#40 - JRL 2008-31 - JRL Home
RFE/RL
February 12, 2008
Russia: Putinism's Impact On The Neighbors
By Christopher Walker and Robert Orttung
Copyright (c) 2008. RFE/RL, Inc. Reprinted with the permission of Radio Free
Europe/Radio Liberty, 1201 Connecticut Ave., N.W. Washington DC 20036.
www.rferl.org
President Putin has said Russia could redirect its missiles to target Ukraine
if Kyiv joined NATO. According to RFE/RL's guest authors, that kind of talk is
representative of an increasingly truculent foreign policy, which goes largely
unchallenged by Russia's political elite.
Over the past eight years, Russia's repression of its key domestic
institutions has been a defining feature of its governance. The Kremlin's
manipulation of Russia's recent parliamentary elections and presidential
succession are the most recent examples of an ever-tightening grip on the
country's political life.
What few have fully appreciated, however, is that the growing
authoritarianism of Russia's domestic politics is shaping the parameters of its
foreign policy. As President Vladimir Putin has consolidated control over the
country's political opposition, civil society, and news media, independent
voices of consequence have been muzzled and are no longer able to challenge or
temper the whims and excesses of the Kremlin. This closing of ranks among an
elite that has its hands on the levers of state and commercial power has created
a dangerously insular system that produces public policy that does not undergo
meaningful debate and scrutiny.
Russia's leadership has left few stones unturned in its effort to assert
control over critical institutions. The strengthening of the instruments of the
state to maintain political dominance has been especially visible in the
business sector. The Kremlin under Putin has cleansed independent players from
the commanding heights of the economy -- particularly the energy sector.
Meanwhile, deep interlocking interests have taken hold within the Kremlin, much
of whose leadership is "double-hatted" as state policy makers and stakeholders
in some of the country's largest commercial (though state-controlled)
enterprises.
In February, Viktor Zubkov, now prime minister, was named the highest-ranking
public official on the list of candidates for Gazprom's board, suggesting that
he will become Gazprom's next chairman, replacing Dmitry Medvedev, the current
chairman, who is being guided into the Russian presidency. He joins numerous
other officials with key corporate positions, including deputy head of the
presidential administration Igor Sechin, who serves as chairman of the board at
the state oil company Rosneft. This merger of outsized strategic commercial
interests with those of senior Kremlin decision makers has subtracted from the
foreign-policy-making equation the sorely needed range of voices that would be
heard in an open and pluralistic system.
Near Abroad
In the wake of this reassertion of state power and now with virtually no
institutional checks on its decision making, Russia's leadership is pursuing an
increasingly truculent foreign policy, taking hard-line positions on issues
ranging from Kosovo to Iran, and suffering progressively fraught relations with
Europe. The sharp descent of Russia's relations with the United Kingdom stands
out.
The rise of Putinism has been felt acutely in the countries on Russia's
borders, where the Kremlin is exerting political and economic pressure on a set
of vulnerable post-Soviet states.
Energy is a critical, though not exclusive, part of this approach. As energy
prices have soared, Russia's leadership has played the energy card to apply
pressure on supposed allies such as Belarus and Armenia, as well as countries
that represent test cases for reform, like Ukraine, whose democratic aspirations
have been consistently challenged by the Kremlin.
Beyond energy, a mind-set has taken hold within Russia's elite that mistrusts
the outside world and sees anti-Russian conspiracies everywhere. For Putin and
his security-services-driven leadership, this view places squarely in the
crosshairs neighboring countries formerly under the Kremlin's yoke. Russia has
reserved its fiercest attacks for democracies on its borders.
Georgia and Estonia are cases in point. Just as the Kremlin has gone after
domestic opponents, it is taking a similar tack against sovereign neighboring
states that are pursuing a democratic course. At home, it is relying on
capricious application of law to limit the ability of independent groups to
organize and using state propaganda to discredit political opposition.
Internationally, Russia has shown it can also throw sharp elbows, applying a
variety of economic, military, and media-related instruments to accomplish its
goals.
