The West, Globalization, and Pussy Riot Portrayals of Russia and Eurasia’s enemies in the work of Alexsandr G. Dugin



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The West, Globalization, and Pussy Riot

Portrayals of Russia and Eurasia’s enemies in the work of Alexsandr G. Dugin

Vladimír Naxera

Geopolitics in post-Soviet Russia has become not only a respected scientific field, but also a tool of practical policy and to a certain degree a new ideology, which in the 1990s helped to fill the normative vacuum that arose due to the collapse of communism. Aleksandr G. Dugin holds an exclusive position among modern Russian geopoliticians. He is the author of a wide range of geopolitical publications and is a publicly influential intellectual who has long been a figure among the elite of Russian politics. At the center of Dugin’s work stands the notion of a bipolar structure of the world, which is divided into competing blocs of “Atlantic” and “Eurasian” power, which contradict one another in a civilizational sense. In Dugin’s perspective, Russia as the core of Eurasian space must stand up to the efforts of the Atlantic blocs, headed by the USA, which (through globalization and international conspiracy) is attempting to rule the entire world by forcing its culture upon it. This paper will focus not only on this conflictive relationship, but also on the general portrayal of Russia’s “civilizational” enemies in Dugin’s work. An independent section of the paper is devoted to the Pussy Riot “scandal” in 2012, which Dugin describes in great detail as proof of an international conspiracy aiming to humiliate Russia.



Keywords: Dugin, Russia, geopolitics, globalization, Putin, Pussy Riot, Neo-Eurasianism, imperialism

1. Introduction

After the collapse of the Soviet Union and in reaction to the transformation of the international environment, a wide array of theoretical approaches began to develop in Russia that attempted to comment on the role that Russia should play in this new power configuration. During this debate, which took place in the political, academic, and public spheres, geopolitics quickly began to take hold, marking a renaissance in this field in post-Soviet Russia.1 Over the course of the previous quarter-century, Russian politicians, academics, and publicly influential intellectuals have touted geopolitics and its principles on a daily basis. This hitherto unseen trend can mainly be seen in geopolitical notions that stem conceptually from Neo-Eurasianism, which is a certain reincarnation of the classic Eurasianism of the period between world wars but has now been modified for the needs of the present. The geopolitical argumentation that follows the logic of Neo-Eurasianism has been used by a whole score of influential political leaders in various phases of post-communist development – Russian President Vladimir V. Putin, Chairman of the Communist Party Gennady A. Zyuganov2, or “liberal democrat” Vladimir V. Zhirinovsky. The most significant author in the field of geopolitics and Neo-Eurasianism, however, is now Aleksandr G. Dugin – a man who is on one hand an occultist and megalomaniacal eccentric convinced of his own intellectual exceptionality, and on the other a relatively acknowledged scholar, an advisor to a score of political representatives, and an original author of a wide range of geopolitical publications on the level of both theoretical academic discussion and practical political recommendations. These recommendations often take on the form of expanding the borders of the Russian Federation (mainly to certain regions of Eurasia). Primarily due to this fact, Dugin is commonly considered to be a prominent representative of contemporary Russian imperialistic though, an integral demand of which is the expansion of Russian territory and the creation/renewal of the Russian Empire. In Dugin’s concept, Russia is to a certain degree the protector of all civilization, as it is the actor to whom the West’s (or more specifically Atlantic forces’) proverbial gauntlet has been thrown, thus entering into conflict with the West to preserve traditional values and traditional cultures around the world3 that are endangered by an artificially orchestrated process of globalization.

The aim of this text is not to describe in full detail all the aspects of Dugin’s complicated and syncretic intellectual development or his extensive (and often unrecognized) work that surely contains many concepts worth consideration. In light of the limitations of this study, this is also not the ambition of the text presented below. Dugin’s work is the subject of interest of a wide range of scholars and has been widely published in the international context, including in the Czech Republic. This study, however, focuses on one selected aspect of Dugin’s work. Its goal, based on a brief outline of Dugin’s geopolitical concepts, is to determine the elements Dugin considers to be existentially hostile to Russia or, more precisely, Eurasia, and to point out the ways in which, in Dugin’s work, these elements manifest themselves in the contemporary world. After a brief introduction summarizing Dugin’s work, we will focus primarily on outlining the geopolitical structure of Dugin’s vision of the world, what position Russia holds in the world, and the hostile powers that should be confronted. More general geopolitical deliberations will be illustrated using specific examples, including the case of Pussy Riot, which Dugin discusses to a great extent and actually sees as a global conspiracy controlled by the USA with the aim of weakening and subduing Russia.

2. Dugin’s work and intellectual development – from the extreme right to geopolitics, Neo-Eurasianism, and the “fourth theory”.

