Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Press conference with political analyst Belkovsky

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Press conference with political analyst Belkovsky

    Official Kremlin Int'l News Broadcast
    May 17, 2005 Tuesday

    PRESS CONFERENCE WITH POLITICAL ANALYST STANISLAV BELKOVSKY

    RIA NOVOSTI, 11:30, MAY 17, 2005

    Moderator: Good day, and welcome to RIA Novosti press club. The topic
    today is the timetable of post-Soviet revolutions and the threat of
    the disintegration of Russia. Before I give the floor to our speaker
    today, I will commit myself to quote a study of the American-Israeli
    analytical center, Stratfor. You are probably aware of this study
    which was distributed just recently. It says, among other things,
    the situation is fast becoming hopeless for Russia. The itinerary
    of President Bush's trips on the eve of Victory Day -- first stop in
    the Baltics and then, Georgia immediately after Moscow -- was meant
    to dot all the i's. Was there an attempt to compare the occupation
    of the Baltics by the Soviet Union to the Nazi occupation along with
    the statement of the Bush administration officials that with the fall
    of Hitler infringement upon its interests stopped. All this rhetoric
    is intended to put Russia on the defensive. Russia's decline and the
    use of that situation by the US marked a watershed. If Moscow has lost
    Ukraine, Georgia becomes the dominant country in the Caucasus and the
    events in Kyrgyzstan spill over to the whole of Central Asia -- all
    this can easily be imagined, by the way, the report was distributed
    before the developments in Andizhan, Uzbekistan -- the survival of
    Russia itself will obviously be in question. We will witness part of
    the Russian Federation dissociate itself from it. The Russia we know
    today will no longer exist.

    This is a lurid forecast for Russia.

    And our guest today is Stanislav Belkovsky, founder of the National
    Strategy Institute, will comment on this view.

    Belkovsky: Good afternoon. First of all, I would like to speak about
    post-Soviet revolutions, their nature, content and the forecast
    of further development in the former Union of Soviet Socialist
    Republics. I must say that the official position of the presidential
    administration is that the revolutions have been inspired from outside,
    in the first place by the United States. And therefore limiting the
    impact of these processes in various countries is key to preventing a
    revolutionary change of regime. That is, a replacement of the ruling
    cooperation with broad popular participation, with people taking to
    the streets, which in fact can be described as a typical post-Soviet
    revolution, departing from the Marxist idea of a revolution, its
    nature and content.

    At the same time the Kremlin is fully aware that this is not quite
    so. That this propaganda doctrine does not reflect reality. As someone
    who was deeply involved in the revolutionary events in Ukraine,
    I can attest that America, which in June 2004 pledged to Russia not
    to stand in the way of the electoral victory of Yanukovich, strictly
    abided by that pledge until November 2004. Starting from June 2004 it
    cut off financing of the Ukrainian opposition and on November 23 and
    November 30 of last year the US Ambassador to Ukraine did everything
    to prevent the rioters from occupying the buildings of the presidential
    administration and the cabinet of ministers of Ukraine, which was not a
    problem at all at the time. The security guards there were not ready to
    resist and they were ready to disperse, especially in the latter case.

    It was only when it became clear that the revolutionary processes
    were irreversible and that the incumbent President, Leonid Kuchma,
    had in fact lost his grip on power, and that Viktor Yanukovich would
    not become the president, that the US hastily recognized the new
    power thus displaying much more tactical prowess than Russia which
    until last labored under the illusion that Viktor Yanukovich would win.

    After analyzing the situation in Georgia and the Ukraine and in
    Kyrgyzstan and the mounting conflict in Uzbekistan which is just
    unfolding and it will climax within a year or two and its outcome
    will be not in favor of the incumbent President, Islam Karimov,
    and the emerging prerequisites for the change of regimes and ruling
    corporations in other CIS countries, the National Strategy Institute
    has formulated its concept of why revolutions arise.

    Of course, they arise due to internal causes. External influence
    is just one of the ten factors of revolution. And as I said at the
    beginning, we define a revolution as a radical change of the ruling
    corporation with broad popular participation. That's what makes
    a revolution different from a coup which is also threatening some
    CIS countries, of which I will say more. These ten factors are as
    follows. First, the clogging up of the channels of vertical mobility,
    young people are denied access to the ruling elite, society is unable
    to influence the authorities through legal political mechanisms.
    Secondly, the legitimacy gap. Unfortunately, the ruling elite in
    Russia today -- and this, by the way, was part of the problem with
    its assessment of events in Ukraine -- does not understand the nature
    of legitimacy which was brilliant described at the turn of the 20th
    century by Max Weber. Legitimacy is not a legal category. A protocol
    of the election commission confirming that you have been elected
    president is not enough for you to be recognized as a legitimate
    ruler. The fate of the Georgian parliament in 2003, the fate of
    Viktor Yanukovich in 2004, and the fate of the Kyrgyz parliament in
    2005 are eloquent proof of that.

    Legitimacy -- and this is a commonplace which the Kremlin for some
    reason ignores -- is a category of mass consciousness and it means
    the recognition by the people of the justice of the regime. It is
    not connected with the former legality of power, its election or
    emergence. Max Weber singled our three types of legitimacy: rational
    legitimacy, arising from the fact that the people recognizes a certain
    system of the transition of power; the traditional legitimacy,
    whereby the people and society recognize the transfer of power in
    the framework of tradition (the type of legitimacy characteristic of
    monarchies) and charismatic legitimacy in which the leader's right
    to rule the country is based on his charisma which, of course, is
    God-given and the charismatic leader is forgiven any departures from
    the law, from common sense and so on.

