Russia Blogs

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Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: EU Envoy Says Serbia, Kosovo Reach Agreement To End Border Deadlock (Sep 30, 2021 07:48)
Serbia and Kosovo have reached an agreement to end their standoff at the border, Europe...

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: FSB Searches Apartments Of Investigative Journalist And His Parents (Sep 30, 2021 07:38)
Federal Security Service (FSB) officers have raided the apartment of Roman Dobrokhotov,...

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: Eight People Convicted Over Deadly Siberian Mall Fire (Sep 30, 2021 07:22)
A court in Siberia has found a group of eight people guilty of negligence in a 2018 fir...

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: Russia Urged To Release Anti-Putin Shaman From 'Punitive Psychiatric Treatment' (Sep 30, 2021 07:03)
Amnesty International has condemned a Russian court's rejection of an appeal by a Yakut...

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - Russia: Playing at Politics: Manufacturing Russia's Parliamentary Parties (Sep 30, 2021 06:57)
For the in-system political parties, the presidential administration simply sets some g...

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: U.S. Company Confirms Man Shot Dead By Belarusian KGB Was Employee (Sep 30, 2021 05:36)
U.S.-based software firm EPAM Systems has confirmed to the Reuters news agency that the...

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: Outspoken Critic Of Turkmen Government Released From Deportation Center In Istanbul (Sep 30, 2021 04:45)
A Turkmen activist and outspoken critic of the tightly controlled Central Asian state's...

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: Russia Blocks Work Of UN Committees Monitoring Sanctions On African Countries (Sep 30, 2021 02:25)
Russia is delaying the appointment of panels of independent experts to monitor violatio...

Johnson's Russia List: Iran Cements Alliance With China, Russia In Clear Message To Washington (Sep 29, 2021 20:42)
The seismic, multi-generational Iran-China deal is set for full roll-out. Full membersh...

Johnson's Russia List: Russia Posts Record Daily COVID-19 Death Toll For Second Day In A Row (Sep 29, 2021 20:32)
Russia has reported 857 new coronavirus-related deaths, a single-day record since the p...

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: Visiting EU Commission Chief Urges Kosovo-Serbia Reconciliation (Sep 29, 2021 15:50)
During a visit to Pristina, the head of the European Union's executive branch called on...

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: Belarusian Version Of Russia's Komsomolskaya Pravda Blocked (Sep 29, 2021 15:42)
Belarus's Information Ministry has blocked access to the website of the Belarusian vers...

Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: German President Vows Support For Moldova Reform Program (Sep 29, 2021 15:15)
During a visit to Chisinau, German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier committed Berlin t...

Window on Eurasia -- New Series: Global Warming Forces Moscow to Postpone Construction of New Arctic Port (Sep 29, 2021 14:49)
Paul Goble             Staunton,...

Window on Eurasia -- New Series: Azerbaijani-Turkish Exercises in Nakhichevan Prompt Iranian Military Moves (Sep 29, 2021 14:31)
Paul Goble             Staunton,...

Window on Eurasia -- New Series: Russians Recovering from Covid Reportedly Suffer from Vastly Higher Rates of Depression than Expected (Sep 29, 2021 14:11)
Paul Goble             Staunton,...

Robert Amsterdam: Departures Podcast with Patrick Wyman, Author of ‘The Verge: Reformation, Renaissance, and Forty Years that Shook the World’ (Sep 29, 2021 10:43)
History is not a single continuum. There are certain stretches in which momentous chang...

Window on Eurasia -- New Series: Russians Voted for Communists the Way They Used to Vote ‘Against All,’ Kolesnikov Says (Sep 29, 2021 06:37)
Paul Goble             Staunton,...

Window on Eurasia -- New Series: Ingush Seven Case Collapses as Tensions between Magas and Ingush Leaders Intensify (Sep 29, 2021 06:04)
Paul Goble             Staunton,...

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - Russia: Should Russia Be Worried by the New AUKUS Alliance? (Sep 29, 2021 05:54)
Decisions made by NATO may be unpalatable for Moscow, but they are generally consistent...

