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#6 - RW 10-22-04 - RW Home
The Jamestown Foundation
www.jamestown.org
EURASIA DAILY MONITOR
Volume 1, Issue 110
October 21, 2004
Putin offers new take on war on terror
PUTIN ASSERTS THAT TERRORISTS SEEK BUSH'S ELECTORAL DEFEAT
By Pavel K. Baev
Russian President Vladimir Putin had a busy international schedule in
mid-October, meeting in Moscow with Canadian Prime Minister Paul Martin and
Brazilian Vice-President Jose Alenkar, followed by a full-scale official visit
to China, and then staying for several days in Central Asia with a dense program
of bilateral and multilateral meetings. During a Dushanbe press conference on
October 18, he expressed his deep conviction that international terrorists in
Iraq sought to inflict damage not so much on coalition forces, but more on
President George W. Bush's standing, in order to prevent his re-election (Lenta.ru,
October 18).
The statement was hardly a carefully prepared message and appeared rather to
be an unscheduled brainstorm, after too many hours spent in unbearably boring
low-content meetings (Kommersant, October 19). For Kremlin-watchers, however, it
is exactly these rare extemporaneous remarks that provide a glimpse into the
real thinking and feelings inside the hermetically sealed presidential
administration. This comment gives a bit of insight on two intersecting but
essentially separate issues: the U.S. presidential elections and the war against
terrorism.
Putin's preferences on the first issue are no state secret: he roots for
George W. Bush and counts on his victory, adding only minimalist politically
correct cover, like "I do not want to spoil relations with any of the
candidates." He probably thinks, typically miscalculating the impact of his
public statements, he can contribute to the success of Bush's campaign. In this
context, the Dushanbe "signal" is a follow-up to the Astana "signal" of June 18,
when he mentioned the warnings from Moscow to Washington concerning Saddam
Hussein, who allegedly had been planning terrorist attacks on U.S. soil. That
was intended to be a helping hand after the 9/11 Commission concluded there was
no evidence confirming ties between the Saddam regime and al-Qaeda (Nezavisimaya
gazeta, June 21). The U.S. State Department had to issue some awkward denials
afterwards, and would not find it much easier to comment upon Putin's remarks
this time around. It was probably a sheer coincidence that both times Putin
tried to give Bush a bit of a help while speaking in Central Asia (and both
times on the 18th), but the very visible pro-Bush bias on Russian state-run TV
channels has certainly not happened by chance (Ekho Moskvy, October 9). A
peculiar, minor detail here was the censorship of the coverage of the first
round of the Bush-Kerry debates, when their argument about the decline of
democracy in Russia was unceremoniously cut out (Vremya novosti, October 4).
The grounds for this clear preference are both personal and political. Putin
has reasons to believe that he has developed a near perfect rapport with Bush
and has doubts about the tenor of relations with the much more sophisticated
John Kerry. Currently, both presidents are equally eager to exploit the theme of
struggle against terrorism for all sorts of internal and external purposes, but
a democratic administration in the United States might be more attentive to
other challenges and to the opinions of its Western allies. Moscow, therefore,
foresees an erosion of the counter-terrorist partnership and a lack of
understanding of its style of managing democracy from a Kerry White House.
Interestingly, these Kremlin preferences correspond perfectly with the choices
in the traditionally discordant Russian diaspora in the United States, which is
strongly inclined towards Bush (Moskovskie novosti, October 15).
As for interpreting Putin's statement in the context of the war against
terrorism, the key insight here is the interpretation of the enemy's aims. Here,
Putin was not speaking about Bush's electoral prospects or, for that matter,
about the impact of the Madrid terrorist attack on the parliamentary elections
in Spain; he was speaking about himself. Back in September 1999, terrorism was
the launching pad for Putin's jump into the Kremlin, but five years later is has
become a grave threat for his presidency. Reflecting on the Beslan tragedy,
Putin sees not the plain horror of hundreds of dead children (he was furious at
Izvestiya for printing the graphic images), he sees the instant destruction of
two key notions of his rule: "stability" and "control." The rationale of his
'"executive vertical," the efficiency of his "power structures," the quality of
his own leadership, everything was put in doubt. The sky-high figures of his
ratings are not convincing anymore, he is afraid that his inability to meet this
challenge has become clear to all; hence perhaps his odd reference to "every
objective observer."
Voting for Kerry and questioning Putin's leadership are therefore equally
irresponsible means of granting terrorists their victory. The best reaction to
this twisted worldview in the Russian media was perhaps the joke about deputy
presidential administration head Vladislav Surkov instructing Putin to announce
that the aim of international terrorism was to prevent Bush's re-election to a
second term, in order to secure a reciprocal statement from Bush that the aim of
international terrorism was to prevent Putin's re-election to a third term (Vladimir.vladimirovich.ru,
October 18).
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