Information Clearing House

Vladamir Putin: "The World's Most Popular Leader"? 

By Mike Whitney

12/01/07 "ICH " 

On Sunday, Russians will vote in their country's
parliamentary elections. The results are a foregone
conclusion. Putin's party, United Russia, is expected
to win in a landslide. The only question is whether
the margin of victory will exceed 70%. If it does,
then Putin will continue to be the most powerful
player in Russian politics even after he steps down
from office next year. 

Vladamir Putin is arguably the most popular leader in
Russian history, although you'd never know it by
reading the western media. According to a recent
survey conducted by the Wall Street Journal, Putin's
personal approval rating in November 2007 was 85%
making him the most popular head of state in the world
today. Putin's popularity derives from many factors.
He is personally clever and charismatic. He is
fiercely nationalistic and has worked tirelessly to
improve the lives of ordinary Russians and restore the
country to its former greatness. He has raised over 20
million Russians out of grinding poverty, improved
education, health care and the pension system,
(partially) nationalized critical industries, lowered
unemployment, increased manufacturing and exports,
invigorated Russian markets, strengthened the ruble,
raised the overall standard of living, reduced
government corruption, jailed or exiled the venal
oligarchs, and amassed capital reserves of $450
billion. 

If there's a downside to Putin's legacy, it's hard to
see.

Russia is no longer "up for grabs" like it was after
the fall of the Soviet Union. Putin put an end to all
of that. He reasserted control over the country's vast
resources and he's using them to improve the lives of
his own people. This is a real departure from the
1990s, when the drunken Yeltsin steered Russia into
economic disaster by following Washington's neoliberal
edicts and by selling Russia's Crown Jewels to the
vulturous oligarchs. Putin put Russia's house back in
order; stabilized the ruble, strengthened
economic/military alliances in the region, and removed
the corporate gangsters who had stolen Russia's
national assets for pennies on the dollar. The
oligarchs are now all either in jail or have fled the
country. Russia is no longer "for sale". 

Russia is, once again, a major world power and a force
to be reckoned with. It's star is steadily rising just
as America's has begun to wane. This may explain why
Putin is despised by the West. Freud might call it
"petroleum envy", but it's deeper than that. Putin has
charted a course for social change that conflicts with
basic tenets of organized greed, which are the
principles which govern US foreign policy. He is not a
member of the corporate-banking brotherhood which
believes the wealth of the world should be divided
among themselves regardless of the suffering or
destruction it may cause. Putin's primary focus is
Russia; Russia's welfare, Russia's sovereignty and
Russia's place in the world. He is not a globalist. 

That is why the Bush administration has encircled
Russia with military bases, toppled neighboring
regimes with its comical "color-coded" revolutions,
(which were organized by US NGOs and intelligence
services) intervened in Russian elections, and
(threatened) to deploy a nuclear weapons system in
Eastern Europe. Russia is seen as a potential rival to
US imperial ambitions and must be contained or
destroyed. 

In the early years of his presidency, it was believed
that Putin would comply with western demands and
accept a subordinate role in the US-EU-Israel centric
system. But it hasn't worked out that way. Putin has
wisely resisted integration and consistently defended
Russian independence. 

The triumphalism which swept through Washington after
the fall of the Berlin Wall has been replaced with a
palpable fear that Russia's power will continue to
grow as oil prices increase. The tectonic plates of
geopolitical power are shifting eastward. That's why
the US has joined in "The Great Game" and is trying to
put down roots in Eurasia. Still, it's easy to imagine
a scenario in which America's access to the last great
oil and natural gas reserves on the planet--the three
trillion barrels of oil and natural gas located in the
Caspian Basin---could be completely blocked by a
resurgent Russian superpower. 

The most powerful of the Washington think tanks, the
Council on Foreign relations, recognized this problem
early on and decided that US policy towards Russia had
to be reworked entirely. 