    So, when today analysts describe as irrational or inadequate the
    actions of, say, Saakashvili or Alexander Lukashenko, they discount
    this key factor of charismatic legitimacy. A charismatic leader can
    get away with much more than the bureaucratic mass and the gray crowd
    can get away with. In this sense, delegitimization of the regime, as
    happened in Ukraine and Kyrgyzia, occurred because all the three types
    of legitimacy are undermined. With the exception of Russia nowhere in
    the post-Soviet space is there traditional legitimacy. The tradition of
    Czarism existed only in Russia. All the other states were artificial
    entities created by Joseph Stalin and to a much lesser degree by
    Nikita Khrushchev through his manipulations with Soviet territory,
    entities that were not prepared to be independent states. The
    numerous ethnic and territorial conflicts in the post-Soviet space
    are due to artificial nature of post-Soviet borders. The inclusion of
    Karabakh into Azerbaijan, of the Crimea and another part of the Russian
    territory into Ukraine and so on; the artificial drawing of borders in
    Central Asia as manifested, among other things, in the Fergana Valley.

    So, post-Soviet regimes did not have traditional legitimacy. And
    in this respect, their legitimacy has always been quite doubtful
    in all post-Soviet countries except Russia. So, at a certain point
    the peoples of these countries understood that the Soviet Union was
    a thing of the past, that the period when they were part of another
    community had ended, and they were emerging as political nations. So,
    they started looking for legitimate authorities, whose legitimacy
    would be based either on charismatic or rational and rational-legal
    legitimacy. This is the main resource of revolutions.

    For example, the Leonid Kuchma regime was completely de- legitimized
    because people did not consider it fair. The same was with the
    Eduard Shevardnadze and the Askar Akayev regimes. The probability of
    revolution increases immensely in such a situation. At the same time,
    the current regimes created by Turkmenbashi or Alexander Lukashenko
    are legitimate to a large extent. They are legitimate charismatically
    and to a lesser degree from the rational and legal point of view. I
    will speak about this a bit later, but the probability of revolution
    in Belarus and Turkmenistan appears to be minimal at this point.

    The third factor is serious contradictions within the elites. In all
    countries where revolutions have occurred, we could see the split of
    the elite and its inability to follow an integral system of values,
    including national values.

    The fourth factor is the absence of a positive image of the future
    embodied by authorities. In this respect, any promise of stability
    offered by authorities work actually against the image of the
    future because the current situation and current stability are
    as a rule gloomy because it is positive stability for a fraction
    of a percentage of people, while for the overwhelming majority,
    more than 99 percent, in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan stability
    means hopelessness, in other words, the impossibility of any major
    improvement of their position, the impossibility of vertical social
    mobility, the impossibility of attempts to stop humiliation caused by
    the current situation. And I am talking not only about the financial
    status. What I mean is that a person cannot go beyond the provincial
    habitat into which he has been submerged by existing authorities.
    Ambitions to overcome these provincial borders are a key driving
    force for any person in public life and politics.

    The fifth factor is the opposition as a subject, and opposition
    leaders. Where such a subject exists, the change of ruling corporations
    is quite possible. And where it doesn't exist, prerequisites for such
    change are not there yet, as a minimum.

    The sixth factor is that authorities are not prepared to use force.
    And to a large extent this depends on two things: the commonness
    of goals for authorities and power structures. There was none in
    Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan. Power structures were subordinated
    to authorities only formally, and in a critical situation they made
    it clear that they would not obey orders to suppress public unrests.
    In Belarus, such commonness of goals is quite big.

    The seventh factor is the existence of unsolved regional and
    ethnic contradictions. In other words, in heterogeneous countries,
    both ethnically and regionally, different ethnic groups and clans,
    subterritories and substates can play a special role in the evolution,
    like in Kyrgyzstan where the southern clans were set against the
    northern clans.

    Now, the merger of bureaucracy -- the eighth factor is the merger
    of bureaucracy and the political class. This is a very dangerous
    trend because politics and bureaucracy are two different things.
    Bureaucracy is a rational class that has to implement a political
    program, while politics are largely based not on professionalism but
    on morals and appealing to the fundamental principles of the state
    system. If we take Ukraine, we could see that when bureaucrats became
    political leaders and began to embody political leadership in the
    ruling class, it meant a merger of bureaucracy and the political class,
    which always requires the formation of a new alternative political
    class outside the ruling bureaucracy.

    The ninth and the tenth factors are technical factors: external
    interest in the change of the regime. This is a factor but it is not
    a key or a critical one. It is only one of the 10 factors. Where
    America is interested in changing the regime, revolution is more
    probable, but only by several fractions of a percentage point, not
    two or three times. And the tenth factor is a crisis as a trigger
    of revolution: elections that are not considered fair or any other
    historical milestones.

    So, we have singled out three groups of countries in terms of
    the risk of revolution in these countries or the probability of
    revolution. The first group includes Armenia, Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan
    and Tajikistan. The probability of revolution in these countries in
    the foreseeable future is quite big. However, this does not mean that
    if the ruling classes refuse to extend their mandates, if they leave,
    revolutions may develop peacefully without excesses. If Armenian
    President Kocharyan or Kazakh President Nursultan Nazarbayev decides
    all of a sudden to leave, there will be no revolution.

