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Home >> Former USSR Russia The Rise of Dmitry Medvedev and the Re-Configuration of Post-Soviet Politics Dr. Andreas Umland - 5/11/2008 On May 7th, 2008, the 42-year-old jurist Dmitry Medvedev was inaugurated as the new President of the Russian Federation. The same day, Medvedev proposed Putin as Russia’s Prime Minister, and the State Duma duly confirmed the proposal the following day. Whatever these moves may, in the end, entail for the exact redistribution of power in Moscow, they imply that Medvedev will become Russia’s official leader. Medvedev’s rise means that Russia might have a serious chance to embark anew on a course of political liberalization and democratization. It will provide a welcome opportunity for Western go... Gorbachev Number Two: Dmitry Medvedev Dr. Andreas Umland - 5/3/2008 The majority of Russian and Western observers see the man who will become the new President of the Russian Federation this month as an only relatively liberal figure, if not as a faceless opportunist. Some even think that Medvedev will be a second Putin whose rise means merely more of what we have seen during the last eight years. However, Medvedev’s early political biography and most recent statements on such issues as multi-party competition, freedom of the press, or Russia’s relations to the West point in a different direction. Should the Russian presidential administration come under the l... Russia’s WTO Ambition and Georgian Role Abdul Ruff - 5/3/2008 Russia has been at logger heads with many of its former friends that constituted the USSR. Apart from the Central Asian Republics , there is hardly any country of the Former Soviet-Union States (FSUS) that supports Russia in good faith. Byelorussia with which Russia has been trying make a united country is also not showing full interest in the project off late. Supported by the USA and European nations, the European part of FSU sates have even opposed Russian dominance over them. Russia thus used energy diplomacy to contain the resistance form these essentially anti-Russian FSU states. Ukr... Moscow Diary: President Putin Speaking Abdul Ruff - 4/29/2008 Even as the latest love-affair controversy, reported by the media linking him with a gymnast Alina Kabayeva, Russian president Vladimir Putin is busy streamlining the future course he has to pursue while in the White House, the office of new Russian Prime-Minster on the other-side of the Kremlin across the Moscow (Moskva) river. Dmitry Peskov, Putin's chief spokesman who speaks four languages and has been Putin's voice to the world media since 2000, has been named spokesman for the prime minister and a deputy government chief of staff on 26 April. In activity after the close of business in Mo... Russia-Italy Ties Abdul Ruff - 4/23/2008 President Vladimir Putin and Italian Prime Minister-elect and the richest man of Italy, Silvio Berlusconi, on 18 April 2008 rekindled ties by talking up a possible new bid by Aeroflot for troubled airline Alitalia and hinted that a gas deal between Gazprom and Italy 's Eni involving Libya could be in the pipeline too. Putin was visiting Berlusconi on the island of Sardinia just days after the Italian media mogul's victory in parliamentary elections. Putin arrived on the island 17 April after completing a two-day trip to Libya , where he signed a raft of deals on debt, railways and energy. On energy, Putin hinted that a Gazprom deal with Eni involving Libya could be close. Censorship of love a la Putin Iqbal Latif - 4/20/2008 Men are boys and they never really ever grow up when it comes to passion. The message from Putin is clear: Don't mess with my woman; she is no orphan like Lewinsky. Putin and Sarkozy are two gainfully employed powerful men. One gets curious as to find out what they are looking for in a relationship. We know what their partners, Ms. Carla and Ms. Alina look at -- it is the 'power' that emanates and radiates from these two very potent guys. Recently, Sarkozy married a well-known Parisian (Italian heiress) socialite, Carla. I was keen to know why powerful men fall for 'amazing beauties' and socia... The Belonuchkin Case Dr. Andreas Umland - 4/17/2008 In December 2007, Russian political journalist and researcher Grigory Belonuchkin told a court that the results of that month's federal parliamentary elections in two electoral precincts of his home town Dolgoprudnyi near Moscow were tainted. Working as an official observer during the voting for the Russian State Duma, Belonuchkin collected documentation of electoral fraud in favor of Vladimir Putin's party United Russia. In early April 2008, Belonuchkin was beaten so severely that he had to be hospitalized. One fears that Belonuchkin is a case small enough for the Kremlin to let the Dolgoprudnyi gang make the journalist an example for others who may have illusions similar to Belonuchkin’s. Russian Proposal for Mideast Summit