Wednesday, November 20, 2013

EDITORIAL - NYT: Vladimir Putin Clings to the Past

EDITORIAL - NYT

Vladimir Putin Clings to the Past



The former republics of the Soviet Union have been sovereign, independent countries for almost 22 years, free to develop economic and political relations with any foreign nation or trading bloc they choose. That point appears to have eluded President Vladimir Putin of Russia, who is doing everything he can to prevent these countries from developing closer ties with Europe — even threatening to cut off the gas that one country needs to get through the winter.

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“The Cold War should be over for everyone,” Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany said this week. Not, it appears, for Mr. Putin.
Next week, six former republics — Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine — are scheduled to meet with leaders of the European Union in Vilnius, Lithuania, to discuss enhanced economic, political and diplomatic ties with the union. In 2004, Lithuania, along with Estonia and Latvia, became the first former Soviet republics to join the union.
To qualify for stronger ties, the six nations will have to demonstrate progress on democratic and judicial reforms required by the European Union. That may prove difficult for some, like Ukraine, which has, so far, refused to allow its imprisoned former prime minister, Yulia Tymoshenko, to travel to Germany for medical treatment.
Europe’s use of trade leverage to encourage democracy is constructive and reasonable. Russia’s attempts to bludgeon former vassals into continued economic dependence are not. The European Union offers something real and attractive. Russia, which wants them to join the customs union it has formed with Belarus and Kazakhstan, offers threats.
In September, a Russian deputy prime minister warned Moldova that it might lose access to gas this winter should it strengthen links with Europe. Then it banned imports of Moldovan wine. Next came threats to expel tens of thousands of Moldovans working in Russia. Yet, far from backing down, Moldovan leaders have continued negotiations with Europe and are now working to reduce the country’s economic dependence on Russia.
Moscow’s bullying has had more success in Armenia, which counts on Russian support in its territorial dispute with Azerbaijan, and has agreed to join the customs union. Even Lithuania, already a member of the union, has been subjected to trade harassment, presumably in retaliation for hosting next week’s Vilnius meeting.
Similarly, Russia has threatened to slow Ukrainian imports with exacting customs inspections, although the main obstacles to stronger Ukrainian ties with the union involve domestic politics. In any case, Ukraine, which is economically robust, is perfectly entitled to choose its own course, as are the other former Soviet republics.
In the waning years of the Soviet Union, its last president, Mikhail Gorbachev, talked optimistically about a post-Cold War Europe stretching undivided from the Atlantic to the Urals. Mr. Putin, however, seems to long for a return to the days when an iron curtain divided the Continent, darkening the horizons of the satellites and Soviet republics to the east — nations that now seek the enjoy more fully the fruits of independence.

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    • Kurt
    • NY
    • Verified
    Mr Putin has called the breakup of the Soviet Union the greatest geopolitical disaster of its century. He does not see the former Soviet republics as independent states, he sees them as component parts of his homeland wrested away from Russia by hostile outside powers and their seeking closer ties to the West as further isolating and weakening Russia. To present it as simply a continuation of the Cold War is not accurate, as he sees Ukraine or Georgia, etc in the same way we would view it were California, Texas, or Florida to be independent and seeking closer ties to nations we viewed as our enemies.

