you.