Abdul Ruff - 4/16/2008 This write-up concentrates on the statements made by Russian leaders and statesmen on the need for a summit brokered by the Kremlin, in addition to the opinions expressed by Palestinian and Israeli leaders. Post-Soviet Russian Anti-Americanism and the Post-War German Experience Dr. Andreas Umland - 4/14/2008 Since the publication of Alexander Yanov’s 1995 book After Yeltsin: ‘Weimar’ Russia (Moscow: KRUK; New York: Slovo-Word), a number of Yanov’s predictions for the post-Yeltsin period have come true. Above all, during the last years, sections of the Russian elite have adopted a paranoid vision of the outside, above all Western, world which, in the 1990s, had been a minority view held by the extreme right and paleocommunists. Whether this makes Yanov’s sweeping equation of developments in post-Soviet Russia and inter-war Germany justified or not: It remains a fact that, in spite of relative polit... Will the Third Rome (Russia) Fall to Islam? Fjordman - 4/3/2008 I recently read the book The Reformation by Owen Chadwick, about the Protestant Reformation and the situation in 15th and 16th century Europe. It is fascinating to read about Western Europe during a period when it was genuinely dynamic, not the anemic and self-loathing continent it is now. But still, I was also struck by how many similarities there are between the situation then and now. This was also during a period of Muslim aggression, as the Turks made inroads into the Balkans and Central Europe, eventually threatening even Western Europe.
Ironically, this period was also whe... Is Putin’s Russia really “fascist”? A response to Alexander Motyl Dr. Andreas Umland - 3/26/2008 In his articles “Is Putin’s Russia fascist?” published on the site of The National Interest Online on December 3, 2007 (http://www.nationalinterest.org/Article.aspx?id=16258) and “Surviving Russia’s drift to fascism” published in the Kyiv Post, January 17, 2008 (http://www.kyivpost.com/op... Moscow’s New Chief Ideologist: Ivan Demidov Dr. Andreas Umland - 3/25/2008 Recent attention by Russian and Western commentators was focused on the presidential elections of March 2nd, 2008, and the personality of Dmitry Medvedev. Therefore, the appointment of 44-year old Ivan Demidov as Head of the Ideological Directorate of the Political Department of United Russia’s Central Executive Committee in late February 2008 went largely unnoticed. Demidov is a colorful Russian politician who became a cult figure among the young in the 1990s when he was a popular moderator and producer of youth-related programs for various TV stations. His new post as official chief ideologi... Post-Soviet Nationalism and Russia's Future Dr. Andreas Umland - 3/6/2008 The roots of Russia’s currently rising nationalism are threefold: pre-Soviet, Soviet and post-Soviet. The idea of Moscow as the “Third Rome,” i.e. of a special Russian mission in world history, goes back several centuries. Russian nationalism had been – contrary to what many in the West believed – an important element of Soviet ideology ever since the 1930s. Like in the early 19th century when Moscow’s so-called Slavophiles applied German nativist thought to Russian conditions, ideas of various Russian nationalist movements today are often imported from the West. Russia's Psycho-war against India Monotapash Mukherjee - 3/3/2008 Riding on oil, gas and arms export Russia is rising like a phoenix and is trying to build a world order parallel to the one conceived by the USA. In doing so, it has unleashed an intense, carefully calculated and calibrated psycho-war especially against the USA and India. Despite the Russian P.M. Viktor Zubkov's two day visit to India which he described as a 'trusted friend' of Russia, the psycho-war is still on. Let us briefly examine how all these happened, what the reflexes are, why the two need each other and what India should do to progress towards peace and prosperity as an independent and sovereign state. Russia's Nuclear Declaration: A Defense, Not An Attack David Storobin, Esq. - 1/22/2008 "We have no plans to attack anyone, but we consider it necessary for all our partners in the world community to clearly understand ... that to defend the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Russia and its allies, military forces will be used, including preventively, the use of nuclear weapons." -Gen. Yuri Baluyevsky. This announcement was largely ignored by the American media as it debated what’s more important for the next President: the shape of the candidate’s genitals or the color. In more wonkish corners, the statement drew concerns and talk of a new Cold War. And yet, Moscow is... Russia and Qatar Prof. Mark N. Katz - 12/3/2007 From 2004 to 2007, relations between Russia and Qatar went from extremely poor to remarkably cooperative. How did this happen? Considering that Russia and Qatar are both among the world's three largest producers of natural gas (the third being Iran), what does this Russian-Qatari rapprochement portend? Russia Opens the Pacific Front In Indonesia David J. Jonsson - 10/9/2007 As Sun Tsu said: “Whoever occupies the battleground first and awaits the enemy will be at ease; whoever occupies the battleground afterward and must race to the conflict will be fatigued. Thus one who excels at warfare compels men and is not compelled by other men.” Putin's Dictatorial Streak Angelique van Engelen - 10/7/2007 The Russian President Vladimir Putin isn’t anywhere near as funny as his predecessor Boris Yeltsin, yet his actions are far more outrageous. Only a few days ago, Putin shocked both domestic onlookers and the international community by stating his plans to hold onto power at the end of an address of the country’s United Russia party. Even the most informed of analysts appeared to be mesmerized by the announcement. Putin’s Russian Roulette Angelique van Engelen - 10/4/2007 Vladimir Putin is the quiet sort. But he’s deep. He’s solved the puzzle that everybody expected him to solve, announcing how he’s planning to hold on to the power he’s accrued during his two term tenancy as Russia’s President. Russia's Spetsnaz and Islamic Terrorism Ryan Mauro - 9/11/2007 There is no doubt that the Soviet Union played a tremendous role in the expansion and evolution of Islamic terrorism. Many of the people responsible for the policy of promoting fundamentalist miliancy still hold key positions in Russia. People can accept the fact that there are "anti-Bush" cliques inside the CIA and State Department, and the fact that there are "pro-Bin Laden" cliques in the Pakistani military ISI. Yet, for some strange reason, they cannot accept the fact that there are still "pro-Marxist" cliques inside Russia. I believe that the Russian Mafia operates in unison with these "rogue" elements, almost as a separate intelligence directorate. Russian weapons in the Middle East Natalya Hmelik - 9/1/2007 The last three days of July the leader of the Palestinian Authority Mahmoud Abbas spent in Moscow . Actually, Mr. Abbas is the leader of the West Bank, with the Gaza Strip under control of Hamas radical movement, a rival of his Fatah party. But many in the world, including in the United States, Europe and even Israel, have recognized him as the only legitimate Palestinian leader and a great peace-lover and rushed to help him. Russian President Vladimir Putin also offered Mr. Abbas support in a form of 50 armored personnel vehicles for his security forces and an announcement that Russia had dow... Russia: Bright Present, Dark Future? Dieter Farwick - 8/11/2007 Summer time 2007 in Moscow and St.Peterburg is an exciting highlight for visitors. Russia-UK’s Political Consensus Is In Recession Bhuwan Thapaliya - 7/31/2007 Majority of the diplomats now agree on something. Practically all of them now say that the Russia-UK’s political consensus is in recession. Where they do not agree is over how deep and how long the political recession will be, and how robust the recovery, if it is to happen at all. Russia and the United Kingdom are playing a diplomatic see-saw. Last few weeks were a gift to critics of Russia and the United Kingdom ’s foreign policy. It all started with UK expelling four Russian diplomats following Moscow’s refusal to extradite the main suspect(Andrei Lugovoi, ex-KGB agent), in the murder of f... Booming Russia and 'Regained' Prosperity For Russia Bhuwan Thapaliya - 7/4/2007 The result was not unexpected, but it was still spectacular. Russian economy once reassuringly unpredictable is becoming more and more stable. Inflation is low, the current account is in surplus, the financial system looks rigid, and the public finances are sound and solid. Russian economy is rising and many economists expect it to rise further. Collapse of the USSR - Figurative Meaning Dimitri Kolb - 5/29/2007 There are different explanations of the sudden collapse of what used to be one of two superpoewers of 20th century. Economists blame the weakness of Soviet economy. Americans believe it is due to the Afghan war and Ronald Reagan, who called the USSR the "Evil Empire". Russians blame Mikhail Gorbachev. Pro-Axis Russians: Terrorists ... and Democratic Capitalists David Storobin, Esq. - 5/9/2007 May 9 is a major holiday in Russia - Victory Day, celebrated the day after Nazi Germany surrendered. Recently, Estonia decided to take down a monument to Russian WWII soldiers, angering Moscow, which called Estonians Nazi-sympathizers because many Baltic people joined the invading German forces. And yet, thousands of Russians also fought in the pro-German Russian Liberation Army (ROA), Russian People's Liberation Army (RONA) and the 29th Russian Waffen SS division. Additionally, there was the 14th Waffen SS Division made up of Ukrainians, but it will not be discussed in this article. The Grand Chess Masters—The Bear and the Dragon David J. Jonsson - 1/5/2007 While