September
9, 2000
This Date's Issues: 4500 4501
Johnson's Russia List
#4500 [DJ: This issue is the 500th this year]
9 September 2000
davidjohnson@erols.com
[Note from David Johnson:
1. Moscow Times: And the Winner Is? (DJ: We are in
Pultizer Prize territory here. Today's issue of the
Moscow Times contains a collection of detailed articles
exploring falsification of the March presidential
election. Western experts on Russian elections, who for
the most part minimized falsification, should pay
attention. Go to www.moscowtimes.ru
My admiration for the Times is not misplaced.)
2. AFP: Tearful Muscovites remember victims of deadly terror
blast.
3. Anatol Lieven: Brzezinski on a Turkish model for Russia.
4. Washington Post: Robert Kaiser, Vladimir Putin Dishes With
the Media.
5. Reuters: Putin ends U.N. summit with frank interview.
6. BBC MONITORING: RUSSIAN PAPER SAYS NUMERICAL DOWNSIZING OF
MILITARY UNLIKELY TO ACHIEVE AIM.
7. Reuters: IMF says Russia managing well without IMF loans.
8. Moscow Times: Primakov Assures West.]
*******
#1
Moscow Times
September 9, 2000
And the Winner Is?
The Moscow Times has documented enough falsification in the March 26
presidential election to question the legitimacy of the vote. Yevgenia
Borisova reports from Dagestan, Saratov, Tatarstan, Ingushetia, Bashkortostan
and Moscow, and by telephone from Novosibirsk, Kursk, Nizhny Novgorod,
Kabardino-Balkariya and Mordovia. With additional reporting by Gary Peach
from Kaliningrad, Nonna Chernyakova from Vladivostok and Mayerbeck Nunayev
from Chechnya.
Abdulla Magomedov, a 42-year-old police officer and a father of three, was on
duty guarding the entrance to a government building in Dagestan when two
Volgas pulled up _ one black, the other white. Three men and a woman got out,
flashed government ID cards to enter the building, and then reemerged
carrying large sacks.
"I am supposed to control anything leaving the building," Magomedov recalled.
"I checked what was in the bags. They were stuffed with ballots filled in for
[Communist candidate Gennady] Zyuganov, with the seals and signs of polling
stations _ I know how they look, I was an observer at the elections."
It was 11 a.m. on Sunday, April 16 _ three weeks after the March 26 election
that had confirmed Vladimir Putin in office with 52.94 percent of the vote.
In the aftermath of that vote, two leading national opposition parties _ the
Communists and Yabloko _ had alleged widespread elections fraud. Dagestan had
been fingered for such fraud often enough that a commission from the State
Duma had come to Makhachkala to investigate. And officer Magomedov had
evidence of a deadly serious federal crime.
"I got very angry, and tried to take one of the bags from the woman, one of
the four. But she told me, 'Do you really need to get involved in this?' And
the men also told me not to interfere."
The four carried their bags of ballots a little ways off, with an uncertain
Magomedov following. They took out the ballots and began to tear them up and
then to burn them.
"I know ballots must not be destroyed. I protested, but they only threatened
to have me sacked," Magomedov recounted in an interview on April 19, three
days after the fact. He assumed they were destroying evidence to foil the
Duma commission's investigation.
"I told them I would not leave it like this, that I was not going to shut up
because I am a Communist and I voted for Zyuganov," Magomedov said.
The next day, he filed a complaint with the local Communist Party. The
complaint was forwarded to the headquarters of Makhachkala's Kirovsky
district _ the building Magomedov had been guarding _ but there has been no
reply.
April was dry in Makhachkala, and on a visit later that month to the site of
the fire indicated by Magomedov, The Moscow Times was able to collect the
ashes of the ballots. The names of the candidates in the March 26 elections
can be clearly seen.
"This is not right, what they did," said Magomedov. "They are just a mafia
structure prepared to do whatever they want."
Magomedov says he is ready to testify in court to what he has seen. But he
also worries: His colleagues have been telling him to shut up or risk losing
his job _ and his monthly salary of 800 rubles ($28) is the only pay coming
in to support his family of five.
Six Months of Testimony
In the six months since the elections, The Moscow Times has met dozens of
ordinary people like Magomedov. Federal elections authorities, foreign
observers and the criminal justice system have all been dismissive of fraud
allegations like his _ admitting that fraud existed and lamenting it, but
insisting it was insignificant (and apparently, punishing no one for it).
But fraud was far from insignificant. Given how close the vote was _ Putin
won with just 52.94 percent, or by a slim margin of 2.2 million votes _ fraud
and abuse of state power appear to have been decisive.
Consider:
oIn Dagestan alone, it is possible to definitively document about 88,000
votes stolen from other candidates and given to candidate Putin _ simply by
comparing documentation at about 16 percent of the local precincts, or
polling stations, to documentation at the national level. The cheating leaps
out immediately.
And that is only in the minority of Dagestani voting precincts that were
willing to provide election-day documentation. Other precincts _ where
observers were kicked out or otherwise snubbed _ seem to have been engaged
in, if anything, more extensive fraud.
A State Duma commission investigating Dagestan under Communist Deputy
Alexander Saly has extrapolated from documented fraud to assert that about
700,000 votes in Dagestan must have been wrongly awarded to Putin. But the
methodology, as laid out in an April 27 issue of Rossisskaya Gazeta, is
highly questionable. And inexplicably, Saly's team has apparently only made
intelligent use of about half of the hundreds of protocols it has collected.
