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russia's most angry man

zhirinovsky:
russian fascism and the making of a dictator
by vladimir solovyov and elena klepikova
Translated by Catherine A.  Fitzpatrick in collaboration with the authors.  
Illustrated. 256 pp.
New York: Addison-Wesley Publishing Company

!zhirinovsky!
by vladimir kartsev with todd bludeau
Illustrated. 198 pp.
New York: Columbia University Press
august 13, 1995


     THE Russian word bespredel is a slang term that basically
means "anything goes."  It is often used these days
to describe the lawlessness raging in Russia, the sense that
life is out of control and that while freedom is great, a little
order wouldn't do any harm either.  Bespredel is a word one needs
to have at hand when contemplating the career of Vladimir V.
Zhirinovsky, the theatrically extremist leader of the Liberal
Democratic Party who has so powerfully influenced the course
of Russian politics over the past few years.  

     It is hard to read either of these biographies of Mr. Zhirinovsky-- 
one written by an emigre husband-and-wife team living in New
York, the other by his former boss at Moscow's best-known publishing
house -- without drawing two conclusions.  The first is that Mr.
Zhirinovsky is a pathetic human being.  The second is that 
understanding his success is essential to understanding Russia today.  

     "Zhirinovsky sprang on the Russian political scene as
suddenly as a genie from a bottle," Vladimir Solovyov and
Elena Klepikova write in "Zhirinovsky: Russian Fascism and
the Making of a Dictator."  "No amount of cursing will
push him back in."  They are right, but with his continual
public outbursts (he recently threw a glass of orange juice in
the face of a political opponent on national television) he may
yet manage to self-destruct before he can succeed in destroying
Russian reform and replacing it with an aggressively imperialist
program.  

     In any case, Mr. Zhirinovsky is not really the point of their
book.  The Russian people's willingness to listen to him is.  Mr.
Solovyov and Ms.  Klepikova, who detest the man, say they are
convinced that "the restoration of the Russian empire --
in its previous or near-previous borders -- is only a matter
of time, sooner rather than later, regardless of who will be
head of state."  Theirs is a volume for people who believe
Russia to be simply between empires right now.  They add that
Mr. Zhirinovsky has had a powerful role in making the Kremlin
more nationalistic and hawkish, and that he has enabled President
Boris N.  Yeltsin to pay less attention to democratic reforms
and more to proving his might -- most notably in Chechnya.  

     Mr. Zhirinovsky has certainly mined a large vein of despair.
And he has certainly compelled Mr. Yeltsin (and just about every
other politician in the country) to shore up his right flank.
When he talks, many Russians find themselves nodding in agreement,
almost without meaning to.  For example, in one speech Mr. Zhirinovsky
stated: "We have mutilated our country, we have made her
backward.  We have forced the Russian nation, the most advanced,
to sink down.  We have done it with force.  Materially, through
laws, and psychologically, through pressure.  And now we are being
told that we can't get along without foreigners, that we cannot
rely on ourselves, on the Russian people.  That's terrible."
He had a point that most Russians instinctively recognize.  

     And, as Mr. Solovyov and Ms.  Klepikova reveal, he manages
to condemn the past while also calling for its resurrection.
Mr. Zhirinovsky is the most eloquent spokesman for the way things
used to be.  He reminds Russians in every speech of what they
have lost, how low they have fallen and how he is the man to
bring it all back.  

     Most of what Mr. Zhirinovsky says is nonsense, but the problem
with this book is its failure to indicate that the Russians are
capable of seeing through the nonsense.  They are not idiots.
Their country is racked with pain at present.  The shift from
totalitarian superpower to huge, ambitious third world country
is not pleasant.  Yet every day a few more individuals do a little
better, and they realize that Mr. Zhirinovsky's feel-good remedies
-- his promises to shoot criminals at the scenes of their crimes,
to supply cheap vodka and to find everyone a spouse -- are not
going to work.  

     Mr. Zhirinovsky rose to prominence as the third-place finisher
in the 1991 presidential election, when people were eager to
protest against the horrible lives they were living.  Mr. Solovyov
and Ms.  Klepikova never completely acknowledge that discontent.
The voters who supported Mr. Zhirinovsky then, and again in the
1993 parliamentary elections, hadn't made an ideological decision
to back a partly Jewish admirer of Adolf Hitler.  Anger got Mr.
Zhirinovsky where he is today, but while anger remains a powerful
political force, it is unlikely ever to make him president of
Russia.  

     Still, if you want a bunch of facts about Russia's best-known
extremist, the Solovyov and Klepikova book, ably translated by
Catherine A.  Fitzpatrick in collaboration with the authors, is
the place to turn.  It has no insights of importance, but everything
you need to know is here, in impressive detail: the horrid youth
(which wasn't so horrid), the (denied) Jewish father and the
remarkably undistinguished academic and legal careers.  Mr. Solovyov
and Ms.  Klepikova devote considerable space to the question of
whether Mr. Zhirinovsky is a total, or only a partial, creation
of the K.G.B.  -- but at this late date that seems to be like
asking whether Frankenstein's monster was created by Dr.  
Frankenstein or by some other guy.  

     THE second book is another thing entirely.  Written by Vladimir
Kartsev, the former director of Mir Publishing House, with Todd
Bludeau, a former editor at Mir, "!Zhirinovsky!"  paints
a picture of a society so evil, so tortured and so misguided
that only a man like Mr. Zhirinovsky could possibly fit the bill
as the kind of leader who could clean things up.  "In order
to become a millionaire in Russia, one need not be terribly smart,
educated or resourceful," Mr. Kartsev writes.  "Nor does one have 
to sweat over creating products, goods and services." All one has 
to do, he says, is be in with the people who run the country.  

     Of course there is truth to this assertion, and to most of
the other cliches that fill the pages of this book.  But one doesn't
diminish the imposing problems of crime and cronyism by admitting
that decent, hard-working people exist in Russia -- and that
many are doing rather well.  

     Mr. Kartsev traces the career of his former underling in painful
detail.  We are reminded that Mr. Zhirinovsky was a poor student,
a bad lawyer and the type of political leader who wins council
races simply because nobody else runs for the office.  Mr. Kartsev
also suggests that Mr. Zhirinovsky is an opportunist who doesn't
believe most of the things he says.  

     Again, some of this is true.  What Mr. Kartsev neglects to
say, however, is that Mr. Zhirinovsky has a sense for people.
He knows how to make promises and occasionally even how to keep
them.  

     "I am reminded of the Weimar Republic and the sequence
of events that led to the rise of Hitler as a national hero,"
Mr. Kartsev declares, expressing an oft-repeated view.  "And
there are a lot of candidates besides Zhirinovsky vying for the
post of Russia's Hitler."  True enough.  But if the Russian
people clearly have a desire for order, it is much less clear that 
they also have a desire to be ruled by a man with an iron hand.  
tophome
copyright 1995, Michael Specter