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How a Russian meme sheds light on what to expect from Putin's fourth term | Trudy Rubin

The Russian leader's foreign ventures hurt his own people, but he manages to distract them with anti-Western propaganda and adventures.

Russian President Vladimir Putin listens during a meeting in Moscow, Russia, Friday, April 13, 2018. Putin begins his fourth term on Monday.
Russian President Vladimir Putin listens during a meeting in Moscow, Russia, Friday, April 13, 2018. Putin begins his fourth term on Monday.Read moreMihkail Klimentyev/Pool Photo via AP

MOSCOW — A joke I heard repeatedly during two weeks in Russia hints at what we should expect from Vladimir Putin's fourth term as president, which begins Monday.

One Russian academic admitted, "This joke isn't really funny."  But it does reveal the difficulties America will face in dealing with Putin in the coming six years (compounded by Donald Trump's strange affection for the Russian strongman).

Angry at new Western sanctions, the joke goes, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov tells the minister of defense, "Bomb London."

"But my daughter is studying there," the minister complains.

"OK, bomb New York."

"But my son is working there," another cabinet minister interjects.

"Then bomb Voronezh," Lavrov finally snaps, referring to a Russian provincial city.

Among the Russian intelligentsia, the meme "Bomb Voronezh" means that Putin's reactions to sanctions  hurt ordinary Russians more than they do the West.

On the surface, Moscow doesn't look as though it is hurting. Throughout the city, glitzy malls feature high-end Western brands of clothing and furniture. A wall plaque of Lenin not far from the Kremlin sits next to a huge glass window splashed with the Valentino label. Fancy restaurants and coffee houses are full.

But the Russian ruble has slid as sanctions  have taken hold, badly hurting ordinary Russians. A professor may make only around a thousand dollars a month, with salaries in the provinces far lower.

>> READ MORE: Generation Putin: Young Russians, who have never known life without him, imagine their future

During my stay, the Russian Duma proposed banning the import of Western medicines in retaliation to sanctions, although many of these meds are essential for Russians. (In retaliation for previous sanctions imposed by Congress, the Duma banned U.S. adoptions of Russian orphans.)  Truly, perfect examples of "Bomb Voronezh."

Moreover, Putin's hostility to Facebook and Twitter – which he views as U.S. tools to overthrow autocrats – encourages those in the  Kremlin who want to take full control of social media and ban foreign internet servers. "For Putin, the internet is the enemy," says Alexander Baunov, editor-in-chief of Carnegie.ru. "He has no internet account, never."

That kind of thinking led to the Russian government's disastrous attempt last month to shut down the Telegram messaging app.

The "Bomb Voronezh" meme also hits at the hypocrisy of top Kremlin officials and pro-Putin oligarchs whose kids work or study in Western capitals. Ordinary Russians – academics, students, business people, those with relatives in America — must now wait for many months to get a U.S. visa. That's because of Russia's imposition of massive staff reductions at the American embassy, which was Moscow's response to last year's congressional sanctions over Russian election meddling in 2016.

>> READ MORE: Can Russian opposition leader Alexei Navalny use social media to combat Putin's presidency-for-life? 

But the meme also has a bigger geopolitical meaning.

Putin's anger has grown at what he considers Western disrespect for Russian sovereignty and greatness. "Putin is after something he can never get," says Dmitri Trenin, director of the Carnegie Moscow Center. "He wants to be respected as a co-equal of the United States. There is a bit of obsession in his mind about the U.S."

In his search for Russian greatness, the Russian leader has enmeshed his country in foreign ventures – Ukraine, cyber-trolling, election meddling – that have boomeranged badly. The resulting Western sanctions, along with much lower energy prices, have fueled economic stagnation in Russia.

"The non-oil sectors of the economy are going down," says Andrey Movchan, director of the Economic Policy Program at Carnegie Russia. "Entrepreneurs, businessmen, don't invest because no one knows what comes next. Banks don't loan. Many companies are sold to the state. "

The real problem, says Movchan, is the sanctions' impact on Russian access to needed technologies for oil extraction, avionics, lasers, extraction of shale, and other uses. This will impact Russia's future.

In his State of the Union speech after Russian elections in March, Putin promised to advance high-tech and private business. But just about every Russian expert with whom I spoke said Putin has been making similar promises for his entire 18 years as president and prime minister, but has yet to deliver. Such modernization is even more unlikely if the Russian president further isolates Russia from the West.

>> READ MORE: Report from Moscow: Russian TV news exacerbates disconnect between Putin and the U.S. 

The bottom line:  Putin's foreign adventures – and the resulting sanctions — have undermined Russia's economy and threaten its future modernization.

Yet there is little sign that the Kremlin is ready to back off – or admit to — the behavior that led to sanctions: whether the continued military venture in Ukraine, or cyber-meddling, or murdering opponents.

So far, the Russian public accepts Putin's behavior.  Focus groups by reputable pollsters such as the Levada Center find that 80 percent approve of the activities of the current president, seeing him as a symbol of Russian resurgence. This despite 41 percent, mainly among poorer Russians, saying they want a radical change in the economy to give them a better life.

Aided by state television and intense internet propaganda, Putin has created the impression that there is no alternative to him, and that he is pushing back against Western efforts to destroy Russia.

But that raises the question of how he will distract Russians if his overseas ventures continue to alienate the West and result in more sanctions. Someone has to be blamed for economic stagnation. Putin can't admit he is hurting his own.

>> READ MORE: Report from Moscow: After missile strike, will Trump or Putin be seen as the winner?

"No one knows how anti-Americanism in such a high degree, combined with World War III rhetoric, combined with a stagnating economy, will work in the next year," says political analyst Konstantin Gaaze.

More educated, urban Russians may joke about "Bomb Voronezh." But Putin needs to give the hinterland a better reason for its problems. That means not only repressing "enemies" at home, but seeking them abroad. So we should expect deepening tensions between Russia and the West.