(A "protocol" is a certificate of a precinct's official vote tally.)
Moreover, when Saly was asked to share copies of at least some of his
findings with The Moscow Times, he agreed to show only some of the protocols,
and joked that Zyuganov kept the rest in a folder with him.
A more conservative calculation by The Moscow Times _ one that assumes fraud
in the precincts that would not give out protocols was no worse than it was
in those that did _ settled on a figure of about 551,000 votes that were
crudely falsified in this way.
In other words: After a visit to Dagestan alone, it is possible to challenge
almost a fourth of Putin's national margin of victory as highly questionable.
In other regions, the same sort of correcting-fluid falsification _ the
clumsiest imaginable, where higher-level elections officials simply
contradict the official reports of lower-level officials, and hope no one
will notice _ can also be documented. In Saratov, Communist-collected
protocols chronicle discrepancies in Putin's favor to the tune of 11,779
votes; in Kabardino-Balkariya involving 7,126 votes; and in Bashkortostan
involving 1,497 votes. Again, protocols in these and other regions were
notoriously difficult to obtain, meaning this sort of crude falsification
could actually be much larger.
oIn Tatarstan and Bashkortostan, where all told Putin won 2.87 million of the
4.46 million votes cast, fraud was more carefully organized. Voters and
observers report a precinct-by-precinct conspiracy to stuff ballot boxes in
every manner imaginable. If in Dagestan, Kabardino-Balkariya and Saratov
higher-level officials rewrote lower-level results, in Tatarstan and
Bashkortostan lower-level officials were already on board _ they produced the
"correct" results the first time around.
In Tatarstan, one ballot-stuffing game was so prevalent that it was even
given a name _ "the caterpillar" _ and its perpetrators even approached the
Tatarstan president's spokesman on election day to ask him to help.
This more closed sort of vote-rigging is much harder to put an exact number
on. But a conservative guess would be that fraud was on a scale of that of
Dagestan, meaning hundreds of thousands of votes stolen for Putin in each
republic.
oIn all of the above-named regions and also in Kursk, Mordovia, Kaliningrad
and Nizhny Novgorod _ nine regions where Putin won a total of 6.96 million
votes _ regional governors resorted to a vertical chain of bullying: Everyone
from collective farm workers to college professors was forced to vote for
Putin. Some critics have gone so far as to argue that on the eve of the 21st
century, such bullying excluded villagers as a class from the democratic
process.
The effect of this so-called "abuse of administrative resources" on the vote
tally is impossible to quantify. But those who have studied it and who spoke
to The Moscow Times said bullying shifted several million votes from other
candidates to Putin. Nearly all observers argued that it was far more
influential than, say, the crude falsifications seen in places like Dagestan
and Tatarstan. (This article does not look at how the Kremlin's abuse of
media power influenced the outcome of the election, although the relentlessly
positive national coverage almost certainly added even millions more to
Putin's vote).
oIn Chechnya, Putin officially won 191,039 votes _ or 50.63 percent _ from a
population made up of families whose homes and lives have been destroyed by
the war and rank-and-file soldiers dropped into the middle of a bloody and
terrifying guerrilla war. In other words, refugee camps and conscripts
supposedly voted en masse in favor of Putin.
Even otherwise timid international observers were not amused by this. They
have refused to recognize results from Chechnya, which was under martial law
on election day, and there were no observers there. With the exception of the
federal government and the Central Elections Commission, almost no one sees
the vote in Chechnya as legitimate.
oPerhaps the most startling discovery of our six-month investigation was one
that emerged from the CEC web site: The official number of registered voters
grew by 1.3 million in the three months between the Dec. 19 State Duma
elections and the March 26 presidential elections _ and there is no good
explanation as to why.
All potential voters are automatically registered by the state upon turning
18 years old. That's why the appearance of 1.3 million new voters in such a
short period has left Russian and American demographers interviewed for this
article baffled _ and troubled by the lame nature of explanations offered by
the CEC and other federal authorities. An unofficial explanation is that
these 1.3 million voters are mostly fictional _ "dead souls," to borrow a
term from Nikolai Gogol's famous novel, summoned up from the imagination of
corrupt elections officials. (See sidebar, page VII).
Crime But No Punishment
Voters have complained about fraud, but no one seems to be listening.
In small villages where it is possible for someone to poll his neighbors and
determine how they all voted, dishonesty turns up easily. Some villages have
written open letters to the president and to other higher authorities to
protest their votes being "stolen," and The Moscow Times has obtained such
letters.
In some cases, voters have testified to having the pens and ballots snatched
out of their hands at the voting booth and filled in for them. In others,
they have been bullied into voting for Putin with threats from local leaders
that they will lose their jobs, or be denied state welfare support. Other
voters recounted seeing elections officials adding "dead souls" to
registration lists _ by listing children as adults, or listing people twice,
or simply by adding names at random. In some cases, corrupt elections
officials have added fictional floors to apartment buildings, and filled the
resulting fictional apartments with fictional voters _ who as one cast their
ballots for Putin.
And everywhere, local government can be found to have worked for Putin _ by
leaning on factory directors, school principals, hospital administrators and
farm chiefs, who in turn bullied their employees and others dependent on
them. Those reluctant to vote "correctly" report being threatened with losing
their jobs, being evicted or being denied their right to state support such
as pensions. "Of course we were pressured from the top, and we pressured our
people to vote for Putin," said one collective farm chief in an interview in
Kazan, on condition of anonymity. "But it is forbidden to talk about it."
