http://www.isn.ethz.ch/news/sw/details.cfm?ID=10744

Russia's chekist elite

Some observers believe that Putin's political machine is entering a
systemic crisis provoked by a string of political failures both at
home and abroad, and that the emergence of an elite of
security-service veterans, or chekists, is one reason for the crisis.
By Victor Yasmann for RFE/RL (09/02/05)

A growing number of Russia watchers seem to be coming to the
conclusion that the political machine of President Vladimir Putin is
entering a profound, systemic crisis that has been provoked by a
string of political failures both at home and abroad. 
Over the last 10 months or so, Moscow has been shaken by a number of
setbacks, including the assassination in May of pro-Moscow Chechen
leader Akhmed-hadji Kadyrov, a large-scale raid by Chechen militants
into the Republic of Ingushetia in June, the simultaneous terrorist
bombings in August of two passenger airliners, the horrific hostage
taking in Beslan in September that left more than 300 dead, and a wave
of social unrest in the North Caucasus Republic of Karachaevo-Cherkessia. 

These domestic incidents were compounded by failures abroad such as
the scandalous convictions in June of two Russian security-services
employees in Qatar in connection with the assassination there in
February of former acting Chechen leader Zelimkhan Yandarbiev. Other
such foreign setbacks include the collapse of the pro-Moscow
administration of Aslan Abashidze in the Georgian province of Adjara,
the failures of pro-Russian candidates in elections in the Georgian
Republic of Abkhazia and Ukraine. 
All of these events occurred against the backdrop of the long saga of
the de facto renationalization of oil giant Yukos. And now this litany
of failure appears to be being capped off by massive national unrest
against the government's effort to convert the in-kind social benefits
that were the heart of the Soviet-era safety net into cash payments.

The `Chekist Manifesto'

Many analysts place responsibility for the resulting crisis on the
so-called silovik oligarchy, a group of security-apparatus veterans,
or chekisty, within the Putin administration that replaced the
Yeltsin-era commercial oligarchy as Russia's ruling elite. Perhaps as
a reaction to such criticism, one leading member of this group,
Colonel General Viktor Cherkesov, published in Komsomolskaya pravda on
29 December a long programmatic article that might be considered
something of a "Chekist Manifesto". 
Cherkesov, who is director of the Federal Antinarcotics Service,
worked for many years in the Leningrad branch of the KGB, where he
earned a reputation as a dissident hunter. He is a close friend of
Putin's and formerly served as Putin's envoy to the Northwest Federal
District. According to recent media rumors, Cherkesov is in line to
replace Nikolai Patrushev as head of the Federal Security Service
(FSB). In his article, Cherkesov states directly that "the chekisty
and contemporary Russia have become historically intertwined". 
"We should understand that we are one single entity," he wrote. "None
of us strove for power or wanted to gain the role of the dominant
estate in Russia. But history turned out such that the burden of
maintaining the Russian state has been laid on our shoulders."
Cherkesov's article is alarmist and repeats some points already made
by Putin and others. In a speech to the country in the aftermath of
the Beslan events, Putin said, "Russia is threatened both from the
East and the West". 
Presidential aide Vladislav Surkov in October gave a long interview to
Komsomolskaya pravda in which he denounced a "fifth column" of liberal
politicians and activists who were undermining Russia. In his article,
Cherkesov dismisses criticism of the chekist elite as a campaign
directed against Russia by its enemies, who are threatening the
country's territorial integrity. He writes that Russia faces a real
threat of disintegration, and even admitted that the chekisty often
failed to appreciate dangers confronting the country. "Even very
recently it seemed as if all danger was behind us," Cherkesov wrote.
"It seemed as if we were entering a period of relative stability. 
I am not shirking responsibility for mistakes that were made. And in
admitting this, I remain loyal to the main thing, the purpose of my
work and fate as a chekist. No matter what the name of the agency I am
heading is and regardless of my rank and status, I have been and
remain a chekist." Cherkesov's article condemns the entrenched
nomenklatura of the old Communist Party for the collapse of the Soviet
Union. 
"Clinging to power that they were unable to wield, cut off from
responsibility, and having lost a sense of reality, this arrogant and
helpless caste dragged the state, society, their own ideology, and
their own historical mission to their graves." However, he says, the
contemporary chekisty will not leave the historical scene so easily or
"repeat the shameful fate of the degenerate Soviet nomenklatura". "I
believe in our community, in our caste that supports the state, in our
ability to appreciate threats, to discard petty concerns, in our
ability to remain true to our oath," Cherkesov wrote.

