Archive for the Spiegel Category

Reluctant Democracy?

Posted in Duma, Spiegel, democracy, elections on December 2, 2007 by accidentalrussophile

Spiegel Online has an long and interesting article titled Portrait of a Reluctant Democracy. On the eve of the carefully orchestrated Duma elections, Spiegel provides a sort of cross-section of opinions and the political times in Russia. Their case study involves a series of cities across Russia, and by god, for once it doesn’t include Moscow. Ivanovo, Magnitogorsk, Tyumen, Bedime, and Vladivostok are chosen as representative of the successes and failures of Putin’s tenure as President of the Russian Federation.

Some of the more interesting tidbits from the article:

Vladimir Ryzhkov (whose Republican Party was dissolved in May by the Russian Supreme Court and after 14 years will no longer be part of the Russian Duma): “This is not an election, it’s a farce.” Ryzhkov states that the controlled multi-party system that is being formed in Russia reminds him of the former East Germany.


Boris Nemzov, a leading candidate of the “pro-business” SPS (but that protesters characterize as “Party of the Oligarchs”) is asked by a reporter if he could imagine cooperating with the dominant United Russia party.

“If you mix a kilo of cranberries with a kilo of shit,” Nemzov replies, “you get two kilos of shit.”

There’s the spirit of pragmatism and compromise upon which successful democracy’s are built! Nemzov’s SPS party is deemed unlikely to meet the minimum 7% for inclusion in the new Duma.

Another telling moment:

Nemzov says, to an audience at Ivonovo’s “Silver City” shopping center: “Do you want me to tell you what the cleanest spot in the country is? The ass of the president! That’s because someone is kissing it from morning to night.”

Three female students giggle. A furious-looking soldier turns red in the face. Putin is his idol. An agitated pensioner calls out: “You stole our pensions in the ’90s, you thieves!”

Nemzov is prepared for these accusations. He pats the angry pensioner on the back and responds to the attack with numbers: “When I was the energy minister, the price of oil was only $17. Nevertheless, Boris Yeltsin spent 7.5% of the national budget on pensions. The Putin administration spends only 4.2% on pensions.”

And didn’t Gazprom, the state-controlled energy giant, pay $13 billion for Abramovich’s shares in the oil company Sibneft? Thirteen billion dollars, says Nemzov, is more than the government spends on its “national projects,” much-touted programs devoted to healthcare and building low-income housing. “In other words,” says Nemzov, “the most important national project for Mr. Putin is the oligarch Abramovich.”

Ever since the arrest of oil billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky in 2003, Nemzov tells his guests, everyone who hopes to do business in peace knows “where they have to leave their money” — with United Russia.

In Magnitogorsk, almost 90% of the city’s tax revenues are derived from the steel mill Magnitogorsk Metallurgical Combine (MMK) owned by Viktor Rashnikov and operated by Andrei Morozov. Morozov and MMK have somewhat reluctantly decided to support United Russia. This support is not without its detractors among the workers in the city.

When it came out that the mill’s managers would support United Russia, critics in Magnitogorsk began parodying the party’s Russian name, Yedinaya Rossiya, calling it “Yedim Rossiyu,” or “We eat Russia.”

“They have learned nothing from history,” complains Gennady Grabaryev, a local opposition politician. [..] He sees a group of aging MMK veterans demonstrating on the square behind the city hall. Mariya Lyssenko holds a placard: “United Russia’s members of parliament have cheated the MMK pensioners.” She and her husband worked at the MMK for a combined 106 years, only to be pressured by
management, following the privatization of the combine, to sell their shares at rock-bottom prices. Lyssenko and her husband were told it was their duty to save the plant from an outside takeover.

Lyssenko, whose shares would be worth €120,000 today, must now make ends meet on a monthly pension of about €100. According to a Russian proverb — “Nye poyman, nye vor” — those who are not caught are not thieves.

And yet in other regions of Russia, such as the booming city of Tyumen, travel agency entrepeneur Natalya Mironova, flatly remarks regarding United Russia:

“Why should we vote for anything else? We’re doing very well here.”

[..] Born during the Soviet era in the city of Asbest, {W. Shedd notes: Russian for asbestos, which should give you a clue what they mine there} an industrial hell west of Tyumen, Mironova worked as an English teacher in the 1980s and moonlighted as a tour guide for Intourist,
the state-owned travel agency. The economy stagnated, while private business ownership was forbidden. “Not in my wildest dreams would I have thought that I would establish my own company one day,” says Mironova.

Update: Reuters reports that early results show that United Russia is winning approximately 63% of the voting.
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Spiegel Interview with Alexander Solzhenitsyn, or The Horror of the Nobel Prize Unbound

Posted in Gorbachev, Putin, Solzhenitsyn, Spiegel, Yeltsin on July 24, 2007 by accidentalrussophile

Spiegel Magazine recently conducted an interview with the 88-year old Alexander Solzhenitsyn on a large number of Russian topics, including Soviet History, the Putin Years, and smaller, less serious topics like life and death. Solzhenitsyn has a new book coming out this fall My American Years. Even at 88, Solzhenitsyn continues to write and provided a sharp interview.