This and more is among the evidence assembled by The Moscow Times _ reporting
that echoed in similar investigations carried out by the Communist Party,
Yabloko, foreign observer missions and the Saly commission in the Duma.
The inescapable conclusion is that Putin would not have won outright on March
26 without cheating.
At the same time, those months of reporting indicate that the conventional
wisdom of the time was correct: Putin was far and away the most popular
candidate for president in the spring and summer of 2000. Had he won less
than 50 percent of the March 26 vote, he most likely would have faced _ and
easily defeated _ Communist leader Zyuganov in a runoff.
Tellingly, in every region visited by The Moscow Times, the same top
Communist members who so indignantly laid out evidence of fraud in the first
round all freely conceded Putin would have easily won in a second round
anyway.
According to Saly, the Communist Party member who heads the Duma's commission
to investigate elections fraud, about 440 lawsuits were filed in courts
across the nation to contest fraud of one kind or another in the March 26
vote. Saly also said the nation's various elections commissions have received
untold thousands of formal complaints.
But those who file such complaints say they get no satisfaction.
And those who appealed to the courts were often told to readdress their
complaints to federal or regional prosecutors _ in other words, to complain
to the executive branch ultimately headed by Putin, and not to the
theoretically separate judicial branch. Prosecutors, in turn, often send such
appeals back to the courts, or to elections officials _ in a never-ending
game of go-nowhere football.
Such has been the experience of Ilyas Magomedov, an aide to a Communist State
Duma deputy from Dagestan. Magomedov filed suit in two separate courts in
Makhachkala alleging specific instances of fraud and violations in both the
December 1999 Duma vote and the March 2000 presidential vote. In both cases
the courts declined to hear the matter, sending Magomedov written orders to
appeal instead to prosecutors. When he then appealed to Makhachkala's deputy
prosecutor, he received written instructions to appeal to the courts.
Many others reported that they did not even bother to complain about fraud
they witnessed because they saw it was hopelessly futile.
"Undoubtedly there was large-scale forgery here, but we did not prepare a
complaint," said Dmitry Fomin, who campaigned for Grigory Yavlinsky in
Tatarstan's Naberezhniye Chelny district. "For Tatarstan, the definition of a
court is: Something that takes a lot of energy but provides a very equivocal
result. Everything is under such tight control here that we expect better
results from publications in the media than from court decisions."
See No Evil?
Federal elections law gives Russian and foreign organizations broad powers to
observe all voting day activities, and observers are supposed to prevent the
most crude abuses.
But observers were not everywhere. Communist and Yabloko party observers
allege having seen, or heard of, massive fraud, to the tune of millions of
votes. Zyuganov has claimed to have had 7 million votes stolen from him,
quite a lot if Putin won by about 2 million _ but the evidence provided for
such claims, while often troubling, is not complete.
Meanwhile, it's hard to know how seriously to take foreign observers.
Consider the biggest, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in
Europe, which sent a team of about 400 people to observe both the 1999 Duma
elections and then again three months later the presidential vote. As with
other foreign observer groups, about a 10th of the OSCE teams were
"long-term" observers with strong knowledge of Russia and Russian, who
arrived months beforehand to take an in-depth look at the situation, while
the other 380 or so were flown in late in the game to watch the voting day.
Edouard Brunner, head of the OSCE delegation, told The Moscow Times a week
before the Duma vote that he expected "international observers will come up
with a statement [after the Dec. 19 vote] that the elections were conducted
in a democratic way." They did indeed (with the exception of the least
well-known of the lot, the European Media Institute, which characterized the
Duma vote as "sad" and a step back from democracy for Russia).
The short-term foreign observers usually include the top officials like
Brunner _ and it is they who tend to set the tone of the crucial
morning-after news conferences and press releases.
Following the presidential elections, long-term OSCE observers interviewed by
The Moscow Times, on strict condition of anonymity, expressed disgust for the
cheery tone of the day-after OSCE commentary _ and dissatisfaction that the
more thorough, official OSCE report on the elections _ which was published
two months later and was harsher and more informed _ got no attention.
"They make the OSCE's press statement on the elections before the long-term
observers _ and it's the long-term observers who really know the story _ have
actually given their reports," said one long-term OSCE observer. "They don't
actually hear all the evidence before they write it _ and then what happens
is, the longer report that the OSCE writes, which is sometimes more critical,
its overall tone is set by the press statement.
"Because the press statement is the official stamp of approval. That's what
gets quoted in the newspapers ... That's what Putin's people carry around
with them in their hand. Nobody will read the detailed report."
That detailed report, released May 19, is posted on the OSCE web site
(www.osce.org/odihr/elecrep.htm). In it, the OSCE sticks to its initial
finding that the elections were democratic and a step forward for Russia. But
the report also cites anecdotal evidence from the long-term observers similar
to stories heard repeatedly by The Moscow Times _ even as the report
downplays the significance of the abuses it chronicles and goes into little
detail.
The OSCE report states, for example, that in fully half of all polling
stations visited by OSCE observers, "some of the cumbersome procedural
requirements for the vote count were circumvented in order to expedite the
process."
It also notes that the Communist Party observers in particular had documented
"episodic violations that, in and of themselves, would not appear to be
sufficient to alter the outcome," and then goes on to give a jargon-softened
list:
"For example, sporadic instances of family voting, inclusion of deceased
persons on voter lists, occasional denial of requests to receive copies of
protocols, various abuses of administrative resources, improper influence of
administrative authorities seen to be directing the work of polling station
commissions, expulsion of individual observers from some sites, incidents of
inequities regarding access to the mass media, distribution of campaign
material during the 'silent period,' etc."
