[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

Kamala Harris, reparations, and guaranteed income

Did Mudboy Slim finally kill this place?

"Why Young Americans Are Not Taught about Evil"

"New Rules For Radicals — How To Reinvent Kamala Harris"

"Harris’ problem: She’s a complete phony"

Hurricane Beryl strikes Bay City (TX)

Who Is ‘Destroying Democracy In Darkness?’

‘Kamalanomics’ is just ‘Bidenomics’ but dumber

Even The Washington Post Says Kamala's 'Price Control' Plan is 'Communist'

Arthur Ray Hines, "Sneakypete", has passed away.

No righT ... for me To hear --- whaT you say !

"Walz’s Fellow Guardsmen Set the Record Straight on Veep Candidate’s Military Career: ‘He Bailed Out’ "

"Kamala Harris Selects Progressive Minnesota Governor Tim Walz as Running Mate"

"The Teleprompter Campaign"

Good Riddance to Ismail Haniyeh

"Pagans in Paris"

"Liberal groupthink makes American life creepy and could cost Democrats the election".

"Enter Harris, Stage Lef"t

Official describes the moment a Butler officer confronted the Trump shooter

Jesse Watters: Don’t buy this excuse from the Secret Service

Video shows Trump shooter crawling into position while folks point him out to law enforcement

Eyewitness believes there was a 'noticeable' difference in security at Trump's rally

Trump Assassination Attempt

We screamed for 3 minutes at police and Secret Service. They couldn’t see him, so they did nothing. EYEWITNESS SPEAKS OUT — I SAW THE ASSASSIN CRAWLING ACROSS THE ROOF.

Video showing the Trump Rally shooter dead on the rooftop

Court Just Nailed Hillary in $6 Million FEC Violation Case, 45x Bigger Than Trump's $130k So-Called Violation

2024 Republican Platform Drops Gun-Rights Promises

Why will Kamala Harris resign from her occupancy of the Office of Vice President of the USA? Scroll down for records/details

Secret Negotiations! Jill Biden’s Demands for $2B Library, Legal Immunity, and $100M Book Deal to Protect Biden Family Before Joe’s Exit

AI is exhausting the power grid. Tech firms are seeking a miracle solution.

If you need a Good Opening for black, use this.

"Arrogant Hunter Biden has never been held accountable — until now"

How Republicans in Key Senate Races Are Flip-Flopping on Abortion

Idaho bar sparks fury for declaring June 'Heterosexual Awesomeness Month' and giving free beers and 15% discounts to straight men

Son of Buc-ee’s co-owner indicted for filming guests in the shower and having sex. He says the law makes it OK.

South Africa warns US could be liable for ICC prosecution for supporting Israel

Today I turned 50!

San Diego Police officer resigns after getting locked in the backseat with female detainee

Gazan Refugee Warns the World about Hamas

Iranian stabbed for sharing his faith, miraculously made it across the border without a passport!

Protest and Clashes outside Trump's Bronx Rally in Crotona Park

Netanyahu Issues Warning To US Leaders Over ICC Arrest Warrants: 'You're Next'

Will it ever end?

Did Pope Francis Just Call Jesus a Liar?

Climate: The Movie (The Cold Truth) Updated 4K version

There can never be peace on Earth for as long as Islamic Sharia exists

The Victims of Benny Hinn: 30 Years of Spiritual Deception.

Trump Is Planning to Send Kill Teams to Mexico to Take Out Cartel Leaders

The Great Falling Away in the Church is Here | Tim Dilena

How Ridiculous? Blade-Less Swiss Army Knife Debuts As Weapon Laws Tighten


Status: Not Logged In; Sign In

International News
See other International News Articles

Title: Head to Head in Moscow Power Play
Source: Wall Street Journal
URL Source: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100 ... 3551304576261040289862376.html
Published: Apr 14, 2011
Author: GEOFFREY T. SMITH
Post Date: 2011-04-14 01:18:16 by A K A Stone
Keywords: None
Views: 355
Comments: 1

Over the past few weeks, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has publicly rebuked his Prime Minister Vladimir Putin over Libya, distanced himself from Mr. Putin's model of state capitalism and now, on Chinese television of all places, dared to suggest that his mentor is stuck in the past, and that he himself is the better man to steer Russia for the next six years.

Meanwhile, over at the White House, deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin, the architect of Mikhail Khodorkovsky's downfall and a man widely perceived both inside and outside Russia as Mr. Putin's strong right arm, is facing at least a tactical defeat, if not a strategic one, at the hands of a trio of oligarchs over a flagship project to develop oil resources in the Arctic Ocean.

