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RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly - 09/10/2004

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  • RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly - 09/10/2004

    RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
    _________________________________________ ____________________
    RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly
    Vol. 4, No. 35, 10 September 2004

    A Weekly Review of News and Analysis of Russian Domestic Politics

    ************************************************** **********
    HEADLINES:
    * ORGANIZING SPONTANEITY
    * THE KREMLIN'S REACTION: STAY THE COURSE
    * THE KREMLIN AFTER BESLAN
    ************************************************** **********

    KREMLIN/WHITE HOUSE

    ORGANIZING SPONTANEITY

    By Julie A. Corwin

    If the "Kursk" submarine disaster of August 2000 caused a
    short-term dip in President Vladimir Putin's popularity, it's
    not difficult to imagine that the trio of terrorists acts in the past
    three weeks might also erode -- if only temporarily -- the 70
    percent-plus approval ratings of Russia's commander in chief.
    After all, Putin came to power promising to "rub out" Chechen
    terrorists in the outhouse. Now, he -- rather than they -- appears to
    be on the run.
    Although Putin's popularity may suffer, it's not
    clear that any other politician or party will benefit. The response
    to the events from Russia's weakened political parties has
    largely been confined to the issuing of public statements. It was the
    Kremlin and regional authorities, after all, and not the political
    opposition, who organized the nationwide "protest" against terrorism
    held on 7 September. Writing in "Izvestiya" the same day, commentator
    Aleksandr Arkhangelskii noted that while formally the trade unions
    organized the gathering of more than 100,000 people in central Moscow
    to express support of the people of Beslan, it was "understood" that
    they were simply stand-ins for the authorities.
    Similarly in other cities, regional youth organizations were
    nominally listed as the organizers for protests, when in fact it was
    regional officials who were arranging the events, frequently by
    resorting to "traditional organizational methods," "Nezavisimaya
    gazeta" reported on 8 September. And, if "Vedomosti's" reporting
    on 8 September is correct, deputy presidential-administration head
    Vladislav Surkov deserves the real credit, since he reportedly
    orchestrated the series of antiterrorist rallies on the
    president's orders. Surkov is widely credited for overseeing
    Unified Russia's victory in the December 2003 State Duma
    election.
    Writing in "Izvestiya," Arkhangelskii asked, "Why does our
    opposition prefer to tearfully complain about the Kremlin, but does
    not summon the people even when they would follow?" He continued,
    "Yes, the authorities would not allow meetings with antigovernment
    slogans...[but] what if [we] were simply silent, standing shoulder to
    shoulder, elbow to elbow, demonstrating to ourselves and to our hated
    enemy and that [we] are not afraid? And, afterwards having revived
    their trust and rallied potential voters, the opposition could
    organize an antigovernment meeting under less dramatic
    circumstances."
    Arkhangelskii answers his own question by pointing to the
    personal shortcomings of individual liberal politicians. While those
    may be contributing factors, another possibility is that the law on
    public demonstrations and street rallies is already having its
    intended effect. According to the new law, relevant authorities must
    be notified no more than 15 days and no less than 10 days before an
    event, which means that the organizers of the 7 September rally
    against terrorism should have applied for permission sometime between
    22 and 27 August -- before the seizure of the school in Beslan even
    began, "Kommersant-Daily" noted on 8 September. However,
    mayoral-administration officials denied that any regulations had been
    violated in order for the event to be held, and Moscow trade-union
    leader Mikhail Nagaitsev told the daily that the meeting was
    originally going to be held just to commemorate the 25 August
    collision of the two airplanes that resulted in 90 deaths. However,
    the Club for Heroes of the Soviet Union, which was another one of the
    formal organizers of the event, told the daily that it learned of the
    meeting only on 6 September.
    The political opposition not only lacks the assurance that
    legal officials will look the other way when it comes to completing
    the necessary paperwork on time to hold a demonstration, they also
    lack the "administrative resources" necessary to ensure a good
    turnout. According to gazeta.ru on 7 September, railway workers,
    medical-establishment employees, and students at higher educational
    institutions were all "tasked" with attending the 7 September protest
    against terror. According to "Kommersant-Daily" on 8 September, the
    police helpfully rearranged protesters so that persons bearing the
    same signs wouldn't be standing next to one another.
    The irony is that all the arm-twisting and heavy-handed
    organizing may not have been completely necessary. "Vedomosti"
    reported that some people came to the rally in Moscow simply because
    they couldn't stay home and watch TV. And "Nezavisimaya gazeta"
    noted that many residents of St. Petersburg of their own accord
    burned candles in their windows in memory of the victims of Beslan.
    At the demonstration, everyone cried, even men, especially when two
    large screens showed fresh news from Beslan.
    Pollsters will soon measure how and whether Putin's
    popularity has been affected by Beslan. A longer-lasting effect of
    the recent wave of terrorism than a movement up or down in
    Putin's approval rating may be a further expansion of the state
    on the pretext of preventing new terrorist acts. Sverdlovsk Governor
    Eduard Rossel, a recent convert to the cause of the Unified Russia
    party, suggested at a press conference in Yekaterinburg on 6
    September that like Americans, Russians are ready to give up part of
    their rights for greater safety, "Novyi region" reported on 6
    September. Rossel said: "We are ready to limit our rights in the name
    of the security of our children. Today we say: less political
    intrigues, more security. Society is ready to grant the president
    additional powers in the struggle against terrorism." And with
    additional powers and an even stronger state, President Putin may
    find public opinion less and less relevant.