Why Did They Do It?
"Other allegations were more serious and deserve the full weight of
investigation," the OSCE report continues. "They involved charges that
protocols were falsified, in some instances by reversing or increasing the
vote totals recorded for Putin over Zyuganov."
The report concludes that the OSCE observers "are not in a position to judge
the validity of the complaints raised by the Communist Party and can draw no
conclusions as to the proficiency and seriousness with which they were
reviewed by competent election commissions or the courts."
Yet the OSCE did in effect reject the validity of those complaints _ when
they endorsed the elections as free, fair and democratic. In similar cases,
such as the fraud-tainted April re-election of Peruvian President Alberto
Fujimori, Western observers complained until new elections were held. The
winner, again Fujimori, today enjoys more legitimacy thanks to the exercise.
"Why did [Western observers] do it [endorse the Putin election as
legitimate]? In obvious support for what they call Russian reforms," said
Boris Kagarlitsky, a sociologist and political analyst with the Institute for
Comparative Politics. "And of course in support for Putin as a reformer. It
is a credit of trust to Putin and an extension of the support of the Chubais
group," he added, referring to long-running Western support for Anatoly
Chubais, the architect of Russian privatization programs.
"Many of these organizations, they have as it were a political statement that
they want to make before they go," said an OSCE long-term observer unhappy
with the organization's soothing official findings. "I thought it was very,
very ... totally cynical and unsatisfactory, and if I had been writing the
press statement I'd have given it a different slant."
Who Gave the Orders?
Not one person of those interviewed over the six months since the election
could offer compelling evidence that fraud was part of a national conspiracy
organized on direct orders from anyone in the Kremlin.
But there is abundant evidence that in some of Russia's 89 regions, orders to
falsify the vote came down directly and formally from the governors' offices
_ in a nation where governors from Kaliningrad to Vladivostok all publicly
embraced Putin's political vehicle Unity. And there are reasons to believe
that Kremlin officials might have made clear, with not-always-subtle hints,
that regional leaders were expected to deliver the Putin vote by hook or by
crook.
Consider just the example of the 1995 Duma elections, when then-Prime
Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin angrily and publicly berated regional governors
for not delivering the vote _ and even threatened to engineer the downfall of
governors of regions where Our Home Is Russia did worst.
That the Putin team saw the apparatus of government as subordinate to their
campaign needs is suggested by the composition of the team itself. According
to the OSCE's final report on the March 26 vote, Putin campaign staff
included, among many others, three deputy heads of the Kremlin
administration; top Interior Ministry officials including the first deputy
minister and deputy police chiefs across the nation; top Railways Ministry
officials representing all of the country's major railroad routes; and top
officials from the tax and agriculture ministries.
"[OSCE observers] in different regions encountered incidents where campaign
materials for the acting president were found in offices of territorial
election commissions," the OSCE report says, referring to the unit that
oversees 20 to 30 polling stations. "Some territorial commissions
acknowledged that they were instructed by the administration to pick up Putin
campaign materials for distribution in their areas. Corroborating reports
were submitted from territorial commissions as far distant from one another
as [Vladivostok] and Kazan.
"In one instance, the chairwoman of a territorial commission acknowledged
that one day earlier, she had received her first specific order regarding
promoting the acting president's campaign. At that time she had been
instructed to pick up campaign literature promoting his candidacy at the same
time as she picked up the ballots for her territory."
Elections officials were also apparently bullied into making up results _
whether by adding "dead souls" to their count (see sidebar, page VII) or
"correcting" official lower-level results to favor Putin.
******
#2
Tearful Muscovites remember victims of deadly terror blast
MOSCOW, Sept 9 (AFP) -
Scores of tearful Russians laid floral tributes Saturday on the site of a
Moscow housing block where 92 people died exactly a year ago in a terrorist
bomb attack.
An open air memorial service was held on the building site in Moscow's
Guryanov Street around a large wooden Orthodox where the eight storey block
of 72 apartments once stood.
"There were a lot of people here between 10:00 p.m. and midnight (Friday)
when the explosion went off," one pensioner told the NTV television station.
"This will remain with us all our lives. As long as we are alive we will
remember those that died," said a tearful army officer in full military
uniform.
"We will take our revenge on these bastards, to the last drop of blood. We
will never forgive them for what they have done," he said.
Former resident Gennady, who lived in the destroyed building for 26 years,
said he had only escaped the bombers because he and his family were staying
with his mother-in-law at the time.
"All my childhood has been wiped out in one go," he said. "I lost my best
friend here. I lost everyone here," he added.
Children's cuddly toys were placed among the floral tributes, a poignant
reminder of the many youngsters who died in the blast.
A plastic beaker of vodka with slice of black bread placed over it was set
down on the site where new flats are being built, a traditional mark of
respect by relatives on the anniversary of the death of a loved one.
As many as 16 people remain officially missing following the Guryanov Street
blast and a second explosion in Moscow four days later in which a further 118
people died.
Two men, Taukan Frantsuzov and Ruslan Magayayev, have been arrested and
charged in connection with the two Moscow blasts but have yet to come to
trial.
In total, 292 people died in four apartment bombings across Russia last
September. The deadly blast stunned Russia and marked the first time the
country had been confronted by terrorist bomb attacks on civilian housing
estates.
