Sunday, March 10, 2013

3.10.13 - Putinology Update: The Putin Doctrine - Leon Aron - Foreign Affairs: "It rests on three geostrategic imperatives: that Russia must remain a nuclear superpower, a great power in all facets of international activity, and the hegemon -- the political, military, and economic leader -- of its region." | Miss Russia dares Putin, defends Pussy Riot - Oman Tribune

3.10.13 - Putinology Update


via Putin - Google News on 3/9/13

Foreign Affairs





The Putin Doctrine
Foreign Affairs
Since coming to power in 2000, Vladimir Putin has added an overarching goal to Russian foreign policy: the recovery of economic, political, and geostrategic assets lost by the Soviet state in 1991. LEON ARON is Director of Russian Studies at the ...
Anxiety as Putin picks new Russia central bank chiefBangkok Post

all 3 news articles »

 


A Vladimir Putin float in Nice, France. (Eric Gaillard / Courtesy Reuters

Leon Aron

"Much in Russian foreign policy today is based on a consensus that crystallized in the early 1990s. Emerging from the rubble of the Soviet collapse, this consensus ranges across the political spectrum -- from pro-Western liberals to leftists and nationalists. It rests on three geostrategic imperatives: that Russia must remain a nuclear superpower, a great power in all facets of international activity, and the hegemon -- the political, military, and economic leader -- of its region. This consensus marks a line in the sand, beyond which Russia cannot retreat without losing its sense of pride or even national identity. It has proven remarkably resilient, surviving post-revolutionary turbulence and the change of political regimes from Boris Yeltsin to Vladimir Putin.

After his election as president in 2000, Putin added to this agenda an overarching goal: the recovery of economic, political, and geostrategic assets lost by the Soviet state in 1991. Although he has never spelled it out formally, Putin has pursued this objective with such determination, coherence, and consistency that it merits being called the Putin Doctrine.

Domestically, the doctrine has guided the regime to reclaim the commanding heights of the economy (first and foremost, the oil and natural gas industries) and reassert its control over national politics, the judicial system, and the national television networks, from which an overwhelming majority of Russians get their news. In foreign and security policy, the doctrine has amounted to a reinterpretation of Russia's geostrategic triad, making its implementation and maintenance considerably more assertive than originally intended. Although U.S. President Barack Obama has signaled lately that he will attempt to revive the "reset" with Russia, Washington's best option may well be a strategic pause: a much-scaled-down mode of interaction that reflects the growing disparity in values and objectives between the two countries yet preserves frank dialogue and even cooperation in a few select areas."

