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Who is Vladimir Putin?

http://www.msnbc.com/news/675793.asp

Vladimir Putin: Joined the KGB because of the organization's image in
'romantic spy stories'
http://a799.ms.akamai.net/3/799/388/282a9fd8999762/www.msnbc.com/news/13
08861.jpg

Who is Vladimir Putin?

The Russian leader has demonstrated a healthy disdain for ideology, but
he�s still a product of his KGB upbringing

By Andrew Nagorski
Newsweek Poland

      Dec. 20 �  Mikhail Margelov is a fastidious dresser. On the day I
come to interview him, he�s wearing a lavender-striped shirt with a
white collar, a deep red bow tie, matching cuff links and suspenders. A
tall, beefy young parliamentarian, he exudes confidence and charm. At
37, he�s already the chairman of the Russian Federation Council�s
Foreign Relations Committee�and, more importantly, close to Vladimir
Putin. Like Putin, he has a KGB resume and is quick to let you know it.

�WEREN�T YOU HERE in the early 1980s?� he asks with a grin as he ushers
me into his office. One of the benefits of hooking up with the KGB
early, he explains, was that he got to read my dispatches from Moscow
that led to my expulsion from Russia in 1982. He speaks in nearly
flawless English, and speaks Arabic, too. He studied both languages at
Moscow State University, and then became an Arabic-language professor at
the KGB Academy. His grandfather, he notes, was a famous Red Army
commander of the Pskov paratrooper division, and his father, who bounced
his family around the world �pretending to be a diplomat,� is now deputy
chief of the SVR, the Foreign Intelligence Service.



         Although this introduction takes the form of a casual
conversation, it sends a couple of clear-cut messages. First, a KGB
background in today�s Russia is a decided plus, and those who have it
are proud of it. Second, outsiders should realize that, contrary to
their popular image, KGB veterans have the knowledge, experience and
breadth of vision that so many of their countrymen lack. In other words,
they are among the best and the brightest precisely because their jobs
allowed them to see and learn more than anyone else. So, Margelov and
others from the Kremlin implicitly argue, no one should be surprised
that Putin is proving to be just the leader Russia needs to usher in a
new era of political stability and economic growth at home, and to win
new respect abroad.

AT EASE WITH THE WEST?
       Those whose political memories stretch back to the early 1980s
can be forgiven if they have a sense of d�ja vu. After all, Yuri
Andropov received similar billing when he was preparing to take power
then. Although he had presided over the KGB for 15 years as it
methodically persecuted a dwindling dissident movement, his supporters
claimed that he represented a much-needed chance for renewal after the
stagnation and demoralization of the Leonid Brezhnev era. �You
Westerners see him as a man of the KGB,� a Soviet official told me at a
reception in 1982, when Andropov was positioning himself for the top
job. �But he is intelligent, open to new ideas. If he succeeds Brezhnev,
he will be more liberal than the current leadership.� Andropov�s minions
also spread the word that he spoke English, played tennis, listened to
jazz and read mystery novels�most of which was patent nonsense.
        All of which suggests that a healthy dose of skepticism is still
in order when evaluating who Putin is and where he will take his country
in 2002 and beyond. But make no mistake: these are very different times
than the 1980s, and Putin is a very different leader than Andropov.
Putin really is a sportsman�a former judo champion who still knows how
to take an opponent to the mat�and really does speak a foreign language,
German, very well. More significantly, he is demonstrating both in word
and deeds a healthy disdain for ideology�unlike Andropov, who not
coincidentally took over the ideology portfolio of the Central Committee
before he became general-secretary. This has led to some sensible
economic reforms, like a personal-income flat tax, and, of course,
Putin�s remarkable overtures to the United States in the wake of the
terrorist attacks of September 11. Even after President George W. Bush
announced last week that the United States would withdraw from the
antiballistic missile treaty in six months, the Russian president
offered only a muted dissent, telling The Financial Times of London that
this decision wouldn�t jeopardize �the spirit of partnership and even
alliance� between Moscow and Washington.
        Nonetheless, Putin�s KGB credentials are, to put it delicately,
something less than an unadorned blessing. His growing popularity is
both impressive and troubling because of the means he has used to
achieve it. It would be far too simplistic to label Putin as a throwback
to the Soviet era who is trying to rebuild the Soviet system. When he
insists that he doesn�t want to restore the Soviet Union, he means it.
Above all, he�s a pragmatist and, as such, understands that Russia must
chart a new course both at home and abroad. But in his own words, he was
�a pure and utterly successful product of Soviet patriotic education,�
and the evolution of his thinking has to be measured from that starting
point. The beliefs he still clings to, as well as those he has
jettisoned or at least claimed to have revised, are all part of the
answer to the question about what his leadership will mean for Russia
and the world.