Aleksandr G. Dugin was born on January 7, 1962 in Moscow. In 1979, he began his studies at the Moscow Aviation Institute, from which he did not graduate – the reason (in Dugin’s opinion) was his “ideological non-conformism” and “Anti-Soviet activity”. Dugin later finished his studies elsewhere. In the 1980s, Dugin began forming contacts with extreme right groups in Russia (with the blessing of the KGB) and Western Europe. Dugin’s development in the 1980s was significantly affected by anti-communist attitudes, his study of philosophy, and his ideological inspiration drawn from German conservative thought, classical German geopolitics, and also Nazism.4 He later took up classical interwar Eurasianism5 and added to it elements taken from the various streams and approaches above. This mainly included connections to the classical geopolitical narrative, from which he primarily draws his idea of the clash between the “continental” and “oceanic” world, an issue that we will return to, as it forms the backbone of Dugin’s geopolitical work. Dugin’s intellectual development has been complicated and often erratic throughout the 1980s and 1990s and into the present – he still commonly reformulates his opinions, an issue we will also deal with later in this paper.

In 1993, Dugin began to work as an ideologist and one of the leaders of the anti-liberal and anti-American National Bolshevik Party (together with anarchist poet Eduard V. Limonov). He left the party in 1998 for ideological differences. In 1998, he began to work in a number of academic positions and also as an advisor to various political representatives. After 2001, he began gradually to build the International Eurasian Movement. From 2008 on, he worked as a professor at the Lomonosov Moscow State University.

Directly after leaving the radical opposition National Bolshevik Party, Dugin, the non-conformist, became an advisor to the highest political representatives in the country and a relatively acknowledged academic who lectured on his geopolitical vision at the Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces of Russia. After Putin’s rise to power as President of the Russian Federation, Dugin fully established highly loyal relations to Russia’s contemporary political representation. His sympathies toward Putin can be illustrated in a quote he made several years ago: “Adversaries to Putin and the course he has taken no longer exist, but if they do, they are psychologically ill individuals and should be subjected to supervision. Putin is all, Putin is absolute, Putin is essential.6

According to a number of observers, Dugin’s contemporary influence has significantly fallen – for example, Paweł Rojek explains this as primarily due to Putin’s deviation from imperial ideology in terms of Russia’s future course while inclining more toward insularism. This insularism is represented, for example, by Vladislav Y. Surkov and his concept of “sovereign democracy”.7 Today, Surkov functions to a strong degree as the primary “polit-technolog” (political engineer) of the Russian regime and is blamed by Dugin for all the various failures of Russia and even Dugin’s own, e.g. his ejection from Moscow University in 2014.8 Dugin’s certain loss of position and influence was accompanied by an even harsher critique of Putin, whom he began to accuse of making various concessions to hostile Atlanticism.9

Dugin’s most widely known work is without a doubt his “Foundations of Geopolitics”10, which was first published in 1997. The book was created during Dugin’s work at the Military Academy of the General Staff of the Armed Forces, where he began to lecture on geopolitics in 1992. The publication likely arose from these lectures and was to a certain degree written under the influence of military leaders – due to this fact, many scholars assume that these military representatives had inspired Dugin, not vice versa.11

Dugin’s work is very extensive. In addition to shorter-length papers, interviews, and commentary on just about everything happening in Russia and the world, he has published a wide array of monographs primarily under his own publishing house that oscillate between geopolitics, philosophy, occultism, and mysticism. Despite this peculiar combination, we cannot claim that Dugin’s work is unsophisticated or that it lacks many original concepts. The connecting link in his work is the refusal of Western civilization and culture, the portrayal of the West as the enemy, and the construction of Dugin’s own ideological justification for the exceptionality of Eurasia. In addition to the aforementioned “Foundations of Geopolitics”, we should also make mention of one of Dugin’s newest books – “The Fourth Political Theory“. This fourth theory, which Dugin constructs using numerous references to the philosophy of Martin Heidegger, is meant to replace the failed ideology of the modern era – liberalism, communism, and fascism. Its foundation primarily involves the refusal of postmodernism, post-industrial society, and the political practice of liberalism and globalization12, which Dugin often cites as negative phenomena, an issue which we will return to later in the paper.

3. General standpoints of Aleksandr G. Dugin’s geopolitical vision

Aleksandr Dugin’s geopolitical concept, in accordance with many other geopoliticians, who also construct bipolar geopolitical arrangements of the world (e.g. Halford J. Mackinder or Nicholas J. Spykeman), propagates a conflict scheme between two fundamentally antagonistic blocs. Dugin, however, attributes a differing connotation to this confrontation and, in his new concept, claims it should be a “final apocalyptic conflict” between strictly hierarchically organized “Eurasian” continental powers (which he identifies in the geographical context using Mackinder’s “Heartland” 13 topology) and the liberally-democratic capitalist “Atlantic” oceanic powers, who have surrounded this Eurasian Heartland. In this context, Dugin also applies the terms “thalassocracy” and “tellurocracy”,14 which were coined by Mackinder or Carl Schmitt (although as ideas reach back much further15) and were linked by Dugin to Eurasian concepts.

