Oman Daily Observer

Putin’s 20 years on the global stage

- MARINA LAPENKOVA & THEO MERZ

Twenty years ago on Friday, Russian president Boris Yeltsin appointed his fourth prime minister in less than 18 months: Vladimir Putin, then a relatively unknown security services chief with scant experience of politics. The departing Yeltsin was casting around for a successor and few could have predicted that two decades later Putin would still be ruling Russia, having taken on a dominant role in world affairs.

But the anniversar­y comes at a time of uncertaint­y in the leader’s reign.

Putin’s approval ratings remain at a level most Western leaders would envy but they have taken a hit from a stalling economy and declining living standards.

A protest movement in Moscow has meanwhile seen thousands arrested in recent weeks — the largest crackdown since a wave of demonstrat­ions against Putin returning to the Kremlin in 2012 after another spell as prime minister.

The 66-year-old is meanwhile facing a succession drama of his own.

This is his last term in office according to the Russian constituti­on but — after stamping out the competitio­n and taking control of most of the media — there is no obvious figure to replace him.

Analysts say it is unlikely that Russia’s longest-serving leader since Joseph Stalin will give up power completely when his current term ends in 2024.

PUTIN THE LIBERAL The picture was very different when Putin won his first presidenti­al election following Yeltsin’s early resignatio­n on New Year’s Eve, 2000.

“Russia, despite its poverty and problems with criminalit­y, was still a democratic, liberal country,” said prominent journalist Nikolai Svanidze, who often interviewe­d Putin at the start of his time in the Kremlin.

“After 20 years in power, he’s not limited in any way — he’s practicall­y a sultan,” Svanidze said.

Political analyst Konstantin Kalachev said Putin started out as a liberal who was ready to work with the West but over time took a more conservati­ve and hostile stance.

“Until the mid-2000s there was a political life in the country and elections were competitiv­e,” Kalachev said.

After the 2004 Orange Revolution in Ukraine, which the Kremlin believed was backed by foreign government­s to reduce Russia’s influence in its Soviet-era satellite, Putin’s attitude changed.

The West’s dismissive attitude towards Russia as well as its interventi­ons in Iraq, Libya and elsewhere further disillusio­ned Putin, Kalachev told this agency.

“I believe his disappoint­ment... was the trigger in this evolution” towards a harder line, the analyst said.

Liberal Russians, however, had concerns about their leader from the start — not only over his background in the KGB but also his harsh crackdown on Chechen separatist­s as prime minister.

Questions remain over a series of deadly bombings of Russian apartment blocks, which were attributed to separatist­s but some claim were staged by the security services as cover for further military interventi­on in Chechnya.

Putin’s firm response to the crisis boosted his popularity among the wider public and helped him move from acting president to elected leader, with 53 per cent of the vote.

He remains popular among large swathes of the public, who see him as the man who restored Russia’s dignity following the humiliatin­g collapse of the USSR and as a guarantee of stability after the changes of the 1990s.

Putin’s approval ratings remain at a level most Western leaders would envy but they have taken a hit from a stalling economy and declining living standards

HISTORICAL MISSION Now Putin and his team are seeking a way out of the Kremlin that will allow them to maintain their influence, analyst and media commentato­r Gregory Bovt said.

This may be through the creation of a new institutio­n rather than a short return to the role of prime minister to get around constituti­onal term limits on the presidency, as in 2008, according to Bovt.

“Some sort of collective body will be created to direct the country, and Putin will always remain the head,” he said — a similar system to ex-soviet Kazakhstan, where longterm ruler Nursultan Nazarbayev stood down but continues to call the shots.

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