WHAT STALINIST TERROR?
       Even a cursory examination of the young Putin suggests that, as
he was growing up, he questioned nothing in the system he lived in. On
the contrary, he was fixated on the idea of joining the KGB because of
the organization�s image in �romantic spy stories.� Asked by a Russian
interviewer whether he thought about the years of Stalinist terror when
he signed up for his dream career, he replied: �To be honest, I didn�t
think about it at all.� Referring to the late 1970s when he received his
training and began practicing his trade, he blithely added: �Now people
say that was when Leonid Brezhnev was beginning to tighten the screws.
But it was not very noticeable.�  Advertisement



  First Person by
 Other books by





          In �First Person,� the series of interviews published in book
form when Putin was running for the presidency, his first somewhat
critical remark concerns the collapse of East Germany, where he worked
during much of the 1980s. �Actually, I thought the whole thing was
inevitable,� he claimed, referring to the fall of the Berlin wall. �To
be honest, I only regretted that the Soviet Union had lost its position
in Europe, although intellectually I understood that a position built on
walls and dividers cannot last. But I wanted something different to rise
in its place. And nothing different was proposed. That�s what hurt.�
        Putin, of course, was speaking with the benefit of hindsight.
It�s impossible to know whether he truly saw the collapse coming,
particularly since he had been blind to so much else before. But the
passage is extraordinarily instructive. He doesn�t bemoan the end of
communism; he does bemoan the loss of the Soviet Union�s place on the
world stage. He longs for �something different� to take its place,
clearly a powerful and once-again proud Russia. But that doesn�t happen.
Polish writer Ryszard Kapuscinski, whose book �Imperium� chronicled the
end of the Soviet Union, concludes that this defines Putin�s current
agenda. �He still has the complex about Russia�s loss of great power
status,� he says. �That�s what he wants to get back. His strategy is to
rebuild Russia as a great power. Everything else is secondary to him. He
won�t achieve this goal, but he�ll get as close as he can. And this will
make him very popular with his own people. Russian pride always dictated
that you are willing to endure anything to be a great power.�

STUDIES IN THE RED-LIGHT DISTRICT
       If Putin was confused and resentful in 1989 and its immediate
aftermath, his reeducation began in the 1990s. He started a new job as
deputy to St. Petersburg Mayor Anatoly Sobchak, a leading reformer.
Reforms in this period went hand in hand with massive crime and
corruption, and St. Petersburg was one of the leaders in this
department, as well. Putin managed to maintain a reputation as Mr. Clean
in the midst of all this, despite a couple of close brushes with local
scandals. As head of St. Petersburg�s Committee for Foreign Economic
Relations, he had the chance to work closely with Westerners and travel
to the West for the first time. In Hamburg, he admitted later, he went
with his wife Lyudmila and some friends to an erotic show. He claims to
have been reluctant to go, and, he added in �First
Person�: �You won�t believe me, but I was assigned to study their
red-light district as part of my job. At the time we were trying to
bring order to the gambling business in St. Petersburg.� The night out
ended melodramatically, when his friend�s wife fainted as �a huge black
man� and �a black woman who was just a little girl� began to strip.
        But the serious side of Putin�s new role was that he began to
expand his field of vision. The West, particularly Western investors,
were no longer the enemy. In looking for clues to Putin�s dramatic
embrace of the United States after Sept. 11, officials close to him
point out that this was the period when he began to depart from the
assumptions that many of his former colleagues still cling to.
Interestingly enough, another veteran of the secret services, Defense
Minister Sergei Ivanov, reacted totally differently to the terrorist
attacks. Four days after September 11, Ivanov angrily ruled out the
possibility that United States and their allies would be allowed to use
former Soviet bases in Tajikistan and Uzbekistan for their offensive.
�It�s not very strange that it took some time for him to adjust the way
he sees the world,� says Margelov, the former KGB Academy professor. He
notes that Ivanov spent the 1990s in the SVR headquarters on the
outskirts of Moscow while Putin was �polishing his attitude toward
another civilization� by working with Westerners in St. Petersburg.
Putin quickly set Ivanov straight, and the president�s willingness to
see the deployment of U.S. troops in Central Asia as a positive
development represents a dramatic break with old-line Russian thinking.

