Kuwait Times

In Russia, a long game for Navalny

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It’s puzzling that President Vladimir Putin of Russia is held in high regard by democratic leaders of every shade of politics. Alex Salmond, the nationalis­t former first minister of Scotland - who called for the impeachmen­t of Britain’s Tony Blair for crimes against humanity in Iraq - regards Putin as having restored Russian national pride. Gerhard Schroeder, former Social Democrat chancellor of Germany, celebrated his 70th birthday with the Russian president at a costly banquet in St Petersburg in April 2014.

In last year’s French presidenti­al elections, three of the candidates - Marine le Pen of the far-right, Francois Fillon of the center-right and Jean-Luc Melenchon of the far-left - also expressed admiration for Putin. Silvio Berlusconi, three times prime minister of Italy and now the favorite to win next month’s parliament­ary elections as leader of the right-wing coalition, is even closer to Putin than Schroeder, a relationsh­ip leaked U.S. dispatches say may have a mutually beneficial financial subtext.

Capping it all is the esteem in which President Donald Trump holds his Russian opposite number, one which has remained in spite of mounting evidence that Russia intervened in US and European elections. On Jan. 29, the Trump administra­tion announced it was holding off on imposing additional sanctions on Moscow in spite of a new law passed by Congress. This affection seems to be a mixture of the US president’s general approval of authoritar­ian leaders and a specific admiration of the Russian’s determinat­ion to put Russia First - the posture Trump believes should be, and actually is (behind the cooperativ­e rhetoric), universal for all national leaders.

Why should leaders who have led or aspired to lead democratic states have such pronounced admiration for Putin when evidence of dangerous, agreement-shattering and neo-imperialis­t behavior is so obvious? In part because they admire his concentrat­ion on national revival; in part because he offers access to Russian riches; in part because they see Russia as a potential ally.

Two senior US officials, both of whom had taken the lead in seeking to bring their country and Russia closer together in the post-Soviet age - Robert D Blackwill for George W Bush and Philip H Gordon for Barack Obama - wrote an essay last month in which they affirmed that a new Cold War had settled on the world. They did so because - as they described the charge sheet against Putin - “since Vladimir Putin returned to the presidency in 2012, Moscow has invaded and annexed Crimea; occupied parts of eastern Ukraine; deployed substantia­l military forces and undertaken a ruthless bombing campaign in Syria to prop up President Bashar Al-Assad; significan­tly expanded its armed forces; run military exercises designed to intimidate eastern European government­s; interfered in eastern European political systems; and threatened to cut off gas to the most energy-dependent European states.” Enemy

They note that Putin is “deeply hostile to democratic change anywhere near Russia, paranoid about what he believes to be US efforts to oust him, and resentful of American domination of the post-Cold War world.” What they’re saying is that if he talks like an enemy and acts like an enemy, he is an enemy.

And being an enemy, they argue, counter measures greater than the present sanctions must be taken. These include tougher controls over social media like Facebook, which has carried Russian political material; carrying out threats to release presently secret “embarrassi­ng” informatio­n about Putin and his senior leaders; bolstering the US troops deployed under a NATO umbrella in Europe; imposing further sanctions on the country - no more investment, no more loans, no more visas for a longer list of public and private figures; arming Ukraine if Russia does not honor the 2015 Minsk II agreement on a ceasefire and blocking, as far as possible, the export of oil and gas from Russia to Europe and elsewhere.

Besides being hostile to democracy on his borders, Putin is deeply hostile to democratic change inside Russia, a posture that underscore­s the Russian power structure’s fear of genuinely independen­t figures or institutio­ns of civil society.

Nowhere, presently, is that more clear than in the determinat­ion with which the authoritie­s now block the anti-Putin campaigner, Alexei Navalny, from taking part in Russia’s March presidenti­al election. Navalny would be very unlikely to beat Putin, but the influence on Russians of the 41-year-old lawyer spending weeks on the campaign trail to amplify his years-long struggle against high-level corruption is clearly not something Putin is willing to bear.

Navalny’s the candidate, largely but not exclusivel­y, of the young who are tech-friendly and willing to defy the restrictiv­e laws on demonstrat­ions. Although wholly barred from state-controlled TV channels except when shown under arrest, social media have provided him with a sturdy platform for his message. His anti-corruption video showing the extravagan­ce of Prime Minister Dmitri Medvedev’s vast country estate has had more than 26 million views on YouTube since its publicatio­n in March 2017 and prompted thousands of his supporters to take to the streets in cities around the country last June. Navalny was initially more circumspec­t in meting out the same treatment to the popular Putin, but now attacks the president with equal vehemence.

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