    WAR ON TERROR

    THE KREMLIN'S REACTION: STAY THE COURSE

    By Robert Coalson

    Nearly a week after the horrifying denouement of the hostage
    crisis at a school in North Ossetia, the Russian government seems to
    have formulated its response, a reaction that is characterized by
    bolstering the mechanisms the administration of President Vladimir
    Putin has installed over the last five years, rather than by any
    perceptible change of course. Putin and other officials have,
    predictably, ruled out any softening of the government's policies
    in Chechnya, going so far as to deny that there is any connection
    between the situation in the breakaway republic and the Beslan
    hostage crisis. "Just imagine that people who shoot children in the
    back came to power anywhere on our planet," Putin told Western
    journalists and experts during a Kremlin meeting on 7 September,
    Russian media reported. "Just ask yourself that and you will have no
    more questions about our policy in Chechnya."
    He pledged that the Kremlin will proceed with its policy of
    installing a new administration in Chechnya. "We will strengthen law
    enforcement by staffing the police with Chechens and gradually
    withdraw our troops to barracks, and leave as small a contingent
    there as we feel necessary, just like the United States does in
    California and Texas," Putin said. On 9 September, the government
    announced a $10 million reward for Chechen President Aslan Maskhadov
    and for radical field commander Shamil Basaev, formally assigning the
    two men equal culpability for the Beslan events and seeming to
    destroy any remaining hope that the government might choose to
    consider Maskhadov an acceptable partner in the search for a
    political solution in the republic.
    Having ruled out a change of course in this area, the Putin
    administration has focused on containing the public and political
    reaction to the events, which have been widely viewed as a failure of
    the administration in the very area -- security -- that it came to
    power promising to prioritize. The administration cannot help but be
    stung by comparisons between the latest series of terrorist attacks
    -- in which well over 400 people have been killed, including the 90
    who died when two civilian airliners were blown up on 24 August --
    with the fall of 1999, when more than 200 people were killed in a
    series of apartment-building bombings in several Russian cities and
    Chechen militants launched a major incursion into neighboring
    Daghestan. Putin was elected in large part because of his tough talk
    in response to those events and widespread public insecurity.
    Now, of course, the administration is doing everything it can
    to make the claim that the latest incidents are not a continuation of
    this violence, but the launching of a new war against Russia by
    unspecified outside forces that are backed by other unspecified
    outside forces. The administration so far has been more proactive in
    responding to the potential for a political crisis created by the
    Beslan events than in responding to that attack itself.
    Measures have been taken to keep the public focused on the
    tragedy of the events and on the need for ever greater unity, themes
    that Putin stressed during his 4 September speech to the country.
    "This is not a challenge to the president, parliament, or
    government," Putin said. "It is a challenge to all of Russia, to our
    entire people." He called on people to show their "responsibility as
    citizens" and said Russia is stronger than the terrorists because of
    "our sense of solidarity." The wave of government-orchestrated public
    demonstrations against terrorism in Moscow, St. Petersburg, and other
    cities was the most visible of these efforts, with the administration
    marshalling its control of national television and of the
    quasi-independent Federation of Trade Unions to bring out good
    crowds. Only a few voices, such as that of Free Russia leader Irina
    Khakamada, could be heard pointing out that a spontaneous
    demonstration would have been more satisfying.
    On the political level, the Kremlin-linked leftist