    And at some point we must ask whether our extending NATO eastward and seeking to bind former Soviet components separately to the West enhances our security and prosperity or theirs, or if it only further antagonizes and pushes Russia away. Shouldn't the ultimate goal of our policy be to bring Russia fully into the West? And are we likely to be able to do so if we keep making moves that, were the equivalent done to us, would be seen as hostile actions? Do we really wish to push Russia even closer to China? Shouldn't our main geopolitical goal be to detach Russia from China? So why should we take actions that make that impossible?
      • theodora30
      • Charlotte NC
      Let's just hope the EU doesn't also pressure these countries to adopt its failed econic policy of austerity.
        • Small Paul
        • New Orleans
        Vlad Puti,
        Do your duty!
        Let these countries make their ties
        And don't you go intrudi!
          • Uziel
          • Florianopolis
          NYT Pick
          President Vladimir Putin is doing exactly what the Russian people expect him to do. That is, re-positioning Russia for a new era of waning US power. The Syrian peace initiative, for example, demonstrates a keen sense of opportunity by Putin. Like or not, Russia -- member of BRIC countries -- is back in business. No doubt, Russians again will be a tough bunch to be dealt with.
            • hamid
            • riga latvia
            NYT Pick
            russian interest to wield power in its neighborhood can take different forms: through diplomacy, incentivization such as trade, investment and commerce, or bullying. the same goes for all countries. to say that bullying worked for many centuries is to ignore a rapidly changing world with different dynamics, values and vastly interconnected. to say because one or several countries do act as bullies so it is ok for others is shortsighted, poor logic and not in step with a global community that is expanding its interdependence. one wrong does not make another wrong right. hopefully we are all learning that.
            today we face common humanitarian survival issues that transcend historical insecurity issues that are less relevant today.
            russia's greatest security will come from developing the potential of its impoverished people who have great potential with the aid of its vast resources; it will not come by bullying its neighbors. this is true for all countries.
              • Mr Magoo 5
              • NC

              Russia is not clinging to the past. Today, most every country does what it does for energy resources, which is trying to be globally controlled through carbon credits, and if not, countries take on more drastic measures.

              Russia uses State controlled oil and gas instead of other countries leveraging Russia’s resources. There is little difference externally between what Russia does and what the American government does. Both Russia and the US uses threats, sanctions, and wars, however while Russia is doing it for their State owned enterprises of oil and gas. America is doing it for corporate greed and power, which economically is destroying the country from within.

              An example of this clash is in Syria. Saudi Arabia is backing the rebels in Syria, with covert plans to install their own puppet government in Syria, which will allow the Saudis to control the flow of energy (a gas pipeline) through the region. Saudi Arabia, is putting pressure on the US to support the rebels through threats of cutting off their friendship and oil. Turkey, wants to pipe it from Syria on to Europe. Qatar, the largest source of natural gas in the world wants to pipe the gas from the Persian Gulf to Europe. France, who wants to pay less for gas, is also putting pressure on the US to support the rebels, while Russia wants the Assad regime to block the flow of natural gas out of the Persian Gulf into Europe, thus protecting its own national profits from Gazprom.
                • Norman Pollack
                • East Lansing, Michigan
                • Verified
                I agree in principle with the call for universal self-determination, and The Times is right in its criticisms--up to a point. One must also recognize that the European Union, to which the former Soviet republics wish to align, is conterminous with NATO, a military organization, itself a relic of the Cold War, at Russia's doorstep, AND that Russia remains targeted by missiles surrounding it.

                Thus, #1, if one wants freedom of choice, then first disband NATO and the missiles pointed Eastward.

                The Times must put the issue into global historical context. Has the US allowed Latin America for decades to exercise the same freedom it calls for with respect to former Soviet republics? Just now, new of Princeton meningitis omits the fact that Cuba has vaccines for this specific Type B, which are not allowed here because of the trade embargo.

                Thus, #2, if we want diplomatic openness, start at home, US policy, rather than be hypocritical and pretend selflessness.

                Finally, Putin in fact is enlarging Russia's diplomatic role, as in his move to bloc US bombing of Syria. I applaud that act. Russia, along with China, Japan, Brazil, and emerging Third World industrializing nations, are defining a NEW multipolar global context, so that the US cannot act unilaterally in its hegemonic posture and aims.