What is going on? Certainly, capital flight of $21 billion in the first quarter of the year suggests some very real uncertainty on the part of those who have accumulated assets under the current regime.

Capital flight aside, it's easier to say what is not going on. As much as anything can be sure in the world of Russian politics, there is no likelihood of Mr. Medvedev running off in open competition against Mr. Putin in next year's presidential elections. The men are political intimates and have been for a decade. There is a bond of trust between them that would be remarkable in any country's leading politicians.

Another thing that is not changing is Mr. Putin's seniority in the partnership, at least not immediately, and not to any degree that makes a jot of difference to the safety of foreign investments in Russia.

There is, probably, also no change in the relative realities of power and office in Russia. Mr. Putin, for the past four years, has not needed to be in the Kremlin to exercise effective supreme power. Whether, after 2012, Mr. Putin is in the Kremlin and Mr. Medvedev is in the White House, or the other way around, is of limited importance. They will continue to exercise real power.

The only change that one can be truly sure of is a generational one, and this will be a very gradual one.

Russian political cycles have tended to be longer than those in western Europe. Its transition from centrally-planned, autarkic and dysfunctional empire to a more pluralistic, modern and dynamic element of a multi-polar world is lasting decades.

Even if it has been inevitably buffeted by external events and retarded by misjudgments and creeping venality, that process is Mr. Putin's life mission.

He knows that, at some stage, control of a 20-year project will have to pass to another generation.

Mr. Putin took power, after all, at the relatively young age of 47, allowing him a realistic shot at a 20-year career at the top of the power structure.

For a decade, he led a national-conservative counter-revolution with extraordinary energy and success, stamping his and his allies' outlook on the political, economic and cultural life of his country.

There was little room, in those years, for the toleration of dissent. The oligarchs and regional governors who had seized wealth in the 1990s, Mikhail Khodorkovsky included, were no more scrupulous about democracy and the rule of law than the Putin clique was.

But Mr. Putin has never been a one-dimensional tyrant of the Mugabe or Gadhafi type. Having spent his formative years watching gerontocratic totalitarian states collapse around him, he knows what happens in countries that don't allow political competition.

It is conspicuous that many of the "siloviki" who dominated Russian life in Mr. Putin's Kremlin years between 2000-2008— Sergei Chemezov, Viktor Ivanov, Alexander Bastrykin, Vladimir Ustinov, Sergei Ivanov, Viktor Cherkesov, Nikolai Patrushev and Alexander Bortnikov—are all between 58 and 61 years of age.

At some point, all of them, Mr. Putin included, will put more value on a comfortable and lengthy retirement than on fighting every day for political supremacy.

Mr. Putin will need a succession strategy, and one that can guarantee the necessary popular consent.

This is why Mr. Putin has only bent the democratic process, not broken it completely. This is why constitutional niceties will continue to be observed, even if for much of the time they are made mock of by the "legal nihilism" of which Mr. Medvedev complains.

And this what makes Mr. Medvedev a pivotal figure in the evolution of Russia's political class. He is, in Mr. Putin's eyes, a pole around which a more liberal, but still loyal, counterweight to the national-conservative power bloc can coalesce over time.

But for that to happen, Mr. Medvedev needs credibility, and that has been hard to win in a country acutely attuned to the realities of power.

Ominously for the succession strategy, Mr. Medvedev's popularity ratings have been falling faster than Mr. Putin's since last year's routine disasters with drought and forest fires. He is facing an uphill struggle to mobilize voters who have long grasped the reality of the electoral process under Mr. Putin.

Over the next six months, Mr. Medvedev somehow needs to be able to show to the Russian people, and to the younger elements of government, that he can make a difference, without scaring the old elite that he is making it too quickly.

The funny thing is, although the capital flight suggests heavily that the old guard is indeed scared, there is scant visible evidence so far that there is anything to be afraid of.

There may be more material concessions to the liberal wing in the offing. But it would be a major surprise for them to be a serious challenge to the old guard's pre-eminence.

Write to Geoffrey T. Smith at geoffrey.smith@dowjones.com

Post Comment   Private Reply   Ignore Thread  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

#1. To: All (#0)

http://www.nytimes.com/2011/04/14/world/europe/14russia.html

A K A Stone  posted on  2011-04-14   1:21:35 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


TopPage UpFull ThreadPage DownBottom/Latest

[Home]  [Headlines]  [Latest Articles]  [Latest Comments]  [Post]  [Mail]  [Sign-in]  [Setup]  [Help]  [Register] 

Please report web page problems, questions and comments to webmaster@libertysflame.com