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Putin's passage to the Kremlin

http://www.dawn.com/2000/01/25/op.htm#1

By Tanvir Ahmad Khan


THE latest polls in Russia put support for Vladimir Putin in the forthcoming
presidential election at more than 55 per cent. During the last presidential
election in 1996, which I witnessed while serving in Moscow, the winning
candidate, Boris Yeltsin, the founding father of the present Russian nation
state, did not enjoy even a fraction of the public approval that new-comer
Putin seems to enjoy today. The Putin phenomenon becomes even more
remarkable as one begins to deconstruct it and relate its various elements
to the forces at work in Russian politics.

According to Russian sources, a mere two to four per cent Russians were
prepared to vote for Putin in August-September 1999 were he to become a
presidential candidate in the face of heavyweights like the redoubtable
Yevgeny Primakov, Moscow mayor Yuri Luzhkov, the communist leader, Gennady
Zyuganov, and even Grigory Yavlinsky, the Yabloko party leader often
considered much too intellectual and principled for the rough and tumble of
Russian electoral politics. During the last two months of the year that
ended with Yeltsin's dramatic eve-of-the-millennium announcement of
'abdication', the support for Putin had climbed to a spectacular 45-plus per
cent.

At present, the next in the order of public rating, Zyuganov, trails behind
him with a mere 13 per cent while he moves towards an unprecedented 60 per
cent mark. Primakov, whose appointment as prime minister produced hundreds
of well researched commentaries all over the world heralding a new synthesis
in the dialectics of post-Soviet politics, has plummeted in public approval
to such an extent that he first dropped out of the presidential race to
become an aspirant for the post of Duma's speaker and then gave up even that
ambition as unattainable. The speaker's election was a clear indication of a
new in-house correlation of forces in the Russian parliament, a body prone
to work by its own peculiar dynamics.

The western media frequently allege that Putin has deliberately planned and
promoted his ascent to the commanding heights of the Kremlin through a
bloodstained path in Chechnya. Unlike 1994-96, when the Chechnya conflict
was viewed by large segments of the Russian people with horror and
abhorrence, the current campaign is a popular enterprise that easily
translates into political support for the ruthless warrior, the best of the
KGB-appartchik, Vladimir Putin.

The Chechnya factor is only a half-truth if one interprets the cheering by
the Russian people as the expression of an outdated form of jingoistic
European nationalism. But it becomes highly relevant if one treats Chechnya
as the tragic battleground where Russia chose to articulate its new response
to several internal and external pressures on its state and society. That
this had to happen at the expense of the lives and property of a large
number of innocent Chechens is just one more cynical illustration of the way
realpolitik works in our imperfect world. The message underlying Putin's
masterly exploitation of the Chechnya crisis, which many suspect he also
engineered, is that the Russian Federation is reordering not only its
internal polity but also its international relations.

At the basic and elementary level, the Chechnya war is a declaration that
Moscow would be the sole judge of how much autonomy the constituent units of
the Russian Federation can claim. The permissible measure would vary from
region to region but it would meet zero tolerance if there was the spectre
of de facto secession in a sensitive zone.

Russia was increasingly being seen as an aggregate of powerful regions with
a progressive erosion of federal authority. Putin is fast emerging as the
man who would preside over the revival of a re-centralized state. What
happened in the Russian Duma on January 18 was highly instructive. In a
somewhat unexpected deal, Unity, the party created in recent months to
provide a political base for Yeltsin's chosen heir, Vladimir Putin, secured
the cooperation of the Communist Party (KPRF) to create a new framework for
future relations between the parliament and the executive.

All through the Yeltsin years, an inherent antagonism between the two
branches defined their interaction, with the Duma trying to block or delay
the government's programme , ranging from internal legislation to the
ratification of international treaties such as START II. Making a major move
towards cooperation, Unity and KPRF shared the leadership and composition of
the new Duma committees and entrusted the august office of the speaker to a
communist deputy. The stage is thus set for an easier passage of
government-sponsored legislation and, more importantly, for a more
consensual vision of Russia's destiny.

There is no evidence that Putin, who combines hard-line thinking of an
intelligence chief with strong educational attainments in the
intellectually-oriented Russian city, St. Petersburg, is planning to turn
the clock back on economic and political liberalization. What, then, is the
basis of his ability to work with the communists, at least in a carefully
delimited sphere of national politics? The answer may partly come from a
shared allegiance to the mystical idea of Russia as the 'New Jerusalem',
historically engaged in fulfilling a sacred mission through its own
greatness.

