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'Reforms' That Hark Back to Stalinist Times

Russia: Putin is centralizing control over the media and tax revenue to snuff out dissent.

Commentary

July 20, 2000|STEPHEN BLANK and THEODORE KARASIK, Stephen Blank is a professor at the Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College. Theodore Karasik is adjunct assistant professor at the School of International Relations at USC and editor of the Russia and Eurasia Armed Forces Review annual. The views expressed here are those of the authors alone

Boris N. Yeltsin's legacy to Vladimir V. Putin--a government, military and police forces that are not accountable to anyone--is now bearing fruit. Rather than leaving behind the prerequisites of democracy, Yeltsin left behind a splendid opportunity for Putin to abuse those institutions and grab equally unaccountable power for himself.

Putin is now building a police state using primarily the police organs of the Federal Security Service, known as the FSB, and the army to seize all key power positions in Russia, eliminate dissent and attack both internal and external enemies. New laws and decrees have given the FSB control over electronic and e-mail transmissions in Russia and reinvigorated the FSB's agent network in general society and its ability to recruit informers in the army. Building on Yeltsin's neglect in reforming reform the police and army, Putin is taking giant steps to eliminate parliamentary immunity, civil rights and privacy in Russia.


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The tax police and FSB have conducted raids on businesses and media outlets deemed critical to Putin and the regime. Critics of the regime, like Media-Most owner Vladimir A. Gusinsky and Radio Liberty reporter Andrei Babitsky, a Chechen war correspondent for U.S.-funded Radio Liberty, have been arrested and harassed. The campaign accelerated immediately after Putin's anti-Yeltsin State of Russia address, with Putin's police going after supporters of Yeltsin's privatization program, including the oligarchs Vagit Alekperov, head of Lukoil; Anatoly B. Chubais, head of the energy giant UES; Vladimir O. Potanin, president of the group that owns Norilsk Nickel; and even media tycoon Boris A. Berezovsky. Equally troubling is the attempt to split the Jewish community, of whom Gusinsky was a leader. Gusinsky's arrest also raised the equally time-tested anti-Semitic card, always featured in the arsenal of Russian authoritarians.

Putin has launched a police offensive against the devolution of power to the provinces that is an essential prerequisite of democracy and federalism, even if the governors themselves have abused their powers, another legacy of Yeltsin's lawlessness. The aim is to centralize control over tax revenue and local media and snuff out any hope of true dissent. These moves parallel the creation of new federal judicial agencies to accelerate criminal proceedings against uncooperative politicians and business owners. All these moves to purge internal enemies recall the worst hallmarks of Russian despotism. It is hardly accidental that Putin has glorified the use of informers and even stated his wish that things were as they had been in 1937, the zenith of Stalin's terror.

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