    The second group includes Russia and Azerbaijan. And the third group
    includes Belarus and Turkmenistan. We think that revolutions in these
    countries are least probable. Using Belarus as an example and taking
    the 10 factors I have mentioned above, I would like to explain why
    we think so.

    Last week FSB director Nikolai Patrushev said the US was investing a
    certain amount of money, more than $10 million, in the Belarussian
    opposition. Given this and the condemnation of Belarus by the US,
    Ukraine, Georgia and so on, speculations about the inevitability
    of revolution increased. But we think it is not so because of the
    10 factors that lead to revolution and are necessary conditions and
    prerequisites for revolutions, only two exist in Belarus. One, partly,
    is blocked vertical mobility. But only partly. And external interests.

    The Belarussian regime has no deficit of legitimacy because
    Lukashenko's charismatic legitimacy is obvious. Moreover, to some
    extent Belarus had a revolution in 1994 when the post-Soviet regime
    left the stage because the post-Soviet regime was not the Lukashenko
    regime, it was the regime of Shushkevich and then of Kebich. So, we
    can see no serious contradictions within the elite. A positive image
    of the future is there. It's a neo-Soviet project that Lukashenko
    is implementing. We can see no strong opposition or its leaders. But
    we can see the full readiness of authorities to use force, and they
    have done so many times. In this respect, there is the unity of
    authorities and power structures. We can see no unsolved regional
    or ethnic contradictions. And we can see no signs of a crisis. If
    free elections were held in Belarus tomorrow, absolutely free of
    any manipulation and based on free access of political subjects to
    information and administrative resources, Alexander Lukashenko would
    win these elections, even not by a landslide.

    So, regimes like the Lukashenko regime or the Turkmenbashi regime can
    fall in two cases: if there is direct external intervention, and if
    there is a coup d'etat organized by the closest allies of the current
    rulers. Motives for such a coup always exist. And the main motive
    is to break the isolation because such regimes inevitably doom their
    loyal servants to international isolation, to certain isolation from
    the consumption society, globalization, the US system of values. And
    if the closest aides of a strong leader think that this isolation
    should be broken, leaders like Lukashenko or Turkmenbashi may be
    liquidated physically. In this case we can speak of a coup.

    However, we can't speak of any prerequisites for a revolution in
    these countries similar to those that occurred in Georgia, Ukraine,
    Kyrgyzstan or Uzbekistan. And the experts who think that a revolution
    in Belarus is probable in fact are thinking on the same lines as the
    Kremlin experts who attach far too much importance to the influence
    of the United States on processes happening in the world and in the
    post-Soviet space.

    Basically, the role of the United States consists in taking over from
    Russia the status of a regional power. In 1990s, after the break up
    of the Soviet Union, Russia was a classic regional power and a source
    of legitimacy for the post-Soviet regimes.

    We can think of many historical examples when regimes that were
    aggressive anti-Russian, for example, the Gamsakhurdia regime in
    Georgia or the Popular Front of Azerbaijan under Abulfaz Elchibei
    suffered a political debacle largely due to the direct or indirect
    role of Russia in toppling them. They were replaced with regimes
    which made their first visit to Moscow, not formally, like Yushchenko,
    but they drew their legitimacy from the capital of the regional power.

    13 years on, we can recognize that Russia has lost such status, that
    today the post-Soviet regimes draw their legitimacy directly from the
    United States, while Russia remains the biggest country in terms of
    territory and population, but politically is no different from all the
    other post-Soviet countries. Both the strikingly aggressive stand of
    the post-Soviet countries with regard to Russia and today's position
    of Georgia on Russian bases, and the position of the Baltic countries,
    though they are not classic post-Soviet countries, all this shows
    that Russia is no longer perceived as a regional power in the top
    league of world politics, assuming that there are three leagues. The
    top league now is constituted by the sole super power, the United
    States. Perhaps, China will soon join that league, but not yet.

    The first league is regional powers such as India or Brazil or, until
    recently, Russia. And the third league are the ordinary isolated
    states such as Ecuador or Bangladesh. So, it can be said today that
    Russia has been delegated from the first league to the second. One
    can welcome this fact, as do some liberal circles in Russia; one can
    regret and lament the fact, like my co-thinkers do, but the fact has
    to be recognized. Without recognizing it, it is impossible to analyze
    and predict further developments in the post- Soviet space.

    To sum up the first part of my remarks, I would like to say that
    revolution in the post-Soviet space stems from internal causes and the
    external factor is certainly secondary. In that sense practically all
    the post-Soviet countries are revolution-prone, with the exception of
    those where the revolutions have already taken place -- from below
    or from above. Russia is not an exception, it certainly belongs to
    the risk group.