the Iraq crisis continues, the strategy of the Grand Chess Master Russia the bear and China the dragon along with their pawns the Leftists, Marxists and Islamists continue to develop and put in place their strategy for the ultimate goal of world domination. General John Abizaid, the top US commander in the Middle East and John McCain argue about toop strengths. Many Democrats, including Carl Levin, who will become chairman of the Senate armed services committee in January, argue that the US needs to pressure the Iraqis by announcing a timetable to start withdrawing troops within four to ... The Enrons of Russia Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 1/4/2007 Hermitage Capital Management, an international investment firm owned by HSBC London, is suing PwC (PricewaterhouseCoopers), the biggest among the big four accounting firms (Andersen, the fifth, is being cannibalized by its competitors). Democracy And Development - A Geopolitical Instrument In Post-Soviet Space Todor Kondakov, Ph.D. - 8/25/2006 The development of Russian-American relations has always been in the center of analysts' attention. In this connection, the statements on certain tensions between Washington and Moscow as well as on a potential change in the Russian geopolitical vector from West-bound to East-bound direction cannot but raise significant interest. How Russia Deals With NGOs Liliana N. Proskuryakova - 8/5/2006 President Vladimir Putin recognizes that nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) are useful tools for shaping global and national policy – and also for criticizing other world leaders. The second article in this two-part series examines Putin’s two-pronged approach in handling NGOs, a strategy on display during the recent G-8 summit in St. Petersburg: While keeping many Russian-based NGOs and opposition parties under tight security, Putin hosted representatives of international NGOs at his residence and acted as the voice of the “Civil G-8” at the meeting of world leaders. Thus, the president def... Russian Arms Trade: A New Threat Natalya Hmelik - 12/12/2005 The Soviet Union was always preparing for war, so it's no wonder that the defense industry was the best funded and the most advanced sector. The Soviets annually transferred $20bn worth of weapons to other countries, but earned only $3m-$5m. The rest was so-called "political export" – a kind of donations to ideologically friendly regimes or gifts to militants making troubles to unfriendly ones. After the Soviet Union collapsed and Russia embraced the market, some expected the defense industry to bring enormous profits. That never happened. Former brothers in arms didn't line up with new orders... Space Industry in Russia Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 12/8/2005 The recent (December 2005) spate of news about Russia's space program was decidedly mixed. According to Space News, the 17-country European Space Agency (ESA) declined to participate in Russia's $60 million, two-year Clipper manned and winged space vehicle program, a touted alternative to NASA's Crew Exploration Vehicle. Russia's Idled Spies Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 11/15/2005 On November 11, 2002, Sweden expelled two Russian diplomats for spying on radar and missile guidance technologies for the JAS 39 British-Swedish Gripen fighter jet developed by Telefon AB LM Ericsson, the telecommunications multinational. The Russians threatened to reciprocate. Five current and former employees of the corporate giant are being investigated. Ironically, the first foreign buyer of the aircraft may well be Poland, a former Soviet satellite state and a current European Union candidate. Russia's Vodka Wars Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 11/4/2005 Vodka is a crucial component in Russian life. And in Russian death. Alcohol-related accidents and cardiac arrests have already decimated Russian life expectancy by well over a decade during the last decade alone. Vodka is also big business. The brand "Stolichnaya" sells $2 billion a year worldwide. Hence the interminable and inordinately bitter battle between the Russian ministry of agriculture and SPI Spirits. The latter, still partly owned by the state, is the on and off owner of the haloed brand "Stolichnaya", James Bond's favorite. Energy dialogue between Russia and the US Dr. Alexandar Todorev - 10/9/2005 On a number of occasions the Russian President Putin has stated that the active involvement of his country into international and regional integration processes is one of the key instruments for modernization of national economy. This can be illustrated by the dialogue on energy issues between Russia and the US, which was activated in the last two years. In actual fact, the stability and predictability of world energy will depend largely upon the ability of diplomatic efforts on energy of both countries to find the sensible balance between