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Putin Gets Away With Murder
Weekly Standard ^ | 10/23/06 | Anders Åslund

Posted on 10/16/2006 5:24:37 AM PDT by Donna Lee Nardo

Putin Gets Away with Murder It's time to confront the Russian leader. by Anders Åslund 10/23/2006, Volume 012, Issue 06

IN RUSSIA, gangsters have the macabre custom of making a birthday present of a murder. On Vladimir Putin's 54th birthday, one of his fiercest domestic critics, the journalist Anna Politkovskaya, was shot to death in her apartment building in central Moscow. She worked for the weekly Novaya Gazeta, Russia's last independent newspaper. Its deputy editor was murdered a couple of years ago, and the killer was never found. Although Politkovskaya had been tailed by the FSB for years and her murderer was captured on film, he got away. The Kremlin has made no comment. The prosecutor general claims to have personally taken charge of the investigation, but such investigations seldom result in an arrest.

Western policy toward Russia has been an unmitigated failure since Vladimir Putin became president on New Year's Eve 1999. Every year since then, the Russian government has moved further away from both the United States and the European Union, and Western influence over Russia has waned.

In the last year, President Putin has exported ground-to-air missiles to Iran that can shoot down American F-16s. He has exported arms to Syria that were successfully used by Hezbollah against Israel. A year ago, the Kremlin cheered when Uzbekistan evicted a large U.S. air base, and now it is encouraging Kyrgyzstan to do the same.

Meanwhile, state-controlled Russian media spew out nationalist and anti-Western propaganda. Every evening after the first state channel's main newscast, one of the Kremlin's foremost propagandists, Mikhail Leontiev, delivers his daily diatribe against the West.

To consider Putin a strategic partner or even ally would be to close one's eyes to reality. If Putin persistently behaves like an enemy of both the United States and the E.U., we had better pick up the gauntlet. Only a fool or a coward would do otherwise.

The G-8 summit in St. Petersburg in July became a symbol of all that is wrong with Western policy toward Russia. For three days, the Western leaders participated in this televised celebration of Putin's new authoritarian powers, and they got nothing in return.

To flatter himself further, Putin invited the presidents of the other eleven former Soviet states for the ensuing week, but they know how to handle him. A few hours before the summit, four of them dropped out--two announcing that they were going on vacations. By contrast, in St. Petersburg it was President Bush who endured Putin's insult ("We certainly would not want to have the same kind of democracy as they have in Iraq.").

The fundamental problem of Western policy toward Russia is that it is still based on the idea that the Cold War is over. Alas, this truth has become obsolete, as Putin has gone about reviving one feature after another of a police state, including authoritarian rule and an anti-Western foreign policy.

The West has retained the same friendly but half-hearted policy toward Russia it pursued under Boris Yeltsin. But Putin is no Yeltsin. In fact, Putin is the anti-Yeltsin. What ever Yeltsin was, Putin is not. Whatever policy the West pursued toward Yeltsin should be replaced with its opposite--with a few exceptions: Not even Putin wants to revive Communist ideol ogy, and Russia remains a market economy.

Although poorly understood in the West, Yeltsin was a democrat, as Leon Aron shows in his excellent biography. Yeltsin believed in free and fair elections and free media. Putin, by contrast, is a secret policeman. In his book First Person, made up of in terviews, he marvels at his own skillful repression of dissidents.

Putin talks about dem ocracy while systematically destroying it, as Berkeley political scientist Steven Fish has detailed in Democracy Derailed in Russia. Putin has mostly destroyed press freedom, deprived both par liamentary chambers of power, undermined free elections, eliminated the election of regional governors, and seized control over the courts. Where Boris Yeltsin boldly and peacefully dissolved the Soviet empire, giving its peoples freedom, his successor has publicly complained that this was the "greatest geopolitical tragedy of the 20th century."

Yeltsin believed in private enterprise. He has been criticized for privatizing the Russian economy in the only way that was possible, rather than leaving a larger share in the hands of the state. Putin is currently undertaking the greatest re-nationalization the world has seen.

Yeltsin regarded both himself and Russia as part of the free and democratic Western world, while Putin does not. He criticizes both the United States and the E.U. in ever more paranoid and conspiratorial language, while praising China more and more. Unlike Westerners, the Chinese do not ask nosy questions about authoritarianism, corruption, and money-laundering, questions for which Putin has no good answers.

In the end, Yeltsin was one of us, although larger than life. So it was worth talking to him and exploring our common interests through quiet diplomacy. The opposite is true of Putin. He gives lip service to our values, but regularly undermines them. A liar should not be treated like a gentleman.

