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----- Original Message ----- 
From: Jim Yarker
Sent: Thursday, September 09, 2004 9:52 PM
Subject: gee, I wonder if *this* has anything to do the
 ginned up human rights rhetoric on Russia?


http://www.untimely-thoughts.com/index.html?cat=3&type=3&art=779

Controls over Foreign Funding of NGOs:

By Alexander N. Domrin :: Daily Comment
Published on August 03, 2004


What Do They Have to Do with Development of Civil Society in Russia?
Stricter controls over grants and donations to Russian NGOs from foreign
organizations have been long anticipated. It’s certainly a positive
development. There is nothing “draconian” about it. Among other experts in
the country, scholars at the Russian Government’s Institute of Legislation
and Comparative Law have been speaking (and not only speaking) about the
necessity of imposing such controls since the mid-1990s.


There is hardly any visible correlation between foreign grants to NGOs and
development of civil society in Russia. Although foreign inputs can support
the creation of infrastructure to nurture fledgling democratic institutions,
a truly democratic and civil society is to be founded on a solid domestic
ground. Democratic institutions derive their legitimacy from people and not
from foreign sponsors of “regime change”. The current situation in Russia,
where the non-governmental sector «is still dependent on Western funding»
(as admitted in the 2001 Ford Foundation Report), is utterly unhealthy. For
instance, NGOs working in collaboration with the (now defunct) Russian
Foundation for Legal Reform revealed that on average they used to have eight
main sources of funding of their activities with “foreign foundations”
constituting the largest source among all of them - 22.7%. Actual foreign
support is even bigger, because the additional 12.6% of the budget coming
from “sponsor dues” does not necessarily mean that such sponsors are
“domestic”.


Russian NGOs cannot be accused of being too prude and selective with respect
to their sponsors. Not many other things could damage the reputation of the
Sakharov Center or the Moscow-based International Foundation for Civil
Liberties more in the eyes of common Russian folks than generous financial
support (to be precise, 3 million U.S. dollars in the first case, and one
million in the other) to the Sakharov Center from a robber baron in exile,
Boris Berezovsky.


A recent proposal by two American scholars (Timothy J. Colton & Michael
McFaul) to replace the “old formula for democracy ‘Get the institutions
right, and the people will follow’”, with a new one “‘Represent the will of
the people within the state, and the institutions will follow’”, can be
right only when the “will of the people” is voiced by the people and not by
their foreign mentors. In reality, Colton-McFaul’s proposed change of
strategy of foreign aid from “technical assistance for the crafting of
democratic institutions, be it democratic electoral laws, constitutions,
courts, or political parties” to, in their words, “pro-democratic elements
in Russia’s society” and “those brave people in Russia still fighting for
democracy”, is a sly attempt to keep providing foreign money to the same
small clique of corrupt and morally bankrupt pro-Western “reformers”, the
main recipients of American “aid” in the 1990s, who were thrown by the
Russian voters from the Duma to the ditch of “educational” NGOs (like Gaidar
’s Institute of Transitional Economy) or “public” associations (like dwarf
organizations of Filatov, Shumeiko, Rybkin, and other survivors of Yeltsin’s
cleptocratic regime).


What American aid to the non-governmental sector actually means can also be
illustrated by a Belarussian example. Although the main (if not the only)
reason for Washington’s dissatisfaction with the current regime in Belarus
is President Lukashenko’s pro-Russian policy, the U.S. authorities put
pressure on the Belarussian government for its alleged “campaign against
civil society and independent voices in Belarus” (the U.S. State Department
statement of July 26, 2004) or because it “blatantly and repeatedly violated
basic freedoms of speech, expression, assembly, association and religion”
(from U.S. Congressman Christopher H. Smith’s statement on Belarus of July
15, 2003). Surprisingly, we in Russia never heard similar criticism from the
U.S. officials either when Yeltsin (an “explicitly pro-American,
pro-Western, pro-market” president, who kept Russia “on a pro-Western track”
, as he was characterized in the U.S. Congress) shelled the Russian
parliament and suspended the activities of the Constitutional Court, or when
Russia’s «dream team» (with support of American consultants and foreign
money) staged the 1996 presidential election farce. In a truly amazing
admission, Michael G. Kozak, a former U.S. Ambassador to Belarus, bluntly
stated in a letter to The Guardian that America’s “objective and to some
degree methodology are the same” in Belarus as in Nicaragua, where the U.S.
backed the Contras against the left-wing Sandinista Government.


