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RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly - 08/07/2006

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  • RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly - 08/07/2006

    RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC
    _________________________________________ ____________________
    RFE/RL Russian Political Weekly
    Vol. 6, No. 14, 7 August 2006

    A Weekly Review of News and Analysis of Russian Domestic Politics

    **************************************** ********************
    HEADLINES

    * IDEOLOGICAL DOCTRINE PAVES KREMLIN'S COURSE
    * KHODORKOVSKY'S WIFE: 'THEY ARE TRYING TO BREAK HIM'
    * RUSSIAN SUPREME COURT APPROVES LIST OF 17 'TERRORIST' GROUPS
    * A NEW RUSSIAN GAS STRATEGY EMERGES
    ****************************************** ******************

    POLITICS

    IDEOLOGICAL DOCTRINE PAVES KREMLIN'S COURSE. Two developments have
    become obvious in the wake of the recent G8 Summit in St. Petersburg:
    Russia's rising political and economic clout, and growing concern
    in the West that the Kremlin might abuse it. But talk of a reversal
    in Russia's intention of following its own democratic path may be
    misguided.
    PRAGUE, August 4, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Moscow's new
    diplomatic assertiveness was on display for the world to see during
    last month's G8 summit in St. Petersburg.
    And one controversial topic that dominated the run-up to the
    summit has remained in the spotlight -- Russia's repeatedly
    stated intention of following its own democratic path, dubbed
    "sovereign democracy."
    The concept was formulated by Vyacheslav Surkov, the deputy
    chief and prime ideologue of President Vladimir Putin's
    administration. Surkov began floating the new ideology during
    speeches to activists of the pro-presidential Unified Russia party in
    February and May.
    As outlined by Surkov on the website edinros.ru, sovereign
    democracy centers on Moscow's right to restrict the impact of
    international law, global economic bodies, and world public opinion
    on Russia's domestic policies.
    Surkov has said he borrowed the name for the concept from Che
    Guevara, who in 1960 wrote that some states have all formal
    attributes of democracy, but remain dependent on transnational
    corporations and foreign political forces.
    Surkov suggests that that Russia can materialize its
    sovereign democracy in the economic sphere by putting under the
    state's control or dominance "such vital sectors of the national
    economy as strategic communications, pipelines, the national
    electricity grid, railroads and federal highways, the financial
    system, and broadcast television."
    As for foreign policy, Surkov believes Russia must restore
    its global influence, for geopolitical reasons and because of its
    imperial tradition. In this context, Surkov notes that for 500 years
    Russians have been a "state-forming nation" and that "Russians always
    have matters beyond of their borders."
    Surkov has also suggested that sovereign democracy could form
    the base of Unified Russia's political platform. The role of the
    president was not mentioned in Surkov's outline of his ideology,
    but, in fact, President Putin has already begun to implement it in
    Russia's assertive foreign-policy course.
    Russia's stated intention of following a course centered
    on sovereign democracy was the source of harsh criticism in the
    run-up to the July 15-17 G8 summit.
    During a visit to Vilnius in May, U.S. Vice President Dick
    Cheney accused Russia of backtracking from democracy. And as the
    summit neared, criticism from the West increased as defensive
    responses from Russia became sharper.
    Just days before the event, Putin personally articulated the
    basic provisions of the new doctrine. In an interview with major U.S.
    and European television networks on 12 July, Putin countered that in
    1990s, when Russia was economically and politically weak, the West
    had many levers of influence on Russia's domestic and foreign
    policies.
    Today, he argued, the situation has changed. The levers of
    influence have disappeared, "but the [West's] desire for
    influence remains. We are categorically against using political tools
    for intervention into our internal affairs," Putin concluded.
    Many Russian politicians also publicly touted the policy,
    including Deputy Prime Minister and Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov, a
    close confidant of Putin and a potential candidate to succeed him as
    president.
    Writing in "Izvestia" on 13 July, Ivanov said that
    Russia's current policies are based on three concepts:
    Russia's efforts to become an energy superpower, to develop a