       Putin is convinced that Russia no longer has to fear the West; he
believes that the main threats are coming in the south, where Islamic
fundamentalism is on the rise, and in the Far East, where China�s huge
population is pressing against sparsely populated Russian territory. In
that scheme of things, the next round of NATO expansion, while still
irritating, should be no cause for alarm. Especially if the new talk of
expanding Russia�s relationship with the 19-member alliance really does
develop into a new �NATO at 20,� giving the Kremlin an active role in
some of its decision-making. But if Putin�s St. Petersburg experiences
changed his thinking about the West, they didn�t dim his pride in the
KGB. Igor Shadkhan, a local documentary filmmaker, got to know Putin
well in that period-and began making films about him. At one point,
Putin urged him to make a film about the KGB building in St. Petersburg.
Shadkhan balked, explaining that his grandparents went through the
Gulag. �He asked me to do it so that I could see that the new people who
worked there had the same feelings about the Gulag as I do,� Shadkhan
recalls. But as much as Putin wanted to prove that the KGB had changed
with the times, there were clear limits to his new thinking. When a
friend of Shadkhan asked Putin what he thought about the writings of
Viktor Suvorov, the famous defector from the Soviet military
intelligence agency GRU, the future president of Russia
snapped: �I don�t read books by traitors of the homeland.�

A COMPLETE UNKNOWN
       After Sobchak was defeated in the 1996 elections, Putin left St.
Petersburg and rapidly began rising through the ranks in the Kremlin. By
1998, Boris Yeltsin appointed him head of the FSB, as the former KGB is
now called. For all of Putin�s attachment to St. Petersburg where he
grew up, he was enjoying the excitement of power in Moscow. When
filmmaker Shadkhan visited him and asked him whether he�d return to the
city where he grew up, Putin replied: �It�s boring in St. Petersburg.�
In August 1999 Yeltsin plucked the faithful bureaucrat out of relative
obscurity and made him prime minister. At that point, his approval
rating stood at 2 per cent; for most Russians, he was a complete
unknown, and the general assumption was that he would be just another in
a string of short-term prime ministers. How Putin turned into a
president who now boasts an approval rating of about 75 percent reveals
a lot about his concept of leadership.
        Shortly after he became prime minister, a series of explosions
tore apart Russian apartment buildings killing hundreds of their
inhabitants. Putin promptly emerged as the tough new boss, blaming the
Chechens for these killings and vowing to prosecute a new war in their
breakaway territory until the army would �wipe the terrorists out
wherever we find them, even if they are sitting on the toilet.� Despite
the rueful precedent of the first war in Chechnya, most Russians
applauded. �In a difficult situation, people look to the boss for
leadership,� notes Alexander Oslon, the president of The Public Opinion
Foundation, which works mainly for the Kremlin. �At the time, the West
didn�t understand what was happening with Putin�s approval rating. Now,
we see the analogy with Bush after September 11.� (What he fails to
mention, however, is that a small but not insignificant minority of
Russians believes the persistent rumor that the FSB was responsible for
the apartment building bombings.) Oslon and others who seek to bolster
Putin�s image claim that much more than Chechnya accounts for his
growing popularity. They point to his early, successful drive to end the
problems with irregular payments of pensions. Then he put an end to much
of the squabbling in the Duma by cutting a deal with the communists and
neutralizing other potential opponents. His reorganization of the
Federation Council meant that he ended the virtual autonomy of many
regional governors and brought federal policy in line with �the vertical
chain of government� that he espouses. He also pushed through a sensible
budget, and began pressing for a series of reforms in other areas�taxes,
the judiciary, private land sales and education.
        Much of this is still in the early stages, but he has convinced
many of his countrymen that he is dedicated to bringing order out of the
chaos of the 1990s. As in foreign policy, he has demonstrated a
willingness to rethink economic priorities. In a meeting with American
correspondents in November, he criticized Russia�s �excessive dependence
on the fuel and energy sector over the last decade� and the failure to
create �a genuinely modern and cost-effective economy.� This would
suggest that he will be aiming for that goal in the years ahead, and
that he will try to convince foreign investors who were burned in the
economic crisis of 1998 that it�s safe to return. It�s on the home
front, though, that troubling signs remain. Pollster Oslon finds nothing
wrong with explaining that another key reason for Putin�s high approval
ratings was his successful campaign �to distance big capital from
politics.� Or, in plain language, the pressure that led to the takeover
of media outlets, like NTV and the weekly newsmagazine Itogi (which was
published in cooperation with NEWSWEEK until then) that had been
critical of his policies. Media mogul Vladimir Gusinsky was briefly
imprisoned then fled the country, as did another once-powerful
�oligarch,� Boris Berezovsky.