                Thus, #3, if the US seeks global comity, let it renounce and desist from intervention and targeted assassination. Then perhaps world opinion, including Putin, will listen.
                  • Ross Dunn
                  • Wellington, New Zealand
                  Putin is a dictator - have been saying it for years - he is a from the same camp as NSA - men are easy to read - your article is redundant - just scream dictator and you've pretty much hit the nail on the head.
                    • tito perdue
                    • 'Bama
                    If Putin's new iron curtain can protect easternmost Europe from the incursions of political correctness, he will deserve our cheers.
                      • john thade
                      • Switzerland
                      Living in Europe makes it clear that all European counries will join in economic cooperation - EU or otherwise including Russia, some day.
                      The same is already forming with India, China and other asian nations and, The U.S., Canada and South America are looking for the same cooperation.

                      Any EU person may work in any other EU country without extra permits albeit, America does not have that agreement with the EU and it's ridiculous.

                      Paving the way for economic cooperation should be our goal.
                      Apparently that was on the agenda already until this phone stuff got in the way.
                        • l
                        • chicago
                        Russia considers the former republics to be indebted to them for Soviet era debts that Russia 'paid off', ignoring the treatment and extraction of resources from those lands during Soviet times. Beneficial trade agreements and cheap gas ensure compliance for now, but these countries are eager to free themselves from the Russian yoke--to say nothing of the treatment their people receive from Russians. Read about race relations in Russia, there is a larger cultural tension that underscores these 'political' relationships.
                          • kll
                          • Connecticut and Estonia
                          At least in Estonia,Russia has not "paid off" (though I do not understand what the quotation marks indicate) any debts, and certainly has done nothing to help alleviate the physical and environmental devastation it left after the military finally withdrew.
                        • frozenchosen
                        • Alaska
                        Interesting historical review. But what does any of that have to do with the strengthened "economic, political and diplomatic ties" sought by some of the former republics and the EU? Do you consider those ties to be "pushing into the space next to Russia"? That is nonsense. There is no reason why countries shouldn't be able to have productive relationships with neighbors both to the east and the west. Moldova, Ukraine, et al. are seeking positive ties in both the EU and Russian directions. Russia's bullying will be counterproductive.

                        National behaviors consistent since the 1500s should be viewed with some skepticism, I would suggest. Russia ought to be able to let go of fears based on horsemen riding across the steppe.
                          • Jack Nargundkar
                          • Germantown, MD
                          Mr. Putin seems to forget the lessons of history, especially one that is so recent. Don’t you understand, Mr. Putin, these nations prefer the power of European Union values to the value of Russian customs union power. In the long run, choosing the EU is a mutually beneficial decision for these six nations, whereas choosing the Russian customs union largely benefits you, Vladimir. Capiche?
                            • gene c
                            • Beverly Hills, CA
                            Putin's dilemma is that he cannot shut off the internet. Stalin didn't have to contend with a massive, free flow of information which allows today's Russians to measure themselves up to the rest of the world. this is central. Putin is more like the dutch kid trying to plug the dike; he controls the state media but he has a 34% approval rating with the electorate, despite the rigged elections. Putin's fortunes will turn, radically, when the one-tier economy he manages, with utter dependency on its natural resources, hits a severe downturn. The enormous kleptocracy and continuous deprivation of individual rights will cause this country to implode. And Putin's regime will implode with it.
                              • craig geary
                              • redlands fl
                              Poor Vladimir Putin.

                              Born too late. After the Soviet Union was recognised as a vast Potemkin village with a huge nuclear arsenal and lines for everything including bread.
                                • Ladislav Nemec
                                • Big Bear, CA
                                There is no secret that Putin is the man of the past. Long time ago he expressed his unhappiness with the disintegration of Soviet Union. He, for instance, does not consider Ukrainians and Russian two separate nationals. Ukrainian language – just a dialect of Russian to him.

                                One of his major goals is to restore as much of the Soviet Union as possible, so far without using the formidable Russian military might.