Read More

THE PUTIN DOCTRINE IN PRACTICE
The first imperative of Russia's foreign policy consensus is maintaining the country's position as a nuclear superpower. The centrality of preserving Russia's parity with the only other nuclear superpower, the United States, explains Moscow's eagerness to engage in strategic arms control negotiations with Washington. At the same time, Putin's assertive pursuit of this goal accounts for the vehemence with which Moscow has opposed anything that could weaken this strategic parity, such as NATO's missile defense system in Europe. It is hardly surprising, then, that the claims of top U.S. and NATO officials that the system poses no threat to Russia's nuclear deterrence have fallen on deaf ears. As Putin declared in his speech at the Russian Foreign Ministry last July, the missile shield allegedly "upsets the strategic balance" -- that is, it weakens Russia's status as a nuclear superpower.
A secondary but symbolically important (not to mention financially rewarding) pillar of Russia's position as a nuclear superpower is its export of nuclear technologies. The state nuclear energy corporation, Rosatom, has been busily selling nuclear technology and currently has contracts for the sale of nuclear reactors to China, Turkey, India, Belarus, and Bangladesh. Iran has been a particularly attractive customer -- Russia helped construct the $1 billion Bushehr nuclear power plant in the face of U.S. resistance. The Bushehr project underscored not only Russia's nuclear technological capacity but also Moscow's willingness to assert its policies in the face of Washington's resistance.
This imperviousness to U.S. wishes is central to Putin's reinterpretation of the second objective of Russia's foreign policy consensus: broadly maintaining the country's status as a great power. It is in this context that Moscow has actively pursued former Soviet clients in the Middle East, Latin America, and Asia. Emblematic of this policy were the upgrading in 2009 of the supply-and-repair facility at Tartus in Syria and Putin's visit to Cuba in December 2000, the first by a Russian or Soviet leader since Leonid Brezhnev's trip there in 1974. Moreover, Moscow's use of the UN Security Council to weaken or block U.S. initiatives has steadily risen: in the 1990s, Russia cast two vetoes in the Security Council; between 2000 and 2012, it wielded its veto eight times.
The pursuit of the third component of the foreign policy consensus -- regional hegemony -- has led Moscow to strive for the political, economic, military, and cultural reintegration of the former Soviet bloc under Russian leadership. In his speech at the Foreign Ministry last summer, Putin reaffirmed this commitment, calling the "deepening of the integration" of former Soviet territory the "heart of our foreign policy." Despite less-than-enthusiastic cooperation from the newly independent states, this quest has resulted in the Collective Security Treaty Organization (a military alliance that includes Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan) and the customs union of Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia, which is set to evolve into the Eurasian Union by 2015, a project that Putin has advocated frequently and forcefully.
Under the Putin Doctrine, the pursuit of regional hegemony has acquired a new dimension: an attempt at the "Finlandization" of the post-Soviet states, harkening back to the Soviet Union's control over Finland's foreign policy during the Cold War. In such an arrangement, Moscow would allow its neighbors to choose their own domestic political and economic systems but maintain final say over their external orientation. Accordingly, Moscow has taken an especially hard line against former Soviet republics that have sought to reorient their foreign policy. In the case of Georgia, which openly aspired to NATO membership, Russia went to war in an attempt to humiliate and dislodge President Mikheil Saakashvili's regime. Similarly, Moscow sought to destabilize the Ukrainian government of Viktor Yushchenko and Yulia Tymoshenko -- who advocated joining the European Union and, eventually, NATO -- by shutting off or threatening to shut off natural gas deliveries in 2006 and 2009. Today, even with a far more pro-Russian government in Kiev, Moscow refuses to lower the prices of its natural gas exports to Ukraine -- which pays more than many European importers -- until the country abandons plans for gradual integration into EU economic structures and, instead, charts a path to membership in the eventual Eurasian Union.
Another central pillar of the Putin Doctrine, the pursuit of unchallenged military superiority in Russia's neighborhood, explains the steady increase in Moscow's defense budget during Putin's years in power, from an estimated $29 billion in 2000 to $64 billion in 2011 (both figures are listed in 2010 U.S. dollars). Even in today's tough economic environment, Moscow continues to expand defense outlays at rates far outpacing those for other domestic programs, including education and health care. During his campaign for the presidency in February 2012, Putin promised a "comprehensive and systematic rearmament" of the Russian military and "modernization of the military-industrial complex," pledging to spend 23 trillion rubles ($770 billion) on these projects in the next ten years.
THE BESIEGED FORTRESS
With its fundamental objective of recovering state control over politics and the economy, the Putin Doctrine has inevitably led to authoritarianism. Just as inexorably, the Russian authoritarian restoration has forced the Kremlin to draw on sources of legitimacy outside the subverted democratic institutions. As a result, the regime has played up alleged external threats. Russians' only plausible protection from these foreign dangers, Putin has argued, is the courageous leadership of the current regime. This mode of legitimizing can be called the besieged fortress strategy.
In 2004, a few weeks after Chechen extremists took hostages in a North Ossetian school, Vladislav Surkov -- the deputy chief of the presidential administration who is now deputy prime minister -- laid out a vision of Russia as a besieged fortress. According to Surkov, anonymous foreign malfeasants, hungry for the country's natural resources, were plotting to "destroy Russia and fill its enormous space with many weak quasi-states." Furthermore, he added that in the "de-facto besieged country," outside plotters were helped by "the fifth column" of traitors, the "left and right radicals," who have "common foreign sponsors," and that these traitors are united by "the hatred of what they claim to be Putin's Russia but, in fact, [is the hatred] of Russia herself." Since then, Surkov's three themes -- the never-ceasing attempts to subjugate or destroy the Russian state, the anti-regime opposition as tools of those behind the plotting, and equating the present government with the Russian nation -- have become the staples of the regime's propaganda. As one might expect, the besieged fortress theme is given most visibility and intensity when the regime's need for bolstering its legitimacy appears to be the greatest. And the threat of the United States is a common focus.
Nevertheless, at the beginning of Obama's first term, U.S. and Russian interests seemed to overlap enough for both countries to compromise on some divisive issues. After Washington and Moscow launched the "reset" in March 2009, a number of cooperative efforts followed. These included the Northern Distribution Network (a series of logistic arrangements used to ship NATO materiel and personnel through Russian territory to Afghanistan); the cancellation of Washington's planned deployment of missile interceptors and a radar in Poland and the Czech Republic; the signing of New START; and Moscow's vote in June 2010 for UN Security Council Resolution 1929, which imposed sanctions against Iran.
But by the end of 2011, Washington and Moscow began to drift apart, as a changing geopolitical context has produced a growing disconnect between the two countries' objectives and guiding values in key policy areas. In the nuclear arena, European missile defense appears to have hardened into an insurmountable obstacle to Russia's cooperation on other strategic arms reduction agreements. Moscow has threatened to withdraw from New START, and in October 2012, it announced its abandonment of the 20-year-old Nunn-Lugar Cooperative Threat Reduction Program, under which the United States has spent more than $7 billion to help deactivate over 7,500 Russian strategic warheads.
Meanwhile, from Washington's vantage point, this new geopolitical context is also marked by a significant diminution of Russia's relevance to key U.S. interests. In Afghanistan, the rapid drawdown of U.S. troops obviated much of the need for the Northern Distribution Network after 2014. With respect to Iran, Moscow has ceased support for even the weakened version of sanctions it previously voted for in the UN Security Council. Syria, of course, has been the starkest demonstration of the divergence in guiding values and objectives between the United States and Russia: Moscow has thrice vetoed U.S.-supported Security Council resolutions calling for sanctions against Bashar al-Assad's regime.
Domestic politics has also emerged as an increasingly complicating factor. In Russia, the regime's repressive response to the rise of the anti-Putin, pro-democracy movement -- led by the middle class -- has pitted two structural imperatives of the countries' foreign policies against each other: U.S. support for democratic self-rule on the one hand, and the Putin Doctrine's focus on maintaining the state's firm control over national politics on the other. Meanwhile, in the United States, Congress passed the Sergei Magnitsky Rule of Law Accountability Act last December, prohibiting Russian officials implicated in human rights abuses and corruption from entering the United States and freezing their U.S. assets. In reaction, Moscow banned the adoption of Russian orphans, many of whom are sick or disabled, by American families.
TIME FOR A PAUSE
The divergence of the United States' and Russia's core foreign policy objectives has left the White House with two strategic options. The first is attempting to revive the "reset." Washington appears to be trying this strategy at the moment. According to sources in Moscow, during a phone conversation with Putin last November after the U.S. presidential elections, Obama accepted Putin's invitation for a summit in Russia before the end of 2013. In February, U.S. Vice President Joe Biden held a meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Munich, and it now appears that U.S. National Security Adviser Thomas Donilon will be dispatched to Moscow soon to discuss ways to revive nuclear arms control negotiations. (Acting Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security Rose Gottemoeller, who was the chief negotiator of New START, traveled to Russia in the second week of February.)
But there is also another option for U.S. policy -- and it may well be wiser: a strategic pause. In relations between countries, as between individuals, such intermissions can provide much-needed time to define priorities in the relationship and the price each side is prepared to pay for achieving its goals. There is no better time than now for the United States -- both its leaders and the public -- to engage in such a debate. A pause in engagement, moreover, need not mean inaction or silence. As the Obama administration ponders what to do about the most pressing and divisive issues in U.S.-Russian relations -- missile defense in Europe, U.S. opposition to growing authoritarianism and repression in Russia, and Moscow's pursuit of the "Finlandization" of its neighbors -- the lines of communication should be kept open for a frank dialogue.
In the end, the decisive role in shaping the future of U.S.-Russian relations will be played by the Russian people themselves -- and the success of their democratic impulse seems closer today than at any time since 1991. The emergence of a free, democratic, stable, and prosperous Russia would be enormously beneficial to the United States, so assisting this process ought to be the overarching priority of U.S. policy. In the years ahead, the challenge will be to find the middle ground between the hubris of thinking that Washington can shape and guide Russia's domestic evolution and the folly of complete resignation.