John Edwards and Jack Kemp were appointed to lead a
CFR task force which concocted the basic pretext for
an all-out assault on the Putin. This is where the
idea that Putin is "rolling back democracy" began. In
their article "Russia's Wrong Direction", Edwards and
Kemp state that a "strategic partnership" with Russia
is no longer possible. They note that the government
has become increasingly "authoritarian" and that the
society is growing less "open and pluralistic".

Kemp and Edwards provided the ideological foundation
upon which the entire public relations campaign
against Putin has been built. And it is quite an
impressive campaign. A Google News search shows
roughly 1,400 articles from the various news services
on Putin. Virtually all of them contain exactly the
same rhetoric, the same buzzwords, the same spurious
claims, the same slanders. It is impossible to find
even one article out of 1,400 that diverges the
slightest bit from the talking points which originated
at the Council on foreign Relations. 

Readers should check this out for themselves. Its
interesting to see to what extent the media is nothing
more than a propaganda bullhorn for the national
security state. Putin's personal approval ratings
already confirm his enormous popularity, (85%) but the
media continues to treat him like he's a tyrant. It is
completely incongruous. 

In most articles, Putin is disparaged as "anti
democratic"; a charge that is never leveled at the
Saudi Royal family even though women are forbidden to
drive, they must by fully-covered at all times, and
can be stoned to death if they are found to be
unfaithful. Also, in Saudi Arabia, beheading is still
the punishment of choice for capital crimes. 

When Saudi King Abdullah visits the US, he is not
heaped with scorn for his regimes' repressive
treatment of his people. Instead he's rewarded with
flattering photos of he and George Bush strolling
arm-n-arm through the Crawford sage. 

Why is Putin blasted for "rolling back democracy" when
American stooge, Mikhail Saakashvili, arbitrarily
declares martial law and deploys his truncheon
wielding Robo-cops to beat protesters senseless before
dragging them off to the Georgia gulag? The pictures
of Saakashvili's bloody crackdown appeared In the
foreign press, but not in the US where the media had
all its camera lenses focused on Garry Kasparov
(contributing editor to the Wall Street Journal and
right-wing loony) as he was led off to the Moscow
hoosegow in handcuffs for protesting without a permit.

Poor, abused Garry.

What American wouldn't prefer a leader who stuck up
their national interests rather than the interests of
global Capital? Has Putin repealed habeas corpus, due
process and the presumption of innocence? Has Putin
abducted innocent suspects from the streets of foreign
capitals and taken them to black sites where they've
been tortured, water-boarded and sometimes killed? Has
Putin initiated war's of aggression on defenseless
countries killing and maiming a million or so
civilians on "a pack of lies"? Has Putin created 4
million refugees and a humanitarian crisis which is
likely to erupt into a region-wide conflagration? 

Those aren't Vladamir Putin's Daisy Cutters and
cluster bombs falling on Samara, Falluja and Tal Afar.
That isn't Putin's armada in the Gulf off the coast of
Iran. Those aren't Putin's intelligence agents and
mercenaries executing covert operations in Mogadishu,
Beirut and Islamabad. 

Putin's crime is that he rejects Washington's
"unipolar" world model. As he said in Munich:


"The unipolar world refers to a world in which there
is one master, one sovereign; one center of authority,
one center of force, one center of decision-making. At
the end of the day this is pernicious not only for all
those within this system, but also for the sovereign
itself because it destroys itself from within.. What
is even more important is that the model itself is
flawed because at its basis there is and can be no
moral foundations for modern civilization." 

He added: 

"We are seeing a greater and greater disdain for the
basic principles of international law....We are
witnessing an almost uncontained hyper use of force -
military force - in international relations, force
that is plunging the world into an abyss of permanent
conflicts. I am convinced that we have reached that
decisive moment when we must seriously think about the
architecture of global security." 

Well said, Vladamir. Good luck in the election. 

 http://www.informationclearinghouse.info/article18817.htm



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