                                Let’s hope it will remain this way.
                                  • Matthew
                                  • Tewksbury, MA
                                  If people wonder why the former Eastern Bloc states were eager to join NATO after the fall of Communism, here is your answer.
                                    • Prof.Jai Prakash Sharma,
                                    • Jaipur, India
                                    • Verified
                                    When Russia could do business with Europe and find the latter lucrative market for its natural gas supply, why does it want the former Soviet Republics not do trade or develop political ties with Europe, forgetting the fact that neither the Soviet Union does exist any more, nor these Republics are any more the vassal states. Why Putin forgets that much water has flown down the Volga ever since the Soviet empire collapsed under its own crushing weight? Also, if Putin really wants to win over the Republics to his side, it could be by winning their trust, and not through coercion and bullying. To achieve that, he may have to shed his KGB tactics, and learn a lesson or two in the art of diplomacy, similar to what he did on the Syrian chemical weapon stand off with the US.
                                      • tom mcmahon
                                      • millis ma
                                      • Verified
                                      Putin is a man of the present, past and in no way is he in any way a leader of people who can inspire them to rise above what they are.
                                      Putin is an ex KGB former communist party leader, who seeks the former greatness of the era or the 1950's, 60's & 70's which proved to be the ultimate failure. It was not Marxism is was a perverted Communism , it was not socialism, it was a military industrial state, without consumer goods, unlike the U.S.
                                      Putin is asking for help in the Olympic security issue regarding terror, It is in all our interests to keep the Olympics safe, but not to prop up Putin, just make that perfectly clear.
                                      Putin will be long gone when the gas runs out, and it will, Russia will one more time will have been left out in the cold, by selfish leaders of little vision, cold, drunk and hungry.
                                        • mancuroc
                                        • Rochester, NY
                                        • Verified
                                        Russia's ambition to wield power in its own backyard preceded the Soviet era and apparently survives it. And it's not unique among big powers, as Chile, Colombia Cuba,Guatemala, Mexico, Nicaragua, Panama, Venezuela et al have learned over the years.
                                          • Mark Thomason
                                          • Clawson, MI
                                          • Verified
                                          Yes, they are free. Still, they are not free to do things that threaten their neighbor.

                                          The Editorial Board is quite willing to impose extreme limits on any future Palestinian State, and to an large extent on anybody in reach of Israel, all for the security of Israel despite its power. Well, the Russians feel the same way, for similar reasons.

                                          The Russians live in an open steppe, and have been invaded and slaughtered across it repeatedly for longer than recorded history, including Hitler's atrocities. From that experience, they have some very specific demands on neighbors in order to feel safe, maintained since their wars with neighbors in the 1500's. They have not changed, and they will not change.

                                          If you admit those same type of demands for Israel, if you admit the Monroe Doctrine which kept European powers away from the US for the same reasons, if you admit Britain's concern for the Low Countries across from it from Louis XIV through the world wars, then you must admit the same for Russia.

                                          That is as much freedom as they will ever give their neighbors. There are no other choices on offer, and no other nation with the power to protect itself does any less according to its own circumstances.

                                          Any other nation which aspires to push into that space next to Russia will meet the same things as would any nation that pushed into Gaza or the West Bank, or which pushed into the Western Hemisphere (Cuban Missile Crisis) or which rolled over Belgium (WW1 with Britain).
                                            • Dave B
                                            • Chisinau, Moldova
                                            NYT Pick
                                            The notion that these countries through seeking closer European integration are threatening Russia is absurd. Not only do these former Soviet Republics pose no significant security threat to Russia's security (which is actually much more vulnerable to internal challenges, including its restive North Caucasus region), but neither will closer ties to the EU, which is an economic and political alliance, not a military bloc. Russia itself seems to accept this through its arguments and threats to date, which have mostly addressed its neighbors' economic interests.

                                            What is actually under threat is Russia's own sense of regional superiority. Its leaders and many of its citizens are upset by their loss of international prestige and a lack of gratitude by their neighbors for what many Russians consider as economic and military support, but many in the neighboring countries now see as a history of domination.