A spokesman for the U.S. Embassy in Minsk told The Times that the embassy
helped to fund 300 non-governmental organizations and admitted that «some»
of them were linked to those who were “seeking political change”. “Helped”
is certainly an understatement here. Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty was
more precise: “Many groups in Belarus rely on foreign money for their
activities”. Christian Science Monitor revealed that Washington spent $24
million in 2000 to support NGOs and opposition groups in Belarus, and was
going to spend even more next year. According to Russian press, support to
Belarussian opposition through the Eurasia Foundation, for instance, grew
from $340,000 in 1996 to $1.5 million in 1998, and to about $4 million in
2001. That’s in a country where National Bank reserves do not exceed $200
million!


To what extent such groups in Belarus, created and funded by the U.S., can
be considered “independent” (i.e. “not governed by a foreign power;
self-governing; free from the influence, guidance, or control of another or
others; self-reliant”) is certainly a big question. To look at this from a
more concrete perspective, 300 Washington-funded NGOs is one organization
for every 34,000 citizens of a 10-million person republic. What would be the
reaction of American people and the Bush Administration if some foreign
country (for instance, Saudi Arabia, North Korea or Russia) would set up and
provide multibillion funding to some 8,250 “civil society” groups (one for
every 34,000 Americans) aimed at “seeking political change” (read:
“overthrowing the President”, “changing the political regime”) in the U.S.?


The Belarussian experience with foreign interference into the internal
affairs of that republic under the disguise of Western “aid” to “civil
society” groups is not much different than the Russian experience. As stated
in the Russian Democracy Act, “United States Government democratic reform
programs… have led to the establishment of more than 65,000 non-governmental
organizations… and numerous political parties” (Sec.2(a)(3)(A)). In other
words, the U.S. law-makers openly admit that the U.S. Government and
American money are behind every fifth out of 300,000 registered NGOs in
Russia. The figures are even more impressive than those in Belarus. For
every 2,100 citizens of Russia, we’ve got one “public” association
“established” and at least partly, if not fully, funded by Washington.


It’s hardly an excuse that the real number of U.S.-funded NGOs in Russia is
certainly smaller. Many such organizations exist on paper only and were
established by clever Russians with the only purpose of milking the rich
cows of the U.S. Agency for International Development and various Western
foundations. It only corroborates my final observation. The continuation of
U.S. reliance on a narrow circle of pro-Western liberal intelligentsia and
“agents of democratic change” (mainly concentrated in Moscow and half a
dozen other urban centers) proves to be wasteful, eventually unproductive
for the U.S. interests (if those interests are not aimed at the ultimate
subordination of Russia and further aggravation of her socio-economic
problems) and detrimental to the interests of long-term institutional legal
and democratic development of Russia, including development of her civil
society.


What Western governments and experts should do, instead of continuing their
futile and ridiculous attempts to «pull Russia into the West» (Michael
McFaul), threatening Russia with «negative consequences», and frightening
themselves and their communities with horror stories that if Russia does not
continue “reforms” “following strategies developed in Western capitals»,
then “it most likely will have become a dictatorship and a threat to Europe”
(McFaul again), is to agree with Charles H. Fairbanks, Jr. (of Johns Hopkins
University’s School of Advanced International Studies) that the failure of
American “reform strategy” “has probably destroyed Russians’ trust in the
West for generations to come” and follow his advice: “Those of us who care
about the advance of democracy in the world should make it our foremost
intellectual and practical task to find out why our reform strategy went
wrong in so much of the former Soviet bloc”.


Back in 2001, I wrote in Nezavisimaya gazeta that “U.S. aid to Russian
‘reformers’ should be stopped by the U.S. Administration before it’s
interrupted by the Russian Government” (NG-Dipkurier, 22.03.2001). Adoption
in 2002 by the U.S. Congress of the notorious Russian Democracy Act
(pledging an additional 50 million dollars a year to pro-American “political
parties and coalitions” in Russia, “democratic activists”, “democratic
forces”, “reform-minded politicians”, and the like) became just another
confirmation of the unwillingness of U.S. authorities to stop America’s
interference into Russian domestic affairs. The Russian Government finally
decided to react. It should have done so long before.


Alexander Domrin has an academic degree of Doctor of Juridical Science
(S.J.D.) from the University of Pennsylvania Law School. He is a Senior
Associate of the Institute of Legislation and Comparative Law (under the
Russian Government), a member of the Council on Constitutional Legislation
under the State Duma Chairman, and currently a Visiting Professor at the
University of Iowa College of Law.



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