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Oranges and lemons perturb Putin

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  • Oranges and lemons perturb Putin

    Oranges and lemons perturb Putin
    by Jeremy Page

    The Times (London)
    February 19, 2005, Saturday

    A MAP of the former Soviet Union must be a troubling, if not colourful,
    sight for a former KGB officer such as Vladimir Putin as he prepares
    for a summit with President Bush next week (Jeremy Page writes).

    Since Mr Putin became President of Russia in 2000, the United States
    has relentlessly encroached on Moscow's sphere of influence in
    Eastern Europe, the Caucasus and Central Asia. First the conflict in
    Afghanistan brought US troops to Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan. Then the
    Rose Revolution swept a Western-minded liberal into power in Georgia in
    2003. Within a few months the US was training Georgian special forces.

    Next Nato fighter jets arrived in the former Soviet republic of
    Lithuania after its accession to the alliance in 2004. And late last
    year Russia lost its foothold in Ukraine when the Western-leaning
    liberal Viktor Yushchenko came to power.

    But the erosion of Russia's strategic orbit does not stop there,
    analysts say. They are predicting a series of copycat "revolutions"
    in Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Armenia and, possibly, Kazakhstan that will
    dash for good Mr Putin's aspirations to reassert Moscow's influence
    over its former empire.

    The Russian media have even come up with names for future revolutions:
    grape for Moldova; apricot for Armenia; aubergine for Azerbaijan;
    and amber for the tiny Russian enclave of Kaliningrad.

    One of the places they are not predicting revolution is in Russia
    itself, where Mr Putin recently abolished direct elections for
    regional governors.
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