    "opposition" party Motherland has called for the resignation of the
    government in response to Beslan, a move that takes some of the
    pressure off of Putin. If truly independent forces in the Duma such
    as the Communist Party insist on forcing a discussion of the
    terrorist attacks, Motherland and Unified Russia will easily be able
    to make sure the spotlight remains on the cabinet and not on the
    administration. Although such a turn of events is highly unlikely,
    even the resignations of some cabinet members would not be perceived
    as a personal defeat for Putin, since the current government has been
    widely billed as a "technical government" intended to implement and
    take the heat for painful reforms such as the recently adopted
    social-benefits bill.
    Perhaps the most telling example of how the government used
    the tools at its disposal to protect itself is how deftly the
    security forces were apparently able to deal with journalistic
    threats to the regime, as opposed to their less-stellar protection of
    civilians from terrorists. "Novaya gazeta" reporter Anna
    Politkovskaya and RFE/RL correspondent Andrei Babitskii, both of whom
    have long been considered by the Kremlin to be sympathetic to the
    Chechen cause, were both intercepted well before they got anywhere
    near Beslan and entirely prevented from reporting on the crisis.
    Babitskii was arrested on trumped-up charges in a Moscow airport,
    while Politkovskaya was apparently poisoned on a flight to
    Rostov-na-Donu, spending the rest of the crisis in a local hospital.
    In these cases, the security organs, the police, and the courts seem
    to have worked in close coordination to prevent any damage to the
    Kremlin's image or version of reality.
    The Kremlin's response to Beslan is predictable, given
    the instruments of management that it has strengthened and cultivated
    over the past five years. Other instruments -- independent political
    parties, judiciary, mass media, and public organizations -- might
    have produced a significant change in political course, or perhaps
    even a significant crisis of stability. Instead, the
    administration's control of the security organs, law enforcement,
    the mass media, public debate, and the political process predetermine
    that its focus will be on managing the perception of the crisis first
    of all. And the more the foundations of that system are shaken by the
    events, the more the administration will bolster its control over
    those instruments, ensuring a policy that amounts to nothing more
    than "more of the same."
    Of course, the security situation in Chechnya and the North
    Caucasus in general will have to be addressed. But that response will
    not take into consideration calls for a real political process there
    to replace the sham of stage-managed referendums and elections and
    the facade of local administrations that is fully controlled by the
    Kremlin. It will not take into consideration calls for an end to
    human rights violations by federal forces in Chechnya: when asked
    about this during his 7 September meeting with Western journalists,
    Putin compared them to the events at Iraq's Abu Ghurayb prison,
    saying, "In war there are ugly processes that have their own logic."
    It will not take into consideration the widely perceived need to root
    out the corruption that has almost certainly played a role in every
    major terrorist incident Russia has faced in recent years.
    Instead, the Kremlin will most likely rely on its control of
    society, of information, and of the political process to cover up an
    intensification of the military policies it has pursued in Chechnya
    for most of the post-Soviet period. The information blockade of the
    republic will be redoubled and the seemingly endless "antiterrorism
    operation" there will continue. But these policies are not without
    their risks. "There is fear if no one knows the truth," Khakamada
    told "The Moscow Times" on 8 September. "If people don't
    understand, it makes it easier for terrorists to buy people off. If
    we are slaves, it is easier for them to recruit. The more things are
    pushed underground, the better it is for the terrorists."