    strong army, and to follow sovereign democracy, a concept it would
    defend by any means, including by force.
    Such statements were not taken lightly by Russia's fellow
    G8 members assembling in St. Petersburg.
    On the sidelines of the summit, U.S. President Bush expressed
    disagreement with Russia's claim to a special type of democracy.
    According to Irina Yasina, a former leader of the
    organization Open Russia who took part in a meeting between Bush and
    several Russian human right activists 16 July, Bush told participants
    that "there is no sovereign or a special [kind] of democracy,"
    "Novoye Ruskoye slovo" reported on July 16. "There are fundamental
    democratic values based on which democracy either does exist or not,"
    she quoted the president as saying.
    Unexpectedly, another hopeful to succeed Putin as president,
    First Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev, in an interview with
    "Ekspert," No. 28, expressed his distaste for the term "sovereign
    democracy," describing it as "unsuccessful."
    Medvedev explained that "sovereignty" and "democracy" belong
    to different philosophical categories and that they should not be
    combined.
    Some observers took Medvedev's comments as an indication
    of a split between Surkov and the Kremlin. But in his interview with
    "Ekspert," Medvedev said any difference with Surkov's ideology
    was more in style than in substance. This led others to suggest that
    Medvedev was merely positioning himself as a "liberal" in Putin's
    camp to appease Western politicians and to counter domestic opponents
    who had earlier rejected the concept of sovereign democracy.
    Despite Medvedev's comments, the evidence accumulated
    both before and after the G8 summit indicates that sovereign
    democracy is here to stay.
    Moscow Mayor Yury Luzhkov, one of the co-chairmen of Unified
    Russia, lent his support to the doctrine when he suggested on July 13
    that the West should look anew at Russia and change its attitude
    toward its rising power.
    Luzhkov's comments were significant, considering that the
    political heavyweight has already announced his intention to leave
    his mayoral post in 2007. Some observers thus consider him to be
    another prime candidate to succeed Putin, for the simple reason that
    he does not have to prove to anyone abroad or at home that he is
    capable of running the country.
    Unified Russia General Council Secretary Vyacheslav Volodin
    stated on July 25 that sovereign democracy is key aspect of his
    party's ideology, and that it would be a "basic element" of the
    party's program.
    Medvedev's and Unified Russia's "strategic vision for
    the country's future coincides," he added. The incorporation of
    sovereign democracy into the party's program is of key importance
    because Surkov has suggested that after leaving office in 2008, Putin
    might became the leader of Unified Russia, and thus remain in
    politics as the head of the "ruling party."
    Oleg Morozov, the head of Unified Russia's Ideological
    Commission, on July 27 added a new twist to the party's adoption
    of sovereign democracy. He described the party as a "party of
    historical revanche," noting that "revanchism is a very good starting
    point, a very powerful driving force."
    The concept of sovereign democracy has received considerable
    support from another rising ideological force within Putin's camp
    -- Archbishop Kirill. Speaking at the 10th World Congress of Russian
    People in April, Kirill universality rejected Western democratic
    values and defended Russia's "specific" vision of democracy and
    human rights.
    Furthermore, in an article titled "It Is Time For The End Of
    Dithering Diplomacy" published in July by kreml.org, the archbishop
    bluntly criticized the democratic political system. "I place in
    question that the division of power and a multiparty system relates
    to common human values," he said. "We should end dithering diplomacy,
    which requires that we always have to justify ourselves. Our official
    and public diplomacy always considers it a victory when we manage to
    prove to the West that we are like them -- but this is simply
    disinformation and the wrong [thing to do]."
    It is also noteworthy that the Kremlin and its political
    allies adopted the doctrine of sovereign democracy at a time when a
    new generation of Russians is emerging -- one that is not familiar
    with communism or a totalitarian regime influencing their social and
    political lives.
    The future of democracy in Russia may depend on whether the
    Kremlin will truncate this new generation by succeeding in imposing
    sovereign democracy upon it, or whether this new generation will
    succeed in rejecting it. (Victor Yasmann)