    There is, of course, one fundamental way in which Russia differs from
    all the other post-Soviet countries. In Russia from the start Russian
    power -- Boris Yeltsin -- were heirs and proponents of traditional
    legitimacy, they were the heirs to the power of the Czars. While
    in other post-Soviet countries revolutions were to a large extent
    connected with nation building, they were left-wing and nationalist
    in their nature and had basically a creative thrust -- because one
    can say in general that the Georgian and Ukrainian states emerged
    strengthened and not weakened after the revolutions, in any case
    the idea of statehood was certainly strengthened. In this case the
    state of the economy or the bureaucratic institutions cannot be an
    indicator because it is a temporary phenomenon. By contrast, in Russia
    a revolution will become the final stage in the delegitimization of
    power. It will not be cause of disintegration of the country, but
    its consequence. That is an important point to be borne in mind. So,
    preventing revolution and preventing the disintegration of Russia
    are virtually synonyms. Russia can be prevented in Russia only by
    peacefully transferring power from the current ruling class to a new
    generation of the nationally-oriented elite.

    This brings us to the question of the disintegration of Russia. For
    the last two centuries many scholars have paid much attention to the
    problems of disintegration of the state. Starting from 1992 Russia
    has not been an empire, it has been a regional power. Now it has lost
    that status too. But the disintegration of the state always occurs
    when the central government does not send strong enough messages and
    does not provide enough incentives for keeping a territory within a
    single state.

    Today Russia is held together by the traditional legitimacy of the
    Kremlin as the heir to the Czar's power. The moment the Kremlin system
    falls apart -- and trends leading in that direction are mounting --
    and again I mean internal trends. This is not some outside conspiracy,
    and not an attempt of few dozen protestors to pelt somebody with
    eggs. It will be brought about by the sustained trend of decomposition
    of the state that was initiated in the 1990s, when much of Russia
    will lose any incentive for staying within Russia. I don't mean only
    the national republics, such as Tatarstan or Yakutia which can well
    be an independent state under a Japanese umbrella. As far as the
    elite in Yakutia is concerned, there is nothing to prevent it from
    assuming that new status. But large chunks of Siberia and the Far East,
    where China's influence is already great, where Chinese immigration,
    coupled with the low density of the population and falling population,
    is emerging as an ever more significant social and economic factor. And
    in four or five years the Chinese population in the Russian regions
    in Siberian and the Far East will be able to form its political
    structures and establish de facto, if not de jure power. And if,
    against that background, the central Russian government disintegrates,
    one would have to admit that Russia will have collapsed not only in
    fact, but formally as well.

    The only alternative to the mounting destructive trends which, I
    repeat, are not connected with external factors because today, if
    the United States was interested in a change of regime in Ukraine or
    Georgia, although, let me stress, it did not play the decisive role
    in that change, but only a secondary role, the United States is not
    interested in a change of regime in Russia today. This is because the
    growing Chinese threat worries the US much more than Russia and the
    US interest today is, first, in a united and integral Russia being
    a buffer between China and Europe and a restraining factor on the
    geopolitical ambitions of China; on the other hand, America is afraid
    that Vladimir Putin will be succeeded by a left-wing nationalist
    regime with far greater geopolitical ambitions for Russia than the
    present regime.

    In both cases America is absolutely right. There are no grounds
    to question the quality of analytical support of American policy
    in these areas. So, the decay and disintegration of the regime will
    happen exclusively due to internal causes, and it has to be prevented
    because I think that an alternative to revolution in Russia, in the
    medium term, is a government coup, an absolutely peaceful coup, in
    which power will pass from the present ruling corporation, which is
    a successor to Yeltin's, to a new ruling corporation which will be
    undoubtedly left-wing and nationalist.

    If such a transformation of power is possible within the next three
    years, then an optimistic forecast regarding the fate and integrity
    of Russia is possible. If not, no such scenario. Thank you.

    Anchor: Well, thank you. I now open it up for question. I understand
    that you have heard quite an earful and you are at a loss what
    questions to ask.

    Q: Who in your opinion, Stanislav Alexandrovich, could be the subject
    of such a coup and who could provide the broad support? What forces?

    Belkovsky: At present it is a coalition including Motherland and
    the CPRF. And I see Dmitry Rogozin as the person who can embody that
    coalition. But because this process will take between a year and a
    half, and two years and a half, it is very likely that new figures
    will come forward against the background of the paralysis of the
    political system. So, it is an open ended list.

    Q: I would like to ask you about Ukraine. Half of the petrol pumps
    in Ukraine today are without petrol, and there is a conflict between
    Russian oil tycoons and the Ukrainian government. Are there political
    implications and how will be problem influence the internal political
    situation in Ukraine?

    Belkovsky: There are of course, political. As I have always said,
    the problem of the new Ukrainian authorities is that they are not a
    single team in managerial terms. Clearly, in objective conditions of
    a crisis the Ukrainian economy has found itself in -- not provoked
    by anyone, and I cannot share the view of those representatives of
    the Ukrainian authorities who say that Russia has purposefully done
    something to worsen the economic situation in Ukraine. In my opinion,
    Russia has not done anything in particular for that. It has neither
    supported Ukraine nor has it intentionally provoked the crisis. Under
    those conditions, when the authorities are not balanced and each
    minister in the Cabinet actually plays his own game and the Cabinet
    cannot pursue a single course, naturally all sorts of governance
    problems emerge, including in the economy.

    Was it necessary to start a conflict with Russian oil companies from
    the point of view of Ukraine's interests? I am not sure about that.

    Q: In your opinion, how probable is that Russia will shift from the
    presidential system to a parliamentary system?

