Fidel is dead, and now, buried. Some will call him
the last of the Cold Warriors. But there are still plenty of regimes that have
been in power for decades.
Are they frozen in time, or is change bubbling
beneath the surface? In each case, the answer may depend on how long political
power can be kept within the family. A look at five of the longest-ruling
regimes in the world, and where they go from here.
1. Cuba
For all the breathless headlines this year about
historic change, Cuba remains a one-party state controlled by the same figures
and power brokers i.e. the military and the Communist Party old guard. In
today’s Cuba, the majority of land and labor remains in the hands of the state;
private ownership is limited; rationing continues; the media is state-run; the
government continues to repress dissent. In fact, the most important change has
been its opening with the U.S. but that has more to do with the current
economic crisis engulfing Venezuela, which had been Cuba’s benefactor after the
fall of the Soviet Union. Now Venezuela can’t even afford to feed itself. While
there’s been some opening up to allow for private ownership and employment in
recent years, there has been no movement on political reform. Fidel’s brother
Raul promises to step down when his presidential term ends in 2018, making way
for his presumed successor, First Vice President Miguel Diaz-Canel, in a
managed transition. Raul will stay on as the head of the Communist Party and
remain influential behind the scenes. But it won’t be until Raul and key
members of the Politburo are buried that true political change will come to
Cuba. Fidel’s death is the beginning, not the end.
2. Belarus
Somewhat remarkably, Belarus has managed to retain a
large part of its Soviet-era economic model with heavy state control and major
reliance on Russia’s economy. The political system remains similarly
controlled; in fact, five-term President Alexander Lukashenko is much more
powerful than his Soviet-era predecessors. Condoleezza Rice wasn’t wrong when
she once referred to Belarus as “Europe’s last dictatorship.”But it’s getting
harder for Minsk to depend on Moscow, both politically (Vladimir Putin has his
own ambitious political agenda, after all) and economically (Russian GDP fell
nearly four percent in 2015 alone, its biggest drop since 2009). So Minsk has
begun looking westward to the E.U. as a possible partner. These moves have come
in fits and starts, and E.U. demands haven’t opened up the country’s politics
much. It doesn’t help that Belarus is one of five countries that have signed up
for the Eurasian Economic Union, Moscow’s response to the E.U. In all
likelihood, Belarus is going to stay in Russia’s orbit while they seek ways to
build ties with the E.U. for the sake of the economy. But don’t expect much
more than symbolic gestures towards Brussels; the country’s elites have too
many interests to protect to cut themselves off completely from Moscow. The future
could depend on the strongman’s 12-year-old son Kolya. The president enjoys
taking the boy to important international meetings and dressing him in clothes
that match his own, leading some to speculate that Kolya is bound for bigger
things.
3. Kazakhstan
Kazakhstan is currently ruled by Nursultan
Nazarbayev, who has held the post of president since 1991 and served as head of
the Kazakh Soviet Republic before that. He won the 2015 elections with 98
percent of the vote, topping the 95.5 percent he “earned” in 2011. Kazakhstan
is fortunate to have sizable natural wealth; 21 percent of the country’s
economy comes from oil. Its economic growth during the high-oil early 2000s
turned Kazakhstan into the economic leader in Central Asia, something the
government parlayed into a role as a regional political and investment center.
The country’s key industries remain under strong direct and indirect state
control.When the time comes, the country’s next-generation leaders will
struggle to end overreliance on oil, to satisfy high public expectations that
economic growth will improve their well-being and to find a leader who commands
the same beyond-question respect as Nazarbayev. We know the successor won’t be
Nazarbayev’s much-feared son-in-law, Rakhat Aliyev. He reportedly committed
suicide in an Austrian detention center last year. His daughter Dariga and her
son Nurali Aliyev remain prominent contenders.
4. Zimbabwe
The 92-year old Robert Mugabe has been in power
since 1980. To his followers, he’s an elder statesman courageous enough to
pursue an African liberation agenda in the face of Western opposition; to
everyone else, he’s a strongman who retains power through a security network of
enforcers, secret police and intelligence operatives.Staying in power hasn’t
been easy. Following the loss of urban voters during the late 1990’s, Mugabe
focused on building a rural power base. This involved land grabs from white farmers
and the handover of property to political cronies. The land redistribution
program initially failed and crippled an economy that was then-dominated by
agriculture. The country has limped along ever since.Mugabe’s saving grace is a
political opposition that’s unable to muster sustainable support and shows
limited organizational skill. Speaking of keeping power within the family,
members of Mugabe’s party are already lining up behind potential successors,
with one faction being led by Mugabe’s wife Grace, and the other by current
Vice-President Emmerson Mnangagwa. But for those hoping to see a sea change in
the country’s politics, the current economic collapse is more likely to force
political change than the internal machinations of Mugabe’s party provided the
political opposition can get its act together. That’s a big if.
5. North Korea
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