    KHODORKOVSKY'S WIFE: 'THEY ARE TRYING TO BREAK HIM.' Inna
    Khodorkovskaya tells RFE/RL about the impact of prison on her
    husband, the former tycoon Mikhail Khodorkovsky, and the pressures
    she faces from the authorities.
    PRAGUE, July 31, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Since Mikhail Khodorkovsky
    was imprisoned three years ago, his wife and their three children
    have lived in a house in the leafy Moscow suburb of Zhukovka.
    The building and the land around it is -- or rather was --
    owned by an affiliate of Yukos, the oil company that once made
    Khodorkovsky one of the richest and most influential men in Russia,
    Khodorkovskaya explained in a July 25 interview with RFE/RL's
    Russian Service.
    But on May 2 this year, Khodorkovskaya says, a Moscow court
    impounded the family home, saying it was part of the ongoing
    investigation into tax evasion at Yukos.
    Khodorkovskaya suspects it will not be long before she and
    the wives of other Yukos executives living in Zhukovka are forced
    out.
    It is part, she says, of the relentless pressure that the
    authorities are piling on her husband and other Yukos officials.
    Khodorkovsky is now incarcerated in a prison camp deep in
    Siberia. Inna is permitted to visit once every three months. But
    getting there is a major effort in itself: a nine-hour flight,
    followed by a 15-hour train journey, followed by a 40-minute car
    ride.
    She is allowed to stay with her husband for three days in a
    prison hostel that some Russian papers suggest borders on the
    luxurious. In fact, she insists, they share a simple room furnished
    with a bed, a chair and a cupboard.
    Khodorkovskaya finds her husband much changed -- a
    consequence, she says, of the psychological, and sometimes physical
    pressure he is subjected to.
    "They're trying to break him, nothing more, nothing
    less," she says of the prison authorities. "These are methods that
    have probably long been worked on and refined. I would say that it
    works on the principle of amplitude. They raise the pressure, then
    they reduce it and then they raise it again. So there's no
    straight upward line, they're just trying to drain him."
    His biggest difficulty, she says, is the isolation and the
    mental vacuum caused by his inactivity. But he is finding other ways
    to fill the gap.
    "He reads a lot of religious literature. He's not a
    religious fanatic, he's not completely mad about religion," she
    says. "His interest is analytical. He doesn't push faith away,
    but he has begun to experience it in a new way. If before he
    approached the subject from a sort of historical point of view, now
    he feels closer to it."
    Khodorkovskaya says she has no doubt that her husband is a
    political prisoner, sentenced to satisfy the ambitions of the men who
    now rule the Kremlin.
    Khodorkovsky himself -- and many independent critics --
    describe his trial as a staged farce and a warning to Russia's
    immensely wealthy oligarchs to stay out of politics.
    The Kremlin disagrees. Khodorkovsky, it says, is a criminal
    who defrauded the state of a massive sum in taxes.
    Inna Khodorkovskaya says she and her husband had feared the
    state would come after him. Nonetheless, the couple had chosen to
    stay in Russia.
    "It was our joint decision. We talked about whether to stay
    or go, but the decision was simple. What is there, out there? Of
    course, no one suggested that things would get quite so bad, but
    right to the end he intended to stay here. And I did too."
    In that respect, she says, nothing has changed. If the
    authorities force her out of her home, she will stay in Russia. The
    critical issue now is how to bring up her family in the absence of a
    father.
    But Khodorkovskaya betrays little bitterness.
    Both she and her husband have been changed by the experience
    of the last few years, she says. But they will emerge stronger, she
    believes.
    "There are moments when something serious happens in your
    life and your values change. And, naturally, recent events... my
    values have grown stronger, I would say. That's to say, my values
    have really crystallized," she says. "I can't say that they have
    changed fundamentally. But his probably have because he used to be in
    politics. Now he sees what's happening there from a slightly
    different perspective. Naturally, he has changed greatly."