Georgia, a country consumed by recent political turmoil, has been a prime
target of the Kremlin's wrath. Along with Ukraine, Georgia represents a critical
test case for democratic reform in the former Soviet Union. With a population of
4.5 million, this fragile would-be democracy in the Caucasus has suffered since
2006 under a blanket Russian blockade that seals the border between the two
countries to trade and transportation, and bars sea and air travel. The
Kremlin's unhelpful hand in Georgia's volatile breakaway territories of Abkhazia
and South Ossetia has exacerbated an already fragile regional order. Last
August, an aircraft -- entering from Russian airspace -- dropped a Russian-made
guided missile on Georgian territory not far from its frontier with South
Ossetia. The overwhelming suspicion is that the Kremlin was behind this
provocative act.
Cyberattacks
Despite its membership in the European Union and NATO, Estonia likewise has
been subjected to Kremlin-inspired attacks. In April 2007, this small Baltic
country was hit with a coordinated assault on its national cyberinfrastructure.
Known for its reliance on the Internet, the country's banking system, media,
parliament, and other institutions were compromised. The attacks occurred at the
time the Estonian government decided to move a Soviet-era war memorial and the
bodies of soldiers buried beneath it. Kremlin-controlled state television
whipped up furious anti-Estonian sentiment. Members of Nashi, a Kremlin-backed
youth organization, harassed the Estonian ambassador in Moscow and blockaded
border posts. Russian oil stopped flowing through Estonian ports.
At the time, Estonia's defense minister said there was not enough evidence to
prove "a [Russian] governmental role, but that it indicated a possibility." The
public response -- or absence thereof -- by the Russian authorities suggests
that even if official Russia did not direct the cyberassault, it certainly did
not view it as unwelcome.
Meanwhile, the Kremlin seems to be taking a somewhat different tack recently
with Estonia's Baltic neighbor, Latvia, which has over the years been subjected
to a relentless Kremlin campaign to stir up resentment among Latvia's
ethnic-Russian community. In what appears to be a step back from this pugnacious
approach, in recent months the Kremlin has turned down the volume on Latvia's
ethnic-Russian minority and is "smothering Latvia with kindness," as Pauls
Raudseps, editorial-page editor of Latvia's leading daily "Diena," has noted.
Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in January went out of his way to cite
the "very positive dynamic" in Russian-Latvian relations.
While the precise basis for this recent Kremlin shift is unclear, Raudseps
observes that "Russia could be trying to influence Latvia's position on EU
policies that are of interest to the Kremlin. For instance, Latvia is one of the
countries opposing the liberalization of EU energy markets, a policy which would
run counter to the Kremlin strategy of controlling both the production and
distribution of energy and locking in consumers with long-term contracts."
While the Kremlin has seemingly tempered the propaganda campaign in Latvia's
case, the Estonian and Georgian episodes were emblematic of a Kremlin approach
that relies heavily on control and manipulation of information to advance its
objectives. The same propaganda machine that was revved up to spark
anti-Estonian sentiment was also put into overdrive to attack the Georgian state
and Georgians living in Russia. A dangerous byproduct of the Kremlin's dominance
of Russia's news media is that it is able to routinely unleash harsh propaganda
campaigns to shape and distort public perceptions.
Russia's resurgence on the international scene has closely tracked the rise
in energy prices, which have given Russia's leadership leverage that would not
exist if oil prices were at, say, the level of when Putin first came to power.
The current Kremlin gambit does not, however, represent Soviet-era global
ambition. Instead, Russia is pursuing a more circumscribed approach that first
and foremost looks to ensure that transparent and accountable democratic systems
do not succeed on Russia's periphery, where their proximity would pose the
greatest threat to the controlling Putin model of governance.
The same Kremlin leadership that gives no quarter to domestic opposition
likewise has little taste for democratic politics on its doorstep, and therefore
will continue to devote substantial energy to prevent their advance.
(Christopher Walker is director of studies at Freedom House. Robert Orttung
is a senior fellow at the Jefferson Institute and author of the Russia report in
"Freedom in the World," Freedom House's annual survey of politics rights and
civil liberties.).
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