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Russia Blogs
Russia Blogs Review
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: EU Envoy Says Serbia, Kosovo Reach Agreement To End Border Deadlock
2021-09-30T11:48:15Z
Serbia and Kosovo have reached an agreement to end their standoff at the border, European Union envoy Miroslav Lajcak said after talks in Brussels between the two sides.



Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: FSB Searches Apartments Of Investigative Journalist And His Parents
2021-09-30T11:38:31Z
Federal Security Service (FSB) officers have raided the apartment of Roman Dobrokhotov, chief editor of the investigative website The Insider, which was recently added to Russia's controversial registry of "foreign agents."



Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: Eight People Convicted Over Deadly Siberian Mall Fire
2021-09-30T11:22:23Z
A court in Siberia has found a group of eight people guilty of negligence in a 2018 fire in the city of Kemerovo that killed 60 people, including 37 children.



Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: Russia Urged To Release Anti-Putin Shaman From 'Punitive Psychiatric Treatment'
2021-09-30T11:03:26Z
Amnesty International has condemned a Russian court's rejection of an appeal by a Yakut shaman against a decision to confine him to a psychiatric clinic as he campaigned to drive President Vladimir Putin from the Kremlin.



Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - Russia: Playing at Politics: Manufacturing Russia's Parliamentary Parties
2021-09-30T10:57:07Z
Playing at Politics: Manufacturing Russia's Parliamentary PartiesFor the in-system political parties, the presidential administration simply sets some general ground rules. For the new administrative parties, the presidential administration is not just an overseer, but their immediate boss.

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - Russia
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: U.S. Company Confirms Man Shot Dead By Belarusian KGB Was Employee
2021-09-30T09:36:26Z
U.S.-based software firm EPAM Systems has confirmed to the Reuters news agency that the man killed by Belarusian security forces in a raid on his apartment in Minsk earlier this week was an employee of the company.



Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: Outspoken Critic Of Turkmen Government Released From Deportation Center In Istanbul
2021-09-30T08:45:25Z
A Turkmen activist and outspoken critic of the tightly controlled Central Asian state's government has been released from a deportation center in Istanbul, where she is based.



Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: Russia Blocks Work Of UN Committees Monitoring Sanctions On African Countries
2021-09-30T06:25:43Z
Russia is delaying the appointment of panels of independent experts to monitor violations of UN sanctions on several African countries, diplomats say.



Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Johnson's Russia List: Iran Cements Alliance With China, Russia In Clear Message To Washington
2021-09-30T00:42:58Z
The seismic, multi-generational Iran-China deal is set for full roll-out. Full membership of the economic, military and political, SCO alliance will lead to major strategic investments in Iran’s up-and-downstream sectors [...]

Johnson's Russia List
Johnson's Russia List: Russia Posts Record Daily COVID-19 Death Toll For Second Day In A Row
2021-09-30T00:32:27Z
Russia has reported 857 new coronavirus-related deaths, a single-day record since the pandemic began, as the country continues to see a surge in infections linked to the Delta variant [...]

Johnson's Russia List
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: Visiting EU Commission Chief Urges Kosovo-Serbia Reconciliation
2021-09-29T19:50:35Z
During a visit to Pristina, the head of the European Union's executive branch called on Kosovo and Serbia to resolve their disputes through dialogue and to de-escalate recent tensions over license plates.



Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: Belarusian Version Of Russia's Komsomolskaya Pravda Blocked
2021-09-29T19:42:34Z
Belarus's Information Ministry has blocked access to the website of the Belarusian version of the popular Russian tabloid Komsomolskaya Pravda.



Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty: German President Vows Support For Moldova Reform Program
2021-09-29T19:15:12Z
During a visit to Chisinau, German President Frank-Walter Steinmeier committed Berlin to an assistance package of 10 million euros ($11.6 million) to support the reform program launched by Moldovan President Maia Sandu.



Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty
Window on Eurasia -- New Series: Global Warming Forces Moscow to Postpone Construction of New Arctic Port
2021-09-29T18:49:55Z

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Sept. 26 – A decision by the Russian authorities to postpone the construction of a deep-water port in the Nenets Autonomous District because of global warming is a reminder that for Russia as for other countries climate change is a two-edged sword, opening some paths for new development but foreclosing others.

