Daily Archives: May 21, 2008

May 21, 2008 — Contents

WEDNESDAY MAY 21 CONTENTS

(1) EDITORIAL: The Evil that Russophiles Do

(2) Kozlovsky on Neo-Soviet Russia

(3) Lipman on the Puppet Press

(4) Sure Looks Like He’s Still President!

(5) Putin Fails, and then He Fails Some More

(6) Woody Allen to Russia: Drop Dead!

NOTE: It’s hard to overstate the heroic role being played by the Washington Post newspaper as it stands at the forefront of Western opposition to the rise of dictatorship in neo-Soviet Russia. As we report today it delivers haymaker after haymaker documenting the horrors unfolding behind the new iron curtain, leaving all other western newspapers in its dust. We offer our thanks to the paper for performing this vital service to humanity, and hope that history will record the paper’s leadership accordingly.

EDITORIAL: The Evil that Russophiles Do

EDITORIAL

The Evil that Russophiles Do

Pity poor Edward Lozansky.

There he was on Monday morning about to open his sick, sordid little confabulation of Russophiles, seeking to dupe unwary Americans into dropping their guard and allowing Vladimir Putin to further consolidate his malignant rule over Russia. He’d lined up financial support for his dastardly enterprise from the Kremlin’s propaganda TV network, Russia Today, and he was even given an op-ed column in the Moscow Times to publicize it. All the bedraggled Russophile garbage across the land was converging on Washington DC for his “World Russia Forum” including even the vile Yuri Mamchur of Russia Blog.

And what happens? He opens up his morning edition of the Washington Post and what does he find? An op-ed column by none other than leading Russian dissident Oleg Kozlovsky (shown above in the loving embrace of Vladimir Putin’s neo-Soviet goons), a column accusing his benefactor of turning Russia into a giant neo-Soviet gulag! We republish the column below, together with a second op-ed from the post on Russia in as many days, this one from Masha Lipman of the Carnegie Center decrying Russia’s lack of a free press.

And it wasn’t just any op-ed. It ran in the upper left corner of the hard copy of the paper and included the above photograph of Kozlovsky — not one but two distinct honors for the column, showing the Post’s influential editors stood behind Kozlovsky 1,000 percent.

Ouch. Miracle if Lozansky wasn’t rushed to the emergency room with a nasty case of acid reflux. Lozansky is well known to regular readers of this blog; we’ve exposed him repeatedly in prior posts as the fundamental fraud he is. Reading Kozlovsky’s terrifying words, its impossible to see Lozansky as anything other than a modern Neville Chamberlain.

Lozansky claims that presidential candidate John McCain is “alone” in his stark opposition to Russia, but in fact it’s neo-Soviet collaborators like Lozansky that stand alone, surrounded by their truly ridiculous, detached-from-reality, neo-Soviet lies. In a classic bit of Soviet dishonesty, he claims that the U.S. needs Russian uranium to run its nuclear reactors; in fact, Russia itself just inked a deal to import uranium from Australia, without which it couldn’t run its own reactors. Moreover, the idea that the U.S. should ignore Russia’s barbaric desecration of the institution of democracy just so that it can get hold of Russian energy resources defiles the very foundations of American civilization. This man is truly beneath pond scum.

Lozansky claims that Russia needn’t worry about McCain’s threat to oust Russia from the G-8, because the other members wouldn’t go along. Apparently, he thinks McCain is crazy and off the reservation. But if that is so, why is Lozansky so worried? The fact is that McCain can, with the stroke of his pen, make the G-8 choose between the U.S. and Russia as members. If he does that, the nations of Europe won’t have to think twice before siding with their NATO ally.

The only person Lozansky actually names as disagreeing with McCain is the senile lunatic professor Steven Cohen, whom this blog has, like Lozansky himself, repeatedly discredited for the ridiculous gibberish he spews from the radical Nation magazine published by his own wife. The fact that Lozansky is insane enough to believe that Professor Cohen’s opposition means that one of the most powerful figures in America’s foreign policy establishment stands alone is proof positive, all by itself, of what a ridiculous fraud Lozansky really is.