    RUSSIAN SUPREME COURT APPROVES LIST OF 17 'TERRORIST' GROUPS.
    PRAGUE, July 28, 2006 (RFE/RL) -- Russia today published a list of 17
    organizations that it said had been identified as "terrorist" by the
    national Supreme Court.
    Yury Sapunov, the head of antiterrorism at the Federal
    Security Service (FSB), said all 17 groups were seen as a threat to
    the Russian state.
    The publication today in the governmental "Rossiiskaya
    gazeta" of what Sapunov calls the only official Russian list of
    terrorist organizations contains few surprises.
    But it will raise a few eyebrows -- at least in the West --
    for some names that are missing.
    No mention here, for instance, of either Hamas or Hizballah,
    both of which are at the center of world attention at the moment and
    both of which rank high on most Western lists of terrorist
    organizations.
    Sapunov said Russia took into account the views of the
    international community but said the 17 were primarily a national
    list of organizations that the Supreme Court considered the greatest
    threat to the security of the state.
    Russia risked the ire of Washington by inviting Hamas leaders
    to Moscow for talks after they won the Palestinian parliamentary
    elections in January this year.
    Sapunov said that neither Hamas nor Hizballah were
    universally regarded as terrorist.
    But the main reason they do not figure on the list, he said,
    was because they were not trying to change Russia's
    constitutional order through violence and were not linked to illegal
    armed groups and other extremist organizations operating in the North
    Caucasus.
    These, he said, were the main criteria used in deciding which
    organizations to include.
    Almost all the groups listed, he said, were linked in one way
    or another to the Muslim Brotherhood, including Hizb ut-Tahrir, which
    seeks to establish an Islamic caliphate stretching from Central Asia
    to the Caucasus.
    Rights campaigner Lev Ponomaryov says the inclusion of Hizb
    ut-Tahrir is just an extension of the deep suspicion its members
    arouse, despite the group's official rejection of the use of
    violence to achieve its ends.
    Ponomaryov says he knows dozens of Hizb ut-Tahrir members who
    have been jailed on what he says are trumped-up criminal charges.
    "As a rule, drugs and gun cartridges and the like are planted
    on them," Ponomaryov said. "And now, in addition to all that,
    they're being accused of being members of a terrorist group. I
    can assure you that there has not been a not a single accusation
    directed at Islamic Liberation (Hizb ut-Tahrir) that they've
    committed a terrorist act in Russia, or have even attempted to
    organize one."
    Other organizations on the Russian list include the Congress
    of Peoples of Ichkheria and Daghestan, the Supreme Military Majlis
    Shura of the United Forces of the Mujahedin of the Caucasus, Jamiya
    al-Islamiya, the Islamic Party of Turkestan, and the Pakistan-based
    Lashkar-e-Toiba.
    Sapunov said part of the problem with any list was that the
    groups keep changing their names.
    Not, he added, that that was fooling the security services.
    Increased international cooperation, the support of President
    Vladimir Putin and the government, and the creation of the National
    Antiterrorist Center had made it possible at last to establish an
    overall strategy for combating terrorism. (Robert Parsons)
    (RFE/RL's Tajik Service contributed to this report.)