Problems at home

Cherkesov's "manifesto" appeared before the current wave of protests
against the government's efforts to convert Soviet-era in-kind
benefits to cash payments. 
These protests have proven a further embarrassment to the Kremlin and
the chekisty, who clearly miscalculated the extent of the passivity
and apathy of the citizenry. For instance, during an appearance on
TV-Tsentr on 16 December, political scientist and Experimental
Creative Center Director Sergei Kurginyan expressed skepticism that
Russians would protest the reforms. "There are only two real national
ideas in Russia today," Kurginyan said, "the 'hedonist consensus' and
the 'plundering mainstream.' The 'hedonist consensus' is the desire of
each individual to have fun at any price, whether by gulping down
cheap alcohol in the company of beggars or taking a posh vacation on
the French Riviera.

 The 'plundering mainstream' is the desire of all social groups to
steal what they can, regardless of their standard of living, with only
the amount and value of the things being stolen varying." Embarrassed
by the widespread unrest, the Kremlin initially tried to blame the
regional authorities for the "poorly implemented reforms". 
However, Institute of Globalization Director and Duma Deputy Mikhail
Delyagin (Motherland) has said that many protestors were directing
their animus at President Putin personally. "Attacks on Putin became
widespread not because someone in the West spent an extra million
[dollars] on such a campaign, but because Putin's policy has begun to
threaten Russia's existence and has become more destructive than the
efforts of all our external enemies taken together," Zavtra, No. 3,
reported. Frightened by the scale of the protests, the Kremlin and
local administrations quickly began making concessions to all the
social groups participating in the demonstrations. 

Analyst Aleksei Pushkov, speaking on TV-Tsentr on 29 January, laid out
several reasons for this fairly rapid retreat. First, although only
about 360'000 people - of Russia's 38 million pensioners -
participated in the rallies as of the end of January, the
demonstrations were scattered throughout the country, raising the
specter of a national strike action. Second, pensioners are the most
politically active part of the Russian electorate and they generally
support the Communist Party.
Although the pro-Kremlin Unified Russia party managed to siphon away a
lot of Communist supporters in the December 2003 Duma elections,
reducing the party's support from 24 per cent to 14 per cent,
continued protests threatened to reverse this new correlation of
political forces, Pushkov said. According to Pushkov, the Kremlin also
fears that students and young people might join the protesting
pensioners. 
This concern is particularly vivid in the light of the Orange
Revolution in Ukraine, in which students were the main driving force
behind a compelling display of civil disobedience. The Kremlin has
noted that a new generation of post-Soviet leaders is emerging,
including Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili and Ukrainian
President Viktor Yushchenko. In a joint statement, the two presidents
stated that the Georgian and Ukrainian revolutions "represent a new
wave of the liberation of Europe that will lead to the ultimate
victory of freedom and democracy on the European continent".

Personal loyalty

In addition to these arguments by Pushkov, some analysts also cite the
personal loyalty of the chekisty to their leader, President Putin.
This issue is especially interesting in the context of the events in
Kyiv, where, according to The New York Times on 17 January, the
peaceful resolution of the Ukrainian revolution was made possible by
the decisive role played by Ukrainian siloviki in blocking the
fraudulent ascent to power of former Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych
and countering efforts by army units loyal to Yanukovych to use force
against the demonstrators. 
In Russia, the police and the military are also suffering from the
benefits reform and their reliability might be in doubt. In the case
of a serious disturbance, Putin can rely on the loyal FSB, as well as
on a virtual shadow army of security-services and military veterans.
Political scientist Kirill Zubkov told prognosis.ru on 9 December
that, unlike Ukraine, which has had virtually no experience of war and
terrorism over the last decade, Russia has seen nearly continuous
combat in Chechnya. 

More than 1 million soldiers have performed military duty in the
rebellious republic. Many of these combat veterans are now united into
semi-commercial, semi-criminal organizations and private security
services, Zubkov noted. Since November, Colonel General Vladimir
Shamanov has served as liaison to veterans' organizations in the
government of Prime Minister Mikhail Fradkov. Shamanov, a former
commander of federal forces in Chechnya, was one of the key "Chechen"
generals whose support helped Putin gain the presidency in 2000.
Gennady Troshev, another general who came to prominence during the
Chechen campaigns, is now a presidential adviser for Cossack affairs.

 Troshev, Shamanov, and other Chechnya generals understand that the
disappearance of Putin from the political scene could create personal
difficulties for them and they will rally to defend the regime, Zubkov
argued. He also states that these militarized networks are driven by
the ideals of the White Guard from the time of the Russian Civil War.
"We are seeing how, without much public attention, a kind of volunteer
army is forming that has a vested interest in preserving the current
regime," Zubkov wrote. 
One of the heroes of this network, Zubkov wrote, was White Admiral
Aleksandr Kolchak. Zubkov noted that there have been stepped-up
efforts recently to secure Kolchak's political rehabilitation, that a
monument to Kolchak was recently erected in Omsk, and that a new state
holiday - People's Unity Day - has been declared on 4 November,
Kolchak's birthday. Instead of an Orange Revolution, the future of
Russia might hold a White or Gray Counterrevolution, Zubkov concluded.

Copyright (c) 2004. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of
Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave. NW, Washington
DC 20036. Funded by the US Congress.










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