And then, in classic bit of Russian insanity, he completely contradicts himself. He states:

To be fair to McCain, the other two presidential front-runners, Democratic Senators Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, have not offered a positive-thinking agenda for Russia either, pledging to be tougher with Russia than Bush and endorsing further NATO expansion by accepting Ukraine and Georgia into the alliance. All three presidential contenders have promised to expand the Bush administration’s effort to “spread democracy,” a policy that an overwhelming majority of Russians see as a thinly veiled smoke screen to strengthen the U.S. position in the world at the expense of Russia.

Hmm. So then, it seems that McCain isn’t really so alone after all, now is he? No wonder Lozansky is getting desperate.

In his MT op-ed, Lozansky complains that he’d invited McCain to attend the Forum and debate his hard line on Russia and was apparently surprised to find that McCain was ignoring him. Of course, Lozansky doesn’t say a single word about his failure to extend any Forum invitations to any Russian opposition figures — such as Garry Kasparov or Kozlovsky himself. Though Mr. Lozansky’s forum made a place for pro-Russian propaganda from Russia Today and many other sources, no such place was laid for the United States — nor did his column say a single word about any changes any Russian leader needs to make to accommodate the U.S.

We can’t help but wonder how Americans would have reacted in 1938 to a forum sponsored by a state-owned Nazi TV network and calling for “economic, political and military alliance” with Hitler’s Germany. Since the sponsor of Lozansky’s conference is Russia Today, Putin’s propaganda network (recently condemned by the New York Times), one would hope Americans will be just as suspicious of his effort, kicked off by the Russian ambassador. Does Mr. Lozansky, a card-carrying Kremlin shill, really believe Americans might be foolish enough to believe he’s concerned about their national security interests as well as those of Russia?

Simply put, Americans can’t trust Kremlin mouthpieces like Mr. Lozansky to look out for their best interests, and won’t do so no matter how much Kremlin money greases the skids. Fool me once, Mr. Lozansky, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me!

Kozlovsky on his Persecution and Opposition

Ororona opposition leader Oleg Kozlovsky, writing in the Washington Post:

Vladimir Putin hails stability among his greatest achievements as president of Russia. But stability in Russia exists in appearance only, supported by enormous oil revenue and massive propaganda from the government-controlled mass media. Behind the facade lies an unprecedented increase in corruption, a population largely mired in poverty, and a bureaucracy and domestic intelligence apparatus whose power is unchecked.

Putin’s stability is the stability of the gulag, where wardens ensure that all the prisoners have their allotted rations, reward the most obedient and punish potential troublemakers to preempt disorder. The difference between Russia today and the Soviet gulag is that most Russians have never known another type of government, so they do not realize that they are confined.

As you read this, I am in prison in Russia. I am a leader of the youth movement Oborona (“Defense”), which advocates nonviolent resistance to oppression by the authorities. Before my arrest this month — I was picked up while walking on the street and charged with civil disobedience — my last encounter with the government had occurred in December, when officers of the FSB (as the Federal Security Service, a successor organization to the KGB, is known) forcibly placed me in the army under Russia’s draft.

My activities with Oborona have long caused me problems with the government. At age 23, I have been arrested more than a dozen times, have twice served short terms in prison and have been fired from a job at the FSB’s request. The government could never find a reason to imprison me for the long term, so it has yet to get rid of me completely.

Late last year, the intelligence services took a different tack. On Dec. 20, I was once again arrested. Despite health problems and the fact that I am a student, both of which should have exempted me from conscription, I was sent to the army to serve as an enlisted soldier. FSB officers escorted me to a military unit in a forest about 150 miles from Moscow and told me that I was expected to serve for one year.

My trip into the army took only a few hours, but getting out took 2 1/2 months. I was finally freed on March 4, two days after Russia’s presidential “election” was held. Military authorities have acknowledged that I was inducted into the army illegally, but no one has apologized to me. Shortly after my release, the Moscow headquarters of Oborona was raided by the police. I and 10 others were arrested and threatened; some of us were beaten by the police, who confiscated our leaflets, papers and a computer.

I am just one of the many political activists in Russia who face repression. Others include Maxim Reznik, the prominent leader of the Yabloko political party in St. Petersburg. He was arrested after being falsely accused of beating up three police officers and was held without trial. He is still alive, though. In December, a member of the Other Russia coalition, Yuri Chervochkin, was beaten to death; it is thought that his killers were employees of a special police unit.