    Belkovsky: Russia will never have a classical parliamentary republic.
    This is at odds with the Russian historic tradition. But I would
    certainly support as I find it adequate for Russia dividing power
    and governance. In line with the Russian traditions, the power should
    be flawless. It should be a source of law and values. In this sense
    and for this reason, it should not deal with political and economic
    issues. It should not deal with such problems as, for example, the fuel
    crisis in Ukraine or monetization of benefits. Such issues should be
    dealt with by the government formed by parliament. The power should
    stay aside from those processes. In this sense, the constitutional
    monarchy model would be optimal for Russia, in my opinion, but as
    it can hardly be implemented, the presidential power model, with
    the presidential power staying outside the economy, outside social
    problems and would be reelected rather conditionally, so to say,
    would be appropriate. For instance, the Egyptian variant of election
    of the president could be used. But certainly there should be a strong
    parliament and a strong government, and they should be responsible
    for the economy and the social sphere.

    Q: We have witnessed something similar to a cold war between Russia
    and Georgia about military bases. In your opinion, how long could this
    situation last with the language of ultimatums used? Will Russia pull
    out its bases from Georgia?

    Belkovsky: Russia will certainly move its bases out of Georgia by
    2008. I have no doubt about that. The decision has actually been
    made. As for the cold war, the main factors, in my opinion, are
    Russia's loss of its regional power status, which Georgia realizes well
    enough, and the realization by Mikhail Saakashvili of his doctrine,
    according to which -- initially, when Saakashvili came to power, as far
    as I know, he had an inner conviction that Georgia cannot survive as
    a self-reliant country and it needed an elder brother or sponsor. At
    the initial stage of his rule, he regarded Russia as such a country,
    but Russia's ruling class proved not ready to accept Georgia. This
    explains why he has made his choice of America as such a sponsor.

    I have always regarded Saakashvili as a Lenin type leader, who
    reviews his priorities depending on the current situation, political
    and economic. So, I would not be surprised to see the situation in
    relations between Georgia and Russia radically change again in a
    couple of years. But as Russia is unprepared to use firm levers of
    pressure it has, I think that the bases will be pulled out and this
    will not happen later than in 2008. And the current ruling class will
    try to present this as Russia's victory.

    Q: After the bloodshed in Andizhan, is it possible to avoid a
    bloodletting revolution in Uzbekistan?

    Belkovsky: No, I think this cannot be avoided. The thing is that out
    of ten factors, all ten are present there, of all those ten factors
    I have listed. They all apply to today's Uzbekistan. What happened in
    Andizhan is just the beginning. And the Islamic factor matters here.
    Even though Uzbekistan cannot be described as an Islamic country and
    confrontation in Uzbekistan has a social and clan nature, Islam is
    a very strong ideology, a very strong factor, and it will certainly
    fill the gaps which have emerged in the ideological sphere as a result
    of the Islam Karimov regime's activities. Therefore, I think that an
    Islamic revolution and Islamization is inevitable in Uzbekistan in
    the coming two or three years. Naturally, blood will be let, because
    transfer of power from one ruling corporation to another never happens
    in a different way.

    Q: What do the events in Uzbekistan mean for Russia, for the Kremlin?
    What conclusions should the Kremlin draw from that? Has the reaction
    by Putin and Russia been adequate?

    Belkovsky: I would make a difference between the Kremlin and Russia
    here, because they are no longer the same today. There are objective
    interests of Russia and there is a subjective position of the Kremlin,
    and they far from always coincide.

    As for the Kremlin, I think the Kremlin was unprepared for this course
    of events, which testifies to a crisis in the intelligence apparatus
    first and foremost. This indicates that the Russian intelligence
    services have not worked efficiently enough. You may have noticed
    that statements on clear support for Islam Karimov were only made
    by the Friday night, when the situation changed in favor of the
    incumbent authorities. This actually means that before the Friday
    night, the Kremlin had no scenario for its behavior and wanted to see
    what this may lead to. This also concerns the question of whether or
    not the country needs intelligence services which have been steadily
    financed and have worked even in regions which are not seen as priority
    regions today.

    As for further developments in Uzbekistan, from the point of
    view of Russia's current status as a provincial country, this
    is not important. This was important as long as Russia remained a
    regional power. It can no longer influence decisively developments in
    Uzbekistan for subjective reasons. Had Putin really wanted to act as
    an intermediary in the Uzbekistan conflict, he could have become an
    intermediary. But we can see absolute lack of this willingness and
    it will not emerge, particularly for psychological specifics of the
    main players.

    Q: Is a revolutionary scenario possible in Transdniestria? In this
    connection, what do you think of a plan drawn up by your colleagues
    at the Chisinau National Strategy Institute? They have proposed
    moving Russian troops out next fall and arranging a free election in
    December in the Dniester region, monitored by the West. Depending
    on the results, the Dniester left bank could be given a certain
    autonomy status.

    Belkovsky: Did you mean Kiev or Chisinau? Which institute?

    Q: Chisinau.