                                            Without a doubt all major powers are eager to maintain influence in what they see as their spheres of influence. But just because history is full of instances of bullying masquerading as ensuring security and defending one's own legitimate interests does not justify Russia threatening its neighbors for its political and economic choices.
                                            • Richard
                                            • Stateline, NV
                                            Mark,

                                            Russia has an equally long and bad history with their neighbors, ask any Ukrainian, Pole, Finn, Armenian or well you get the idea. They had an empire in the past and want another today. The Russians were only invaded a few times from the west before they built the Brest Fortress system. They have been invaded many times from the east, there is nothing like the Brest Fortress on the Eastern side of Russia. Putin would be Tzar by rebuilding the old Russian Empire as did Lenin after the revolution.
                                            • Citixen
                                            • NYC
                                            A compelling argument, Mark, just one small problem: all those pre-1914 examples you give, whether the Monroe Doctrine or Britain's concern for the Low Countries, etc, just about always included stationing what we would today call 'security assets' in the host countries, regiments that could quickly go from observer-status to spearheading a political coup. That was a real concern borne of a tradition of annexation into the then-imperial power expressing such 'concerns'. But c'mon, even with a cantankerous US stomping around the globe today, those days are over. While Russia may choose to continue thinking in those terms, the object of the desires of some of the Eastern bloc of nations--the EU--can hardly compare with past imperialist powers and their overt designs.

                                            The issues between Russia and its 'Near-abroad' nations, in the 21st century, are really about a clash of national ambitions. One side seems to seek imperial advantages (for domestic consumption?) over its neighbors more suited to the 19th century, while the other side (the Near-abroad states) seek no further advantage than increasing economic opportunities for their people.

                                            PS: oh, and "not free to...threaten their neighbor"...Really? Are any of the Near-abroad, or even the EU itself, 'threatening' Russia? Perhaps only in the sense that Russia cannot simply do as it pleases to those nations without comment or even consequences from other nations. It is, after all, no longer the 19th century.



                                        Monday, November 18, 2013

                                        18/11/13 16:00 from The St. Petersburg Times WASHINGTON – US officials and Boeing representatives will travel to Russia on Monday to assist in the investigation of the crash of a Boeing 737 in the city of Kazan over the weekend that killed all 50 people on board, US transportation ... | 18/11/13 09:46 from Reuters: International MOSCOW (Reuters) - A call by President Vladimir Putin for a new textbook that reconciles differences over Russia's past has left him facing accusations of copying Soviet leaders by rewriting history for political ends

                                        Russia's President Vladimir Putin (L) takes part in a ceremony to award the Margelov Ryazan Higher Airborne Command School with the Order of Suvorov in Ryazan region November 15, 2013. REUTERS-Aleksey Nikolskyi-RIA Novosti-Kremlin

                                        1 OF 2. Russia's President Vladimir Putin (L) takes part in a ceremony to award the Margelov Ryazan Higher Airborne Command School with the Order of Suvorov in Ryazan region November 15, 2013.
                                        CREDIT: REUTERS/ALEKSEY NIKOLSKYI/RIA NOVOSTI/KREMLIN

                                        » 




                                        Putin accused of Soviet tactics in drafting new history book
                                        18/11/13 09:46 from Reuters: International
                                        MOSCOW (Reuters) - A call by President Vladimir Putin for a new textbook that reconciles differences over Russia's past has left him facing accusations of copying Soviet leaders by rewriting history for political ends.

                                        » HIV Infection Rate in Russia Has Grown 7% This Year
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                                        The HIV infection rate in Russia has grown 7 percent this year, with an average infection rate of 35.7 cases per 100,000 people, according to state statistics.


                                        Foes of Russia's anti-gay law seek new tactics - USA TODAY (Nov 17, 2013 15:55) 
                                        Foes of Russia's anti-gay law seek new tactics USA TODAY NEW YORK (AP) — The four-m...