The aim of Dugin’s geopolitical theory (just as with many other similarly thinking authors) was to restore the status of superpower to Russia and its allies. This thellurocratic alliance should act as opposition against the thalassocratic powers led by the United States. Iran, Germany, and Japan will primarily stand at Russia’s side, while Dugin places the United Kingdom, Turkey, and China among the followers of Atlanticism.16 Dugin, however, has since amended this division and now sees China and Turkey as significant Eurasian allies of Russia, who (just as Russia) must protect their culture and traditions from the pressure of globalization. Dugin goes on to view Turkey as the ideal actor to help Russia integrate Central Asian space into a newly constructed Eurasian empire.17 On a global level of the international system, this confrontation of thalassocratic and thellurocratic blocs can be seen in the form of confrontation between the Russian Federation and the USA. In keeping with his concept, Dugin perceives these two entities as existentially antagonistic representatives of two incompatible forms of civilizational organization. This stems from the differing characters of these oceanic and continental powers – while Russia as a land-based power has an identity based primarily on conservatism, collectivism, sacrifice, and expressing preference to idealism over materialism,18 “American” Atlanticism stems primarily from individualism, liberalism, postmodern values, and materialistic consumption as markedly negative phenomena.19

The global historic mission of neo-Eurasianism is generally constructed by Dugin as an attractive alternative to the present process of globalization, the fundamental aspects of which are institutionalized by the USA20. Due to globalization, present-day Russia lacks an equal position in terms of the West21, a phenomenon that has long been central to Dugin’s interests. This messianistic aspect in Dugin’s work is identical to the Orthodox chiliastic concept of the Third Rome. 22 Dugin is therefore technically not contemplating the restoration of Russia’s superpower status (be it that of Imperial Russia or Soviet Russia) sensu stricto, but is referring to a new process of the genesis of an imperial entity ab ovo. We have already mentioned that in terms of contemporary Russia, Dugin is a typical proponent of imperialistic thought. In this context, he calls for the application of a supranational model in which the “national” exceptionalist concept of Russia will refer to a broader “Eurasian” ethnic substrate.23 In doing so, Dugin thus conceptualizes his worldview in the geopolitical context of the extension of territory, 24 the genesis of an empire,25 and the confrontation of topologically defined entities. It is fundamentally significant that Dugin refuses ethno-nationalism and xenophobia, which happens to apply to the majority of Neo-Eurasian schools of thought. 26 Thus, in his words, Eurasia represents a racial synthesis of “white” Indo-European Slavs and “yellow” Turkic peoples – in this sense, Dugin follows the concepts of a number of authors endorsing classic interwar Eurasianism.27

An essential aspect of Dugin’s thought is the return to “real and authentic” faith – to Russian Orthodoxy28 or in some cases to Shiite Islam. On the contrary, Sunni Islam is presented (at least in Dugin’s older texts) as a pro-Atlantic and subversive element, a reason Dugin selected Iran as the power that stands at Russia’s side in its “historical-cosmic” mission. Dugin later reevaluated some of his attitudes on this matter and not only sees Turkey and other dominantly Sunni states now as key Eurasian allies of Russia, 29 he is also apologetic toward Russia’s cooperation with the Syrian regime – according to Dugin, the conflict in Syria, which is the result of the Atlantic powers attempting to gain global supremacy, has the potential to grow into a global conflict and Third World War.30

4. Specific aspects of Dugin’s geopolitical theory – the West and its orchestrated globalization as the enemies of the Eurasian world and its allies.

As we have stated above, a basic pillar of Dugin’s geopolitical theory is the antagonistic tension between the Atlantic and Eurasian world. The term Atlanticism from a historical and geographical perspective very clearly represents the Western civilizational hemisphere, primarily the USA and its allies. The cultural context of Atlanticism is mainly formulated by media empires while the market system defines its sociological framework.31 The oligarchically organized proponents of Atlanticism are perceived by Dugin as obsessive expansionists who are striving to non-critically apply this defined model to other geopolitical segments (via orchestrated globalization and conspiracy against other states and primarily against Russia – these states, however, must preserve their culture and the uniqueness of their values32). The goal of these efforts is to achieve a worldwide hegemony and create a unipolar world.33 A means for reconfiguring the international power composition (in favor of Atlanticism) is the continual effort to weaken the relevance of state sovereignty, religious systems, cultural and economic traditions, any manifestations of “social justice”, and all forms of spiritual, intellectual, and material diversity.34 All of this is destroyed via liberalism and postmodernism, which are spread by globalization and are hostile to all that is traditional.35