    THE KREMLIN AFTER BESLAN

    By Victor Yasmann

    President Vladimir Putin on 4 September appeared in a
    nationally televised address in the wake of the bloodiest terrorism
    incident in modern Russian history. He linked the takeover of a
    school in Beslan and the deaths of hundreds of schoolchildren,
    parents, and teachers to a series of other terrorist incidents that
    have rocked the country since 24 August, including the 24 August
    downing of two jet airliners and the 31 August suicide bombing
    outside a Moscow subway station. In all, more than 400 people were
    killed in less than 10 days.
    "What we are dealing with are not isolated acts intended to
    frighten us, not isolated terrorist attacks," Putin said, according
    to the text posted on the presidential website
    (http://www.kremlin.ru). "What we are facing is the direct
    intervention of international terrorism directed against Russia." He
    added that the entire country is now engaged in "a total, cruel, and
    full-scale war."
    Putin admitted that the country has been victimized by
    terrorism because of its weakness. "We showed ourselves to be weak,"
    he said. "And the weak get beaten." He went on to say that this
    weakness was a result of the collapse of the Soviet Union -- an event
    about which Putin expressed some regret -- as well as Russia's
    inadequate defenses and pervasive corruption in the justice and
    law-enforcement systems.
    Putin also made several far-reaching statements that seem to
    be a notable departure from his general policy of deferring to the
    West and speaking of the need for cooperation with the United States
    in combating international terrorism. For the first time in several
    years, Putin said that Russia faces threats "both from the east and
    the west." Without specifically mentioning Chechnya or his own
    policies in the Caucasus, Putin seemed to place the blame for the
    increased terrorist activity in Russia on unspecified outside forces
    that are threatened by Russia's nuclear-power status. "Some would
    like to tear from us a juicy chunk," Putin said. "Others help them.
    They help, reasoning that Russia still remains one of the world's
    major nuclear powers, and as such still represents a threat to them.
    And so they reason that this threat should be removed. Terrorism, of
    course, is just an instrument to achieve these aims." Because
    Russia's nuclear arsenal is targeted primarily at the United
    States, Putin seemed to be referring directly to that country.
    However, does this really reflect the way Putin thinks? As a
    former intelligence officer and a well-informed political leader, he
    knows that the West has little reason to worry that Russia's
    nuclear weapons would be used in the current international
    environment. The West is concerned, of course, that Russia's
    nuclear arsenal could be a tempting target for international
    terrorists who are actively striving to acquire weapons of mass
    destruction. These concerns are increased by the weak and corrupt
    law-enforcement system that Putin describes.
    It would seem, then, that Putin's statements about
    external forces working against Russia through terrorists were
    addressed to his domestic audience, in an effort to avoid political
    responsibility for the failure of his policies in Chechnya and the
    Caucasus. He also undoubtedly wishes to avoid forcing his beloved
    state-security organs to be accountable for this stark failure to
    protect Russian citizens. The externalization of culpability is often
    a defense of those in weak positions.
    Effective Politics Foundation head and Kremlin insider Gleb
    Pavlovskii told RTR on 6 September that during the Beslan siege the
    present political system demonstrated its uselessness because no
    political parties or politicians raised their voices against "the
    lies that overflowed the whole country."
    Another Kremlin insider, National Strategy Institute head
    Stanislav Belkovskii, told RFE/RL on 7 September that the Kremlin
    administration was seized by panic and dismay during the crisis, as
    reflected by numerous conflicting statements from Russian officials
    during this time.
    The Beslan crisis has highlighted the failure of the
    Kremlin's policies in Chechnya, despite the concerted efforts of
    the Kremlin to deflect such considerations. Belkovskii noted that the
    Kremlin's policy in the region relies on pro-Moscow figures like
    Ingush President Murat Zyazikov and Chechen leader Alu Alkhanov,
    figures who all but disappeared from public view during the crisis.
    The country's political parties -- on both ends of the
    political spectrum -- have only slowly been aroused from their
    lethargy and begun to criticize Putin's claims of external forces
    behind the wave of terror. In a statement posted on its website
    (http://www.kprf.ru) on 7 September, the Communist Party said, "The
    roots of the tragedy can be found not in 'international
    terrorism,' which is a convenient smokescreen for the drama, but
    inside the country."
    The Communist Party statement called for the resignation of
    the entire Russian leadership. "The Putin regime directs all its
    efforts toward the struggle with the [political] opposition, the
    suppression of the independent mass media, with producing the
    'required results' in elections, and the construction of a
    vertical of power that proved helpless during this crisis," the
    statement said. "Law enforcement has been transformed into an
    instrument for carrying out the authorities' political orders."
    Yabloko leader Grigorii Yavlinskii on 7 September also called
    for the resignation of the heads of the security organs and for the
    creation of an independent commission to investigate the terrorist
    attacks, grani.ru reported. The Motherland party similarly called for
    the resignation of the government and for disbanding the Duma, which
    it dismissed as "a rubber stamp," the website reported.
    Clearly, as the period of mourning recedes, many Russians are
    seeing the real face of the country's leadership in a whole new
    light.