                                        » US, Boeing Officials to Travel to Russia After Kazan Plane Crash
                                        18/11/13 16:00 from The St. Petersburg Times
                                        WASHINGTON – US officials and Boeing representatives will travel to Russia on Monday to assist in the investigation of the crash of a Boeing 737 in the city of Kazan over the weekend that killed all 50 people on board, US transportation ...


                                        » Russian plane crash: CCTV of aircraft explosion
                                        18/11/13 13:42 from Russian news, all the latest and breaking Russia news
                                        A video taken by a Kazan airport security camera appears to show the moment that a plane crashed, killing all 50 people on board        



                                        Russian plane crash: CCTV of aircraft explosion

                                        A video taken by a Kazan airport security camera appears to show the moment that a plane crashed, killing all 50 people on board


                                        The CCTV footage emerged as investigators were combing through the charred fragments of the Boeing 737, trying to determine the cause of the deadly crash.
                                        The short video shows what appears to be the plane going down at high speed at a nearly vertical angle, hitting the ground and then exploding.
                                        The plane, belonging to Tatarstan Airlines was flying in from Moscow, when it crashed in the city of Kazan while making its second attempt at a landing.
                                        The air craft was 23-years-old and had seen service with several carriers prior to being commissioned by the Tatarstan Airlines.
                                        The company insisted that the aircraft was in good technical condition.

                                        » Terror Ruled Out as Cause of Kazan Crash
                                        18/11/13 12:57 from The Moscow Times Top Stories
                                        Investigators have ruled out a terror act as the cause of the crash of Tatarstan Airlines flight No. 363 that killed 50 people on Sunday night in Kazan, suggesting the accident was instead the result of combined human error and technical...

                                        » Kazan Crash Victims Included British Teacher, Tatarstan Leader's Son
                                        18/11/13 12:33 from The Moscow Times Top Stories
                                        Among the 50 people killed when a plane crashed at Kazan International Airport on Sunday was a British schoolteacher, the recently married son of Tatarstan's president, and the head of the local branch of the Federal Security Service.
                                        -
                                        » Courtroom Cages Remain Common, Despite Criticism
                                        18/11/13 13:10 from NYT > Europe
                                        Long avoided by courts in the United States, they are widely used elsewhere, even in cases where the defendants do not seem particularly dangerous.   

                                        » Properties Sold in Fraudulent Scheme Returned to Defense Ministry
                                        18/11/13 12:58 from The Moscow Times Top Stories
                                        The Defense Ministry has regained four properties sold off during the embezzlement scheme that led to the dismissal of former Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov last year, Kommersant reported Monday.


                                        » New York Stock Exchange Hosting Russia Day
                                        18/11/13 12:31 from The Moscow Times Top Stories
                                        The New York Stock Exchange, or NYSE, was to host its annual Russia Day on Nov. 18, to gather business executives and investors to discuss opportunities in Russia, a statement from the exchange said, while the American gay community said...



                                        Friday, November 15, 2013

                                        Gays caused Chelyabinsk meteorite? Russian LGBT community accuses... | Can a homophobic government create a homophobic populace? On State-Sponsored Homophobia in Russia | Social (In)Queery (Nov 14, 2013 12:10) | UK-Russia Year of Culture unveiled - BBC News (Nov 14, 2013 07:24) | The crumbling Kremlin? - The Economist (blog) (Nov 13, 2013 12:32)

                                        RIA Novosti / Anatoly Medved


                                        » Gays caused Chelyabinsk meteorite? Russian LGBT community accuses TV ... - RT
                                        14/11/13 23:03 from Russia - Google News
                                        RT Gays caused Chelyabinsk meteorite? Russian LGBT community accuses TV ... RT In a reference to the Old Testament story of the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah, famous journalist Arkady Mamontov said on his program that the fall of the Chel...