Therefore, Eurasianism in a generalized form represents the opposition to the Western civilizational sector, to NATO, and to the pressure of globalization. (Neo-)Eurasianists (i.e. according to Dugan the advocates of a “multipolar” organizational concept) promote the development of alternative national, ethnic, cultural, and socio-economic forms of organization36 – again with the observation that accepting “Western” forms of organization in “non-Western” societies (i.e. primarily in Russian/Eurasian societies) would be highly undesirable. Dugin constructs Eurasian identity as voluntaristic and therefore is not stably determined by only geographical and topological contexts.37

Dugin’s proposed multipolar38 spatial differentiation of the global power arena is divided into four zones – the Euro-African zone, the Asian-Pacific zone, the Anglo-American zone, and the Eurasian continental zone. Each of these zones is then divided up into smaller areas.39 This type of geopolitical organization (rather paradoxically in light of the context of the whole concept) is also meant to minimize the threat of global conflict, large-scale wars, and extreme forms of confrontation. In such a world, Russia would naturally hold a constructive position that would de facto correspond to the character of multivector diplomacy40 – Dugin generally approves of the concept of multipolarity, which is integrated into the strategic documents of the Russian Federation.41 The multipolar Eurasian model is an alternative to the unipolar globalized world led by thalassocratic powers led by the USA.42 In Dugin’s interpretation, globalization is understood as a one-dimensional and one-vector phenomenon that has a tendency to move toward the universalization of the Western view of the world. Dugin claims that from an Atlanticist point of view, the world may be divided into several zones: 1/ “Atlantic world” with center in America (Europe and the Pacific region form its periphery); 2/ Eurasia, and primarily Russia, in this context is even more peripheral, and does not represent an autonomous or in any way significant pole – Dugin refers to this space as a “black hole”; 3/ Dugin dubs the final region as the Third World, which is made up of Latin America, Africa, and to a large degree Asia. This part of the world is not free and only serves this center as a region for constant exploitation and occupation. The world from this point of view is thus a unipolar system with its center located on the western coast of the Atlantic. This center strives to subordinate the remaining regions of the world via the process of globalization.43

In Dugin’s eyes, however, there is an alternative to this orchestrated globalization process. The Eurasian concept does not protect only the anti-Atlantic value system, but cultural diversity itself.44 For Russia, the construction of a unique identity of a Eurasian power is a necessity, as without it the country would not be able to fulfill its historical mission – the protection of the world’s cultural diversity. Without this identity, Russia would also not possess the capacity to defeat its Atlantic enemy.

Allies are imperative to Russia – in Dugin’s Eurasian zone, there will be a number of powers with which Russia will create communication axes, giving rise to “Eurasian dialogue”45 – this dialogue will then be the foundation for integrating this space.46 Primarily, this deals with Iran. According to Dugin, the alliance between Moscow and Tehran is fundamental. The linked economic, military, and political potential of Russia and Iran will facilitate the integration of space, which in turn will lead to its greater autonomy from the “globalization center”.47 Other important allies include states that according to Dugin must protect their culture from the pressure of globalization – e.g. India, Pakistan, or Turkey. As was mentioned above, Dugin claims that Turkey is a crucial Russian ally that will help the country integrate with Central Asia.48 In the Asia-Pacific region, Japan will become a primary ally as it breaks away from the “Atlantic” world, thus weakening the thalassocratic bloc and helping to balance China’s influence and its demographic and economic infiltration into the Siberian zones of Russia’s Heartland. In more recent texts, however, Dugin now places China among Russia’s allies and includes it as one of the states that will take part in Eurasian dialogue and will resist the unipolar global world under the rule of the USA.49

The Caucuses, which Dugin focuses on heavily in his writings, form an important part of Eurasia. Dugin claims that alliance between Moscow and Yerevan (together with the Moscow-Teheran axis) is a necessary prerequisite for subsequent Eurasian integration.50 Contrary to Armenia, Azerbaijan remains de facto “neutral”. Georgia, however, should be seen as the largest problem in the region. The builders of a new Georgian state have wholly ignored the disapproval of its various individual regions – primarily South Ossetia, Abkhazia, and Adjara – and by doing so have given rise to a strong potential for conflict. Georgia has no allies in the region, and thanks to this it has a tendency to form alliances with the USA and NATO, the goal of which is to balance the influence of the Russian Federation. Thus, Dugin sees Georgia as the greatest regional threat that could subsequently sabotage the idea of Eurasian integration. In light of this conviction, Dugin had no qualms with the most recent Russian invasion into Georgia. He demonstrated this theatrically in one of his television appearances by repeatedly shouting “Tanks to Tbilisi” and emotional claims that a third worldwide conflict was about to break out.51,52 In one of his other television appearances, he legitimized the Russian invasion of Georgia by saying it was not an attempt to occupy the country, but an effort to protect the individuals who were dying in various areas of Georgia.53 The primary reason for the Russia-Georgia conflict according to Dugin was that Abkhazia and South Ossetia are traditionally tellurocratic regions that are naturally pro-Russian and also refuse Georgia’s Atlantic orientation.54