    POLITICAL CALENDAR

    8 September: Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmad Qurei will visit Russia

    10-11 September: President Putin will visit Germany

    12 September: Federation Council Chairman Sergei Mironov will
    visit North Korea

    13-14 September: Fourth annual meeting of the Russian Jewish Congress

    14 September: British Prince Edward, Earl of Wessex, will
    visit Petrozavodsk

    14-17 September: Third annual Baikal Economic Forum will take place

    15 September: Summit of CIS presidents will take place in
    Astana, Kazakhstan

    15 September: Russia will play supervisory role at OPEC
    meeting in Vienna

    15-18 September: The third International Conference of Mayors
    of World Cities will be held in Moscow

    15 September: Supreme Court will render a final decision on
    when to hold gubernatorial elections in Samara Oblast

    20 September: The State Duma's fall session will begin

    20-23 September: South Korean President Roh Moo Hyun to visit
    Russia

    21 September: U.S. pianist Van Cliburn will perform a concert
    in Moscow in memory of the victims of the Beslan tragedy

    26 September: State Duma will consider draft 2005 budget in
    its first reading

    29 September: Auction for the government's stake in LUKoil will be
    held

    October: President Putin will visit China

    October: International forum of the Organization of the
    Islamic Conference will be held in Moscow

    1 October: Deadline for population to select a management
    company to handle their pension monies, according to
    "Kommersant-Daily" on 3 September

    1 October: Date by which the government will decide whether
    to sell a controlling stake in Aeroflot, according to Economic
    Development and Trade Minister German Gref

    7 October: President Putin's birthday

    10 October: Mayoral elections scheduled for Magadan

    23-26 October: Second anniversary of the Moscow theater
    hostage crisis

    25 October: First anniversary of former Yukos head Mikhail
    Khodorkovskii's arrest at an airport in Novosibirsk

    31 October: Presidential election in Ukraine

    November: Gubernatorial election in Pskov and Kurgan oblasts

    14 November: Mayoral election will take place in Blagoveshchensk

    20 November: Sixth anniversary of the killing of State Duma
    Deputy Galina Starovoitova

    22 November: President Putin to visit Brazil

    December: A draft law on toll roads will be submitted to the
    government, according to the Federal Highways Agency's
    Construction Department on 6 April

    December: Gubernatorial elections in Vladimir, Bryansk, Kamchatka,
    Ulyanovsk, and Volgograd oblasts; Khabarovsk Krai; and
    Ust-Ordynskii Autonomous Okrug

    December: Presidential elections in Marii-El and Khakasia republics

    5 December: By-elections for State Duma seats will be held in
    two single-mandate districts in Ulyanovsk and Moscow

    5 December: Gubernatorial election will be held in Astrakhan Oblast

    29 December: State Duma's fall session will come to a close

    1 February 2005: Former President Boris Yeltsin's 74th birthday

    March 2005: Gubernatorial election in Saratov Oblast.

    ************************************************** *******
    Copyright (c) 2004. RFE/RL, Inc. All rights reserved.

    The "RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly" is prepared by Julie A. Corwin
    on the basis of a variety of sources. It is distributed every
    Wednesday.

    Direct comments to Julie A. Corwin at [email protected].
    For information on reprints, see:
    http://www.rferl.org/about/content/request.asp
    Back issues are online at http://www.rferl.org/reports/rpw/

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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