Gazprom's European Web

The Crimea: Europe's Next Flashpoint?

This occasional report by Taras Kuzio examines Russian-Ukraine relations and the future of the Crimea as well as the port of Sevastopol, a key strategic naval base for the Russian navy.

Russian LNG - The Future Geopolitical Battleground

Russian LNG - The Future Geopolitical Battleground

This occasional report addresses the historical shift in the global natural gas industry away from overland pipeline deliveries and toward liquefied natural gas, as well as Russia's move toward becoming a leader in the emerging LNG market.

 

Putin Attempts a Comeback as His Leadership Becomes Precarious

Publication: Eurasia Daily Monitor Volume: 9 Issue: 220
December 3, 2012 05:23 PM Age: 170 days
Category: Eurasia Daily Monitor, Home Page, Featured, Domestic/Social, Russia

(Source: AFP)

Winter hit Moscow furiously in the last days of November causing colossal traffic jams, but the political climate remains hot as if the electoral season and the government reshuffle did not end in May. President Vladimir Putin announced plans for several trips and scheduled the annual president’s address to the Federal Assembly for mid-December, seeking to catch up on the time he lost walled up in his residence outside Moscow for the past several weeks. Putin indeed needs to block the mutually reinforcing dynamics of spreading discontent and escalating squabbles among the elite clans, but he is set to discover that it is not his health condition that has caused the unseasonal turbulence in Russia’s envisaged “stabilization.” More Russians now think that the country is moving in the wrong direction than believe that it is on the right track (the proportion is 44 percent against 40 percent). And a firmer hand on the steering wheel may only aggravate this blunder (Levada.ru, November 28).

Few people are that concerned about the pains in Putin’s back, but many more are coming to the conclusion that Russia’s far from stellar economic performance cannot support the gargantuan appetite for corruption in government and society. Economic growth has indeed slowed down to fractions of a percentage point in the last quarter, so that the aggregate figure for 2012 is expected to slip below three percent, while inflation is speeding up beyond the target figure of seven percent (Kommersant, November 29). As for corruption, new revelations of embezzlement in the Russian Ministry of Defense have become a daily feature, with a group of low-level officials in St. Petersburg accused of stealing $100 million from communal services (Newsru.com, December 1). Putin cannot present a convincing message that the massively increased flow of corruption scandals amounts to a thorough “cleansing” of his system of power, so his approval ratings keep falling (Nezavisimaya Gazeta, November 30).

In the absence of a coherent program or a meaningful ideology, public support is all Putin can rely upon. Indifferent acceptance would have sufficed, but the polls register a clear growth of the active disapproval of and mistrust in the self-serving executive power (Polit.ru, November 28). The stake-holders in the order—based on a fusion between bureaucratic power and money-making—begin to see Putin as both a focus of public anger and a threat to their privileges, so speculations about his health become a key part of the game of redistributing access to power (Moskovsky Komsomolets, December 1). Putin feels the urgency of restoring control over this game and understands the risk of fragmentation of the anti-corruption campaign, which the feuding clans make into a key instrument of settling scores. Seeking to shift the political attention to a new direction, he suggested introducing direct elections to the Federation Council and raised the possibility of changing the Constitution (Kommersant, December 1).

Strictly speaking, there is no need to amend the Constitution, particularly since the liberal opposition aims to curtail the enormous power granted to the president by this document. But Putin is preoccupied with preempting possible plots among the elites. Putin’s understanding of the nature of the evolving political crisis is deformed by his predisposition to see conspiracies, involving even his junior partner Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev (Moscow Echo, November 30). Medvedev indeed tries to take advantage of the weakening of Putin’s grasp on power, declaring his intentions to return to the Kremlin and praising the performance of his government—despite poignant criticism from the president and falling approval ratings (Gazeta.ru, November 30). Nevertheless, he cuts a spineless figure for the disgruntled elites, who have amassed such fortunes that their basic instinct of servility is overruled by the desire to enjoy life. The threat of being fired is not that grave for most ministers and governors, who can retire to their mansions in London or chalet in Switzerland; and even their aides know that the newly-launched anti-corruption investigations typically produce more noise than punishment (Vedomosti, November 29).