The attacks were cited by the Russian authorities as a key factor in
prompting the Russian ground invasion of Chechnya on October 1, 1999.
But Russian media have often speculated that the FSB domestic intelligence
service could have planned the bombings in order to precipitate a war in
Chechnya likely to boost the popularity of then prime minister, now President
Vladimir Putin.
The head of state, a former FSB chief, has rejected the suggestion as
preposterous.
However, the theory gained credence when it emerged that FSB agents had
planted a "fake" bomb in a housing estate in Ryazan, 200 kilometresmiles)
southeast of Moscow.
FSB officials said the move was an elaborate security test.
******
#3
Date: Fri, 08 Sep 2000
From: Anatol Lieven <alieven@ceip.org>
Subject: Brzezinski on a Turkish model for Russia.
Dear David,
I'm profoundly tired of commenting on Brzezinski's writings about Russia.
So with regard to his bizarre suggestion in The National Interest that
Russia should follow the path of Kemal Ataturk's Turkey, I'll just attach
below a discussion of this issue from the conclusion to my book, Chechnya:
Tombstone of Russian Power, published three years ago.
I'll only add- which should be obvious to everyone - that whenever Russia
does in fact begin to take even the most limited steps in a Kemalist
direction (authoritarian centralisation in the name of reform,
militarisation and a dominant political role for the security forces,
suppression of minority rights) Brzezinski is the very first to break out
in furious denunciations.
Up to now - thank God - Russia has not in fact gone very far in that
direction, above all when it comes to the ethnic minorities, whether
Tatars, Yakuts, Karachai or whoever. As long as these do not engage in
outright revolt against the Russian Federation, they enjoy a political,
cultural and territorial autonomy of which the Turkish minorities can only
dream. The preservation of this under Yeltsin was one of that figure's few
genuine claims to respect, and a key reason why, except for Chechnya and
some other parts of the North Caucasus, ethnic peace prevails across the
greater part of the Russian Federation. We must all pray that this
continues, and that Putin does not follow the path of Ataturk and his
successors. I know that Turkey is a NATO Member and a Vital Strategic
Partner and a Force For Stability in the Middle East - but this argument is
ridiculous!
From: Chechnya: Tombstone of Russian Power (Yale University Press, 1998),
pages 383-384:
There is a historical model for how Russia might react in these
circumstances, and strangely enough, it is one which has been advanced by
some Western commentators as a positive model for Russia: this is Turkey
as reshaped by Mustapha Kemal ‘Ataturk’.
The reasons why this is seen as a positive model in the West are threefold:
that Ataturk’s Turkey gave up the Ottoman Empire’s pretensions to lead the
Muslim world (through the caliphate) and rule over huge areas beyond
Turkey’s ethnic borders; that Ataturk and his successors have crushed both
conservative and radical Islam in the name of Western-inspired modern
secularism; and that they have aligned themselves with the West
geopolitically, first by refusing to ally with Germany in the Second World
War, then by joining NATO in the Cold War, then by lining up alongside the
USA and Israel in the Middle East.
The possible parallels with contemporary Russia look clear enough - and it
is probably only traditional Russian contempt and hatred for the Turks
which has prevented them being picked up by Russian thinkers. By the early
20th century, the Ottoman Empire had experienced decades of repeated
humiliation at the hands of the West, and of failed reforms. The
multinational empire itself, and its claims to leadership of the Muslim
world were fading fast. With defeat in 1918, they disappeared altogether,
and former subject peoples advanced towards the heart of ethnic Turkish
territory itself.
In these circumstances, younger and more radical elements of the Turkish
elites, and especially the military, decided to rebuild and strengthen
their state on the basis of Turkish ethnic nationalism. Hitherto, this had
been almost completely lacking in the Ottoman elite’s ideology and culture.
‘Turk’ had been almost a term of abuse, implying a coarse and uneducated
Anatolian peasant. In terms of blood, the elites (and most probably Ataturk
himself) were overwhelmingly non-Turkish.
It was in reaction to all this that Ataturk launched the slogan, ‘Be Proud
to Be a Turk’, and launched a brutal attack on religious tradition in the
name of modernisation. In part because of the strength of the traditions he
had to overcome, and in part because of the Turkish military’s traditions
(and its Wilhelmine German models), the state that he founded embodied very
strong authoritarian, military and chauvinist elements. As James Pettifer
has written, to this day external and internal enemies are seen everywhere:
‘It is very difficult to be Turkish. In the loyal bureaucrats’ view great
national discipline is necessary to surmount these ever-present threats...’
Kemalist Turkey also had quasi-absolutist claims to total cultural control
over the entire population within Turkey's new and much reduced borders -
something which had also been lacking in the intermittently savage, but
generally lazy and pluralist governing philosophy of the Ottoman empire.
Despite the fact that by the early 19th Century, the Turks had been written
off by many European (and some Turkish) commentators as hopelessly decadent
and incapable of reform and regeneration, the result of the Kemalist
national revolution was in fact - or seemed to be for many years - a
relatively successful experiment in modern state-building and development.
However, it is one which has been a disaster for Turkey's ethnic
minorities, Armenians, Greeks and Kurds, who were respectively subjected to
genocide, massacre and expulsion, and an attempt at complete suppression of
their language and cultural identity (though the Turks reply, with
considerable justice, that this was no worse than the fate with which these
enemies were threatening them). Later of course this state philosophy also
threatened intervention in neighbouring states harbouring ethnic Turkish
minorities, like Cyprus - for while Kemalist nationalism had abandoned
claims to non-Turks beyond Turkey’s borders, it certainly did not imply the
abandonment of claims to protect ethnic Turks; and in this context, it
needs to be emphasied that no Russian state - even a liberal, capitalist
and democratic one - is ever going to be able to abandon all claim to a
right of protection over ethnic Russians outside Russia, at least against
actual physical attack. This may also be true of the Russian stake in
Sebastopol.
