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-Caveat Lector-

The Struggle for Russia

by STEPHEN F. COHEN
The Nation
[from the November 24, 2003 issue]

This article can be found on the web at
http://www.thenation.com/doc.mhtml?i=20031124&s=cohen

The arrest last month of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the
principal owner of Russia's biggest oil company, Yukos,
and the richest of the country's seventeen state-
anointed billionaire oligarchs, on charges of fraud and
tax evasion has put Russia back in the forefront of US
media attention. But is the story being reported the
full, or essential, one?

It's being told as follows. Although Khodorkovsky, like
all of Russia's "wealthy businessmen," acquired his
company (currently valued at roughly $45 billion) at
little if any cost to himself through "murky" insider
dealings in the 1990s, when the enormous natural
resources of the former Soviet state were being
privatized under then-President Boris Yeltsin, he has
since transformed Yukos into a model for a new
capitalist, democratic Russia--"transparent,"
exceedingly profitable, even philanthropic. So much so
that it has helped fuel a Russian "economic rebound"
while becoming a potential source of oil for the United
States.

Unlike other, less "clean" oligarchs, the story
continues, Khodorkovsky is being persecuted by President
Vladimir Putin chiefly because the oil baron became
active in Russia's democratic politics, funding
opposition parties in next month's parliamentary
elections and even aspiring to the presidency. To crush
Khodorkovsky and make an example of him, Putin is
relying on a Kremlin faction he has recruited largely
from the KGB, where he began his own career, which wants
Yukos's wealth for itself. The result will therefore be
a grievous blow to Russia's "booming economy" and
democracy, replacing free-market-oriented "liberal
oligarchs" with much worse and less efficient ones and
driving away needed foreign investment.

Some elements of this story, which relies very heavily
on Moscow sources associated with the "liberal
oligarchs," are plausible, but others are not. Democracy
in Russia has been failing ever since Yeltsin made
oligarchical privatization possible by destroying an
elected parliament in 1993, and neither side is
interested in truly reviving it; the oligarchs are
zealous monopolists, not free-market reformers, and
Western investors interested in Russia's huge oil
reserves have already indicated that they care about
official guarantees of the contracts, not who signs
them; Putin now controls elections sufficiently to get
substantially the legislature he wants; and no one of
Jewish origin, as are Khodorkovsky and most of the other
oligarchs, can be elected president of Russia. Above
all, however, the prevailing media account omits the
essential background and context.

Privatization--or "piratization," as it is often called
in Russia--did not take place in an economic or social
vacuum. It was accompanied in the 1990s by the worst
economic depression of modern times and the
impoverishment of a great many Russians, probably the
majority of them. In the process, it created the
oligarchical economic system that exists today. In 2000,
Yeltsin-era oligarchs, fearfully aware that they were
loathed by most Russians--they still refer to them
contemptuously as a "Communist populace"--and that they
lacked any real legal legitimacy, put Putin in the
Kremlin to be a praetorian president safeguarding the
system, its creators and its beneficiaries in business,
politics, the media and even intellectual circles.

Various motives are behind the Khodorkovsky affair, but
none would matter if that system had not failed to
alleviate Russia's most profound problems. After a
decade, and despite a purported "economic boom"--really
little more than a bubble inflated by high world oil
prices--most of the country's essential industrial,
agricultural and social infrastructure is still starved
for investment and disintegrating. The human toll
continues to grow in the form of more poverty, disease,
crime, premature deaths and homeless children. From the
vast provinces beyond "booming" Moscow, one hears
persistent reports that "Russia is dying." And indeed,
the population is shrinking by nearly a million people a
year.

That ongoing human tragedy is what is mainly missing
from the US media story, where poverty and the plight of
most Russians are hardly ever mentioned. Even if some
accounts of Russia's crisis are overstated, the only
solution is a new economic course that uses the
oligarchs' enormous profits from the country's natural
resources to rescue and develop the rest of the nation,
though not even its advocates agree on how to do it.
Some suggest deprivatization and state direction; others
advocate redistribution of assets to new owners; and
still others call for a punitive compensatory tax on
today's oligarchs followed by amnesty. For now, however,
most of those profits--hundreds of billions of dollars
after minimal tax payments and modest investment in the
Soviet-built energy sector--are not "transparent,"
having fled or been left abroad.

Though Khodorkovsky does not deserve to be singled out
for such severe treatment, and may even gain some public
sympathy, his arrest makes clear that the struggle over
the oligarchical system, and thus once again the future
of post-Soviet Russia, is under way. Putin has already
deposed one of the two highest-ranking political
representatives of the Yeltsin-era oligarchs, Kremlin
chief of staff Aleksandr Voloshin, and Prime Minister
Mikhail Kasyanov may follow. Agents of the oligarchs are
striking back, threatening to use kompromat--personally
damaging information--against Putin himself and trying
to frighten the Russian people into believing that he
will also deprivatize the apartments they were given in
the 1990s.

It is impossible to foresee the outcome of the unfolding
struggle. The result may be, in the tradition of Russian
leadership succession, a far-reaching de-Yeltsinization
of the post-Soviet system. And, of course, it may be an
even worse system, also a Russian tradition. But for the
majority of Russians, as opinion surveys outside Moscow
seem to indicate, there is the hope, realistic or not,
that Putin is finally turning against his creators and
preparing to become, as even a KGB general remarked
privately, "Vladimir the Savior."

Whatever the case, it is a struggle that Russia must
decide, not the United States, which is already too
deeply involved. Many Russians remember the Clinton
Administration's complicity in the formation of the
oligarchical system, when it applauded Yeltsin's
privatization deals as "reform," and they understand
that today's self-interested oligarchs stand behind the
uncritical pro-United States faction in Kremlin
politics. They also know about Khodorkovsky's personal
relations with the Bush White House, which is
intervening on his behalf. Indeed, his arrest and the
freezing of his shares may have been precipitated by his
intention to sell a large equity share of Yukos to an
American oil giant, thereby putting a significant
portion of Russia's present and future wealth beyond the
country's control.

The widespread impression that America is a leading
supporter of the hated oligarchical system cannot be
good for future US-Russian relations. Nor can it be good
for international security. The world's largest
territorial country and still its other nuclear super-
repository will never be truly stable, as we are
witnessing again today, until a system based on plunder
and poverty is replaced by one capable of producing real
economic development and more social justice.



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www.ctrl.org
DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion & informational exchange list. Proselytizing propagandic
screeds are unwelcomed. Substance—not soap-boxing—please!   These are
sordid matters and 'conspiracy theory'—with its many half-truths, mis-
directions and outright frauds—is used politically by different groups with
major and minor effects spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought.
That being said, CTRLgives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and
always suggests to readers; be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no
credence to Holocaust denial and nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.
========================================================================
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