Business Day

Putin approves extra duties for defence, energy officials

- Guy Faulconbri­dge

Russian President Vladimir Putin on Saturday gave extra duties to two key government officials who oversee the defence industry and energy sectors, as the Kremlin chief girds the world’s second-largest oil exporter for a longer war in Ukraine.

Putin, who rose to power just eight years after the Soviet Union crumbled in 1991, proposed extra powers for Denis Manturov, 55, the only first deputy prime minister in the new government of Prime Minister Mikhail Mishustin.

Alexander Novak, Putin’s energy point man, 52, will remain as deputy prime minister overseeing energy but will get additional duties for running the economy, according to the government.

Manturov oversees the Russian defence and civilian industry, which has surprised the US and its European allies by ramping up artillery production faster than the whole of the Nato military alliance combined despite sanctions.

“The increase in the status of the deputy prime minister in charge of industry is due to the importance of ensuring technologi­cal leadership,” the Russian government said.

Russia said it aspired to “technologi­cal leadership in all areas,” such as aircraft manufactur­ing, machine tool building, radio electronic­s and the military-industrial complex.

Novak has implemente­d Russia’s key relationsh­ip with oil cartel Opec.

“Novak has the necessary managerial experience,” the government said. “For a long time, he co-ordinated economic and financial issues in various positions, both in business and in municipal and public service.”

The proposals, formally made by Mishustin, have to be confirmed by the lower house of parliament.

Dmitry Patrushev, formerly agricultur­e minister, will become a deputy prime minister overseeing the agricultur­al sector. Oksana Lut will become agricultur­e minister.

Putin left finance minister Anton Siluanov and economy minister Maxim Reshetniko­v in their jobs, but proposed Sergei Tsivilev, governor of Kemerovo region, as energy minister instead of Nikolai Shulginov. Anton Alikhanov, the 37-yearold governor of Kaliningra­d, was proposed as trade & industry minister.

Putin’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine has touched off the worst fallout in relations between Russia and the West since the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, according to Russian and US diplomats. The West casts the invasion as an imperial-style land grab and has vowed to help Ukraine defeat Russian forces. Putin casts the war as a battle with the West which he said tried to encroach on Russia’s sphere of influence, which he considered to include Ukraine.

Russia controls 18% of Ukraine. Its economy has grown despite the West’s sanctions and Russian forces are advancing in Ukraine despite hundreds of billions of dollars in Western support for Ukraine.

Russia has repeatedly warned that Western support for Ukraine — including Western weapons that have been used to hit Russian territory — risks escalating the conflict into a broader European war, and said it would achieve all of its aims in Ukraine.

Other major appointmen­ts, such as proposals for the defence, foreign and key security services, are likely to come on Monday.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Energy point man: Deputy prime minister Alexander Novak will get additional duties for running the economy.
/Reuters Energy point man: Deputy prime minister Alexander Novak will get additional duties for running the economy.

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