Интерновости.ру





Советником Шойгу стал бывший глава Генштаба Макаров
Интерновости.ру
Ленинизм, Сталинизм, Путинизм – ЗВЕНЬЯ ОДНОЙ ЦЕПИ: Российского ФАШИЗМА ( РФ )!!! ПНАМЧТ напоминает. Родная и ЛЮБИМАЯ ВСЕМИ до СЛЁЗ, взаимно, ЗАПОДПутинская КОРРУПЦИЯ и/или РФ 2013 г. – лишь ВИДИМАЯ и МАЛАЯ ...

and more »

via путинизм - Google Blog Search by VGorin on 3/8/13
Путинизм – продолжение Сталинизма развивается… На этот раз я никаких реплик не даю… Я дам ответ своими акциями, когда сойдёт снег. Но мои акции будут прямым (без намёков) предупреждением диктатору ...

via Videos by golosamerikius on 3/7/13
Бывший премьер рассказал «Голосу Америки» о «поворотной точке» Путина, Астахове, Медведеве-модернизаторе и «антиусыновительном законе». В России не осталось ...
Views:2962
50ratings
Time:19:06More inNews & Politics







Путинские чистки
Сводка Украинских и Мировых Новостей
На этот раз голос, который требовал сдать счета в иностранных банках, принадлежал президенту Владимиру Путину. 12 февраля он подал в Думу законопроект, запрещающий чиновникам и депутатам иметь счета за границей или вкладывать деньги в ценные бумаги иностранных государств. Документом также не ...




Аргументы и факты





Путин поделился секретом отличной физической формы
Аргументы и факты
В ходе рабочей поездки в Вологду Путин посетил цеха «Вологодского текстиля», посмотрел, как мастерицы плетут знаменитые вологодские кружева. Данное предприятие – крупнейший российский производитель льняных тканей; в его состав входят три производства: ткацкое, ...
Путин рассказал, как ему удается держать себя в формеLife News
Путин раскрыл секрет хорошей физической формыBFM.Ru
Владимир Путин приехал в Вологодскую областьТРК "Петербург-Пятый канал"

all 130 news articles »


Socialist Worker Online





Russia's Putin tries to curb smoking, tobacco sales
Reuters UK
The law is part of Putin's drive to reverse a population decline that began after the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. He hopes it will increase productivity and promote economic growth. HEALTH DRIVE. Putin has stepped up these efforts since his return ...
Putin's ongoing war on the leftSocialist Worker Online
How will Russians cope with the smoking ban?The Guardian (blog)
Putin signs new laws aimed at curbing smoking in RussiaWinston-Salem Journal

all 57 news articles »







Путин: будущие отношения с Венесуэлой зависят прежде всего от ее народа , президента и руководства страны
Газета.Ru
Президент России Владимир Путин рассчитывает на продолжение развития отношений с Венесуэлой, но отмечает, что все будет зависеть от народа этой страны. Об этом сообщает РИА «Новости». «Что касается будущих отношений с Венесуэлой, это зависит прежде всего от ...









Почему ушли Римского Папу?
Московский комсомолец
К первой категориитоп-лохов относятся те, которые верят теленовостям: «Ой, бедный Римский Папа уходит со своего поста по состоянию здоровья… Довели бедненького!» Вторая категория – умничающие лохи, которые не доверяют новостям и ищут .... Дон Берлускони сам по понятиям жить умел, быстро всё ...









Генпрокуратура нашла «факты расточительства» в «Курортах Северного Кавказа»
Осетинское радио и телевидение
Генпрокуратура очень удивилась, узнав, сколько тратил на свои заграничные командировки скандально уволенный Владимиром Путиным бывший председатель совета директоров ОАО «Курорты Северного Кавказа» Ахмед Билалов. Только на гостиницу в Лондоне на время летних Олимпийских игр он потратил 2,5 млн ...







Газета Вечерняя Москва





Россиянам без внутреннего позитива не выжить
Золотой Рог
Проявления религиозной, расовой, половой и прочей нетерпимости или дискриминации. Публикация сообщений, наносящих моральный или любой другой урон любому лицу (юридическому или физическому). Использовать в имени (нике) адреса веб-сайтов, грубые и нецензурные ...
Путин вручил журналисткам кремлевского пула букеты тюльпановРИА Новости
Путин заинтриговал журналистов насчет будущего главы ЦБ: "Будет неожиданный, вам понравится"NEWSru.com
Владимир Путин приедет в ВологдуИА Архангельские новости
Газета Вечерняя Москва -ИА REGNUM
all 125 news articles »


Интернет-газета Гарри Каспарова





Работам посвященным Pussy Riot было отказано в участии в феминистской выставке
Интернет-газета Гарри Каспарова
Напомним, 21 февраля 2012 года несколько участниц панк-группы Pussy Riot, закрыв лица масками, устроили в храме Христа Спасителя в Москве антипутинский перформанс, пропев сочиненную ими панк-молитву "Богородица, Путина прогони!". Обвиненные в участии в панк-молебне ...

and more »


Foreign Affairs





The Putin Doctrine
Foreign Affairs
The Bushehr project underscored not only Russia's nuclear technological capacity but also Moscow's willingness to assert its policies in the face of Washington's resistance. This imperviousness to U.S. wishes is central to Putin's reinterpretation of ...

and more »







Acid, mafia and scandal at Russia's Bolshoi Ballet
Santa Rosa Press Democrat
In January, an unknown assailant splashed the acid on the face of the director, Sergei Filin, as he was about to enter his Moscow apartment building. The attack ... Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin has not visited the theater since its reopening.” What ...

and more »


INOTV





Британского дипломата в Москве обвиняют в шпионаже
INOTV
Российские СМИ считают, что британское правительство послало Дениса Кифа для сбора информации и с целью навредить правительству Владимира Путина. Дипломатические источники охарактеризовали эти выпады как «беспрецедентную атаку на старшего дипломата». Издание пишет, что подобные обвинения могут ...




Уфимский Журнал





Исходя из нынешних условий, в 2018 Путин будет неизбираем, в СМИ пытаются запретить обсуждение его рейтинга
Уфимский Журнал
История с разгромом "Газеты.ру" показывает, что в СМИ установлен фактический запрет на обсуждение рейтинга Путина. А из запрета на обсуждение рейтинга Путина в СМИ следует, что сам Путин считает, что его рейтинг в глубокой жопе. Исходя из нынешних условий, в 2018 году Путин будет неизбираем ...