TOTAL DENIABILITY
       To Putin and his team, media criticism was the problem, for
instance, when the Kursk submarine sank last year�not the president�s
initial reluctance to cut short his vacation in Sochi or his seeming
indifference to the plight of the doomed submariners and their families.
�If the subject exists in the mass media, it exists in public opinion,�
says Oslon. �If it doesn�t, it doesn�t exist in public opinion.� Ergo,
take control of the messenger. While praising the vision of the late
dissident Andrei Sakharov, Putin calmly explained during a radio
interview in the United States last month that �the Russian mass media
are as free as in any other nation.� At the same time, a new campaign
was already underway to seize control of TV 6, the last major station to
provide a haven to journalists who lost their jobs in the previous
crackdown. Such actions are conducted with total deniability. The
struggle for ownership of TV 6, Putin�s chief of staff Alexander
Voloshin told me, is �a question for businessmen.� Similarly, the fact
that successive anticorruption campaigns often target political foes is
purely coincidental, Putin�s people say.

       But this was a tactic that Andropov used in the old days, and
critics maintain that the echoes are eerie at times. They note that many
of the current reforms�for instance, of the judiciary�provide the state
with more levers of influence rather than less. And recent arrests of
�spies� on hazy charges, and prosecution of environmentalists and
scholars for violating new secrecy laws in their contacts with
foreigners only accentuate those fears. �We�ve been warning for years
that the special services have a growing influence in this society, and
no one wanted to listen,� says former political prisoner Sergei
Grigoryants, the president of the Glasnost Foundation. �Now you can see
the result.�
        In Putin�s Russia, the president is no longer billed as
Yeltsin�s successor. Instead, the same imagemakers who ran Yeltsin�s
1996 reelection campaign now present the two men as opposites. According
to them, Yeltsin was �a destroyer,� someone who performed the unpleasant
if necessary task of destroying the Soviet Union and its way of life.
Putin, however, is �a builder,� someone who is building the new Russia
that he so sorely missed when the Soviet system collapsed. Judging by
his high approval rating, this strategy is working�and Putin genuinely
deserves credit for some bold initiatives. But it helps that there are
fewer and fewer avenues to seriously challenge the hold of the man whose
formative years were spent in the KGB.


-----------------
NEWSWEEK POLAND (Newsweek Polska)
is Newsweek�s newest foreign-language edition.
It was launched in September.

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