Putin is disappointed in his elites but not attentive enough to their plots because they skillfully channel his worries toward the conspiracies allegedly brewing from within the “white opposition” camp (Novaya Gazeta, December 1). The accusations that Sergei Udaltsov and other “leftists” were trained abroad in organizing “color revolutions” would have appeared absurd were the tightly controlled judges not measuring real jail sentences for them (Newsru.com, November 30). The newly-elected Coordination Council of allied opposition parties tries to re-energize the protests by staging a street rally in Moscow on December 15. For the Kremlin, however, it is the letter from Mikhail Khodorkovsky that constitutes evidence of the conspiracy, in which each street action is part of a plan for destabilizing the country (Grani.ru, November 27). Khodorkovsky, in fact, actually calls for toning down the revolutionary rhetoric and opening negotiations with the authorities, insisting that Putin’s centrality in the real power system in Russia cannot be ignored (New times, November 29).

This centrality has incidentally undermined Putin. He gathered too much control and then had to relax it, letting the subordinates discover that they do not actually need Putin’s intrusive and capricious arbitration. Therefore, a new tightening of control is evasively but effectively sabotaged. On Russian television, Putin was presented as a larger-than-life leader with unlimited capacity for problem-solving, so his sudden shrinking to an ageing and frail paper-pusher was a revelation of the propaganda fraud. His carefully orchestrated comeback to top form, therefore, does not bring back the respectful fear of the elites nor the sincere reverence in public opinion. He has lost support among urban middle classes in the course of a crudely manipulated return to the summit of power last winter and spring but was able to weather the wave of street protests; a new erosion of trust in his core support base and new tremors of discontent inside the corrupt bureaucratic pyramid add to the incapacitation of his leadership. A sliver of power slips out of Putin’s hands every day, and he finds himself reduced to playing with only the trappings.


Publications

Eurasia Daily Monitor

Eurasisa Daily Monitor

Global Terrorism Analysis

Global Terrorism Analysis

China Brief

China Brief

North Caucasus Analysis

North Caucasus Weekly

Militant Leadership Monitor

Militant Leadership Monitor

Donate To Jamestown

Click Here To Donate Now

New From Jamestown

Breaking News:

The South Caucasus 2021: Oil, Democracy and Geopolitics

By:Fariz Ismailzade, Glen E. Howard (eds.)

May 4, 2012 04:32 PM

A retrospective of the 20 years of independence experienced by the countries of the South Caucasus clearly demonstrates the difficulties involved in building a state and restoring an economy after more than 70 years of Soviet rule. Each one of the three post-Soviet republics of the South Caucasus – Azerbaijan, Georgia and Armenia – has chosen its own path of development; each is developing its own particular model of political, economic and socio-cultural transformation. At the same time, the se...


Cat: Book

Kindle Books

December 20, 2011 11:10 AM

You've asked and we've delivered.

Books and Reports which have been published by The Jamestown Foundation will now be available for a substantial discount on Kindle.

Books can be purchased for $9.95 and Occasional Reports can be purchased for $3.95-$7.95 in the United States. 

International purchases will be priced based on the exchange rate at the equivalent of the USD price.

 

Current titles available for purchase on Kindle include:

A History of Islamist Militancy in Pakistani Punjab...


Cat: Book

The Reform Of Russia's Conventional Armed Forces: Problems, Challenges, & Policy Implications

October 6, 2011 02:28 PM

The Reform of Russia's Conventional Armed Forces: Problems, Challenges and Policy Implications, traces the complex origins of the reform, its numerous twists and assesses the key challenges it faces. Roger N. McDermott examines the obstacles confronting the Russian defense planners as they seek to transform the military education system, encourage high standards among the officer corps combined with forming suitable non-commissioned officers and overcoming the weaknesses of the domestic defense ...


Cat: Book

Volatile Borderland: Russia and the North Caucasus

May 20, 2011 09:54 AM

In Volatile Borderland: Russia and the North Caucasus, The Jamestown Foundation presents a collection of essays by leading experts on the North Caucasus that allows for an in-depth look at the key developments, movements and personalities that have shaped the region since the start of the second Russo-Chechen war in 1999. This volume represents a rare and comprehensive collection of articles by some of the premier experts on the region who participated in two major conferences on the North Cauca...