When questioned about Putin’s KGB past (Solzhenitsyn having been prosecuted by the KGB):

Vladimir Putin — yes, he was an officer of the intelligence services, but he was not a KGB investigator, nor was he the head of a camp in the gulag. As for service in foreign intelligence, that is not a negative in any country — sometimes it even draws praise. George Bush Sr. was not much criticized for being the ex-head of the CIA, for example.

On Soviet history and Russian remorse (or lack there of):

If we could all take a sober look at our history, then we would no longer see this nostalgic attitude to the Soviet past that predominates now among the less affected part of our society. Nor would the Eastern European countries and former USSR republics feel the need to see in historical Russia the source of their misfortunes. One should not ascribe the evil deeds of individual leaders or political regimes to an innate fault of the Russian people and their country. One should not attribute this to the “sick psychology” of the Russians, as is often done in the West. All these regimes in Russia could only survive by imposing a bloody terror. We should clearly understand that only the voluntary and conscientious acceptance by a people of its guilt can ensure the healing of a nation. Unremitting reproaches from outside, on the other hand, are counterproductive.

On the October Revolution:

Only an extraordinary person can turn opportunity into reality. Lenin and Trotsky were exceptionally nimble and vigorous politicians who managed in a short period of time to use the weakness of Kerensky’s government. But allow me to correct you: the “October Revolution” is a myth generated by the winners, the Bolsheviks, and swallowed whole by progressive circles in the West. On Oct. 25, 1917, a violent 24-hour coup d’etat took place in Petrograd. It was brilliantly and thoroughly planned by Leon Trotsky — Lenin was still in hiding then to avoid being brought to justice for treason. What we call “the Russian Revolution of 1917″ was actually the February Revolution.

On Russia learning the lessons of two revolutions and their consequences:

It seems they are starting to. A great number of publications and movies on the history of the 20th century — albeit of uneven quality — are evidence of a growing demand. Quite recently, the state-owned TV channel “Russia” aired a series based on Varlam Shalamov’s works, showing the terrible, cruel truth about Stalin’s camps. It was not watered down.

On Gorbachev, Yeltsin, and Putin:

Gorbachev’s administration was amazingly politically naïve, inexperienced and irresponsible towards the country. It was not governance but a thoughtless renunciation of power. The admiration of the West in return only strengthened his conviction that his approach was right. But let us be clear that it was Gorbachev, and not Yeltsin, as is now widely being claimed, who first gave freedom of speech and movement to the citizens of our country.

Yeltsin’s period was characterized by a no less irresponsible attitude to people’s lives, but in other ways. In his haste to have private rather than state ownership as quickly as possible, Yeltsin started a mass, multi-billion-dollar fire sale of the national patrimony. Wanting to gain the support of regional leaders, Yeltsin called directly for separatism and passed laws that encouraged and empowered the collapse of the Russian state. This, of course, deprived Russia of its historical role for which it had worked so hard, and lowered its standing in the international community. All this met with even more hearty Western applause.

Putin inherited a ransacked and bewildered country, with a poor and demoralized people. And he started to do what was possible — a slow and gradual restoration. These efforts were not noticed, nor appreciated, immediately. In any case, one is hard pressed to find examples in history when steps by one country to restore its strength were met favorably by other governments.

On self-government and democracy in Russia:

I have always insisted on the need for local self-government for Russia, but I never opposed this model to Western democracy. On the contrary, I have tried to convince my fellow citizens by citing the examples of highly effective local self-government systems in Switzerland and New England, both of which I saw first-hand.

In your question you confuse local self-government, which is possible on the most grassroots level only, when people know their elected officials personally, with the dominance of a few dozen regional governors, who during Yeltsin’s period were only too happy to join the federal government in suppressing any local self-government initiatives.

Today I continue to be extremely worried by the slow and inefficient development of local self-government. But it has finally started to take place.

On the image of the West in Russia:

When I returned to Russia in 1994, the Western world and its states were practically being worshipped. Admittedly, this was caused not so much by real knowledge or a conscious choice, but by the natural disgust with the Bolshevik regime and its anti-Western propaganda.

This mood started changing with the cruel NATO bombings of Serbia. It’s fair to say that all layers of Russian society were deeply and indelibly shocked by those bombings. The situation then became worse when NATO started to spread its influence and draw the ex-Soviet republics into its structure. This was especially painful in the case of Ukraine, a country whose closeness to Russia is defined by literally millions of family ties among our peoples, relatives living on different sides of the national border. At one fell stroke, these families could be torn apart by a new dividing line, the border of a military bloc.

So, the perception of the West as mostly a “knight of democracy” has been replaced with the disappointed belief that pragmatism, often cynical and selfish, lies at the core of Western policies. For many Russians it was a grave disillusion, a crushing of ideals.

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