Most observers treat revolution as a singular, explosive moment—a lightning strike that shatters the old order overnight. Kamil Galeev dismantles this myth, arguing instead that true revolution is a slow, iterative process of internal elite self-destruction, where the original architects are inevitably sidelined by the very forces they invited in to win a petty power struggle.
The Illusion of the Single Blow
Galeev begins by challenging the popular imagination, which tends to fuse months or years of chaos into one snapshot event. He insists that power does not simply fall from the old regime to the new; it changes hands repeatedly. "Revolution never happens at once - by a single blow - but over the time, iteratively," Galeev writes. He illustrates this by noting that the Russian revolution of 1917-1918 actually comprised at least five distinct coup events, each radically transforming the landscape before the next one arrived. This framing is crucial because it shifts the focus from a heroic narrative of "the people rising up" to a mechanical analysis of political turnover.
The author argues that the individuals who execute the first coup rarely survive to govern the fifth. "People who executed the original coup on the iteration 1, rarely ever play any part in governance on the iteration 5," he notes. This observation holds significant weight: it explains why revolutionary regimes often betray their founding principles. The original actors are not just defeated; they are "memoryholed," forgotten because the agenda has shifted entirely to the new players who entered the game later. Critics might argue that this model underestimates the role of mass ideology in driving these shifts, but Galeev's focus on the mechanics of power transfer offers a compelling, if cynical, alternative explanation for why revolutions so often consume their children.
Revolution is not a storm that breaks the dam; it is the dam slowly crumbling from the inside as the engineers fight over who holds the keys.
The Geography of Power
A second pillar of Galeev's theory is the absolute necessity of extreme centralization. He posits that revolutions do not happen across a nation; they happen in the capital. "The French revolution does not happen in France. It happens in Paris," Galeev asserts. He extends this to the Russian experience, noting that the revolution occurred in St. Petersburg, not the vast empire surrounding it. The logic is stark: in a highly centralized state, the capital is the only source of political agency. If you control the capital, you control the country, because the provinces have been stripped of any independent political life.
This centralization creates a paradox. The very structure that allows a small group in the capital to rule the entire nation also makes that group uniquely vulnerable. "Long story short, revolution can only happen in a country where all the political life had been thoroughly extirpated, except for the national capital," Galeev explains. This means that once the center fractures, the entire system collapses with it, as the periphery has no mechanism to resist or offer an alternative. This is a sharp insight into why some highly centralized states collapse with terrifying speed while decentralized ones grind on through civil war.
The Entrepreneurship of Chaos
Perhaps the most provocative element of Galeev's analysis is his application of economic theory to political violence. He rejects the idea that power is seized by force against the wishes of the elite. Instead, he argues that outsiders are invited in. "Contrary to the popular delusion, taking the power 'by force'... is not a very common nor a very realistic scenario," he writes. The real engine of revolution is "political entrepreneurship," a concept he borrows from Joseph Schumpeter. Just as a business innovator introduces new factors of production to gain an edge, political elites introduce new social forces to defeat their rivals within the ruling circle.
Galeev uses a vivid analogy: an American businessman outsourcing production to Asia to beat competitors, only to find the contractors eventually taking over the business entirely. "You got completely sidelined, and thrown out of business, and that would have never ever happened unless you invited your future undertakers yourself," he observes. This dynamic explains the radicalization of revolutions. The elites, desperate to win an internal squabble, invite in outsiders who have no stake in the existing order. As the conflict escalates, these new entrants outbid the original elites, eventually taking over the entire political theater. The result is a government composed of people with "nothing to lose, and everything to gain," leading to the extreme policies associated with revolutionary fervor.
Critics might suggest that this model ignores the genuine grievances of the masses, reducing them to mere pawns in an elite game. While the masses certainly have their own motivations, Galeev's point stands that without the invitation and facilitation of the elite, these forces often lack the organization to seize the capital in a centralized state.
The radicalizing dynamics of a revolution are not driven by the people's anger, but by the elites' desperation to win a fight they started, only to realize they have invited in a force they cannot control.
Bottom Line
Galeev's "Mechanics of Revolution" offers a sophisticated, structural explanation for political collapse that moves beyond the simplistic narrative of "good guys vs. bad guys." Its greatest strength is the identification of "political entrepreneurship" as the catalyst that turns a palace coup into a total societal transformation. However, the theory's biggest vulnerability lies in its potential to downplay the agency of the lower classes, treating them almost entirely as tools of elite maneuvering rather than active historical agents. For the busy reader, the takeaway is clear: when you see a ruling elite frantically reaching outside their circle for support, do not mistake it for a movement of the people; it is likely the first step in their own obsolescence.