This tellurocratic alliance between the Eurasian continent and Japan must then be accompanied by the most important ally – Europe. Without Europe’s support, Dugin claims there is no chance for the Atlantic world to succeed. Deepening the process of European integration is important to Dugin’s interpretation, as it would result in freeing the continent from the binds of United States. In “a relatively short amount of time”, Dugin predicts an outbreak of economic and consequently political conflict between the two sides of the Atlantic and a definitive split in Euro-Atlantic geopolitical unity.55 In this context, Dugin speaks of a “Greater Europe”, an integrated power pole that has emancipated itself from the United States.56 As concerns Europe, Dugin sees Germany as an unambiguous power with which Russia must cooperate. The next such ally is France. Dugin elaborates on the alliance that in his view already exists between Moscow, Berlin, and Paris, as these three states created an “anti-American coalition” that opposed the American invasion to Iraq in 2003.57 This invasion was supported by Great Britain, which according to Dugin has the strongest tendency of all the European nations toward Atlanticism and is the most loyal of America’s allies. Thus, the recent referendum, in which the United Kingdom decided to leave the European Union, does not pose any sort of problem. The British simply “showed their true colors”.

After mentioning the alliance between Russia and Germany, we should also make note of Dugin’s view of the space that lies between the two countries. On the axis between Moscow and Berlin, the decision will be made on the fate of the buffer states that were created after WWI as a barrier dividing the two countries. In Dugin’s (and others’) conceptualization of Central (and Eastern) Europe, there is no such room for such states. A large number of intellectual and political representatives, led by Putin, agree with Dugin on this matter. Putin himself declared in an interview that Central and Eastern Europe were always ruled by Russia and Germany58, which is the only natural state of power that can prevail in this region.

The countries of Central Europe in Dugin’s concept do not have to be connected to the Eurasian bloc,59 but at the same time may not remain independent and self-sufficient. Thus, they are left with no other option but to make a decision and subsequently solve this elementary geopolitical dilemma, i.e. whether to link with Eurasia/Russia or with Germany. The countries of Central Europe and the Baltics have already manifested their Western orientation by connecting to the zone of European integration. According to Dugin, this does not complicate the Russian situation, as Europe is in his vision a strong Russian ally. An important requirement for Dugin is to prevent the creation of a sphere in Central and Eastern Europe that would divide Germany and Russia and could potentially succumb to American influence – from Dugin’s perspective, the Eurasian bloc cannot share a land border with the Atlantic world. As Russia is not able to gain control of all of Europe, it must take all steps in order to share a border in the West with the bloc led by Germany, which will be a strong ally to Eurasia in the fight against Atlanticism.60 From this stems Dugin’s critique of various Central European countries that supported the United States and Great Britain in the campaign against Iraq, while Germany and France were in opposition.61 If the impacts of Atlanticism can be overcome in Central and Eastern Europe and these states lean toward cooperation with Germany, Dugin does not consider this situation to be problematic. A number of other states (primarily Ukraine and Belarus) have also found themselves outside the border of this bloc of states tied to Germany. These states will not have the opportunity to choose and will thus be left with one logical option – connecting with Russia. This is one aspect that will allow Russia to build a strong Eurasian entity.62 In addition, Dugin sees the essence and identity of Ukraine and Belarus as unarguably Eurasian.63 In this context, Dugin perceives the present conflict in Ukraine as a conflict that will decide on the success of uniting Eurasia and thus will also decide on the fate of Russia (and of the free world, which is capable of defending itself against globalization tendencies) as well.64



5. The case of Pussy Riot as proof of a global conspiracy against Russia?

After presenting general images of the hostile elements portrayed in Dugin’s work, we will now focus on one specific example which points to the way in which Dugin works with images of the enemy. One specific event of 2012 – the performance of the group Pussy Riot in Moscow’s Cathedral of Christ the Saviour – will be used as an example. This event not only shows the connection between the state and the Orthodox Church in the era of Vladimir Putin’s presidency and Kirill’s patriarchy, it reveals the reproduction of discourse that legitimizes65 this relationship and is important in the context of Dugin’s political stream of thought. The incident (just as any other important event) did not escape Dugin’s attention, and thus we can discuss the ways in which Dugin perceived the event in terms of the global conspiracy against Russia.