The parallels to Russia’s position could hardly be clearer; and the
advocates of a Kemalist path have not thought through the impIications of
their arguments, or what a true Ataturk and his programme, with a capacity
for mobilising and inspiring the Russian army and people, would mean for
Europe today. Apart from anything else, just as it would in part be a
reaction against the ethnicist nationalism of neighbouring states, so it
would in turn produce further reactions in this direction among Russia’s
neighbours (and of course her own minorities) risking a downward spiral of
hatred, oppression, unrest and ultimately war.
******
#4
Washington Post
September 8, 2000
[for personal use only]
Vladimir Putin Dishes With the Media
By Robert G. Kaiser
NEW YORK - At the bar downstairs, an animated crowd of burnished New
Yorkers, a bartender in white shaking and pouring martinis: just another
Wednesday night at the 21 Club. But upstairs in the paneled Remington Room
(with Frederic Remington's images of the West in gilded frames on every
wall), a most unusual dinner party: 20 media heavies from print and
broadcast, and the president of Russia. It was Vladimir Putin's first visit
to 21.
Hard to imagine Joe Stalin at 21--or even Mikhail Gorbachev. But
Putin--small, calm, unassuming in manner--seemed perfectly comfortable. This
may have been his mission: reassurance. Before the night was over, he had
surprised his dinner companions with several observations.
Putin's pal Tom Brokaw (they met in Moscow last June, when Brokaw interviewed
the president for NBC) was the host. When Putin arrived for dinner at 9, he
circulated among the guests a little stiffly, shaking hands and saying "good
evening" to each, without much of an accent. The guests were programmed to
make a memorable impression on the president. But the president was
programmed to say "good evening" (the last that was heard of his English) and
didn't seem to be absorbing their efforts.
In the days before, Brokaw spent a lot of time on the phone arranging this
dinner. "Protocol is not my thing," he acknowledged. When he proposed the
idea, Putin's people wanted to know who would attend, so Brokaw suggested the
editor of the New York Times, the editor of The Washington Post, the editors
of Time and Newsweek and the New Yorker, Diane Sawyer and Katie Couric,
Maureen Dowd and Richard Cohen.
The Russians agreed. Then on Wednesday one of Putin's guys called back. Have
you invited too many people, he asked. Can such a large group have an
informal conversation? Brokaw convinced him that they didn't want to start
disinviting the people on this guest list.
As the media types arrived some minutes ahead of the president, Brokaw broke
some bad news to each of them, one or two at a time: Putin had insisted that
the gathering be "off the record." Brokaw promised to try to persuade Putin
himself to change that rule, but Putin initially said he wanted a private
exchange of views.
There were three round tables. Katie Couric sat two seats from Putin, next to
his interpreter, and got the president talking about the tragedy of the Kursk
submarine. Evidently, her winning manner works even through an interpreter.
Soon Putin was holding forth.
Brokaw, sitting on his other side, realized that Putin's comments would
interest the whole group, and asked everyone to listen. Was Putin willing to
talk about the Kursk on the record? He was. (His comments are reported in
today's A section.) From then on, he seemed comfortable staying on the record
nearly all the time.
Maureen Orth of Vanity Fair, author of a profile of Putin in next month's
issue, aggressively questioned the president about harassment of media owners
in Moscow, which led to spirited exchanges, but no conceptual breakthroughs.
Orth asked how the government could harass tycoon Boris Berezovsky since
Berezovsky had helped choose Putin as Boris Yeltsin's successor. Did he
really, Putin asked. "He wanted you to believe that." Putin seemed to enjoy
the repartee, and enjoyed not answering the questions.
He was asked, "What kind of a democrat are you?" and replied by asking the
questioner, "Were you a member of the Soviet Communist Party?" No. Then he
explained: "We had 12 million members of the Communist Party. . . . The
biggest problem we face is the poisoned consciousness of our people. It will
take a long time for our people to realize that the quality of their lives
will depend on their own effort."
Russia, Putin went on, needs "a real multiparty system"--not parties "that
represent only themselves, but rather . . . reflect the interests of large
groups of society," which could "shape the policies of the state." But Russia
doesn't have such parties. Instead it has candidates for office "whom people
vote for because they like them."
"Like you?" he was asked. Putin won an overwhelming majority in this year's
presidential election after forming a new party whose only platform was to
support Putin.
"Like me," he agreed. "And that's very dangerous."
A politic reply. As was his response when asked if Russia needs a free
press--really free, the way Americans understand the term.
"A modern state is not possible without freedom of the press," he replied.
Really free? "Absolutely." But in Russia, he has denounced "the anti-state
press"--which is what the American press thinks it is supposed to be. He has
also denounced Russian media coverage of the Kursk accident.
Putin did least well trying to explain why he remained on vacation on the
Black Sea after the Kursk submarine sank with 118 hands on board. He had a
lot to say about the accident, but very little to say about his own decision.
If a similar accident happens again, will he behave differently?