    Belkovsky: I know quite well the plan developed in Kiev, which I think
    will prevail in the settlement of this conflict. It calls for holding
    a free election which would be followed by Igor Smirnov's stepping down
    and the post of president would be scrapped by December 31, 2005. Then
    Russian troops would be moved out by June 30, 2006. I think it will
    happen more or less this way. In my opinion, this would be satisfactory
    -- if all political ambitions and rhetoric are dropped -- this would
    objectively be satisfactory for both Moldova and Transdniestria,
    because this plan does not call for a review of the principles of
    Moldova's state system. It would remain a Unitarian state. It would
    not turn into a federation, because there would be no power bodies
    where constituent territories would be represented. The President
    and the Moldovan parliament would be formed on the same principles as
    today. There would be no bicameral parliament. But at the same time,
    there would remain a Transdniestrian autonomy with all attributes of
    that autonomy such as three official languages, the emblem and the
    anthem, as well as certain economic levers. The modernization of the
    Transdniestrian elites has been made a cornerstone because one of the
    problems of this region is partial de-legitimization of the ruling
    elite, based on the understanding of legitimacy that I described above.

    Since Russia is losing initiative, actually lost it after the failure
    of the Dmitry Kozak plan, and the Ukrainian clan will provide the basis
    for the settlement, and if Moldova does not want to preserve the status
    quo forever, and there are some doubts about that, it will accept
    the Ukrainian plan, and I believe that that's exactly what's going
    to happen, that is, Transdniestria will hold parliamentary elections
    and will get a legitimate parliament expressing the interests of its
    people, and in this respect all speculations that there is a criminal
    enclave in Transdniestria created by three former KGB officers
    will become a thing of the past, and it will be acknowledged that
    the emergence of Transdniestria is an objective historical process
    generated by the disintegration of the Soviet Union and the fact that
    the borders of the Moldavian Soviet Socialist Republic drawn by Stalin
    were not organic, after which Moldova will have to give Transdniestria
    sufficient sovereignty in exchange for the recognition of Moldova's
    integrity as an unitary state.

    I think the change of power in Transdniestria will take place on
    December 31, and Russian troops will be withdrawn on June 30 of
    next year.

    Q: Do you have credible information about the number of Chinese in
    the Far East and Siberia? And the second question is, we know that
    there is almost half a million Chinese in the US, without historically
    American Chinese, but they don't fear them. Why does Russia fear them?

    Belkovsky: No, I don't have credible figures. I think no one have
    them. But I think we should be talking about millions. As for the
    difference between America and Russia, it is fundamental. In America,
    the Chinese are integrated into the existing political system and
    the national American project, and at the same time they preserve
    the ethnic and cultural independence. In Russia, the Chinese are not
    integrated into anything like that simply because there are no such
    institutes and infrastructure here. But that's a problem of Russia,
    not of China.

    Since nature abhors vacuum, there is always someone to fill it. The
    lack of national projects and political power, and the absence of
    development impulses in Siberia and the Far East may be filled in
    by Chinese. I do not consider it an objective threat, and I am not
    taking anti-Chinese positions. I think it's a problem of Russia, not of
    China. But as far as China's interests are concerned, I think it acts
    correctly by encouraging, or at least doing nothing to discourage,
    migration to Russia because objectively scarcely populated Russian
    territories, rich with natural resources, are needed by China. And
    the Chinese elite is acting in accordance with its national interests,
    and it must not be censured for that.

    Q: If your forecast comes true and power in Russia is taken by the
    nationally oriented elite through a coup or revolution, how will
    Russia's policy in the post-Soviet space change? And in particular,
    how will Russia's policy with regard to so-called unrecognized
    states change?

    Belkovsky: I emphasize the word coup, not revolution because a
    revolution will be the last event before Russia's disintegration that
    may lead to some new state forms, but not the Russian Federation, as
    we know it. I think that objectively, not subjectively, not from the
    viewpoint of the current elites but objectively, from the viewpoint
    of political, historical and economic factors, Russia remains an
    attractive center of gravity for half of former CIS. And these
    former CIS countries may be brought together into a community that
    we tentatively call SSSR, or a commonwealth of Russia's allies. This
    community will have dual citizenship and offer great mobility, while
    preserving the national sovereignty of all participating countries.
    Unrecognized states that still exist by that time may join this
    community. I think these will be Abkhazia and South Ossetia because
    the fate of Transdniestria will be decided next year.

    Q: Don't you think that the ruling elite may change not as a result
    of a coup but through elections and constitutional procedures?

    Belkovsky: By coup I meant a constitutional change of power. In
    this case a coup means that the ruling bureaucracy that associates
    itself with the political class and that does not want to leave the
    political stage will have to give up the reigns of power. The very
    fact of holding free elections, which will mostly likely be won by
    the left nationalist forces, means a coup because no other political
    forces in modern Russia can compete with the left nationalist forces
    through free and democratic elections.

    As for prerequisites for a revolution, let us go over the 10
    above-mentioned ones. Blocked vertical mobility: this is the biggest
    problem in Russia today, which was exacerbated by the abolition
    of gubernatorial elections; the deficit of regime legitimacy: it
    is obvious on all fronts; there are serious contradictions within
    the elite; there is no positive image of the future embodies by
    authorities; there are no opposition leaders, and this is why we are
    not talking about a revolution today. Authorities are not prepared
    to use force, and the creation of all these structures like Nashi
    testifies to this. Authorities know that official power structures
    will not obey orders to use force. This is why they are creating
    these mobile combat brigades, which, I think, will not be effective
    at a critical moment. Unresolved regional and ethnic contradictions
    exist. There is an obvious merger of bureaucracy and the political
    class.