Бизнес-портал ДЕЛО





100 самых влиятельных женщин России определили на "Эхо Москвы"
Бизнес-портал ДЕЛО
Ирину Прохорову называют человеком, чьими стараниями формировалась гуманитарная мысль современной России. Самый известный пример ее умения блестяще полемизировать — предвыборные дебаты с доверенным лицом Путина Никитой Михалковым, где она наносит ...




gulfnews.com





Boris Akunin: Powerful voice of Russian opposition
gulfnews.com
Putin is not Confucian. He does not listen to his inner voice. He does not distinguish between what is right and wrong.” Others have said that Fandorin's stoicism in the face of danger is more reminiscent of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, the jailed oligarch ...









"Если сегодня просто в лоб преподавать Некрасова, Островского и Тургенева, то мы получим опять революцию".
Русская Служба Новостей
Но прежде, вот Вы говорите, Минкульт не обращался, Мединский не обращался, тогда вообще со стороны властей какие-то заявления, предложения, просьбы по этому поводу поступали после известного выступления Владимира Путина на съезде родителей Всероссийского сопротивления, где было сказано, что ...












WORLD-NEWS-SCHEDULE AT 1500 GMT/10 AM ET
GlobalPost
MOSCOW - Russia puts a dead whistleblowing lawyer in the dock on Monday in a posthumous trial that relatives and critics say is a show by President Vladimir Putin's government to take revenge and make a criminal of him. (RUSSIA-MAGNITSKY/ ... BERLIN ...









Эксперт: России нужен свой Нюрнбергский процесс
Росбалт.RU
По словам члена ОП РФ Аллы Гербер, так получилось потому, что культ личности вовремя не развенчали. ... 07 марта 2013 Президент и его бюрократы Год, прошедший после победы Владимира Путина на выборах главы государства, не сделал жизнь россиян проще и понятнее.

and more »







Украинский депутат считает, что Путин блефует: "Россия не сможет без наших рабочих"
ИА REGNUM
Напомним, президент России Владимир Путин на встрече с главой украинского государства Виктором Януковичем 4 марта заявил, что чем плотнее РФ работает с Казахстаном и Белоруссией, тем сложнее Украине. "С 2015 года у нас движение рабочей силы будет ограничено из других ...

и другие »

via Putin - Google News on 3/9/13

Foreign Affairs





The Putin Doctrine
Foreign Affairs
Since coming to power in 2000, Vladimir Putin has added an overarching goal to Russian foreign policy: the recovery of economic, political, and geostrategic assets lost by the Soviet state in 1991. LEON ARON is Director of Russian Studies at the ...
Anxiety as Putin picks new Russia central bank chiefBangkok Post

all 3 news articles »


Уфимский Журнал





Исходя из нынешних условий, в 2018 Путин будет неизбираем, в СМИ пытаются запретить обсуждение его рейтинга
Уфимский Журнал
Судя по Мамуту и разгрому «Газеты.ру», тема собственного рейтинга для Путина действительно является очень болезненной. История с разгромом "Газеты.ру" показывает, что в СМИ установлен фактический запрет на обсуждение рейтинга Путина. А из запрета на обсуждение ...



via Putin - Google News on 3/9/13

DAWN.com





Miss Russia dares Putin, defends Pussy Riot
Oman Tribune
MOSCOW The new Miss Russia took the unusual step on Saturday of contradicting President Vladimir Putin by denouncing the jailing of two members of the Pussy Riot female punk band who performed a protest song in a church. Eighteen-year-old Elmira ...
Miss Russia says Pussy Riot sentencing too harshReuters India
Russian police detain several Pussy Riot supportersGlobalPost
Russian police charge Pussy Riot supportersTimes of Malta
Examiner.com
all 17 news articles »

via Russia - Google News on 3/10/13

Press TV





Russia hopeful about forthcoming Iran-P5+1 talks in Almaty: Churkin
Press TV
Iran and the P5+1 -- Britain, China, France, Russia, and the United States, plus Germany -- have held several rounds of talks mainly over Tehran's nuclear energy program. The two sides wrapped up their latest round of negotiations in Almaty, Kazakhstan ...



via Russia - Google News on 3/10/13

Yahoo! News (blog)





Russia puts dead whistleblower on trial
Yahoo! News (blog)
MOSCOW (Reuters) - A whistleblowing Russian lawyer whose death in custody became a symbol of rights abuses and strained relations with the United States will go on posthumous trial on Monday in what relatives say is revenge by the Kremlin.

and more »

via The New York Times's Facebook Wall by The New York Times on 3/10/13
Quotation of the Day: "I would still eat these meatballs. No problem." -- Zuzana Navelkova, an official at a Czech laboratory who discovered horse meat in Swedish meatballs, fueling a firestorm over food labeling in Europe.


Recipe for Divided Europe: Add Horse, Then Stir
www.nytimes.com
At a time of immense strains brought on by the euro crisis and austerity, the horse meat scandal has brought into the open the deep divisions that bedevil Europe.

3.10.13 - Russia News Review: Kremlin to Protect Venezuelan Interests Even If Opposition Wins | Spying claims against top British diplomat threaten Anglo-Russian détente | Russian TV Airs New Accusations Against Browder

via The Moscow Times Top Stories by By Alexander Bratersky <moscowtimes@themoscowtimes.com> on 3/9/13
Russian ties with Venezuela will not remain as close as under the late President Hugo Chavez, but the Kremlin will be able to protect its interests even if the opposition wins, analysts and government officials said.

via Russia - Google News on 3/9/13

News.Az





Post-Chavez Venezuela:what to expect
The Voice of Russia
He developed special relations with Russia. Russian companies have multibillion-dollar oil and gas contracts with Venezuela. Russia supplies Venezuela with power generating, chemical and oil production equipment, and is planning to build nuclear power ...
Venezuela & Russia: ties that bindFinancial Times (blog)
Russia, Venezuela to continue strategic partnership - MaduroNews.Az
What will Russia do without Venezuela?Pravda
Russia Beyond The Headlines
all 3,569 news articles »

via Russia - Google News on 3/9/13

NBCNews.com





Newly crowned Miss Russia attacks Pussy Riot sentence
NBCNews.com
By Lidia Kelly, Reuters. MOSCOW -- Miss Russia 2013 said on Saturday that the sentencing of punk rockers Pussy Riot to two years in prison for their protest performance in a Moscow cathedral was too harsh a punishment. Maria Alyokhina, 24, Nadezhda ...



