A tsar is born
President Vladimir Putin who has stamped his authority on Russia is reasserting Moscow’s lost might abroad.
A KGB officer turned world leader, Vladimir Putin has stamped his total authority on Russia, silencing opposition and reasserting Moscow’s lost might abroad while building a strongman image through macho stunts.
Putin, 65, who will be inaugurated as president for the fourth time today, has reimposed the Kremlin’s grip on society since taking power 18 years ago after a lawless but relatively free decade following the demise of the USSR.
On the international stage, he has dealt with three US presidents, thrust Moscow into a new rivalry with the West by snatching Crimea from Ukraine and launched a pivotal intervention in Syria.
Named the world’s most powerful person by Forbes for the past four years running, the judo black belt has carefully nurtured his image as a powerful leader with photo opportunities showing him riding topless on horseback in the Siberian wilderness and darting an endangered tiger.
Supporters laud him as a saviour who restored pride and traditional values to a humiliated nation.
To foes, however, Putin has dragged his homeland further from democracy, presided over a seizure of the state by a new elite of former secret police cronies and stoked nationalism in a bid to restore Moscow’s lost empire.
Putin was born into a workingclass family in Leningrad – now Saint Petersburg – on Oct 7, 1952, and cut his teeth in the city’s rough
andtumble neighbourhoods.
“The Leningrad streets taught me one thing: if a fight is unavoidable, you have to hit first,” Putin said in 2015.
He fulfilled a childhood dream by joining the KGB intelligence service, with a posting in 19851990 in Dresden – then East Germany – just as Soviet power was crumbling.
His political rise began after he returned to work at Saint Petersburg city hall under his mentor, liberal
mayor Anatoly Sobchak.
By 1996, he was called to Moscow to work in the Kremlin under Russia’s first democratically elected president Boris Yeltsin, who in 1998 made littleknown Putin head of the KGB’s successor, the FSB.
Battling health and drinking problems, frail Yeltsin in August 1999 named Putin prime minister and his popularity shot up as he oversaw the launch of a second war to crush rebels in the
Chechnya region.
When Yeltsin sensationally resigned on New Year’s Eve 1999, Putin took over as president of the biggest country on Earth.
Buoyed by an influx of petrodollars that saw living standards soar, the Kremlin under Putin forged its own “sovereign democracy” in which the trappings of pluralism – such as political opposition and civil society – were subverted. — AFP