various interests on global, regional and bilateral level. Lysenko and Stalin's Genetics Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 9/22/2005 Trofim Denisovich Lysenko (1898-1976) was an agronomist. During the reign of Lenin and Stalin years in the Soviet Union, he became the chief proponent of the work of the self-taught plant breeder Ivan Vladimirovich Michurin (1855-1935) and his brand of Lamarckism - a pre-Darwinian theory of evolution of the species proposed in the French scientist Jean-Baptiste Lamarck (1744-1829). He was appointed as the president (1938-56) of the Lenin All-Union Academy of Agricultural Sciences and the director (1940-65) of the Institute of Genetics, USSR Academy of Sciences. The leadership of the USSR believed his promises to deliver rapid increases in crop yields. The USSR That Could Have been - Lenin's New Economic Policy Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 9/19/2005 Mikhail Gorbachev (1931- ) was not the first to introduce Perestroika - the economic liberalization of the communist system along capitalistic lines. During the Russian civil war (1918-1922) the Bolsheviks implemented what they called "War Communism" (1917-1921), the militarization of the economy. Between 1916 and 1920, industrial output plunged by more than four fifths. Grain harvests in both 1920 and 1921 disastrously dwindled, leading to widespread famine, claiming five million lives. A series of rebellions of sailors broke out, most famously in the Krohnstadt naval base. The Truth About Maxim Gorky Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 9/13/2005 Maxim Gorky (1868-1936) is widely considered a Bolshevik author, closely allied with the likes of Lenin and Stalin. But this is far from the truth. Wanted: An East European Ataturk Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 8/10/2005 In November 2002, Citibank has become the first American bank to open a retail operation in Russia, replete with phone and Internet banking. It offers middle-class Russian clients in Moscow and St. Petersburg both ruble and dollar accounts, overdraft and loan facilities in both currencies, and even debit - though no credit - cards. Murky laws regarding ownership of real estate initially preclude mortgages. Citibank already has some corporate business in Russia with a modest asset portfolio of c. $1 billion. Rasputin in Transition: Governments In New Democracies Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 7/31/2005 The mad glint in his eyes is likely to be nothing more ominous than maladjusted contact lenses. If not clean shaven, he is likely to sport nothing wilder than a goatee. More likely an atheist than a priest, this mutation of the ageless confidence artist is nonetheless the direct spiritual descendent of Rasputin, the raving maniac who governed Russia until his own execution by Russian noblemen and patriots. The Russian Devolution -Center and Regions in Putin's Russia Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 6/23/2005 A centerpiece of President's Putin overhaul of Russia is the reversion to the Kremlin of the power to appoint governors, hitherto voted into office. The popularly elected sort - admittedly a motley and venal crew - seem to have provoked his ire as far too independent and, therefore, impudent. Book Review: "The Realm of the Secret Police" by Kuorsalo, Susiluoto and Valkonen Antero Leitzinger - 6/18/2005 In 1700s, Count Mirabeau said that everywhere in the world states have an army, except in Prussia, where the army has a state. The same can be said about the power of the secret police in Russia of the 1900s. In Russia, the mighty secret police has ruled a mighty empire regardless of the shifts in ideology and external symbols. This is the conclusion of Anne Kuorsalo, Ilmari Susiluoto and Martti Valkonen in their critical assessment on contemporary Russia, which has now grown into a trilogy. The latest book of the three [Finnish Russia experts] especially studies the influence of post-war KGB, and its activities in Finland. Book Review: "The Political Economy of Post-Soviet Russia" by Vladimir Tikhomirov Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 6/13/2005 "The philosophers have only interpreted the world in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." -Karl Marx I remember the day in August 1998 when Russia ended its transition. As I walked to work, dwarfed by the decaying monumental buildings and potholed spacious avenues, I saw Russians gathering around exchange offices and banks. As opposed to (Western) media images, there was no violence in the air, just the quiet, matter of fact acceptance that is the hallmark of the Russian. Store shelves were stripped bare and for weeks I survived on stale bread and spaghetti. Peasants stre... Arrest of Khodorkovsky: Threat to Russian Democracy and Economy David Storobin, Esq. - 6/4/2005 On October 25, 2003, Mikhail Khodorkovsky was arrested at gunpoint on