FILE - In this April 16, 1997 file photo, the embalmed body of Vladimir Lenin, founder of the Soviet Union, is on display in his tomb on Moscow's Red Square. Lenin is one of several world leaders whose bodies have been preserved and put on perpetual display, as Venezuela's government plans to do with Hugo Chavez. (AP Photo/Sergei Karpukhin, File)No one lives forever — nor do they last forever. At least not without a lot of tuneups.

via Russia - Google News on 3/9/13

Raw Story





Russia admits no new life form found in Antarctic lake
Raw Story
Russian scientists on Saturday dismissed initial reports that they had found a wholly new type of bacteria in a mysterious subglacial lake in Antarctica. Sergei Bulat of the genetics laboratory at the Saint Petersburg Institute of Nuclear Physics had ...
News Update: Head of Russia's Antarctic Genetics Lab Denies "Unclassified ...The Daily Galaxy (blog)
Russia finds 'new bacteria' in Antarctic lakeYahoo! News UK
Russia Says New Antarctic Bacteria FoundRadioFreeEurope/RadioLiberty
Latinos Post
all 60 news articles »

via Russia - Google News on 3/9/13

New Yorker (blog)





Russia's Dissertation-Fraud Muckrakers
New Yorker (blog)
Forty per cent of Russians, according to a recent poll, agree that United Russia, the chief pro-Kremlin force in the national legislature, is “a party of swindlers and thieves.” This sobriquet was coined a couple years ago by Aleksey Navalny, an anti ...



via Russia - Google News on 3/9/13

Telegraph.co.uk





Spying claims against top British diplomat threaten Anglo-Russian détente
Telegraph.co.uk
They include the recent decision to grant asylum in Britain to Andrei Borodin, a billionaire former Russian banker accused by Moscow of fraud, Russia's attempts to hinder investigations into the poisoning in London of the former spy Alexander ...

and more »

via World news: Russia | guardian.co.uk by Conal Urquhart on 3/9/13
New wealth, especially from China and Russia, is having a dramatic impact on European tourism, cities and traditional rural havens
The beaches, resorts and assorted tourist attractions of Europe are undergoing a quiet revolution; a transformation to match the foreign-holiday boom unleashed by cheap package tours in the 1960s. The Russians are no longer coming. They have arrived. And the Chinese are on their way in even bigger numbers.
With its pretty piazzas and ancient churches, Montecatini is a typical Tuscan town. But it is also one where the mayor has proposed that all street signs should be written in Russia's Cyrillic script, reflecting an unprecedented invasion of pleasure-seekers from the east.
Across the rest of the continent, the picture is the same. Russians, Asians and Arabs are rewriting the rules of European tourism as newly enriched tycoons and middle-class beneficiaries of the world's booming economies buy properties and take up beach space once jealously guarded by northern Europeans.
Outbound tourists from western Europe and the United States have remained fairly static in recent decades but the numbers going in the other direction are startling. Take China, where a travelling boom has marched in step with the country's vertiginous economic growth. Five million making foreign visits in 1996 became 60 million by 2010. Over the same period, 12 million visitors from Moscow, St Petersburg and the rest of Russia multiplied into almost 40 million.
As the eurozone (and Britain) wonders where sustained economic growth is going to come from, in the depressing aftermath of the banking crisis, governments overseeing flagging economies in southern Europe are pulling out all the stops to attract non-EU visitors with cash to spare. Countries such as Portugal, Cyprus and Spain have even offered residency permits to foreign house buyers to energise their property markets.
Joannna Leverett of Savills estate agents said there were several trends. "Russians are still buying in the south of France, Tuscany, Turkey. Buyers from the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Qatar have started buying in Turkey as well as the south of France. Marbella remains popular. They tend to buy large villas in serviced resorts. Americans continue to buy in Italy and France. Chinese are buying newly built apartments in Paris and London, but here it's related to education and visas and less about tourism," she said.
In the context of the eurozone crisis, a knockdown sale of assets appears to have begun. Last week the emir of Qatar bought six Greek islands for £7m, continuing a trend started by King Fahd of Saudi Arabia when he fell in love with Marbella in 1974. The king spent up to two months on the Costa del Sol every summer and he was joined by much of the Saudi court and many other Middle Eastern princes. Each royal visit was said to pump £60m into the local economy.
Marbella is still a magnet for visitors from the Middle East. The Saudi royal family owns the 200-acre Nahda complex that includes a clinic, a mosque and a replica of the White House, among other palaces. Sheikh Abdullah al-Thani of Qatar owns Málaga football club. But Russian wealth has become a bigger player in recent years.
Jelena Cvjetkovic, also of Savills, said that wealthy Russians were still looking for "trophy assets" and last year one had bought a private property for more than £40m in St Tropez. The latest fashion, she said, was for the very wealthy to add a countryside property to their seaside property. "We are seeing a surge of interest in Tuscany. They already have a seaside property and now they want a countryside property with a vineyard. A lot of these sales are carried out privately, but I have heard through lawyers of many going for £30m-£40m," she said.
Meanwhile, the emerging Russian middle class – the merely well-off as opposed to the super-rich – are transforming the mass tourism market and adding to their own, more modest property portfolios. In 2011 Russians were the largest group of visitors to Europe, with 24.6 million, followed by the US with 20.6 million. Next is China with 4.7 million, Canada with 4.2 million and Japan with 4.1 million.
Many of those visitors are also buying. Mike Bridges, editor of International Residences, a Russian property magazine, said: "The majority of Russian buyers are now from the middle classes with an average budget of €500,000. They normally don't need mortgages and pay cash. The Russian economy is doing very well, and the middle class is immense."
As a result, large Russian communities are emerging in north-east Spain, Montenegro and Cyprus where there are Russian shops and services on offer. Bridges said: "Russians are looking for places with direct flights to St Petersburg and Moscow and they need a lot of interpreters at the other end. Developers normally need Russian-speaking staff. Bulgaria and Montenegro are popular because of the linguistic similarities, but Spain has become very popular because of the cheap property prices."
Russians now account for 9% of the property market on the Costa del Sol, ahead of the Germans on 7%, but still way behind the British on 35%.
The new influx has had its darker side, amid accusations of mafia activity and corruption. In Cyprus, a court in 2010 bailed a Russian accused of spying in the US, giving him the opportunity to escape. In Spain, Russian businessmen and Spanish politicians have been accused of collaborating in corruption.
But as the spending capacity of the new powerhouses of the global economy inexorably grows, the new kids on the block will become more numerous. And if Russians are the present, the Chinese are the future. Young Chinese people are steadily moving from organised group travel to independent travel, making reservations and buying tickets on the internet and going beyond the major tourist attractions.
The UN has predicted 100 million Chinese tourists will travel somewhere in 2020. Europe, or at least the continent's most alluring spots, are set to become a playground for the new rich of the east. It's all a long way from the Costa Brava in 1970.