                                        On State-Sponsored Homophobia in Russia

                                        Guest post by Russian sociologist, Anastasia Tsaturyan.
                                        Can a homophobic government create a homophobic populace?
                                        On State-Sponsored Homophobia in Russia | Social (In)Queery (Nov 14, 2013 12:10) 


                                        LGBTQ Nation
                                        MOSCOW — A Russian newspaper is the first organization to come under scrutiny for alleged violation of the country's anti-gay “propaganda” law after it published an interview with a openly gay middle schoolteacher... In the profile of Yermoshkin ...
                                        RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
                                        Olga Bakhayeva, a 24-year-old history teacher, was pressured into resigning from her job at a school in the Urals city of Magnitogorsk following a stream of hate mail attributed to Timur and several complaints to local officials, including prosecutors ... 

                                        BuzzFeed
                                        Human rights activists warn these “KGB-like” tactics are an ominous escalation in the assault on LGBT rights ahead of the Olympic games. posted on November 13, 2013 at 9:41pm EST ... Since Vladimir Putin returned to the presidency last year, Russian ...

                                        -
                                        BBC News UK- Russia Year of Culture unveiled BBC News Russia and the UK are teaming up ...
                                        Financial Times (registration) (blog) The crumbling Kremlin? The Economist (blog) IN TH...

                                        Telegraph.co.uk
                                        The relatively low attendance reflected the sense of weariness among the oppositionmovement, which has been losing its energy after a series of major anti-Putin demonstrations in Moscow in the winter of 2011-2012, which attracted 100,000 or more.

                                        Chattanooga Times Free Press
                                        People carry a banner " End Putinism, Free prisoners " during an opposition rally in downtown Moscow, Sunday, Oct. 27, 2013. Several thousand opposition supporters are marching through the Russian capital to demand the release of people they consider ...



                                        American Thinker

                                        Putin came to office promising to liquidate Russia's corrupt class of oligarchs, but what he in fact did was liquidate only those who sought to challenge the Kremlin's authority. The sun at the center of this universe ofcorruption; it's rumored that ...





                                        Africa Intelligence (subscription)
                                        In addition, the firm's founder, Gennadi Timchenko, a close friend of Russian president Vladimir Putin, hopes to also diversify his business by making his first acquisitions in exploration and production. Gabon, new hub - Signed in June and expected to ...

                                        Africa Intelligence (subscription)
                                        Brazzaville is keen to relaunch several projects with Gunvor, Gazprom, Stroytransgaz and the Russian energy ministry, including construction of a gas pipeline between Pointe-Noire and Oyo and the creation of a Special Economic Zone (SEZ) in the oil ...




                                        Upstream Online

                                        The Enel deal is said to have increased tensions between Russian oil barons Sechin, a long-standing ally of Putin, and Timchenkoas the president seeks to boost the fortunes of the economically significant sector, although Gunvor denied any rift ...

                                        Bloomberg
                                        Russian pop star honored by President Vladimir Putin works as a money courier for the international crime syndicate known as the Brothers' Circle, according to the U.S. Treasury Department. Grigory Lepsveridze, who goes by the stage name Grigory Leps ...

                                        Aljazeera.com
                                        Posters of Russian President Vladimir Putinhave become a common sight around the country, with the state-run Al-Ahram newspaper even publishing photographs on Thursday of a "Thanks, Putin" poster hung by residents of Luxor. Sergey Lavrov and Nabil ...

                                        Arab News
                                        Earlier this year, confronted during a televised question-and-answer session that his crackdown against opponents echoed Stalinism, a bristling Putin responded: “Stalinism is linked with the cult of personalityand massive violations of the law, with ...

                                        Deutsche Welle
                                        He does not believe that Snowden is working with Russian intelligence. Putin, himself a former KGB agent, also denies Snowden is cooperating with intelligence services. Pifer vehemently disagrees. Snowden, he believes, is a defector, not a whistleblower.

