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What Happens To Russia When - Not If - Oil And Gas Prices Begin To R

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  • What Happens To Russia When - Not If - Oil And Gas Prices Begin To R

    WHAT HAPPENS TO RUSSIA WHEN - NOT IF - OIL AND GAS PRICES BEGIN TO RETREAT?

    Source: Newsweek International, MSNBC.com, September 25, 2006
    Agency WPS
    The Russian Business Monitor (Russia)
    September 22, 2006 Friday

    News stories about Russia these days follow a predictable theme. The
    country is resurgent and strong, and the West must adjust to this
    new reality. But that story line is wrong. Russia is weak and getting
    weaker.

    Take the conventional index of power-military might. Yes, Moscow is
    testing advanced missiles systems and talks buoyantly about countering
    a US antiballistic-missile system with a new generation of warheads
    that can evade interceptors. Yet note the failure earlier in September
    of the highly touted Bulava submarine-launched missile. The United
    States experiences such mishaps, too, of course. But in Russia they
    are signs of something deeper. It is no secret that, for all Russia's
    new oil wealth, its Army remains poorly trained, malnourished and
    demoralized. Alcoholism, suicide and corruption are rife. Weaponry
    is aging and newer models arrive at a trickle: India has bought more
    Russian tanks since 2001 than the Russian Army.

    Russia gets credit for economic growth-nearly 7% in 2006, according
    to the IMF. But the boom has been propelled mainly by rising energy
    prices. What happens when-not if-oil and gas prices begin to retreat?

    New investment in production capacity is insufficient to sustain
    current levels of exports. Meanwhile, economic reform has stalled,
    state control over strategic economic industries has increased and
    foreign investment remains low. Of the $648.1 billion in foreign
    investment worldwide in 2004, only $11.6 billion went to Russia. Not
    surprisingly, Russia rates poorly in globalization rankings. The
    2005 Foreign Policy/A.T. Kearney survey placed it 52nd in a list of
    62 countries-a drop of five places from 2004.

    Russia's human capital is being ravaged. The population is declining
    by some 750,000 annually because of low birthrates and unusually high
    death rates among males; it is also aging rapidly and will therefore
    become increasingly less productive. Alcoholism remains pervasive, as
    does drug use. Russia has the highest rate of tuberculosis in Europe.

    AIDS has yet to crest. Suicide is one the rise. According to WHO
    data on 46 countries between 1998 and 2003, Russia, with 71 cases
    per 100,000 of the male population, topped the list.

    A nation's power also rests on the strength of its institutions.

    Here, too, Russia is growing weaker. Putin's authoritarianism has
    brought order to a once chaotic political scene. But Parliament has
    been neutered. So have independent civic organizations, political
    parties and media. The secret police, military and security
    services-no friends of the rule of law-occupy prominent political
    positions. Official corruption flourishes.

    Abroad, Russia's influence continues to ebb. Its closest
    allies-Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan-are poor and
    politically unstable. Energy-rich Kazakhstan and Turkmenistan
    resent Russia's grip on their exports. Armenia, loyal but penurious,
    remains embroiled in the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict with increasingly
    prosperous Azerbaijan. The Kremlin's meddling in Georgia has deepened
    Tbilisi's determination to join NATO and strengthened anti-Russian
    sentiment. Belarus's dictatorial president envisions union with Russia,
    but his Soviet-style political order repels many ordinary Russians.

    On the wider global stage, Putin displays seeming strength and new
    confidence. Russian support is key to the negotiations over Iran's
    nuclear program. Its Security Council veto gives it an important say
    on various international issues, from Kosovo's independence to the
    United Nations peacekeeping force in Lebanon. Yet Putin's rhetoric
    increasingly strikes themes of Great Russia-imperial, nostalgic,
    nationalistic. However much it resonates with a particular Russian
    political class, that rhetoric can itself breed weakness.

    You see this in the sharp rise of race-related hate crimes in Russia.

    Right-wing racism and Russia-for-Russians chauvinism augur ill for
    a multiethnic, multiconfessional Russia, which has near 25 million
    Muslims.

    So, the received wisdom is wrong. What the West must live with
    is a weak Russia. And history shows that states that talk loudly
    while carrying a small stick often overreach, creating problems for
    themselves and others.
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