Scramble for a continent


UK

The British climate does not lend itself to non-European sunseekers, but the race for prime property grows ever more intense. When the Malaysian owners of the Battersea power station development released the first batch of 600 apartments for sale in January they were snapped up in two days.
"We're in the eye of the storm right now," says James Moran, sales director at Winkworth's South Kensington office. "Sales are up 60% on last year and we're seeing traditional markets, such as the French and Italians, being replaced with buyers from Russia, the Middle East and Asia."
The Arab spring has also resulted in a surge in demand from Egypt, Libya and Iran as buyers look for a safe haven for their money.
Joanne O'Connor



France

The Russians are still buying holiday homes on the French Riviera, but they are now being joined by sun-starved Scandinavians and cash-rich Egyptians. The "Golden Triangle" – Cannes, Cap d'Antibes, Châteauneuf – remains popular. Fredrik Lilloe, of Estate Net Prestige-Knight Frank, says his agency is seeing buyers from the Middle East, particularly Egyptians. The Chinese have shown great interest in Burgundy vineyards, but in general they do not live on the estate. They get someone to run it and ship the wine to China.
Mark Harvey, of the French team at Knight Frank in London, said Paris was popular with Middle Eastern and American buyers as well as Russians and Italians.
President François Hollande's threat to impose higher taxes has sent many buyers out of the country to seek "safe-haven" investments in places such as Monaco and Switzerland.
Kim Willsher



Spain

With the collapse of the housing market after the residential property bubble burst five years ago, buyers of all nationalities have been scarce – though Russian president Vladimir Putin was among those reportedly snooping around Marbella's exclusive La Zabaleta luxury estate last year.
The government is so desperate to sell off the estimated 1m empty new-build properties that it plans to change visa laws to allow non-Europeans who spend more than €160,000 (£140,000) on a house to live in the country.
Secretary of state for commerce Jaime García-Legaz said the move was specifically aimed at attracting wealthy Russian and Chinese buyers. With prices down more than 30%, Russians overtook Germans last year as the second biggest buyers of property – after Britons – on the southern Costa del Sol. In eastern Alicante they snap up the more expensive properties.
Chinese buyers, meanwhile, are also looking at far bigger investments. A Chinese consortium is considering a 4.6 square mile site on the outskirts of Madrid, where it plans to build a new finance centre.
All of that pales, however, beside the site at Alcorcón, near Madrid, where US billionaire Sheldon Adelson plans to build a vast complex, known as EuroVegas.
Giles Tremlett



Italy

Russian oligarchs and their bottle blonde wives have been a common sight on Sardinia's Emerald Coast for years now, propping up the bar at Flavio Briatore's Billionaire nightclub. The Russian tide has since hit the mainland, with the mayor of Tuscan resort Forte dei Marmi growing so alarmed by the spiralling house prices he decided to set aside new homes for locals only.
Further inland, Svetlana Medvedeva, the wife of Russia's prime minister, Dmitry Medvedev, took over an entire spa hotel in Montecatini Terme last year with her 30-strong entourage, prompting the mayor to suggest he would put up Russian street signs in the hope Medvedeva's arrival would lead a boom in high spending Russians.
Gulf Arabs are thick on the ground and expected to swell in numbers after the Qatar royal family signed a deal last year to buy out the American owner of the Emerald Coast – a stunning stretch of Sardinian coast first developed by the Aga Khan. Plans for large-scale development by the Qataris have been rumoured, prompting fears that sleepy coves will be crowded by new villas catering to Gulf Arabs.
Italian hoteliers are meanwhile desperate to figure out how they can grab a slice of the growing Chinese tourism business, from offering the right tea to complying with Feng Shui rules.
Their fear is that Chinese entrepreneurs will buy up hotels to accommodate Chinese tourists, shutting out Italians from the goldrush. Milan already boasts its own, all-Chinese hotel, the Huaxia.
Indian tourists are now a common site on the streets of Rome, displacing the traditional mobs of baseball capped, camera toting Japanese.
Tom Kington



Germany

Germany is not a country accustomed to foreign investors. In a characteristically blunt commentary the tabloid Bild recently lamented that "Russians, Chinese, Indians and Arabs" were "stuffing their pockets" with "German bargains".
"And they have even more of the best cuts of meat in their sights" Increasing numbers of shipyards on the north German coast have found themselves in foreign hands, much to the disdain of many Germans who feel the shipyard sellouts are just the tip of a much more widespread foreign takeover of corporate Germany that leaves Europe's biggest economy exposed to speculation and short-term visions
Kate Connolly



Montenegro

When it was part of Yugoslavia, Montenegro was the favourite destination for the Serbian middle classes. The Bay of Kotor was the last home of the Yugoslav navy and the resort of Herceg Novi was known as little Belgrade for the number of tourists that came every summer from the Serbian capital.
Now Russians almost equal the number of Serbians who travel to Montenegro but are greater buyers of property. !e Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta reported last year that 40% of Montenegrin property was owned by Russians. Russian oligarch Oleg Deripaska is the owner of Montenegro's aluminium plant, the country's biggest industry.
Conal Urquhart