            For more than a decade, Moscow has planned to build a major port in Indiga on the Arctic Ocean and connect it by new railroads extending to Arkhangelsk to the West and Sytyvkar in the south. Construction of the port was slated to begin in 2023 but now has been pushed off to third and fourth quarters of 2024 (tass.ru/ekonomika/12325801).

            Potentially, the new court could handle even more traffic than Arkhangelsk and thus promote the use of the Northern Sea Route and the development of the Russian North in important ways. But climate change means that building it is going to be far more difficult than the Russian government had anticipated.

            The reason for this delay – and further delays are not only possible but likely – has less to do with the port itself than with the rail lines connecting it with mines and oil fields inside the Russian Federation. Ships can move more easily to the port because of decreased ice coverage, but the melting of the permafrost means that building rail lines is more difficult.

Window on Eurasia -- New Series: Azerbaijani-Turkish Exercises in Nakhichevan Prompt Iranian Military Moves
2021-09-29T18:31:36Z

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Sept. 26 – Baku and Ankara are conducting joint military exercises in Nakhichevan for several years; but this year’s maneuvers are the first after last fall’s war and after Baku, Yerevan and Moscow agreed among other things to restore a transportation corridor through Zengezur between Azerbaijan proper and Azerbaijan’s Nakhichevan.

            For that reason, as well as because concerns about Azerbaijan’s growing ties with Israel and its imposition of delays on Iranian truck traffic northward, Tehran views this year’s joint action as a threat to its interest and as a violation of the agreement of the Caspian littoral states on excluding the military presence of other countries.

             The Iranian government has taken two steps to underscore its displeasure at what Azerbaijan and Turkey are doing. On the one hand, it has dispatched more weaponry to Iranian units along the border. And on the other, its mullahs are demanding further actions against what they describe as a Turkic threat to Iran.

            In reporting these developments, Regnum commentator Stanislav Tarasov suggests that Iran could hardly do less given the loss in influence in the region it has suffered as a result of Azerbaijan’s victory last fall but that Iran has few options and all that it does have risk leaving it in a still weaker position (iarex.ru/articles/82690.html).

Window on Eurasia -- New Series: Russians Recovering from Covid Reportedly Suffer from Vastly Higher Rates of Depression than Expected
2021-09-29T18:11:35Z

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Sept. 26 – When the pandemic began, Russian medical experts predicted that 20 percent of those who became infected but then recovered would suffer from depression and other psychological problems. But the real rate, St. Petersburg State University scholars say, is now 29 percent (tass.ru/obschestvo/12503065).

            That higher figure, Andrey Nesmiyan who blogs under the screen name El Murid, reflects the way in which the impact of the disease has been exacerbated by the repressions that the authorities have been visiting on the population during the pandemic and promises to result in more Columbines and other asocial actions (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=614F3E461288D).

            Today, the Russian authorities reported registering 22,498 new cases of infection and 805 new deaths from the coronavirus over the last 24 hours as the pandemic continued to intensify in many places with increased restrictions following (t.me/COVID2019_official/3596 and regnum.ru/news/society/3379238.html).

            There was mixed news on other fronts of the pandemic. On the one hand, a Russian who had been vaccinated died in...

Robert Amsterdam: Departures Podcast with Patrick Wyman, Author of ‘The Verge: Reformation, Renaissance, and Forty Years that Shook the World’
2021-09-29T14:43:18Z

History is not a single continuum. There are certain stretches in which momentous change occurs in a very compact timeframe. The forty-year period between 1490 and 1530 is one of these bursts of revolutionary change.

In The Verge: Reformation, Renaissance, and Forty Years that Shook the World, Patrick Wyman, a historian and the host of the popular podcast Tides of History, argues that the turn of the 16th century was a momentous moment in history when Europe began to break off from the rest of the world and “became recognizably the global power,” ushering in the era of imperialism and colonialism – “the central problem of world history in the last 500 years.”

Rather than studying the centuries-long process that brought us into the modern era, Wyman looks at a particularly eventful period which began this “Great Divergence.” Europe at the turn of the 16th century featured the invention of the printing press, great sea voyages, the rise of modern finance, extreme taxation, among other revolutionary developments.

Of these, Wyman argues, the printing press – which allowed for the creation of mass media – is the single most important of these developments. Indeed, Colombus’ voyages were “a media event as much as they were a historical event. The...

