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#5 - JRL 7188
Russia: Observers Say Putin's Address Long On
Criticism, Short On Solutions
By Gregory Feifer
Politicians and analysts gathered in Moscow today to discuss President
Vladimir Putin's state-of-the-nation address last week. Most agreed that for all
his grandiose goals, Putin provided few clues about how to achieve them.
Moscow, 19 May 2003 (RFE/RL) -- Politicians and analysts came together in a
discussion in Moscow today to assess the 16 May state-of-the-nation address by
President Vladimir Putin.
Participants agreed Putin is aiming to fundamentally change the government
starting next year -- but fell out over exactly what that will entail.
The disagreements reflected an important aspect of the speech last week, one
that provided no cause for discord: For all his grand plans for Russia to become
a powerful country based on a competitive economy, the president offered few
hints on how to achieve them.
Pro-Kremlin political analyst Sergei Markov, director of the Institute for
Political Studies, said Putin laid out the next stage of his administration, a
task fitting for the "great Russian people."
"I think that the strategic goal for the third stage [of Putin's
presidency] has been established -- Russia's return to the ranks of the great
powers. This return means the formation of a large public project under which
other public projects will be worked out," Markov said.
But Markov added that Putin failed to indicate how the country should go
about transforming itself. "The main question remains how all this will be
achieved. I don't think [Putin's] address answers that yet. In that sense, I see
it as one stage. The next main question is how these goals will be
reached," he said.
In his address, Putin said Russia's future strength should be based on an
internationally competitive economy. He said the country's gross domestic
product should be doubled in the next decade.
A number of analysts largely dismissed that and other grandiose exhortations
as campaign talk, pointing to the fact that Putin's address comes ahead of
parliamentary elections in December and a presidential poll next March.
Fedor Burlatskii, a former adviser to Soviet leaders Nikita Khrushchev and
Mikhail Gorbachev, agreed that Putin's address mostly comprised campaign
rhetoric. But he went further, disagreeing with general opinion in saying the
talk contained no strategy -- save for his call for Russia to double its GDP.
"[Doubling GDP] isn't motivated by anything. It reminds me in a bad way
of what I saw myself when Nikita Sergeievich Khrushchev sent to the program
group [of international relations consultants in the Soviet Central Committee]
the well-known proposal to overtake the United States in 20 years. That also had
absolutely no reason. So I sense a kind of Sovietism in [Putin's] talk,"
Burlatskii said.
Burlatskii went on to say that Russia's top priority should be to tackle
corruption in the bureaucracy, which stifles any attempt at change.
Participants, meanwhile, dwelled on a point that came at the very end of
Putin's speech, in which he promised for the first time to take parliamentary
election results into consideration when appointing government ministers.
"I believe it possible," Putin said, "taking account of the
results of the forthcoming election to the State Duma, to form a professional
and efficient government based on the parliamentary majority."
Igor Bunin is director of the Center for Political Technologies. He said that
Putin will only honor his words if the elections go the Kremlin's way -- that
is, a victory for the pro-Putin centrist United Russia party. "If the
elections don't go exactly how they are supposed to, there won't be any
'parliamentary majority,'" he said. Instead, Bunin added, Putin is simply
preparing public opinion for a change in his cabinet's makeup following the next
presidential elections.
Other analysts focused on the fact that while Putin took credit for the
government's successes under his tenure as president, he went on to berate the
same body for the country's problems.
Veteran commentator Sergei Kurginyan said both Putin's praise and his
criticism is largely irrelevant because government policy, made behind closed
doors, is little affected by the president's words. "As soon as the sources
and the forms of [Russia's] problems are announced, it becomes immediately clear
that one cannot talk about a change of course," he said. "It will lead
too far away from those policies of inertia that now exist, and it's not
necessarily true that the president can do much to change them."
Picking up on commentary about Putin's criticism of the government, liberal
legislator Irina Khakamada, co-head of the Union of Rightist Forces party, said
the president is essentially an "opposition figure" fighting a
bureaucracy he cannot control.
She said the main point of Putin's talk was to call on the "political
class" to consolidate to fight the machine of state. "It's an absurd
situation when the president of Byzantium [eds: a reference to Russia as a
country whose government is characterized by complexity, deviousness, intrigue]
in a presidential country in fact does not command the necessary resources to
carry out his decisions. He conveys that to the people, civil society and
political parties in his address," Khakamada said.
Fellow lawmaker Grigorii Yavlinskii is head of the liberal Yabloko party. He
said Putin's address was honest in that he indicated he would carry out
"great power" policies. But Yavlinskii added that the president also
communicated he would not destroy liberal elements of Russia's political system,
and would even incorporate some of them.
While some analysts jumped on Putin's criticism of the new law on nationality
-- which the Kremlin itself largely crafted -- Yavlinskii said it is part of a
process in which laws are slowly "fixed."
"[Putin] immediately admitted having made a mistake with that
[nationality] law. That's actually a very big feat -- it's an incredibly rare
event. It was a 'great power' law -- 'You have to crawl around before we give
you one of our passports; we're great and who are you, after all?' Putin right
away said it had to be corrected, and to fix it means making it more liberal. I
think that will happen with many problems and many tasks the president set
out," Yavlinskii said.
Yavlinskii said the country's most pressing problems are the lack of an
independent judicial system and an informative press, manipulations of
elections, control over law enforcers, and the mix of business and politics.
"Why didn't Putin talk about that?" Yavlinskii asked. "Because
everyone knows it already, and it would mean a change of the entire system to
alter it. Why didn't he mention corruption? Because [Putin] has no answer for
such questions."
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