Greece

After three years of economic crisis Greece is beginning to attract investors. The emir of Qatar confirmed last week that the debt choked country is a buyer's market, picking up six islands in the Ionian Sea for a mere £7m.
"Properties have lost 50% of their value since 2007 and foreigners who smell an opportunity are calling," says Christos Vergos, of the Athens branch of Remax. Bargains are such that Qatar's oil-rich monarch, Hamad bin Khalifa al-!ani, wants to buy 12 more islands off the coast of Ithaca for the purpose of building summer palaces for each of his 24 children.
Property specialists say hundreds of cash-rich Lebanese and Israelis have snapped up holiday homes on the island of Mykonos.
"They are the people with cash in hand who can get a deal," says Roi Deldimou who represents Beauchamp estates on the island. Turkish investors are also moving in, cutting deals to snap up hotels in the historic heart of recession-ravaged Athens, where the cash-strapped state, desperate to meet the demands of international lenders, is also offloading properties.
The Chinese, who recently bought the operating rights to the port of Pireaus, are taking advantage of depressed prices to purchase property around the capital.
Russians have led Greece's wave of new investors. Oligarchs have acquired luxurious homes along the Athenian Riviera following Roman Abramovich's acquisition of a huge estate on Corfu.
Helena Smith


Cyprus

The island embodies the drive by non-Europeans to invest in the European Union. With the collapse of its British second homes market, the Chinese have moved in, buying retreats at a record rate.
"Since November last year there have been around 700 sales to Chinese investors," says Peter Christofi, overseas marketing manager at Antonis Louizou and Associates.
The promise of permanent residency visas, procured with properties over €300,000, has spurred all the interest. "In our experience the attraction is all based on this law involving residence visas and has little to do with Cyprus itself," said Christofi.
With its low taxes and abundant sunshine, the island has also been a magnet for Russians almost since the collapse of the Soviet empire.
Based in Limassol, the 40,000-strong community has made huge property investments.
Helena Smith

guardian.co.uk © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

Jason Lewis reveals how a very suspicious spying slur is threatening to derail the reconciliation between Britain and Russia.


 
 
 

The announcement came after Nicolas Maduro was sworn in as acting president following Hugo Chavez’s death March 5.

via World news: Russia | guardian.co.uk by Nick Cohen on 3/10/13
The treatment of the widow of the former Russian spy Alexander Litvinenko is a shaming indictment of our legal system
If you want to know why you should not support the coalition's plans for secret courts, consider the British state's treatment of Marina Litvinenko.
Before Christmas, she was as happy as a woman in her position could be. Her husband, Alexander, had helped MI6 and the Spanish secret service deal with the flood of mafia money into western Europe. Litvinenko was a former agent of Russia's Federal Security Service and his past left him well placed to give informed advice. It also made him a marked man. He went to a London hotel in the autumn of 2006 and met two Russians, whom the British authorities later identified as Dmitry Kovtun and Andrei Lugovoi. He fell ill hours later. Doctors found polonium-210 in his bloodstream. His killers had administered an exemplary punishment. Anyone else who thought of crossing Russia would think again after reading of the agonising 23 days Litvinenko spent on his deathbed.
After detectives visited him, his wife reported: "Those were tough policemen but they were almost crying when they came out of his room."
Russia refused to extradite Kovtun and Lugovoi. The police investigation had nowhere to go, so the inquest could begin this year. Marina Litvinenko was relieved. "I want this inquest to show the truth about what happened and I want to protect my husband's name from all the lies that have been told about him in Russia," she said.
It is hard to avoid a descent into psychobabble in such situations and I won't try. I know from when my dear father disappeared in the Lake District that families want "closure". Only an explanation of the circumstances of a suspicious death allows you to lay the body of your loved one down, to let him rest in peace. Marina Litvinenko thought that Britain would grant her that consolation. As the late law lord Thomas Bingham explained, "for centuries" suspicious deaths in this country have been "publicly investigated before an independent judicial tribunal with an opportunity for relatives of the deceased to participate".
The reasons Bingham gave for open justice apply in the Litvinenko case more than any other I can think of. "To ensure so far as possible that the full facts are brought to light" – and a political murder cries out for explanation. "That culpable and discreditable conduct is exposed" – and what else is poisoning but culpable and discreditable? "That suspicion of deliberate wrongdoing (if unjustified) is allayed" – and, as Mrs Litvinenko says, she needs a competent court to answer the conspiracy theorists. Finally, Bingham said that secrecy must be resisted so "that those who have lost their relative may at least have the satisfaction of knowing that lessons learned from his death may save the lives of others" – and I do not need to explain the relevance of those words to the Litvinenko family.
William Hague is showing his contempt for the best British traditions by seeking to stop the inquest examining government papers on the murder. Openness would cause "serious harm to the national security and/or international relations," the Foreign Office says. I love its "and/or". This is Whitehall's equivalent of Groucho Marx's "Those are my principles, and if you don't like them… well, I have others." Without the wit and with considerably more menace, government lawyers say that if the court doesn't believe that telling the truth will harm national security, will it believe it will harm international relations instead?
Hague's demand for secrecy looks like bureaucratic extremism, the product of a constipated government machine that never wants to let information out. How can Hague and MI6 defend it? They cannot claim they want to protect a secret agent from harm – Alexander Litvinenko is dead and in his grave. No one can harm him there. Maybe they want to deny that he worked for MI6. But his wife has bank records of payments from shell companies and knew his minder. Meanwhile, Hugh Davies, counsel to the inquiry, said in open court that the government had evidence that the hit on Litvinenko was authorised by the Russian state, so that is no secret either.
One other bitter truth is incontestable: the government is treating Mrs Litvinenko in a shameful manner. All kinds of powerful organisations are hanging round Sir Robert Owen's coroner's court. Not only the Foreign Office, media and Ministry of Defence, but also the Investigative Committee of the Russian Federation, sometimes described as Russia's FBI. All can hire the best lawyers. The only person who cannot is Mrs Litvinenko.
Chris Grayling's Justice Department has refused her legal aid. It wants to deny the widow of the victim of one of the most sensational murders in recent history proper legal representation. So she is relying on charity. Ben Emmerson QC has agreed to represent her for nothing and makes little effort to conceal his disdain for Whitehall. David Cameron said last year that he was keen to work with the Russian government to strengthen business links. Emerson alleges that for the sake of trade with a country that habitually fleeces foreign investors, Cameron is prepared to hush up allegations that its agents poisoned one of Putin's enemies in London.
The government could prove him wrong by allowing a public inquiry into the Litvinenko affair. It shows no sign of wanting that and, ominously, the coroner has just announced that he will examine evidence in secret before deciding whether open justice can take its course.
Civil libertarians misquote Benjamin Franklin's injunction to "sell not virtue to purchase wealth, nor Liberty to purchase power" and have turned it into "if we restrict liberty to attain security we will lose them both". This is not what Franklin said and is not true either. David Anderson QC, the independent reviewer of terrorism legislation and a man you should always take seriously, believes there is a "small but indeterminate category of national security-related claims" in which closed hearings would be justified. I trust him on that.
The trouble is that you cannot trust the state to confine itself to a "small but indeterminate" number of cases. When Parliament passed the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act in 2000, ministers promised they would only use the new surveillance techniques against terrorists and gangsters. Local authorities ended up using them against fly-tippers.
Now the state wants secret courts and promises it will only lock their doors in exceptional circumstances. You need only look at the cheated and bewildered figure of Marina Litvinenko to know it is lying.• This article will be opened for comments on Sunday morning