Cat: Book

The Battle for Yemen: Al-Qaeda and the Struggle for Stability

April 21, 2010 10:15 AM

The Battle for Yemen is a rare and comprehensive volume that tackles the facets of instability that currently plague Yemen. It offers a wealth of analysis and keen observations from the experts of The Jamestown Foundation, who have monitored the developments within Yemen since 2004. Combining indigenous sources with original analytical insights, this book represents a vital research tool for those seeking a detailed account of Yemen's struggle for stability, the various movements that shape the ...


Cat: Book
go to Archive ->

The Sultan’s Raiders: The Military Role of the Crimean Tatars in the Ottoman Empire

May 18, 2013

From the fourteenth to the seventeenth centuries, the Christian nations of Europe and the Shiites of Persia were forced to defend their lands against the inroads of an ever expanding Ottoman Empire, an empire whose awesome war...

Category: Report, Ukraine

Militant Leadership Monitor - April Issue

April 29, 2013

This issue of Militant Leadership Monitor includes profiles of Saudi Arabia's Ahmed Abdullah Saleh al-Khazmari al-Zahrani, AQIM's Jemal Oukacha, Libya's Isa Amd al-Majid, the Niger Delta's al-Haji Mujahid Dokubo-Asari (Part Two),...

Category: Report

Militant Leadership Monitor - March Issue

March 29, 2013

This issue of Militant Leadership Monitor includes in-depth analyses of Ansaru's Khalid al-Barnawi, the Niger Delta's al-Haji Mujahid Dokubu-Asari, succession scenarios after Talabani, and the second part of a who's who in...

Category: Report

Militant Leadership Monitor - February Issue

February 28, 2013

This issue of Militant Leadership Monitor includes in-depth portraits of Tripoli's Hussam Abdullah Sabbagh, Hamas Political Bureau Chief Khalid Meshaal, Egypt's Muhammad al-Zawahiri and the Toulouse gunman Muhammad...

Category: Report

Pakistan's Tribal Militants: A Militant Leadership Monitor Special Report

February 27, 2013

In this Special Report “Pakistan’s Tribal Militants: Profiles from the Pashtun and Baloch Insurgencies,” we examine some of Pakistan’s tribal militant leaders in the Federally Administered Tribal Areas (FATA) and the North West...

Category: Quarterly Strategic Reports, Report

Militant Leadership Monitor - January Issue

January 30, 2013

This issue of MLM features profiles of Alghabass ag Intallag, Syrian Major General Abdulaziz al-Shalal, Who’s Who in the Jordanian Opposition, Mullah Nazir the "good Taliban", and Female PKK leader Sakine...

Category: Militant Leadership Monitor, Report

Straddling Russia and Europe: A Compendium of Recent Jamestown Analysis on Belarus

January 30, 2013

This report features a collection of recent analysis written in Jamestown's flagship publication, Eurasia Daily Monitor. The included articles were written by Jamestown's foremost experts on Belarus and cover a wide array of...

Category: Report, Belarus

Mayhem in Mali: A Militant Leadership Monitor Report

December 29, 2012

In this Quarterly Special Report (QSR) on Mayhem in Mali, we focus on the various Islamist fighters who have taken over northern Mali. The QSR includes profiles of important personalities in the Sahel region such as Abou Zeid, a...

Category: Report

Northern Nigeria's Boko Haram The Prize in al-Qaeda's Africa Strategy

November 26, 2012

The Occasional Paper, entitled “Northern Nigeria’s Boko Haram: The Prize in Al-Qaeda’s Africa Strategy” is now available for purchase on our website. This Occasional Paper examines the evolution of al-Qaeda’s Africa strategy...

Category: Report, Home Page, Featured, Terrorism, Foreign Policy, Military/Security, North Africa, West Africa

Elections Issue: Militants in Libyan Politics: A Militant Leadership Monitor Special Report

August 16, 2012

In this Special Report on the Libya Elections we examine the entrance of militant leaders into the political scene as the country recovers from several decades of Gaddafi's rule. This 2012 Quarterly Special Report features five...

Category: Report, Home Page, Featured, Africa, Foreign Policy, Military/Security, Terrorism