    A NEW RUSSIAN GAS STRATEGY EMERGES. PRAGUE, July 28, 2006 (RFE/RL) --
    A Gazprom subsidiary recently issued a report recommending a dramatic
    change of strategy for the Russian gas industry. It determined that
    Russia should decrease exports of natural gas to European markets and
    concentrate instead on developing new gas fields to keep up with
    domestic demand.
    The Research Institute for the Economics of the Gas Industry,
    NIIGazekonomika, determined in its late 2005 report that domestic
    consumption of natural gas is increasing at a faster pace than
    projected in Russia's two-year-old Energy Strategy.
    The company, a fully owned subsidiary of Gazprom responsible
    for researching economic and management issues, stated that Russia
    should focus on developing new gas fields in the Yamal Peninsula and
    other locations in order to meet future domestic demand.
    Failure to do so could have a seriously detrimental impact on
    Russia's future economic growth, the report warns.
    But ensuring domestic supplies would also require that Russia
    decrease exports of natural gas to European markets, according to the
    report, which notes the potential consequences for the CIS,
    Asian-Pacific, and European gas markets.
    It appears that Gazprom commissioned NIIGazekonomika to
    conduct its study as part of the ongoing debate in the West and in
    Russia about the real state of the Russian natural-gas industry.
    Gazprom's reported lack of investment into new gas fields
    and pipeline construction have been widely seen as a potential danger
    to European energy security. Such concerns have prompted Western
    European governments to demand that Gazprom's export pipelines be
    opened to independent gas producers to prevent future shortfalls.
    Russia, however, has rejected European pressure and the State
    Duma recently passed legislation that further strengthens Gazprom's
    monopoly on gas exports.
    Gazekonomika concluded that:
    -- Russian domestic gas consumption is rising faster than
    projected in Russia's Energy Strategy, which was announced in May
    2003 and is the foundation of the country's energy designs
    through 2020. The new Gazekonomika study estimates that by 2030
    domestic demand will be approximately 654 billion cubic meters (bcm)
    per year, compared to the Energy Strategy's estimate of 436 bcm.
    -- Gas-conservation technologies are not being implemented
    and the Russian economy remains highly energy intensive
    -- A dangerously narrow gap exists between the cost of
    production of gas and its domestic price.
    The new study also states that the projections of the Energy
    Strategy are based on data from the 1980s that, the study's
    authors claim, are not reliable.
    Other projections of the Russian gas industry, such as one
    conducted by Gazprom in 2004, also do not reach the consumption
    levels estimated by NIIGazekonomika.
    The 2004 Gazprom study projected that domestic consumption of
    gas in Russia in 2020 will reach 525 bcm, while the new study places
    this figure at 560 bcm.
    Russia has already shown marked increases in domestic gas
    consumption -- rising by 17 bcm from January 2004 to the end of 2005.

    "Taking into account the objective results, in the future one
    cannot discount the growing internal demand for gas," the
    NIIGazekonomika study states. "The fulfillment of any of the
    scenarios presented can potentially lead to an inability by Russian
    Federation producers to meet demand for gas in both domestic and
    foreign markets. This situation in turn can prevent double-digit
    Russian GDP growth and can disrupt gas export obligations."
    Furthermore, the new study projects that by 2013 Russian gas
    exports will begin to be pushed out of the European market by Central
    Asian producers. The study projects that by 2013 the amount of
    Russian gas replaced by Central Asian gas could total 10 bcm; in
    2014, 24 bcm; in 2015, 30 bcm; and by 2030, 56 bcm.
    If this were to take place, domestic demand would be met, but
    the Russian budget could stand to lose tax revenues and hard-currency
    reserves. The study forecasts cumulative losses of up to $110
    billion.
    This, however, is not seen as a tragedy. In fact, the
    Gazekonomika report recommends that the Russia government intensify
    development of its own gas resources by lowering exports to European
    markets and "allowing" Central Asian gas producers to fill the gap.
    The long-term benefits of developing new gas fields in the
    Yamal Peninsula and the fields in Obskoy and Tazov are thus deemed by
    the report to be Russia's highest priority in the energy sector.
    Such development would significantly decrease the need for huge
    investments into the gas industry while allowing domestic production
    to continue without major disruptions. Plans of how to proceed with
    this strategy are presently being developed by Gazekonomika. (Roman
    Kupchinsky)

    ****************************** ***************************
    Copyright (c) 2006. RFE/RL, Inc. All rights reserved.

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

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