The Korea Times

Putin’s scare tactics

- By Nina L. Khrushchev­a

COSTA SMERALDA, Sardinia — “Every nation gets the government it deserves,” observed Joseph de Maistre, the Sardinian kingdom’s diplomatic envoy to the Russian empire, some 200 years ago. He was commenting on Russians’ deep-seated political apathy — a trait that persists to this day.

Of course, Russia is no longer an absolute monarchy as it was in Maistre’s time. Nor is it a communist dictatorsh­ip, with the likes of Joseph Stalin using the threat of the Gulag to discourage political expression. But President Vladimir Putin has learned much from the autocratic tactics of his predecesso­rs, whereas the Russian people seem to have learned nothing.

In an opinion poll at the end of 2014, 68 percent of respondent­s said that Putin should be “Man of the Year.” His seizure of Crimea from Ukraine in March, together with his refusal to bow to the Western powers that disputed the move, made him a hero among ordinary Russians.

In fact, Putin’s efforts to recapture Russia’s former territory have overshadow­ed his stifling of non-government­al organizati­ons, repression of independen­t media, and silencing of opposition voices. Even as Russia’s economy collapses — with the ruble having lost more than half of its value against the dollar since June, interest rates rising to 17 percent, and inflation reaching double digits — Putin retains an 85 percent approval rating.

Russians should be demanding a solution to their country’s economic troubles, not praising the leader who caused them. But Putin, an ex-KGB officer, possesses a dictator’s shrewdness. He knows that centuries of tight government control have made Russians obedient. They may fear the government; but they fear being left to fend for themselves even more.

In mid-December Putin held his annual dinner with the oligarchs — a feast in a time of plague, so to speak. Forty industrial and financial leaders (most of whom manage Kremlin-affiliated firms) attended the event to gain — and give — reassuranc­e that, together, they and the government would weather the crisis.

At the dinner, Putin reiterated his promise to protect the oligarchs’ fortunes from American and European sanctions. Specifical­ly, he pledged to apply the so-called Rotenberg Law, named after Arkady Rotenberg, a financier who was forced in September to surrender $40 million in assets to Italy’s government. The law obliges the Kremlin to compensate oligarchs for any foreign assets that they lose as a result of Western sanctions.

These statements built upon a promise Putin made in an interview earlier last month. If Russian businesspe­ople repatriate their offshore accounts, their financial indiscreti­ons will be forgiven and forgotten.

Relying upon such promises would be financial suicide. Just a few months ago, Putin assured everyone that Russia’s economy would weather the European and American sanctions easily. Likewise, during the 1998 financial meltdown, Russian oligarchs lost willing to work hard to get it.

But community colleges are also good places for many younger students who don’t have the academic background­s or resources to go to more expensive four-year institutio­ns, but who still have plenty of brainpower and initiative. In short, community colleges are forced to be flexible and resilient, to meet practical, local needs, as well as the aspiration­s of capable students who might otherwise fall between the academic cracks.

In general, community colleges respond well to these challengin­g tasks. Obama’s proposal to make big — and most never recovered. Clearly, Russia’s government cannot be trusted to safeguard anyone’s wealth, with the possible exception of that of its own members.

Yet refusing the Kremlin’s embrace is equally destructiv­e. After all, in Putin’s Russia, political dissent brings financial ruin. In 2003, Russia’s wealthiest oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovs­ky — a vocal advocate of democratiz­ation and tireless critic of Putin — was imprisoned on trumped-up charges of fraud and tax evasion, and his Yukos Oil Company was driven to bankruptcy, broken up, and sold off to Kremlin cronies.

Ten years later, the message remains the same: If you obey your government, your follies (no business in Russia is free of kickbacks and bribes) will be forgiven. Failure to fall in line will be your downfall — regardless of how wealthy or well known you are.

Of course, it is not the tycoons who will bear the brunt of the economic crisis. After all, Putin needs their support — as short-lived or ephemeral as it may be — to retain his grip on power.

Ordinary Russians have far less leverage — and will suffer far more. But maybe they deserve to suffer. Harsh austerity measures — cuts to pensions, salaries, and social services (including a recent decision to close hundreds of hospitals and lay off thousands of medical personnel) — have inspired barely any criticism.

At the end of December, a few thousand people staged a demonstrat­ion in Moscow’s central Manezh Square, partly to show support for Alexei Navalny — an anti-corruption lawyer, well-known blogger, and leader of a dwindling opposition movement — and his younger brother, Oleg. The Navalny brothers had just been sentenced to three-and-a-half years in prison for defrauding a cosmetics company. Alexei, an opponent of Putin on par with Khodorkovs­ky, received a suspended sentence; Oleg, an apolitical postal executive, will have to serve his full term in prison.

This tactic — to “forgive” one’s enemies, while punishing them via their relatives — was a favorite of Stalin’s. The “enemy” would quickly come to his or her senses, and the public, unfamiliar with those imprisoned, would quickly lose interest.

They still do. Today’s Russians hope that Putin, who blindsided his opponents with his annexation of Crimea, might have another daring trick up his sleeve — one that will stabilize financial markets and revive the oil prices on which Russia’s economy depends.

Of course, Russians know enough to worry that Putin has run out of ideas. But that fear does not compare to their dread of what might happen if they rock the boat. And Putin, for his part, understand­s this well enough to know that he needs no gulags — only the canny use of fear and forgivenes­s — to retain his grip on power. them more accessible and affordable shouldn’t be derailed by ideology. “Free” tuition is an excellent investment in everyone’s future.

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