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Russia's New Face

 
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Pluto



Joined: 19 Dec 2006

PostPosted: Sat Mar 01, 2008 4:06 pm    Post subject: Russia's New Face Reply with quote

...Will Change Nothing Politically.



Quote:
That Other Presidential Campaign
By MATTHEW KAMINSKI
THE WALL STREET JOURNAL ASIA
February 28, 2008

ST. PETERSBURG, Russia -- Ahead of another foreordained election this Sunday, Vladimir Putin exudes confidence about his political future. Yet his actions betray an insecurity that must come naturally to a man with KGB-honed analytical skills.

By the looks of this dull presidential campaign, "Putinism" is settling in for a Thousand Years. Dmitry Medvedev, the 42-year-old aide tapped by President Putin, is so sure of victory that he rarely bothers to hit the hustings. In any case, most Russians believe that Mr. Putin will stay top dog. The popular incumbent, constitutionally barred from a third consecutive term, plans to take the job of prime minister.

President Putin earlier this month declared his future seat "the highest executive power in the country," which it certainly wasn't in his eight years at the Kremlin. According to recent polls, about 70% of Russians plan to endorse this job switch by checking off Medvedev on their ballot.

A look around the birthplace of the current and future president helps explain why. After the depression and upheavals of the previous decade, St. Petersburg enjoys growth of 8% (slightly above the national average), full employment and investor and Kremlin favor. Gray vestiges of Soviet times are washed clean by trillions in oil and gas rubles. Across the country, Putinism has been good for pocketbooks, whether of the country's 101 billionaires, a total now second only to America's, or a growing middle class.

But Mr. Putin doesn't appear to suffer from illusions about the breadth of his support, or the economy's ability to surf record commodity prices forever. As he must know, only a sheer incompetent could've blown the windfall from an eight-fold jump since 2000 in the price for the country's biggest export, oil. If anything, Mr. Putin slowed recovery by freezing economic reforms since his re-election in 2004 and Kremlinizing the energy industry, starting with the appropriation of the premier private oil company, Yukos.

With executive competence and the economy a fragile pillar of Putinism, the far more reliable one is coercion and centralized state control. The single constant of the Putin era is the Kremlin's concerted efforts to hobble free media, business, opposition parties, foreign and Russian NGOs, the Duma and local governments.

No challenge to Putinism is too small. The Yabloko party, a prominent minority voice in the St. Petersburg regional council, got yanked off the ballot before last spring's municipal elections, formally for falsifying signatures needed to get on. It was a dry run. The Kremlin last month used the same tactic to keep former Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov, barely registering a pulse in polls, from running for president.

Many Russians are content or cowed enough not to complain. Conversations about politics, so free flowing in the 1980s and '90s, are hard to find or carried on in hushed tones.

"For regular people, the guiding philosophy is cynicism," says Andrei Dmitriev, an opposition activist in St. Petersburg. "They know that nothing depends on them," and as long as the state doesn't rob or beat them, won't make a fuss.

Along with political apathy and civic disengagement, Mr. Putin has brought back an old tradition, fear. As in the old days, politics is scary and dangerous. Not many are willing to take the risk when dabbling brings trouble -- say, exile in Siberia (consider the plight of former Yukos boss Mikhail Khodorkovsky), assassination (the crusading journalist Anna Politkovskaya's in 2006 just one among many) or, probably least bad, a few knocks from enthusiastic riot police cracking heads at small opposition protests.

Why would President Putin, riding so high in polls, have such a thin skin? Let's try to get inside his.

At the KGB in the 1980s, and as an aide to former St. Petersburg Mayor Anatoly Sobchak in the early 1990s, Mr. Putin stood in the shadows, "a good bureaucrat with a clean desk" (according to Sobchak's former speechwriter Andrei Chernov) and "modest, hard-working" (according to former city deputy Alexander Sazanov). He was a secret agent and bag man for big men before Boris Yeltsin plucked him from relative obscurity to run the country in 2000.

Mr. Putin has never picked up the politician's knack for winning hearts or votes. He looks ill at ease in front of large crowds; on television, he's most likely to be seen sitting at his desk, lecturing underlings. He elicits respect, not adulation. By temperament and experience, Mr. Putin must fear elections, unless he can control the outcome.