    So, there are lots of prerequisites, but not all of them are there,
    and this is why we put Russia in the second group, not the first one.

    Q: I would like to ask a question about Afghanistan. You said that
    a bloody revolution may occur in a year or two years from now. How
    will it affect the regions? Because the Fergana Valley is shared
    by Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. And another question. Maybe related
    to the first one. Do you think that a colored revolution may occur
    in Kazakhstan any time soon since it will have elections next year,
    and there are those who think they should be next?

    Belkovsky: I think a revolution in Uzbekistan, a coup in Uzbekistan
    will lead to accelerated Islamization of the region because there
    are no ideological and fundamental factors in the region that could
    compete with spreading Islam.

    As for Kazakhstan, I think a revolution there is quite probable even
    though Nursultan Nazarbayev still has certain charismatic legitimacy
    and a certain positive image of the future. But still, the rest of
    the 10 factors are quite obvious. This is why I wouldn't rule out
    uncontrolled developments if Nazarbayev does not take sharp and tough
    measures to neutralize prerequisites for a revolution in the very near
    future. I think Nazarbayev is a serious and intelligent political
    leader, and I think he may as well neutralize and curb revolution,
    basically do it from top to bottom rather than the other way
    round. This is why I don't think that the Nazarbayev regime is doomed.

    Q: I have two questions, if you don't mind. First, how much does the
    Kremlin fear a coup by the left nationalistic forces, the forces you
    mentioned? And second, do you think that Russia and the US may come
    together against the background of the Belarussian elections?

    Belkovsky: Well, the Kremlin fears a revolution very much. Not a coup
    by the scenario I described, but a revolution because it knows what
    it's like. According to the Kremlin's logic, Yushchenko's victory
    and Yanukovich's defeat were absolutely impossible, because three
    critical resources, those the presidential team find critical, namely
    money, the media and administrative resources -- the latter allowing
    rigging the results of the vote by citizens -- were on Yanukovich's
    side. The defeat created an absolutely extraordinary situation,
    because it ruined the Kremlin's traditional understanding of realities.

    This explains why they fear a revolution as something unknown, as
    something failing to fit in the Kremlin's program of existence and
    development. In this sense, the Kremlin itself has made a substantial
    contribution to the creation of a revolutionary entity. There is no
    revolution, but there has been too much talk about it.

    Despite the fact that such figures as Nevzlin or Berezovsky cannot
    have any relation to the revolution, because that revolution will
    be an anti-Nevzlin, anti-Berezovsky revolution, it will undoubtedly
    be a leftist and nationalist revolution, the Kremlin is making big
    political figures out of Nevzlin and Berezovsky as figures allegedly
    influencing something, even though this is not true, in my opinion.

    All chaotic efforts by the Kremlin have not been the result of
    its understanding of where revolutions come from. It is rather
    a simulation. They have promoted the preservation of trends which
    lead to a destruction of the power machinery. And the destruction of
    the power machinery and a revolution are synonyms. When the power
    machinery is eventually ruined, this is called a revolution. This
    happened in Russia in February 1917. In February 1917, there was no
    Nevzlin or Berezovsky, who would knock on the Emperor's door to say:
    "Give the power to me." There was no such an individual. The Emperor's
    power just collapsed. And this became a revolution de facto.

    It also happened the same way in October 1917, when the Bolsheviks
    picked up power, even though they were not direct successors of the
    Emperor's power. They started gathering the country from scratch,
    via a chain of bloodletting events.

    The same happened in 1991, and it turned out that there was not
    anyone in the Soviet Union who would drive Gorbachev out. Yeltsin
    was not the Soviet Union. He was rather Russia, a totally different
    geopolitical player. And the Soviet Union as the legal successor of
    the Russian Empire collapsed.

    The revolution is a synonym of disintegration which does not require
    any player that would organize it. When everything goes to pieces,
    when entropy reaches its peak, this is what is known as the Russian
    revolution. This moment has never been pleasant in Russian history
    for those who lived through this tragic moment.

    I find it very important from the point of view of Russia's objective
    interests to retain the Lukashenko regime. But I cannot rule out
    that in exchange for certain concessions, Putin may agree to blockade
    Lukashenko, and this will be a factor of foreign intervention which,
    even in the absence of domestic preconditions, may at least result
    in a serious destabilization of the regime in Belarus.

    Q: Is there a serious split in the Kremlin about the strategy for
    Russia's future? What is your attitude to National Bolsheviks as a
    party? Have they been a serious factor in Russian politics?

    Belkovsky: There is no split in the Kremlin in terms of strategy,
    but they are divided about tactics. There is a good Soviet joke.
    Rabinovich is summoned to the KGB and they tell him: "Comrade
    Rabinovich, is it true that you have serious differences with
    the Soviet power?" "No, comrades, on the whole, I do not have any
    differences with the Soviet power," Rabinovich replies. "There is
    just one small difference on the land issue." "What is it?" "The
    Bolsheviks want me to be in the grave, and I want the Bolsheviks to
    be in the grave."

    Something similar is now happening in the Kremlin. Every public
    servant in the Kremlin wants the rest to be in the grave. But those
    contradictions have nothing to do with the country's development
    strategy. They concern redistribution of administrative rent and
    financial flows. This explains why the system is absolutely unstable
    and cannot stand any catastrophic impact of the historic magnitude.

