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Putin’s New Vision of Eurasia
oilprice.com ^ | 10/05/2011 | John C.K. Daly

Posted on 10/10/2011 10:42:49 AM PDT by bananaman22

Many western politicians have harbored deep suspicions of Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Vladimorovich Putin since he first emerged on the Russian political stage in 1999.

This is hardly surprising, given his KGB background, though those with longer historical memories will recall that Yuri Andropov came from the same organization and that the West grudgingly found a way to work with him.

While the worst aspects of the Cold War faded away with the peaceful collapse of the USSR in late 1991, twenty years later, trying to figure out Kremlin politics remains as vital an exercise as ever, and the “Putin era” has provided Washington analysts desperately reinventing themselves to hang on to their jobs with rich fodder.

Is Putin a democrat?

Stalinist?

Or something in between?

Place your bets.

What does seem to be apparent, with last week’s announcement that current President Dmitrii Medvedev would stand down in next year’s presidential elections, is that Putin is a shoe-in to recover the Russian Federation’s Presidency, and that, since the term has been extended to six years, Western governments will perhaps have to learn to live with him helming the Russian state until 2026.

But one aspect of Russia that has eluded most Washington pundits since 1991 is the fact that Russia a) has developed a free press of sorts, certainly in comparison to the Bad Old Soviet days, and b) that Putin is genuinely popular with many Russians, an observation that many Western liberals find more than a tad irritating.

But to return to basics – what Putin represents is an awareness that dawned late in the USSR, only with the advent of Gorbachev – the power of the media.

In a weird reversal of perceptions, while Gorbachev essentially Full article at: Putin’s New Vision of Eurasia


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Miscellaneous
KEYWORDS: energy; eurasia; russia; trade

1 posted on 10/10/2011 10:42:53 AM PDT by bananaman22
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To: bananaman22

“the peaceful collapse of the USSR in late 1991”

lol. yeah.

The finest trick of the devil is to persuade you that he does not exist. Charles Baudelaire.


2 posted on 10/10/2011 10:50:21 AM PDT by Christian Engineer Mass (25ish Cambridge MA grad student. Many conservative Christians my age out there? __ Click my name)
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To: Christian Engineer Mass

He’ll start with Belarus, work to strangle Poland’s energy flow from Lituania and then move to the southern caucuses.

He wants the unified republic back as a dominating power.

He’s teaming up with China because he has to, not because he wants to.


3 posted on 10/10/2011 11:51:15 AM PDT by Reagan Disciple (Peace through Strength)
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To: bananaman22

Why is Putin trying to Islamize his Country any more than it is?


4 posted on 10/10/2011 12:48:57 PM PDT by Mike Darancette (Psalm 109:8)
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To: bananaman22

“This is hardly surprising, given his KGB background, though those with longer historical memories will recall that Yuri Andropov came from the same organization and that the West grudgingly found a way to work with him.”

I have a pretty good historical memory and that statement is patently false.


5 posted on 10/10/2011 12:55:33 PM PDT by ngat
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