                                        RadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
                                        Yanukovych has held at least three secretive meetings with Russian President VladimirPutin in the last two weeks, and in their wake the Ukrainian leader's enthusiasm for Euro-integration seems to be waning. "The EU has been right to say that ... So ...

                                        KpopStarz
                                        Even in prison the anti-Putinist punk rock group Pussy Riot is dangerous. The Interfax news agency reported that Russia's prison ...."You should know that when it comes to politics, I am a Stalinist." Colonel Kulagin, the other head administrator ...


                                        Forbes

                                        By which de Waal means a more prominent role for the church and the return of the Stalincult. Literally. One wonders how Georgians will take that insulting profile of ... He would rather play at ad hominem political horse-race comparisons between ...




                                        Эхо Москвы в Санкт-Петербурге

                                        Согласитесь, что это было коренным изменением точки зрения на путинизмчеловеком, так долго стоически стоявшим на последней линии его обороны. «Путинизм – дерьмо», – упрямо годами повторял Радзиховский, – «но он защищает нас от ...




                                        Council on Foreign Relations


                                        It seems only yesterday that President Vladimir Putin seized the world's attention with his proposal to put Syria's chemical weapons under international control. To many, the fancy footwork had a clear message: Russia was back in the diplomatic big ...



                                        Tuesday, November 12, 2013

                                        Pope Francis on Tuesday met with the foreign minister of the Russian Orthodox Church ahead of a Nov. 25 visit to the Vatican by President Vladimir Putin | Artist Mutilates Self as Putin Paralyzes Russia - Bloomberg | Moscow is going full-out to transform itself into an international financial center

                                        » Moscow Strives to Make Itself a Global Financial Center
                                        12/11/13 13:16 from The Moscow Times Top Stories
                                        Moscow is going full-out to transform itself into an international financial center, building business centers and overhauling its regulations to present an open face to investors, but the city's hopes are undermined by the lack of a ski...

                                        » Two Killed In Russian Space Center Accident
                                        12/11/13 12:32 from Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
                                        Two soldiers died and three others received toxic burns on November 12 during a chemical spill at the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in northwestern Russia.


                                        » European rights body urges Russia to reform judiciary - Reuters
                                        12/11/13 12:13 from Russia - Google News
                                        RT European rights body urges Russia to reform judiciary Reuters MOSCOW (Reuters) - A leading European human rights body urged President Vladimir Putin on Tuesday to overhaul Russia's creaking judicial system, long criticized as vuln...


                                        » Artist Mutilates Self as Putin Paralyzes Russia - Bloomberg
                                        12/11/13 11:51 from Russia - Google News
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                                        Russian and US law enforcement officers will meet in Moscow this week to discuss the joint search for criminals

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                                        FBI and Dep of Justice to visit Russia to discuss joint search for criminals

                                        FBI and Dep of Justice to visit Russia to discuss joint search for criminals

                                        Russian and US law enforcement officers will meet in Moscow this week to discuss the joint search for criminals, a source from the Russian Prosecutor General's Office told Interfax on Monday.

                                        The Office has initiated the second session of the Russian-US working party, which was established at a meeting of Russian Prosecutor General Yuri Chaika and US Attorney General Eric Holder in May 2012.
                                        The working party will convene in Moscow on November 14-15.
                                        "The sides will discuss reciprocal legal assistance and cooperation in the search for wanted criminals and in the investigation of crimes," the Prosecutor General's Office said.
                                        The US delegation will be comprised of officers of the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security, while Russia will be represented by officers of the Investigative Committee and the Federal Security Service, the report said.
                                        Sources familiar with the situation told Interfax last week that a delegation of the US Department of Justice and the FBI would visit Moscow within a few days to discuss cooperation with their Russian colleagues.
                                        Voice of Russia. Interfax