This relatively brief incident was planned as a reaction to the political engagement of Patriarch Kirill, who called on Orthodox believers to support Putin in the presidential elections. During the event, a “punk-rock prayer” was performed, beginning with the lyrics translating roughly to ‘Virgin Mary, Mother of God, Banish Putin’, however the translations and interpretations of the individual words of the song differ greatly.66 Patriarch Kirill commented on the incident in the sense that such an action should not be underestimated and seen as an innocent joke – on the contrary, it was an action that should be strongly punished, a tone taken by a score of other pro-regime representatives. President Putin proclaimed the women should be punished in light of the Russian state’s obligation to protect the feelings of believers.67 This is quite startling in regard to the constitutionally declared secular character of the Russian Federation.68

Now let us have a look at how Dugin commented on the incident, the ways in which he legitimized the link between church and state, and mainly the ways in which he interpreted the act as a security threat on the part of Russia’s enemies aimed at undermining the very foundations of the Russian state. Dugin labeled the Pussy Riot incident as an act of war meant to destabilize Russia, undermine its moral and psychological power, and force state sovereignty to submit to international powers. The goal of this act was to discredit Kirill’s persona and also all the personas of the sacred institute of the Moscow Patriarchy. Dugin perceives the event as an unprecedented attack on the Russian-Byzantine ideal of the symphony of power,69 which Dugin defines as an elementary expression of the continuity of Russian history, a statement that Patriarch Kirill also agrees with. Putin’s position is thus a logical expression of this symphony of power.

The whole incident is seen as a symptom of a return to the era of “Weimar Russia” – the era of Russia’s instability and its social, economic, and power collapse in the first half of the 1990s.70 Dugin places the case of Pussy Riot into the context of confrontation between “the spiritual tradition of Russia with thousands of years of tradition” and “the degenerate West”, which has relativized and destroyed its own cultural and religious tradition primarily via liberalism and postmodernism. This also corresponds to Dugin’s geopolitical vision of the world discussed in the previous chapters of this paper. We might add here that, after Kirill was elected to the office of Patriarch in 2008, Dugin stated that he expected Kirill to protect Orthodox values by fighting against the liberalism and postmodernism71 promoted by the degenerate West.

Thus, the case of Pussy Riot from Dugin’s perspective should be approached in a highly responsible manner, as it is an attack on “Orthodox eternity” and a manifestation of “Western infiltration”, i.e. individuals that hate Russia and wish to conquer, humiliate, and destroy it. The only method of defense in such a case is loyalty to President Putin, who represents the sacred Russian idea of Russia as the Third Rome.72 The incident in the Cathedral of Christ the Saviour is a manifestation of global blackmail and proof of the ongoing duel with the West in which Russia must not lose. If this happens, the last remains of morality, spirituality, and order will disappear. Traditional values will be replaced by the destructive illusions of liberals and post-modernists. This defeat would not only impact Russia – as Russia is the key actor in the fight against the dominance of the Atlanticist powers at work to create a unipolar world via globalization – a Russian defeat would affect all the other countries that are in opposition to Atlanticism. If we summarize Dugin’s perspective, we can claim that the group Pussy Riot in reality represents the “fifth column” of the West, which is waging a war against Russia using all means possible. This war is of a culturally and socially genocidal character and the key to identifying the enemy is his engagement in the release of Pussy Riot. In Dugin’s words, these individuals are capable of using any means in the forthcoming conflict.73



6. Conclusion

The world in Dugin’s constructed image is a world of irreversible conflict of two differing and clearly antagonistic civilizations – the Eurasian civilization, which is of a land-based character, and the Atlantic civilization, which is led by the thellurocratic United States. The reason for conflict is the attempt by Atlantic powers to create and forever maintain a unipolar world, i.e. force the rest of the world to submit to its cultural and political model. The primary tool for this subjugation is globalization. As the strongest Eurasian power, Russia has been given the role of confronting this attempt and enter into confrontation with the Atlantic world. Not only Russia’s fate is at stake, but also the fate of other countries, which would fail along with Russia in its fated mission and would be left with no other choice but to submit completely to the Atlanticist model – a model hostile to their own values. Liberalism and postmodernism, products of the West, are the destroyers of all traditional values by attempting to infiltrate into non-Western space.



The West (i.e. the United States) is attempting to humiliate, weaken, and destroy Russia. If Russia does not wish to fail, Dugin says it must be strong both internally and externally. The path to success and the defeat of the unipolar model of the world, which could be replaced by a multipolar structure in which powers maintain their own value systems, is the creation of a Eurasian bloc. In Dugin’s concepts, this would mean integrating a large portion of the former USSR and other regions and subsequently surrounding this area with a number of allies, freeing Russia of any land border with the Atlantic powers. These are powers that are striving to prevent this Russian plan, and Dugin sees a number of countries in close proximity to Russia as the subversive agents of Atlanticism, which are helping to destabilize Eurasia – these are countries such as Georgia or other states of Central and Eastern Europe, which in 2003 supported the American plan for the invasion of Iraq. These “agents of Atlanticism” include not only neighboring states; the “fifth column” of the West can take on other forms as well. This column can also include individuals who support influences in Russia and other Eurasian states that Dugin sees as foreign and hostile to Eurasian space. Thus, this fifth column is not only formed by the members of Pussy Riot, who Dugin claims are attempting to disrupt the very foundation of Russian civilization, but also by liberals and those who fight for human rights in Russia – a group of people who also happen to have supported the sentenced members of Pussy Riot. All such people in Dugin’s eyes represent a threat to Russia (and in that case to the preservation of the cultural diversity of the whole world), as they are prepared to betray Russia and take the side of Atlanticism.

