Vladimir Putin sees his regime as a triumph - one that has turned a bankrupt state into an energy superpower, built a new middle class out of post-Soviet wreckage, and defeated NATO expansion, while Russian incomes boomed more than 140 per cent. However, in this riveting new analysis, Ben Judah argues that Russia's leader is not the strongman he appears. Putin may be victorious as a politician, but he has utterly failed to build a modern state. Once loved for its forcefulness and the spreading of new consumer lifestyles, Putin's regime is now increasingly loathed for incompetence and corruption. Rather than modernizing Russia's institutions, Putin has enthroned a predatory bureaucracy, leaving the regions a patchwork of fragmented and feudalized entities - some ruthlessly technocratic, others almost lawless. Written with rare access to the oligarchs and officials who made the Putin era and the new opposition who are trying to destroy it, 'Fragile Empire' is a journey through a frenzied Moscow and beyond.
Judah, an exceptionally talented young writer and reporter, takes the reader on a journey through a scarred nation from the battlefields of the Caucasus and the tank factories of the Urals to the impoverished farmers toiling for Chinese settlers in the cold fields of the Far East. 'Fragile Empire' asks if Putin can still control a new middle class that is dreaming of Europe, will he win over the first post-Soviet generation, and whether his Kremlin can still hold onto a Siberia overshadowed by China. This is a razor-sharp diagnosis of what has gone wrong in post-modern Russia. 'Foreign Policy' named 'Fragile Empire' on of its Top 25 Books To Read in 2013.
- ISBN10 0300181213
- ISBN13 9780300181210
- Publish Date 18 June 2013 (first published 15 April 2013)
- Publish Status Out of Print
- Out of Print 8 August 2014
- Publish Country US
- Imprint Yale University Press
- Format Hardcover
- Pages 352
- Language English