"I couldn't have done anything that would have helped," he replied. He meant
he couldn't have helped the sailors. A politician better attuned to public
opinion would have found a way to at least help himself. "I didn't have a
choice between a good and a bad response," Putin added. "I had a choice
between a bad and an awful option." He didn't explain which he had chosen, or
what the other one might have been.
At 11:25, the party broke up. When it began, Putin had said he hadn't slept
for 20 hours, but when it was over he didn't rush to leave. He signed
autographs and schmoozed. This old KGB man, easier to sum up before you'd met
him, had enjoyed himself.
******
#5
Putin ends U.N. summit with frank interview
By Ron Popeski
UNITED NATIONS, Sept 8 (Reuters) - Russian President Vladimir Putin closed a
lackluster U.N. visit on Friday with a freewheeling television interview
laying bare his thoughts on the Kursk submarine tragedy, disarmament and
hitherto unknown aspects of his private life.
Putin raised eyebrows at the U.N. Millennium Summit by adopting an
uncharacteristic low profile at his appearances.
Largely absent was the poise so evident in previous foreign appearances or at
summit talks with U.S. President Bill Clinton in Moscow last June. Back then,
his calm, off-the-cuff approach to difficult issues left his guest looking
wooden.
His colourless performances invited comparison with the buzz which Boris
Yeltsin always generated at such gatherings, although the lively atmosphere
around Putin's predecessor was badly harmed by his increasingly shaky
demeanor and unpredictability in the final stages of his mandate.
Putin's chance to shine -- he was among the first of more than 150 leaders to
speak after Clinton -- fell flat in a speech highlighted by two relatively
obscure proposals.
Putin said he had received favourable responses to his calls to hold a
conference on the militarization of space call and entrench peaceful uses of
uranium and plutonium.
But they barely got a public mention amid a welter of speeches, four round
tables and broad calls for U.N. reform.
PUTIN STICKS TO KNOWN POSITIONS
His speech to a special Security Council session on boosting the U.N.'s
peacekeeping effort stuck to known Russian positions on insisting on Council
approval for any military intervention. A late-night news conference shed no
new light on Russian ideas for the U.N.'s future role.
The highly publicised interview with CNN's ``Larry King Live'' allowed Putin
to let his hair down on the tasks facing him as president and disasters
recently befalling him, among them the sinking last month of the
nuclear-powered Kursk submarine.
Putin said he might act differently if confronted again with such a disaster.
He was lambasted in the Russian press for not breaking off a Black Sea
vacation to rush to the scene where 118 seamen died.
``The only thing which could have been changed was ... possibly to halt my
working meetings, to suspend them at my place of vacation ... I could have
gone back to Moscow,'' Putin said, according to a transcript released by CNN.
``But again, this would have been a PR (public relations) action, since in
any city of the country or throughout the world, I'm always linked to the
military... From the point of view of PR, that could look better. Maybe yes
it would look better.''
Putin dealt at length with Russian objections to U.S. proposals to create a
national missile defence system -- Moscow's main point of contention with
Washington -- saying the notion upset the nuclear balance established during
the Cold War.
``If we disrupt that balance, we'll put the whole world before this really
great danger, which doesn't serve the interests of Russia or other
countries,'' he said.
``The most acceptable solution would be to preserve the balance of interests
as we know it today and jointly try to avert all these dangers.''
PRESS FREEDOM NOT UNDER THREAT
Putin dismissed suggestions that press freedom might be under threat in
Russia because of complaints by two business magnates with media interests --
Vladimir Gusinsky, jailed briefly in June on embezzlement charges, and Boris
Berezovsky, who has accused the Kremlin of putting pressure on him.
The real issue, he said, was debts incurred by both.
He repeated long-held positions that the conflict against Chechen separatists
was coming to a successful conclusion and that Moscow was confronting Islamic
extremists with foreign funding. The Russian people, he said, were fully
behind him.
``Yes, absolutely so, they do support me,'' he said. ``When federal forces
stopped the resistance of organised troops...the political process was
started with the local population. Today there are no large-scale military
operations. None.''
Putin was enthusiastic about the economy, saying it had undergone ``dramatic
change, unprecedented internationally.''
Difficulties for Russian consumers, he said, had not been unexpected.
``Nobody expected there would be change without imagining what would be
entailed. But I think that right now we can confidently state that the
country is able to deal with it.''
Of his personal life, Putin told King he had twice visited Israel and had
begun wearing an Orthodox cross, a gift from his mother, after it was nearly
lost in a fire at the family's country house.
Putin, a former agent of the Soviet KGB secret services infamous for its
campaign of harassment of religious believers, had previously said he was
baptised in Russia's Orthodox church and carried a cross.
``I was surprised completely when one of the workers, sifting through the
ashes ... found the cross intact,'' he said. ``And the house fell. This was a
surprise, a revelation and therefore I always now keep it with me.''
******
#6
BBC MONITORING
RUSSIAN PAPER SAYS NUMERICAL DOWNSIZING OF MILITARY UNLIKELY TO ACHIEVE AIM
Source: 'Segodnya', Moscow, in Russian 8 Sep 00
A Russian newspaper has cast doubt on whether a simple arithmetical
downsizing of the armed forces will generate significant savings. According
to 'Segodnya', no amount of downsizing will help unless Russia stops
producing arms for general mobilization and training for combat operations
after a nuclear strike, abandons strategic air defence, disbands the
Internal Troops and transfers the Federal Agency for Government
Communications and Information (FAPSI) and the Railway Troops either to the
Defence Ministry or to civilian funding. The following is the text of a
report published in the newspaper on 8th September
Information about military reform is usually circulated in our country by
means of rumours and "leaks". Yesterday the Military News Agency followed
by Interfax reported, citing their Defence Ministry "representatives", that
it is planned to downsize the army alone by 400,000 by 2003 (from 1.2
million to 800,000). This includes the Ground Forces (180,000); the navy
(over 50,000); and the air force (around 40,000), while the Defence
Ministry central apparatus, the logistics services and the military medics
will also shed "live flesh".