a Siberian airport runway and charged with tax evasion. Less than a week later, on October 31, the Russian government froze shares of Yukos due on tax charges. Given that the arrest took place not long before elections and rumors surfaced about the billionaire's desire to become President in future elections, many of his supporters saw the Kremlin's actions against him as retaliation for support of the opposition, and as suppression of any viable potential future opponents. Several days ago, Khodorkovsky was sentenced to 9 years in jail guaranteeing that he won't run for Russian Presidency during next elections. China's Manifest Destiny: Immigration and Land Claims Against Russia Frederick Stakelbeck, Jr. - 6/1/2005 Legendary scenes of determined settlers bravely moving west in a journey to fulfill America's "Manifest Destiny" are being quietly resurrected. Only this time, Chinese migrants, not American settlers, are driving west into the cold, forbidding environment of the Russian Far East and Siberia. Russia as a Creditor Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 5/30/2005 Russia is notorious for its casual attitude to the re-payment of its debts. It has defaulted and re-scheduled its obligations more times in the last decade than it has in the preceding century. Yet, Russia is also one of the world's largest creditor nations. It is owed more than $25 billion by Cuba alone and many dozens of additional billions by other failed states. Indeed, the dismal quality of its forlorn portfolio wouldn't shame a Japanese bank. In the 18 months to May 2001, it has received only $40 million in repayments. Russia's Energy Sector Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 5/24/2005 The pension fund of the Russian oil giant, Lukoil, a minority shareholder in TV-6 (owned by a discredited and self-exiled Yeltsin-era oligarch, Boris Berezovsky), forced, in February 2002, the closure of this television station on legal grounds. Thus was fired the opening shot in the re-politicization of the lucrative (and economically pivotal) energy sector in Russia. Russia's Yukos Trial Does Not Benefit Its Foreign Investment Climate Angelique van Engelen - 5/21/2005 The trial of the Chief Executive of Russian oil company Yukos, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, has many wondering about the viability of investment projects into Russia. A number of Western companies recently has dropped plans and should Khodorkovsky be jailed for the 10 years people believe he might be sentenced to, the move would be strongly condemned by the US government. Russia's Alliance With America's Enemies Ryan Mauro - 5/16/2005 From the end of World War Two to the end of the 1980s, the world remained divided between two powers indulging in the power struggle of history. While the world remained on the brink of nuclear war, this conflict came to an end, beginning with the collapse of the Berlin Wall. As the Soviet Union retreated from Eastern Europe, and eventually imploded upon itself, the United States became the sole superpower. Astronomical manpower, budget, and military cuts followed, along with the revival of terrorism in a new fashion deadlier than ever. Vladimir Putin: Janus Look Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 4/17/2005 Even the most careful and informed perusal of Western policy papers and official announcements leaves one baffled. What is it the West prefers? Does it plump for an affable though ineffectual and constantly inebriated Yeltsin-style leader or would it rather have a thinly disguised authoritarian like Putin? The dilemma seems to be between anarchic democracy and authoritarian rule of law and order. The former agrees with get rich quick tycoons and bleeding heart liberals - the latter with foreign investors and weapons dealers (often one and the same). In Russia, what is good for business often goes against the grain of old fashioned liberalism. History of Government Provocations in Russia Antero Leitzinger - 4/8/2005 The use of provocations as casus belli or as legitimisation of violence, pogroms and propaganda against ethnic and religious groups, and disinformation in order to lead the media astray both at home and abroad are not new phenomena in the political arena. They have a long tradition especially in Russia, from the anti-Semitic propaganda that once spread all over Europe to the present-day disinformation concerning the Chechens. The extraordinarily strong position of the secret police in Russian political culture can partly explain this gloomy side of Moscow's policies. This article enlightens the use of these methods against Jews and Muslims throughout history. The Kleptocracies of the East Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 3/31/2005 The process of transition from communism to capitalism was largely hijacked either by outright criminals in budding outfits of organized crime - or by pernicious and all-pervasive