    As for National Bolsheviks, we are witnessing their
    demarginalization. While five years ago they were an absolutely
    marginal group, they are now close to becoming a model for a
    substantial share of young people, and the attitude to them has
    changed radically in the liberal community. This does not mean that
    I regard them as a real political force. This is not true, but this
    means at least that, first, political mechanisms have qualitatively
    changed and their direct action model is very effective -- not as an
    acting political party, but as a way to resolve political issues in
    modern Russia. This directly reflects the talents of the founder of
    that party, Eduard Limonov.

    Q: When listing self-proclaimed states which could join a new union,
    you have not mentioned Nagorno-Karabakh. What do you think about
    its future?

    Belkovsky: As America has become a direct source of legitimacy for all
    regimes and processes in the post-Soviet space, Karabakh's future --
    I believe that Karabakh's independence was to a great measure gained
    due to Russia in the early 1990s, due to its military support for
    Armenia and Karabakh in their war against Azerbaijan -- will be
    decided by America's position. If the Armenian community in America
    manages to safeguard their position, Karabakh's de facto statehood
    will last very long. At least, we will not see its end.

    I think it will happen this way. I cannot see Azerbaijan's having
    sufficient potential for destroying this statehood, because despite the
    fact that the late Geidar Aliyev made a geopolitical step of genius
    by selling a bluff on resources available on the Caspian shelf in
    exchange for America's direct interest in Azerbaijan's statehood, there
    is no Geidar Aliyev any longer, and this is a substantial factor. His
    successor is not strong enough. Second, I believe that the Armenian
    community in the US factor will be very important when the Karabakh
    issue is decided in favor of its actual, yet informal independence.

    Q: Leonid Ivashov said yesterday that Russian bases could be moved
    to Abkhazia. Is it just a plan or is it the Kremlin's decision? How
    pragmatic for Russia and the Caucasian region would that decision be?

    Belkovsky: No, Leonid Ivashov has not expressed the Kremlin's
    position. It is his personal position which I quite share, to a
    certain measure. That is, he expressed the position of a certain
    share of the expert community.

    As for whether or not this decision would be pragmatic, it is first
    necessary to define a political strategy for Abkhazia. If the fate
    of Abkhazia is to be decided by 2008 or 2009, clearly this will
    concern legalization, in some or other way, within a state common
    with Georgia. Most likely, it will be established anew. The issue of
    Russian bases will be decided depending on that. I just fear that
    Russia will not have priority in decision-making and will not have
    the right of political initiative when deciding the issue on its own
    bases. Under those conditions it will be hard to decide where Russia
    may move its bases. Ivashov and me, we can say what we think. But the
    official Kremlin does not have such a position. It will act in line
    with basic trends that will be laid without the Kremlin's involvement.

    Q: Speaking about external interests, you have only spoken about
    the United States. But the European Union will likely have its
    own interests. European organizations could intervene in all those
    processes.

    Belkovsky: Actually not. They can only be a source of external
    legitimization. But the European Union is not a global super power.
    Many of the United States' efforts are aimed at preventing it from
    turning into such a superpower. In particular, they have stirred up
    differences between new and old Europe, which also exist objectively,
    irrespective of any external will, and the United States have
    subjectively promoted this. So, the European Union will not be a
    factor in the change of regimes. It will only serve as a factor for
    legitimization of regimes.

    As for other factors than the United States, I would mention the Iran
    factor in deciding the fate of Azerbaijan and Central Asian regimes.
    I would mention the China factor. They are the countries that will
    be more important players in some countries than the European Union.

    Q: What is your attitude to unprecedented economic sanctions now being
    introduced against Moldova? Do they reflect any reasonable policy or is
    it just that the Kremlin feels insulted by Moldova, because it let down
    Vladimir Putin's friend Dmitry Kozak during talks on Transdniestria?

    Belkovsky: I think the latter is right. Unfortunately, the Kremlin
    does not have any sensible policy with respect to Moldova and it could
    not influence the situation. We met with you here, dear colleagues,
    about six weeks ago and we discussed whether or not Voronin would
    be president. In my opinion, our forecast has been confirmed that
    Voronin would not face any problems being reelected, even though he
    failed to get an absolute majority.

    The Kremlin had important levers at the election stage, but it failed
    to use them. This indicates that they do not have any policy. What
    sense does it make imposing sanctions, if the Kremlin, had there
    been a strategy, could fully control Moldova's authorities? They were
    political and economic levers, and they are still very important. But
    they have lacked willingness and skills to use them.

    In my opinion, this is a typical demarche which is the result of
    personal insult, especially given that Moldova is now considering
    naming Ukraine as the key intermediary for the Transdniestria
    settlement.

    Moderator: I have a question that is somewhat off topic. It is known
    that you were at the start of the Khodorkovsky affair.

    Belkovsky: That is an overstatement.

    Moderator: What do you think about the way the verdict is being
    announced? When will it be over, in your opinion?

    Belkovsky: In my opinion, the reading of the verdict will end
    tomorrow night. As far as I know, as of last week, there were two
    positions in the Kremlin about Khodorkovsky's fate. One was five
    years, a suspended sentence. The other is six years of imprisonment.
    I do not know which of the two has prevailed at the moment. We will
    know it by tomorrow night.

    Moderator: Let me thank our guest for this meeting. Thank you all.

    Belkovsky: Thank you.
Working...
X