But they will retain their status, which cannot be said about the Strategic
Missile Troops [SMT]. Since sources claim that the reform is following
Chief of the General Staff Anatoliy Kvashnin's plan (the worst-case
scenario for [Defence Minister] Marshal [Igor] Sergeyev's supporters), the
SMT will not only lose the Military Space Forces and the Missile and Space
Defence Troops, but will also be considerably transformed themselves - from
a branch of service into a combat arm and in 2005 the SMT as a whole will
become part of the air force. Only 12 of the current 22 missile divisions
will be left, which does, however, fully accord with the START-2 treaty.
Other troop formations are also falling prey to the reformers' knife. It is
planned to downsize the Internal Troops by over 20,00 men, the Border
Troops by 5,000, the Railway Troops by 10,000, and everyone else by 22,000.
Only Sergey Shoygu, the emergencies minister, will not lose a single unit
of his 25,000 troops, which is quite permissible for the chief "bear"
[reference to Shoygu's position as head of the Unity party, whose acronym
in Russian is Medved, meaning bear].
'Segodnya' tried to find out how far the agency reports can be trusted. It
is strange that authorship of the reform is ascribed to the chief of the
General Staff (he is not authorized to decide the fate of all the power
departments) - this smacks of an attempt to turn the "military masses at
large" against Kvashnin, who is seeking to become defence minister. Also
dubious is the source itself, who has allegedly seen the directive that had
already been signed by the chief of the General Staff but failed to
remember any of the pertinent details. It is also clear that this kind of
"information leak" is not possible in principle without authorization from
a military boss with a very real interest.
The State Duma's Budget [and Taxes] Committee, which your `Segodnya'
correspondent asked to comment, has already estimated that, even with a
really militarized (R206bn) state budget, there is still not enough money
for the procurement of modern military hardware. Nevertheless, the idea of
radically downsizing the army has aroused interest. However, people are in
no hurry to take it seriously. A simple arithmetical downsizing will in
principle have no effect - it should not be people who are downsized first
but the military ambitions in leaders' heads. No downsizing will help
unless we stop producing arms for general mobilization and maintaining
strategic arsenals with generals as their custodians. Training the army for
combat operations after a nuclear strike is another great anachronism. Nor
do we need strategic air defence - as the Americans are successfully trying
to persuade us. The Internal Troops' tasks could quite easily be performed
by army special troops. Evidently, having two intelligence services - the
[General Staff's] Main Intelligence Directorate [GRU] and the Foreign
Intelligence Service - is a loser, one would be enough. The Federal Agency
for Government Communications and Information [FAPSI] and the Railway
Troops could quite well either become Defence Ministry structures or
transfer to civilian funding - rails can be laid and communications
established without uniforms.
******
#7
INTERVIEW-IMF says Russia managing well without IMF loans
WASHINGTON, Sept 8 (Reuters) - Russia is managing well without financial help
from the International Monetary Fund, and there is no pressure for a new
reform program with the global lender, the fund's deputy head said on Friday.
First Deputy Managing Director Stanley Fischer told Reuters in an interview
that the Russian economy was "going well" and officials were starting to
implement an ambitious tax reform program. But he noted that the economy
remained heavily dependent on oil, which hit a 10-year high price this week.
"Clearly the economy is going well, and the reform program, including the tax
reform, is ambitious and has begun to be implemented," Fischer said. "They
seem to be able to manage without our financial assistance and they are
repaying us at a good rate, which is as it should be if the economy goes
well."
He added: "We will maintain close consultative relations with them, and we
will just wait and see whether they want a program or need a program...
Relations are very cordial, but there is no pressure to be in a program."
A deal with the IMF, even one which does not involve cash payments, might
help signal to outsiders that the economic plans were sensible and the
country deserved investment and other forms of financial support.
Russia's last lending program with the IMF ended in disarray last year amid
doubts about the course of reforms and allegations that previous payments had
been misused.
Independent audits commissioned by Russia at the IMF's request said Russia,
the fund's largest single borrower, had misled the IMF about the size of its
reserves, but the auditors found no evidence that money had been misused.
IMF figures show that Russia owed the fund some $12.7 billion at the end of
July, down from a peak of $18.5 billion in the depths of the world financial
crisis of 1997-99. Russia says it repaid some $235 million in August and an
additional $58 million on Friday.
******
#8
Moscow Times
September 9, 2000
IN BRIEF: Primakov Assures West
COPENHAGEN, Denmark -- Former Prime Minister Yevgeny Primakov said Friday the
West should not fear that Russia is heading back to become a totalitarian
state.
There has been no noticeable rise in human rights violations, but activists
have criticized President Vladimir Putin, a former KGB agent, for what he
calls a "dictatorship of law" that targets corrupt officials, gangsters and
shady businessmen.
"Those decision-makers in the West should understand that there is no return
to totalitarianism and Russia doesn't represent a threat to anyone," Primakov
said.
Primakov gave a lecture to lawmakers, officials, foreign ambassadors and
reporters at the parliament building in Copenhagen.
******
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