kleptocracies: politicians and political parties bent on looting the state and suppressing the opposition, sometimes fatally. In the past 16 years, industrial production in the economies in transition tumbled in real terms by more than 60 percent. The monthly salary in the poorer bits equals the daily wage of a skilled German industrial worker, or one seventh the European Union's average. Gross domestic product per c... Where is Russia's Foreign Policy Headed? Angelique van Engelen - 3/30/2005 Russia's official foreign policy is rather obscure and not unlike many of Russia's policies, most of which are largely carried out on what appears an ad-hoc basis by President Putin himself. Moscow's frequent rows with international organisations of are more or less an indicator of where it is at in its otherwise non-coherent strategy to enter into the international community. In anger over the role played by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) in Ukrainian and Georgian elections, Moscow recently threatened to withhold its $180 million membership fee from the organi... Russian Opposition May Re-emerge With a Solid Candidate for President Masha Beliaeva - 3/22/2005 Former Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov, sacked by Putin last year, reappeared on Russian political horizon as a potential leader of the opposition and a presidential candidate. Kasyanov's candidacy as a leader of liberal coalition is not likely to speed up the process of much wanted unification between Russia's major liberal parties Yabloko and SPS. At present Kasyanov is the only solid potential rival to Putin in the run for presidential elections of 2008, while his timely come back as a pro-democratic leader is a sign that Russian political opposition may stand a chance. Former USSR : Whose Empire is it anyways? Angelique van Engelen - 3/21/2005 Neo-imperialism in the former Soviet countries is a term that sparks confusion more than controversy in Russia these days. Both Russia and the US are trying to call the shots in a battle for power that bears resemblance to the post WWII carving up of Germany into power bases of the allied forces. The two countries are ill at ease with each other's presence in the former Soviet countries and US efforts to include Russian army bases in NATO based structures are not successful at all. Are the two (former) superpowers on a collision course? Anatoly Chubais: Russia's Last Oligarch Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 3/19/2005 Anatoly Chubais, head of Russia's electricity monopoly, survived an assassination attempt on March 17, 2005. A roadside charge, followed by a hail of automatic gunfire, failed to remove him from the scene. Even by the imperceptible standards of eastern Europe, the crony-infested Russian version of "privatization" was remarkable for its audacity and scope. Assets now worth some $25 billion were sold for c. $1 billion. A later loans-for-shares plunder was micromanaged by Anatoly Chubais, head of the State Property Committee, then heralded by the West as a "true reformer". Chubais enjoyed casting... Russia's Second Empire Sam Vaknin, Ph.D. - 3/9/2005 History teaches us little except how little we can learn from it. Still, there is nothing new under the sun. Thus, drawing too many parallels between the environmentalist movements of the late 19th century and their counterparts in the second half of the twentieth century - would probably prove misleading. Similarly, every fin de siecle has its Fukuyama, proclaiming the end of history and the victory of liberalism and capitalism. Russia and the Kipchak Curse Antero Leitzinger - 3/3/2005 Empires are not born or killed, but transform themselves, disintegrate and reintegrate, reduce and enlarge their territory. An empire is preserved even when its dynasty changes because the change of regency does not necessarily imply changes in the culture of governance and strategic position of the empire. Kipchak was the name of a region that corresponds to present-day South Russia and Ukraine. It existed already before the conquests of Genghis Khan. The diversity of the peoples of Kipchak renders them uncountable, because they had, from the times of the Goths and the Huns, been moving aroun... Ural, Russia: Potential Instability, Autonomy and Independence Antero Leitzinger - 3/2/2005 Summary: The region of Idel-Ural, presently consisting of three Finno-Ugric republics (Mari, Mordovia and Udmurtia) and three Turko-Tatar republics (Tatarstan, Bashkortostan and Chuvassistan) within the Russian Federation, forms a historically prosperous region with large natural resources. It used to be a site of glorious Tatar civilizations, and an important crossroads of both European and Oriental trade routes. Russia colonised this region in the 1500s, but since the fall of the USSR, several Idel-Ural republics have been looking for increasing autonomy from Moscow. Considering the region's... |