On a few points, the United States has got its policy toward Russia right. First, the United States and the E.U. stood up for democracy during Ukraine's Orange Revolution, and Putin accepted defeat. Second, the West protested loudly against the restrictive Russian draft legislation on nongovernmental organizations, which was softened. Third, the Western outcry over Russia's cutoff of gas supplies to Ukraine last January led to an immediate resumption of deliveries. Putin was upset, but he changed his policy. And the recent U.S. embargo against the Russian state arms export agency Rosoboronexport and the military aircraft producer Sukhoi because of their deliveries of sophisticated arms to Iran is another step in the right direction.

The lesson is that Putin only responds if protests are loud, public, and backed up by threats. Rather than talking about the Cold War being over (which is true), we should remember that the most successful policies toward the Soviet Union were those of Ronald Reagan.

It could be argued that Western policy toward Russia has not mattered much in recent years because Russia has been too weak to dare to be foolhardy. That is no longer the case. In 1999, Russia's GDP was $200 billion in current dollars. This year, it will reach $920 billion. Russia has financial surpluses to waste on foolish policies at home, and perhaps also abroad.

Right now, Russia is apparently preparing for a war against the independent former Soviet republic of Georgia. With no justification whatsoever, Putin personally has accused Georgia of state terrorism. He likened the arrest of four senior Russian military spies in Georgia to the acts of Stalin's henchman Lavrenty Beria. Russia has evacuated its diplomats and citizens from Georgia and imposed a nearly complete embargo. Major Russian military maneuvers are under way.

Most analysts draw parallels to Yeltsin and argue that Russia's actions are meant only to frighten. I doubt that. Putin is a warrior. He won his presidency on a very dubious war, the second war in Chechnya--the region whose agony Anna Politkovskaya covered at the cost of her life. Putin won his reelection and authoritarian rule with his war against the oligarchs, especially his confiscation of the Yukos oil company. It is a logical next step to illegally prolong that rule by starting a war against Georgia.

It couldn't be plainer that the United States needs a serious policy toward Russia and needs it fast.

Anders Åslund is a senior fellow at the Institute for International Economics in Washington.

© Copyright 2006, News Corporation, Weekly Standard, All Rights Reserved.

http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/012/824dulje.asp


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Russia
KEYWORDS: assassination; beslan; espionage; journalist; kgb; politkovskaya; putin; puttieput; russia; sovietunion
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To: Nikolay Lee Sea Cin
"Really don't want your kind of so-called "free media"


I wish you would take it, we don't want it.

61 posted on 10/17/2006 1:55:11 AM PDT by Steve Van Doorn (*in my best Eric cartman voice* “I love you guys”)
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To: MarMema
Great eye opening links.

Between Putin demanding the US remove sanctions against two of his dummy companies - caught selling sensitive technology to the terrorist exporting Iranian Mullah régime, to yet another underhanded move by the Energy Czar to further sink the US Dollar, tyrant Putin and his KGB henchmen have started off the week in a very typical Moscow manner.

Quoting from the link: Dollar weakens as Russia is set to add yen reserves

"The dollar fell after Alexei Ulyukayev, the Russian central bank's first deputy chairman, told the news agency Interfax that the bank might increase holdings of yen from almost zero percent. Russia's reserves, the world's third largest after China's and Japan's, have swelled about 50 percent this year to $267.9 billion as oil prices surged.

"The move could lead toward broader U.S. dollar weakness," said Mark Meadows, a strategist at the currency-trading company Tempus Consulting in Washington."

Putin is soooo good to US....

62 posted on 10/17/2006 2:00:30 AM PDT by M. Espinola (Freedom is not free)
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To: Admin Moderator
Bloomberg Publications, another reason to keep my computer polished.
63 posted on 10/17/2006 2:51:19 AM PDT by jerryem (This is my belief,,,you don't like it? OK I have others.)
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To: MarMema

Israeli soldiers.
Russian spies.==

BHAHAHA!:))) It is really funny! Such nice bias!:))

Once in WW2 the radiostation of one country reported: "The damn enemy treacherously shot down our plane which peacefully bombed thier town". That was the bias likewise yours:)).


64 posted on 10/17/2006 2:52:47 AM PDT by RusIvan ("THINK!" the motto of IBM)
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To: RusIvan

65 posted on 10/17/2006 2:55:30 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: M. Espinola

"The move could lead toward broader U.S. dollar weakness," said Mark Meadows, a strategist at the currency-trading company Tempus Consulting in Washington."

Putin is soooo good to US....==

Why you so sour?:). Accually the weaker dollar then it is easier to pay America' debts and more competitive the american goods became.


66 posted on 10/17/2006 2:57:04 AM PDT by RusIvan ("THINK!" the motto of IBM)
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To: GBA

Going into a neighboring country and capturing their soldiers is not the same as a country arresting foreigners spying while in that country.==

Just what if some country in which USA has the military base will arrest 4 american officers say captains or leutanats then acussed them with spying and throw them to thir zindan.
I predict the very sharp reaction from USA maybe rescue mission or something.