The post-Soviet scene in Russia has been marked by a strong nostalgia for
the loss of its superpower status and by a deep sense of humiliation at its
growing dependence on the West. If Primakov was briefly seen as the
pragmatist who would help heal the internal divisions of the Russian body
politic and thus preserve its unity and territorial integrity, Putin is
staking a claim to being the leader of the restoration theology of a new
generation of men determined to reclaim Russia's pre-eminence in world
affairs.

Citizens of a highly educated society, most Russians understood the price
they were paying for the painful transition from a failed command economy to
a market-regulated free enterprise world. They accepted, albeit temporarily,
a noticeable decline in their military and diplomatic clout as well as the
severe limitations of Yeltsin's peculiar brand of electoral democracy
because of the need to place West-assisted economic revival on the top of
the agenda. But it was here in the economic sphere that they experienced
some of their worst traumas that, in turn, caused much disenchantment with
the West.

A major economic upheaval, termed Black Tuesday, October 11, 1994, happened
during the early part of my own tour of duty in Russia. The International
Monetary Fund, obviously committed to the grand design of 'westernizing'
Russia, helped with a package that included a stand-by agreement worth
nearly seven billion dollars in April 1995. The Russian people accepted the
western-backed 'super-presidentialism' of Yeltsin as a condition necessary
for macro-economic stabilization. But what they actually witnessed was a
Czarist court facilitating the rise of a new oligarchy comprising a small
number of men (often put at the mythological figure of seven) who gained
immense power and wealth, anchored in the emerging banking sector. This
concentration of power enabled Yeltsin to win the 1996 election handsomely
despite great gains made by the Communist Party and its allies in the Duma
elections held a little earlier.

Whatever chances the new oligarchs had of defusing social pressures through
trickle-down benefits of their capital accumulation were nullified by the
fall in the oil prices, the effects of the East Asian crisis, the growing
debt service liability and, above all, the declining capacity of the state
to collect taxes and generate revenue. The day of reckoning came on August
17,1998, when Russia was obliged to announce a hefty 34 per cent
devaluation, a ninety-day moratorium on some of its commercial debt and an
inescapable restructuring of short-term rouble debt.

" In a matter of few weeks this past summer, " wrote Strobe Talbott, the US
diplomat known for his sympathetic advocacy of continued western support for
the Russian economic and democratic reforms, "Russians saw much of their
savings evaporate, many of their banks go belly-up, the bottom fall out of
their fledgling stock market, goods disappear from stores, and a burgeoning
middle class sent reeling".

Amongst the many consequences of this meltdown was the renewed search for a
successor for Yeltsin who would not send the entire post-Soviet historical
process reeling backwards. The ailing president himself would also not
countenance a successor who would succumb to demands for his impeachment for
the armed assault on the parliament in 1993 and for other alleged
unconstitutional actions. Primakov had probably disqualified himself by
recommending a redistribution of powers between the president and the Duma.
Yeltsin seems to have convinced the West that Putin would be the bridge to a
post-Yeltsin continuation of free-market reforms.

Many Russian believe that Putin will take advantage of this autocratic
arrangement for the transfer of power to him and then distance himself from
the Yeltsin legacy by developing an independent profile for himself. The
process may well include a Russian version of what, in China, is known as
'the Chinese way' of political, economic and military reforms. Putin may
well nuance democratization in more specifically Russian terms than was
implied in the traditional slogan of transforming Russia into a western
liberal democracy.

Putin has already moved to elicit a different response to issues rankling
Russia including NATO's eastward advance and the growing western interest in
states like Azerbaijan, Georgia and, above all, Ukraine. Russia has
renounced the concept of "No First Use" of nuclear weapons and defined the
kind of military situation where it would not hesitate to use them first.
Putin has also enhanced military expenditure by more than 50 per cent.
Russia is demonstrably engaged in upgrading its conventional and nuclear
arsenal and delivery systems.

Vladimir Putin's commitment to the restoration of Russia's big power status
is of considerable interest to Pakistan. We need a radical improvement in
the quality of our study of that great northern neighbour of ours as well as
a new vigour in our efforts to develop better relations with it. As Russia
moves towards the election of March 26, this task should be taken up in
earnest. Adequate coverage of events in Russia and their serious analysis
and editorial assessment remain the hallmark of this newspaper, with
outdated rhetoric of a bygone era defining much of the comment elsewhere.
Pakistan would be well served by a broader and a more objective
understanding of the highly complex events unfolding in that country as it
resumes its quest for greatness.

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