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Vladimír Naxera is a Junior Lecturer at the Department of Politics and International Relations, University of West Bohemia in Pilsen, Czech Republic. E-mail: vnaxera@kap.zcu.cz.

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Funding will be completed after a peer review process.

Notes:

1 Stefano Guzzini (2003), ‘Self-fulfilling geopolitics? Or: the social production of foreign policy expertise in Europe,’ Danish Institute for International Studies Working Paper 2003(23).

2 Andrei P. Tsygankov (2016), Russia’s Foreign Policy. Change and Continuity in National Identity, 4th Ed., Lanham: Rowman & Littlefield, p. 240.

3 Paweł Rojek (2015), Rusko: prokletí impéria. Zrod ruského politického chování, Brno: CDK, p. 89.

4 For greater detail, see e.g. Petr Kalinič and Vladimír Naxera (2011), ‘Politická teorie a geopolitika Alexandra G. Dugina,’ Rexter 9(1), pp. 31–54.

5 See Emil Voráček (2004), Eurasijství v ruském politickém myšlení. Osudy jednoho z porevolučních ideových směrů ruské meziválečné generace, Prague: Set Out.

6 Alexander G. Dugin (2007), ‘Putin - vse, Putin absoljuten, Putin nezamenim,’ available at <http://www.inosmi.ru/inrussia/20070926/236828.html> (accessed 10 September 2016).

7 For more on this concept see e.g. Magda Leichtová (2014), Misunderstanding Russia: Russian Foreign Policy and the West, Farnham: Asghate.

8 Rojek (2015), p. 98.

9 Alexander G. Dugin (2015b), Last War of the World-Island. The Geopolitics of Contemporary Russia, London: Arktos, pp. 131–133.

10 Alexander G. Dugin (1997), Osnovy geopolitiki, Moskva: Arktogaeia-tsentr.

11 Rojek (2015), p. 102.

12 Alexander G. Dugin (2012b), The Fourth Political Theory, London: Arktos, p. 21.

13 See Halford J. Mackinder (1942), Democratic Ideals and Reality, Washington, D.C.: NDU Press.

14 Dugin (2015b), p. 10.

15 The difference between thalassocratic and thellurocratic powers, i.e. sea powers and land-based powers, was discussed in Ancient Greece by Thucydides. Classic examples of the time include Athens, which drew its power from trade and crafts, and Sparta, which lived off agriculture. These geographical and economic differences were reflected in politics and society – Athens gave rise to a democratic system with strong status of the individual including various individual freedoms, while Sparta was a collectivist oligarchy. Rojek (2016), p. 78.

16 Marlene Laruelle (2007), ‘Aleksandr Dugin: A Russian Version of the European Radical Right?’ Kennan Institute Occasional Paper No. 294, p. 7.

17 Alexander G. Dugin (2014), Eurasian Mission. An intriduction to Neo-Eurasianism, London: Arktos, p. 50.

18 Dugin (2015b), pp. 7–8.

19 Dugin (2012b), p. 21.

20 Dugin (2015b), p. 10.

21 Jozef Švarný (2016), ‘Neoeuraziánska geopolitická škola v podaní Alexandra Dugina a jej prejavy v zahraničnej politike Ruskej federácie,’ in Jaroslav Ušiak, Dávid Kollár and Michaela Melková (eds.) Bezpečnostné fórum 2016. Zborník vedeckých prác, Banská Bystrica: Belianum, p. 231.

22 Petr Kupka, Martin Laryš and Josef Smolík (2009), Krajní pravice ve vybraných zemích střední a východní Evropy: Slovensko, Polsko, Ukrajina, Bělorusko Rusko, Brno: Mezinárodní politologický ústav, p. 189.

23 Laruelle (2007), p. 18.

24Geopolitically, Russia is something more than the Russian federation in its current administrative borders.’ Dugin (2015b), p. 11.

25 See Rojek (2015).

26 Martin Laryš (2008), ‘Komparativní analýza nacionalismu a ideových zdrojů krajně pravicových subjektů v Rusku a na Ukrajině po rozpadu SSSR,’ Central European Political Studies Review 10(2–3), pp. 255–277.

27 See Voráček (2004).

28 In regard to Orthodoxy, which will be discussed in the final chapter of the paper, we can mention here that Dugin has long supported the principle of the “symphony of power”, i.e. the alliance between spiritual and worldly power, an arrangement that should impact Russia’s internal and external politics.