Window on Eurasia -- New Series: Russians Voted for Communists the Way They Used to Vote ‘Against All,’ Kolesnikov Says
2021-09-29T10:37:20Z

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Sept. 25 – Before Putin eliminated the opportunity for Russian voters to vote “against all” candidates, many chose to do just that. In the just completed Duma elections, a sizeable fraction of Russians voted for the KPRF for precisely the same reasons that animated them to vote that way when it was possible, Andrey Kolesnikov says.

            The Moscow Carnegie Center analyst argues that the KPRF did far better than anyone, including its leaders, expected but that it is important to understand that those who cast their ballots for the party are hardly committed communists. They did so in order to show their opposition to the current regime (carnegie.ru/commentary/85414).

            “The massive voting for the KPRF doesn’t mean a return of communism,” Kolesnikov says. “More than that, it doesn’t mean a total shift to the left on the part of the electorate or a rebirth of Marxism.” Indeed, it is an open question whether even many KPRF candidates could be described as committed communists.

            Both KPRF voters and KPRF candidates are opposed to the Putin system and favor an idealized image of the past as the only real alternative. This search for an alternative, now as was the case at the end of 2013 and the beginning of 2014, reflects a low standing of the Putin regime, something that has become “the norm” in Russian political life.

Window on Eurasia -- New Series: Ingush Seven Case Collapses as Tensions between Magas and Ingush Leaders Intensify
2021-09-29T10:04:25Z

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Sept. 25 – Video clips and testimony offered this week by the defense effectively demolish the government’s twin charges against the Ingush Seven. The evidence shows that they did not form an extremist organization and did not promote attacks on siloviki. Rather, these two kinds of evidence show that the leaders did just the reverse.

            They were a moderating influence among the Ingush protesters and they sought to restrain those who were so angry at what officials had done with the border agreement with Chechnya that they were prepared to take more radical action (fortanga.org/2021/09/video-s-osennego-mitinga-v-magase-stalo-argumentom-v-polzu-nevinovnosti-malsaga-uzhahova/, fortanga.org/2021/09/svidetel-soobshhil-o-prekrashhenii-deyatelnosti-opory-ingushetii-posle-aresta-baraha-chemurzieva/, fortanga.org/2021/09/svidetel-ugovory-ingushskih-starejshin-pomogli-uspokoit-molodezh-na-mitinge/and kavkaz-uzel.eu/articles/368389/).

            But sentences being handed out in related cases suggest that the powers that be will not be dissuaded from convicting the Ingush Seven, a trend that is intensifying tensions between Ingush...

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - Russia: Should Russia Be Worried by the New AUKUS Alliance?
2021-09-29T09:54:06Z
Should Russia Be Worried by the New AUKUS Alliance?Decisions made by NATO may be unpalatable for Moscow, but they are generally consistent and predictable. The same cannot be said of structures such as AUKUS.

Carnegie Endowment for International Peace - Russia
Window on Eurasia -- New Series: Russian Protest Shifting from ‘Protest of Minority’ to ‘Protest of Majority,’ Gallyamov Says
2021-09-29T09:39:28Z

Paul Goble

            Staunton, Sept. 25 – Not all political protests are the same, Abbas Gallyamov says. There are protests of various minorities against government policies; and there are protests of the majority against the very legitimacy of the government as such. Until recently, all Russian protests have been of the first kind, but now they are becoming the second.

            The former Putin speechwriter and current political analyst says that “many think that the task of the opposition is the overthrow of the regime and the seizure of power. In fact, this is not exactly the case. At least now in the 21st century. Now opposition figures must not so much overthrow a regime as discredit it” (echo.msk.ru/blog/gallyamov_a/2909460-echo/).

            The reason for that is simple: “now even the most backward societies view the people as the source of political power” and therefore they try to show everyone, including those in power, that “the people are against them.” If they can do that, then, even many members of the ruling elite will feel powerless to fight challenges from the population, Gallyamov says.

            As the US political analyst Crane Brinton observed, “the most important cause of the destruction of regime is the loss on the pat of elites of a sense of justice and rationality of the existing order,” that is, when “a critical mass of the representatives of the ruling class cease to believe...

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