Because the capture of one country the military personel of another country were always the act of war.


67 posted on 10/17/2006 3:01:19 AM PDT by RusIvan ("THINK!" the motto of IBM)
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To: MarMema

Watch the video.==

It is all good. But tell me what if Akhazians and Oseetians do not wnat Georgian progress on them? They will defend themselves with weapons.
They already did it once when in 1992 Georgians started the ethnic wars on them.
Now you propose the new wars?


68 posted on 10/17/2006 3:04:30 AM PDT by RusIvan ("THINK!" the motto of IBM)
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To: RusIvan

Why on earth would the Abkhaz choose Russia over Georgia?
I know they lean that direction, but it seems incredible to me to make sure a choice.


69 posted on 10/17/2006 3:09:05 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: M. Espinola
But you got to remember that there is more U.S dollars in circulation in the ex-Soviet states than there is in the U.S. I don't think it would be a wise move to play monopoly with the U.S.dollar.
On a visit to the Ukraine when shopping in Kiev I could get a 25% discount against the hryvnia marked price at most stores when paying in dollar bills. I also remember seeing long queues of hundreds of people in Moscow at money changing machines, this was when the U.S. changed the series of the dollar bills, these machines ( I believe the only ones in the world )only changed old series notes for new ones.
70 posted on 10/17/2006 3:26:14 AM PDT by jerryem (This is my belief,,,you don't like it? OK I have others.)
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To: MarMema

It is all about wine, if Georgia stopped exporting, the "Russian Ruling Classes" would have to drink chemical wine (French)
Georgia, home of the best red wine in the world.


71 posted on 10/17/2006 3:37:04 AM PDT by jerryem (This is my belief,,,you don't like it? OK I have others.)
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To: jerryem
I am drinking some right now!! What a coincidence. Muzakani, I think it is called, a dry red.

But yes, I agree. I tasted it first in Georgia in the church and was amazed at how wonderful it is.

Buy Georgian wine! They need our support to stay afloat.

72 posted on 10/17/2006 3:49:26 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: jerryem

You know, don't you, that Russia banned Georgian wine in Russia now?


73 posted on 10/17/2006 3:51:05 AM PDT by MarMema
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To: MarMema

Why on earth would the Abkhaz choose Russia over Georgia? ==

It is simple. Because in 1992 Georgians started the ethnic war with Akhazies. They killed and maimed thousands of Akhazies. This blood isn't being forgotten today.
Akhazies returned in kind and expelled all Georgians (and killed many of them too) but always those are guilty who started the war in first place.

DO you conviniently forget the recent history? 1992 isn't far back. I don't speak about more longer history at all. For example about Stalin attached Akhazia to Georgia by tyranical dictate.
It is strange when Georgians comdemns soviet dictatorship but support soviet dictator established borders, isn't it?


74 posted on 10/17/2006 4:30:35 AM PDT by RusIvan ("THINK!" the motto of IBM)
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To: MarMema

You know, don't you, that Russia banned Georgian wine in Russia now?==

Russia banned the "fecal mass" instead of wine. Georgian minister Okurashvilli admitted that the quality of those liquid which they exported to Russia is beneath contempt.

When Georgia will ready to export the quality product then Russian will accept it.


75 posted on 10/17/2006 4:34:13 AM PDT by RusIvan ("THINK!" the motto of IBM)
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To: MarMema

>
I am drinking some right now!! What a coincidence. Muzakani, I think it is called, a dry red.

But yes, I agree. I tasted it first in Georgia in the church and was amazed at how wonderful it is.

Buy Georgian wine! They need our support to stay afloat.
>

8))


76 posted on 10/17/2006 5:02:52 AM PDT by Semargl
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To: MarMema
I just read your drinking wine, well whats good for the goose is good for the gander, I did have 7 bottles now I got 6.
A plate of fresh spinach mixed with jalapenos Georgian wine, what do Muslims know about paradise?
77 posted on 10/17/2006 8:35:46 AM PDT by jerryem (This is my belief,,,you don't like it? OK I have others.)
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To: MarMema

I just read your drinking wine, well whats good for the goose is good for the gander, I did have 7 bottles now I got 6.
A plate of fresh spinch mixed with jalapineo's Georgian wine, what do Muslims know about paradise?


78 posted on 10/17/2006 8:38:40 AM PDT by jerryem (This is my belief,,,you don't like it? OK I have others.)
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To: jerryem

see what happens when your still asleep, do it twouble.


79 posted on 10/17/2006 8:40:29 AM PDT by jerryem (This is my belief,,,you don't like it? OK I have others.)
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To: jerryem

Too bad I went to bed. We could have toasted via the internet.


80 posted on 10/17/2006 1:41:04 PM PDT by MarMema
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