29 Dugin (2014), p. 50.

30 Alexander G. Dugin (2015a), ‘Aleksandr Dugin Will the Conflict in Syria Lead to World War III,’ available at (accessed 28 Decenber 2016).

31 Alexander G. Dugin (2001), ‘The Eurasianist Vision. Basic principles of the eurasist doctrinal platform, ’ available at <http://ww.evrazia.org/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=244> (accessed 10 Semptember 2011).

32 Dugin (2014).

33 Dugin (2015b), p. 10.

34 Laruelle (2007), p. 5.

35 Dugin (2012b).

36 Rojek (2015), s. 89.

37 Dugin (2001).

38 Despite this often accented multipolarity, Dugin’s vision (in its initial and final system parameters) is strictly bipolar. The practical geopolitical steps via which this transitioning multipolar formation is bypassed are explained below.

39 Dugin (2001); Dugin (2014), p. 57.

40 Dugin (2014).

41 Švarný (2016), p. 232.

42 Dugin (2015b), p. 10.

43 Dugin (2014), p. 55.

44 Rojek (2015), p. 89.

45 Dugin (2014)

46 Integrating Eurasia is Dugin’s natural goal and the reason he welcomes all practical political steps taken in that direction – e.g. completing the “Eurasian Union” (or more precisely a Eurasian economic union). Dugin (2014), pp. 78–80.

47 Alexander G. Dugin (2004), ‘The Eurasian Idea,’ available at <http://evrazia.info/modules.php?name=News&file=article&sid=1884> (accessed 15 September 2011).

48 Dugin (2014), p. 50.

49 Dugin (2014).

50 Dugin (2014), p. 52.

51 Alexander G. Dugin (n.d.), ‘3rd world war has begun,’ available at <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BrIVvypEoSo> (accessed 15 September 2011).

52 We should reiterate here that Dugin sees a potential third world conflict in almost all events – as was already mentioned in the text, he refers to this again several years later in the context of Syria.

53 Alexander G. Dugin (n.d.), ‘Georgia is a failed state,’ available at <http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CSSmiXgZhGE> (accessed 15 September 2011).

54 Dugin (2015b), p. 128.

55 Andrzej Nowak (2010), Impérium a ti druzí. Rusko, Polsko a moderní dějiny východní Evropy, Brno: CDK, pp. 101–102.

56 Dugin (2014), pp. 91–94.

57 Dugin (2015b), pp. 109–111.

58 Nowak (2010), p. 89.

59 Dugin does not view a number of post-communist states of Central Europe as a part of Eurasia – e.g. the eastern Polish border more or less corresponds to the western border of the Eurasian zone that Dugin proposes to integrate.

60 Rojek (2015), p. 90.

61 Dugin (2015b), pp. 109–111.

62 Nowak (2010), p. 101.

63 Dugin (2014), p. 53.

64 Švarný (2016), p. 232.

65 Compare Maria Avanesova and Vladimír Naxera (2016), ‘Proměny vztahů ruské pravoslavné církve a státu v době patriarchy Kirilla,’ Central European Political Studies Review 18(1), pp. 64–100.

66 Martin C. Putna (2015), Obrazy z kulturních dějin ruské religiozity, Prague: Vyšehrad, p. 280.

67 Vladimir Putin (2012), ‘Intervju RT,’ available at ˂https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EmIOWrb51Yc˃ (accessed 19 November 2015).

68 After a five month trial in a Moscow court, which included a number of controversies and doubts on the court’s independence (which is not surprising considering the authoritative character of the regime), the three female performers were found guilty of “hooliganism motivated by religious hatred” (the women were also declared to have committed a “criminal conspiracy aimed at coarsely harming public order”) and sentenced to two years imprisonment in a penal colony. According to state prosecutor Alexey Nikiforov, the actions of the perpetrators proved their evident hatred and hostility toward religion and “offended God”. See Petr Kalinič and Vladimír Naxera (2012), ‘Pussy Riot aneb Svéráz ruských marginálů,’ Mezinárodní politika 2012(10), pp. 31–34.

69 The foundation of the Russian-Byzantine symphony of power lies in mutual cooperation, mutual support, and mutual responsibility without one side interfering in the powers of the other; from a historical perspective, however, it is clear that worldly power, reminiscent of caesaropapism, was always stronger.

70 Compare Nowak (2010).

71 Julia Taratuta and Pavel Korobov (2009), ‘Novyj patriarch prinjal pervoje rešenije,’ Kommersant, 29 January 2009, p. 6.

72 For more on this concept, see e.g. Rojek (2016), pp. 41–67.

73 Alexander G. Dugin (2012a), ‘Aleksandr Dugin: Pussy Riot’s Global Blackmail,’ available at ˂http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IxhxRyeX8tY˃ (accessed 19 November 2015).



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