In whittling away at democratic freedoms, however, Mr. Putin weakens his regime's legitimacy. His survival allows no room for error; and he depends on a small and closely-linked circle whose connections to him date back to St. Petersburg. According to an old friend from the KGB here, Mr. Putin treasures and rewards loyalty, but keeps close counsel. "What Putin will do only Putin and his dog Koni know," the friend jokes.

For the presidency, there were stronger candidates for Mr. Putin to pick. But Mr. Medvedev's lack of a background in the security services or a base of support in the apparat was a plus. And with him, Mr. Putin ensures that he'll stay indispensable.

Only he will be able to mediate conflicts and dole out patronage among his boyars. Only he can speak frankly to the generals. At all levels of the Russian state powerful people owe him their jobs, particularly since he cancelled direct elections for many posts in 2004. Mr. Putin planned his transition well. Unless, of course, Mr. Medvedev learned at his mentor's side and one day manages to push him aside.

Sold as the guarantor of economic and political order, Putinism is at heart unstable. The jockeying for the presidency was hidden but furious, and the power struggle will continue into the new era. And Mr. Putin faces contradictions other Russian leaders, from Alexander II to Mikhail Gorbachev, weren't able to reconcile.

Here's a self-styled modernizing czar who claims to want to open up and enrich Russia, while holding the country by the throat. He stirs up anti-Western chauvinism but demands respect from the West. He claims a broad popular mandate but keeps all the power to himself. The steady destruction of institutions that underpin mature states (a robust legislature, independent courts, strong parties) leaves Russia's future impossible to predict.

But sooner or later, this increasingly prosperous, dynamic and complex society, stretching across 11 time zones, may tire of rule by a feuding clique from St. Petersburg, and do something about it. Perhaps acutely aware of his vulnerabilities, Mr. Putin spent the past eight years building up the firewalls of repression against this very possibility.

Mr. Kaminski is editorial page editor of The Wall Street Journal Europe.


More of the same. Demands for more respect from the West while disrespecting the West. Medvedev will laud independent courts in public while stymy them in private. It even looks as though more free enterprise will be nationalized, or Kremilinized as the author puts it Confused

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soviet_man



Joined: 23 Apr 2005
Location: Seoul

PostPosted: Sat Mar 01, 2008 6:29 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

The only viable alternative to the Putin-Medvedev regime is a return to communism.

The Communist Party is currently (and will remain) Russia's largest opposition party.

Medvedev perhaps has only one good point, that is he is somewhat committed to protecting Russia's territorial integrity (Chechnya, Kaliningrad, Transdniester, Abakazia) and responding to threats by NATO/US forces on Russia's border.

For all his flaws, I support Zyuganov for President.
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Milwaukiedave



Joined: 02 Oct 2004
Location: Goseong

PostPosted: Sat Mar 01, 2008 6:48 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I have to wonder if this is Russia's President Park era(granted I don't think dissenters are being shot so the compairson is somewhat unfair), where Putin and his party will totally dominate politics. The wall fell down in 1989 and Russia reformed in the early 90's, but has struggled. Maybe in 10-15 years time they will come out of this era stronger. Personally I think Putin choosing his successor makes it at least appear like a dictatorship, but maybe it won't be as bad as we think.
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Justin Hale



Joined: 24 Nov 2007
Location: the Straight Talk Express

PostPosted: Sun Mar 02, 2008 6:22 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

McCain on Russia:

Quote:
McCain has been one of the foremost critics of Russian President Vladimir Putin in the US Senate: "I looked into his eyes and saw three letters: a K, a G and a B". He has said that Putin is "going to cause a lot of difficulties" and that he is "trying to reassert the Russian empire."[11] McCain has also stated his belief that Putin is using Russia's energy sources as a political "weapon".[12]

In 2005 McCain and Connecticut senator Joseph Lieberman brought a draft resolution with the requirement to suspend membership of Russia in G8. The same year he initiated Senate acceptance of a resolution charging the Russian government with "political motivations" in litigation concerning Mikhail Khodorkovsky and Platon Lebedev. McCain stated the requirement to exclude Russia from G8 and in the further.[citation needed]

� Today, we see in Russia diminishing political freedoms, a leadership dominated by a clique of former intelligence officers, efforts to bully democratic neighbors, such as Georgia, and attempts to manipulate Europe's dependence on Russian oil and gas. We need a new Western approach to this revanchist Russia. The G8 should again become a club of leading market democracies: it should include Brazil and India but exclude Russia
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