U.S. House Speaker Nancy Pelosi called Wednesday's rioting at the Capitol "the biggest gift to Putin" from President Donald Trump. Glee from pro-Putin commentators in Moscow would seem to bear out that opinion, echoed by many U.S. Democrats.
But what exactly has Vladimir Putin been gifted?
Certainly not a political advantage. With Trump, considered a Putin admirer by the Democrats, about to vacate the White House, the Russian ruler has every reason to expect a compensatory show of strength from incoming President Joe Biden. The weaker the U.S. looks in these final days of Trump's term, the stronger this predictable blowback is likely to be.
Perhaps the gift is a propaganda coup, then? If so, it is an ambiguous one.
Putin's allies can claim, as they have already, that for all its lip service to democracy the U.S. is just as tough on aggressive protest as any post-Soviet regime, including Putin's own.
Nationalist writer Zakhar Prilepin argued in a Telegram post that the shooting death of a protester at the Capitol was as bad as the violence that former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych and Belarusian dictator Alexander Lukashenko have unleashed on their people to quell protests. That, according to Margarita Simonyan, head of the RT propaganda channel, shows that the U.S. cannot claim to be a beacon of democracy.
This line of argument, while characteristically hyperbolic, isn't devoid of merit.
The post-storming rhetoric of Democrats is familiar to any Russian, Ukrainian or Belarusian who has ever protested a stolen election or some equally ugly act of the government.