guardian.co.uk © 2013 Guardian News and Media Limited or its affiliated companies. All rights reserved. | Use of this content is subject to our Terms & Conditions | More Feeds

via - Europe RSS Feed on 3/9/13
Firefighters installed a special top on the Sistine Chapel chimney yesterday, ready for the signal to the world that a new pope has been elected, as the Vatican took measures to end Benedict XVI's pontificate.

via Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty by RFE/RL on 3/9/13
Visiting U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel and Afghan President Hamid Karzai are due to hold talks in Kabul.

via Russia - Google News on 3/9/13

DAWN.com




Miss Russia faces media backlash after denouncing Pussy Riot sentence
Mail & Guardian Online
Their cause has been picked up by such global stars as Madonna and Sting while the US State Department has officially expressed its disappointment with Russia's handling of the case. Putin – his ties with the powerful church becoming more prominent ...
Russia: Activists Supporting Band Are Detained After DemonstrationNew York Times
Miss Russia denounces 'harsh' punishment for Pussy RiotNewstrack India
Police charge Pussy Riot supporters after Russia protestReuters UK
The Global Dispatch -Examiner.com
all 17 news articles »

via Russia - Google News on 3/9/13

Bangkok Post




Anxiety as Putin picks new Russia central bank chief
Bangkok Post
Russian President Vladimir Putin gives a speech at the Kremlin on February 28, 2013. Putin will in the next weeks choose a new head of Russia's central bank, with economists hoping he picks a dependable figure and not a wild card to head one of its few ...

and more »

via Radio Free Europe / Radio Liberty by Golnaz Esfandiari on 3/10/13
Iranian President Mahmud Ahmadinejad is in trouble for embracing the mother of Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez, who died last week from cancer.

via Russia - Google News on 3/10/13





Russia disfavours talks with Taliban: Diplomat
Oneindia
New Delhi, Mar 10: With many western powers not adverse to holding talks with sections of Taliban, Russia has made it clear that it was not in favour of such parleys, asserting that there is no "good or bad" Taliban. The issue is expected to be ...

and more »

A program on Russia's state-controlled Channel One television has accused investor William Browder of committing tax fraud worth billions of rubles in Russia's republic of Kalmykia.
 
 
Mike Nova's starred items

A woman holds a placard with a portrait of Sergei Magnitsky during an unauthorised rally in central MoscowMOSCOW (Reuters) - A whistleblowing Russian lawyer whose death in custody became a symbol of rights abuses and strained relations with the United States will go on posthumous trial on Monday in what relatives say is revenge by the Kremlin. Sergei Magnitsky, who died while in pre-trial custody in 2009, is being prosecuted for defrauding the state in what will be the first time Russia has ever tried a dead person, a development Amnesty International says sets a "dangerous precedent". Magnitsky had been jailed after accusing police and tax officials of multimillion dollar tax fraud. ...

 
______________________________________________

 

Russia News Review - 3.9.13 - Mike Nova's starred items

 

Лидера ОПГ Сергея Цапка лишили ученой степени - Интерновости.ру


Интерновости.ру





Лидера ОПГ Сергея Цапка лишили ученой степени
Интерновости.ру
... и прочее СверхЗАСРАТЫХ СверхМОРОДЁРОВ ЗАПОДПутинской КОРРУПЦИИ и/или РФ 2013 г. - НЕ ЛИШАЮТ!!!??? Не путать с мелочёвкой: мародёрами! Ничего удивительного: РАЗВИТОЙ Путинизм!!! Это ХУЖЕ, чем РАЗВИТОЙ Кретинизм!

and more »

via putinism - Google News on 3/7/13

The Economist





The enemy within
The Economist
Those who remain content with Putinism should heed it, and see that, when the interests of the powerful are at stake, their rulers have no compunction about compromising their economic and political well-being. From the print edition: Leaders ...

and more »

via путинизм - Google Blog Search by yura_turist on 3/7/13
Оригинал взят у antikominfo в ЧТО ТАКОЕ ПУТИНИЗМ КАК ЭКОНОМИЧЕСКАЯ СИСТЕМА ЧТО ТАКОЕ ПУТИНИЗМ КАК ЭКОНОМИЧЕСКАЯ СИСТЕМА Как же получилось что правящая в РФ клика …

via putinism - Google News on 2/6/13






Is This the Twilight of the Putin Era?
The Atlantic
For Putinism to work effectively, not only does the fake state need to look real, but the Deep State needs to remain deep. And this ceased to be the case on September 24, 2011, when Putin and Medvedev announced their fateful "castling move" -- with ...

and more »

via Videos matching: putinism by ROSSIAVPERED1 on 7/15/12
Sikorski ucieka przed kibicamiObejrzyj koniecznieby thepatriot697243766 views; Anne Applebaum Putinism 928. Watch Later Anne Applebaum <b>...</b> Putinism Arctic Ocean Putin Russia War Strategy Challenge Westby surcinema1395 views; Radosław Sikorski in Hardtalk BBCPolish foreign minister 1 951. Watch Later Radosław Sikorski in <b>...</b> 20249. Watch Later Putinism and Russian Protestby uctelevision340 views; BBC hardtalk Radosław Sikorski Foreign Minister of Poland141112 2439. Watch Later <b>...</b>
Views:52
1ratings
Time:12:57More inNonprofits & Activism
 
 

See more of Mike Nova's starred items ...

 

Russia News Review - 3.9.13

 
Mike Nova's starred items