
#2
Christian Science Monitor
February 22, 2002
Putin's duel with the bureaucrats
Several recent reform proposals are losing momentum in a labyrinth of
self-serving officialdom.
By Fred Weir
MOSCOW - At the height of his failed campaign to reform Communism, Mikhail
Gorbachev complained to Kremlin aides that all his initiatives quickly became
lost in the byzantine channels of Soviet bureaucracy, where they "gradually
suffocate, as if in layers of cotton wool." Russian President Vladimir
Putin may be voicing similar frustrations as he watches his bold plans to
restore Kremlin authority over the country's far-flung regions, revamp the
military, and streamline the economy amid official bickering, foot-dragging, and
creative reinterpretation.
"It is becoming clear that Putin is not the strong president he was
advertised to be," says Alexander Konovalov, director of the independent
Institute of Strategic Assessments in Moscow. "All the announced reforms
are dissolving into a war of bureaucratic clans, and he seems incapable of
asserting control."
Experts say Mr. Putin is up against an unreformed bureaucratic machine that
is actually larger and more obstreperous than its communist-era predecessor.
Twenty years ago there were fewer than 800,000 officials in the entire USSR, as
calculated by historian Martin MacCauley in his book The Soviet Union Since
1917.
By 1994, Russia alone had 1 million bureaucrats and the number has since
risen to almost 1.2 million, according to a study last year by sociologist
Vladimir Slatinov published in the political science journal Politika in autumn
2001.
The collapse of communist control a decade ago led to an explosion of
official bribe-taking, graft, and influence-peddling that does not appear to
have abated under Putin. A January poll by the independent Public Opinion
Foundation found that 64 percent of Russians believe that all or most public
officials are corrupt. More than 57 percent in the same survey agreed that
"corruption in Russia is impossible to uproot."
But experts say corruption is a small problem compared with the suffocating
political influence of untrammelled officialdom. "The nature of Russian
bureaucracy is absolutely different from a Western civil service," says
Vladimir Gelman, a political scientist at the European University of St.
Petersburg. "Our bureaucrats are unprofessional, badly paid and, most
important, they exercise power not in the public interest but in their own.
Until the state machinery in this country is completely redesigned from top to
bottom, no other reforms can be reliably implemented."
One of Putin's ambitious ideas upon assuming the presidency two years ago was
to divide Russia into seven administrative zones and place a Kremlin watchdog
over each to whip regional elites into line. Instead, the new presidential
representatives appear to have merely added another layer to the existing
bureaucratic confusion.
Plans to downsize Russia's bloated military and introduce an all-volunteer
force seem to be backfiring. The Defense Ministry is now threatening to revoke
student draft exemptions next year, and a decree published last week ordered the
re-introduction of Soviet-era compulsory summer military training for
16-year-old males.
"It is an ancient rule in Russia that bureaucrats strangle any
initiative - not because they desire to contradict the leader, but because any
change contradicts their interests," says Sergei Mikhailov, deputy head of
the Russian Public Political Center, an independent think tank. "The rule
is that the longer the bureaucratic chain, the more the original policy becomes
transformed into something else entirely."
Another key reform pledged by Putin was to commercialize housing, gas,
electricity, and municipal utilities in order to attract the capital needed for
rebuilding dilapidated infrastructure and modernizing services. That plan has
been delayed repeatedly, and last week Economic Development Minister German Gref
announced that its objectives will be sharply scaled back.
"Unlike their Western counterparts, Russian officials are heavily
politicized," says Mr. Gelman. "In fact, most receive their jobs
through networks of friends and keep them on the basis of personal loyalty
rather than competence. The housing reform would have eliminated the jobs of
huge numbers of bureaucrats. Because it is unpopular, the officials have a good
pretext to scuttle the whole program."
In recent weeks Putin has attempted to shake things up by appealing directly
to the public, over the heads of officials, by declaring Soviet-style
"campaigns" on important social issues.
In December he used a TV broadcast to berate his social affairs minister,
Valentina Matvienko, for not doing enough to help the estimated 1 million
homeless children living on city streets, and promised "decisive
steps" to address the problem. The next month he urged regional leaders to
launch mass fitness programs to improve the country's declining health and
flagging sports performance. Last week it was a war on crime, and the turn of
police officials to face televised presidential wrath.
"This is an old story in Russia: when a leader feels helpless, he
declares a campaign," says Mr. Konovalov. "Putin hopes to translate
his continuing public popularity into political momentum, but he is really just
admitting that the state machinery does not function."
Russia's official bureaucracy was created by Peter the Great in the 18th
century, complete with a table of ranks and privileges, and has remained
remarkably unchanged ever since. Political dissidents have railed against it,
writers from Chekhov to Solzhenitsyn have derided it as a parasitical caste
rather than a civil service. Czars and Soviet commissars alike have despaired of
ever controlling it.
Dictator Joseph Stalin succeeded in imposing his will, but the price was mass
terror.
"We cannot return to Stalinist methods, and we cannot go on pretending
that this machine can ever be made to serve the public interest," says Mr.
Mikhailov. "I hope Putin understands that he has limited time to tackle the
bureaucracy head on - or all his other reforms will disappear like water into
the desert sands."
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