Over the past two years, the scale of repression in Russia has reached a level similar to that in the worst years of the Cold War. The regime’s clampdown and strategic mistakes made by previous opposition leaders have brought us to the point where traditional political parties have lost any influence in this country. Old illusions about how democracy advocates might achieve power through the vote were smashed with the results of December’s parliamentary “elections.” Old parties are unlikely to return to Russia.

The recently inaugurated president, Dmitry Medvedev, is an old friend of Putin’s and is part of the system. Hopes that Medvedev will ensure a more open future are misplaced. Far from having interest in liberalizing Russia, Medvedev well understands that any such attempt would lead only to a loss of control, which would present a fatal threat to the corrupt heights of power in Russia.

The only real possibility for changing the political regime in Russia today is through grass-roots pressure. Nonviolent resistance on the model of Mahatma Gandhi and the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. is the last option available in the arsenal of pro-democracy advocates. This has already become clear to some of the most open-minded politicians, such as those in the Other Russia coalition.

To be successful we must first analyze our mistakes, learn to work together more effectively and rouse society from its apathetic state. For this we need groups such as Oborona, a union of sincere young people striving not for power but for change in their country. The mission of those planning an uprising in the modern Russian gulag is to not become the next wardens.

Putin’s Puppet Press

Masha Lipman of the Carnegie Centre, writing in the Washington Post:

During Vladimir Putin’s presidency, tight control of the mass media evolved as one of the Russian leadership’s key political resources. It will be equally indispensable to newly inaugurated President Dmitry Medvedev.

To understand how journalism here changed under Putin, consider two book projects.

In 1999, Natalia Gevorkyan and Andrey Kolesnikov, two reporters at Russia’s best daily newspaper, Kommersant, interviewed Putin for a book that was to introduce the president-to-be to the public. Excerpts printed in Kommersant before the book’s publication revealed an angry exchange over Andrei Babitsky, a Radio Liberty reporter who was being held incommunicado in Chechnya. The journalists voiced the suspicion, shared then by many in Russia, that Babitsky was being held on state orders. They demanded that Putin release Babitsky and said bluntly that they didn’t believe his responses.

The second book interviews involved Medvedev and occurred shortly before he was elected president. This time the excerpts were published on the Kremlin Web site. Medvedev was queried about what the words “great Russia” mean to him, his conception of democracy and his attitude toward private property. The journalists were friendly and respectful, and Medvedev’s answers were long and uninterrupted.

If the interviewers, a husband and wife, had wanted to discuss journalists in trouble with the government, they wouldn’t have had to struggle for examples. Last year, reporter Natalia Morar’ was deported after a weekly magazine ran a series she wrote alleging that high-ranking officials were siphoning huge sums out of the country. Manana Aslamazian, director of Internews Russia, a mostly U.S.-funded organization that since 1992 had trained television journalists and supported independent broadcasters, fled the country fearing arrest; Internews Russia was promptly destroyed. The assassinations and mysterious deaths of several high-profile journalists, including Anna Politkovskaya, Yuri Shchekochikhin and Paul Klebnikov, remain unsolved.

But in today’s Russia, journalists don’t press top officials. In fact, apart from the interviews with Gevorkyan and Kolesnikov, Putin, as president, never publicly faced a single unfriendly question from a Russian reporter.

During Putin’s tenure, television broadcasting was honed to perfection — as a tool to shape public opinion. Coverage of political and public affairs is now tightly controlled through a coordinated effort of the national channels’ top managers and Kremlin aides. The result is that any event, person, group or movement may be boosted or played down in the public eye in a way that would best suit the Kremlin’s desires and designs; anyone deemed an adversary of the government may be discredited or vilified.

Polls indicate that the public is highly responsive to television brainwashing — whether the campaigns are against Georgia, Ukraine or the West, or are intended to influence voting preferences. In contrast to Soviet times, the government’s most effective media tools are also highly profitable. Each of the two biggest channels reaches almost all Russian households. While stations don’t compete in news coverage — news shows differ little from channel to channel — other competition for viewers and advertisers is fierce. The result: first-class soap operas and other entertainment programs that keep people glued to their screens. Advertisers, attracted to large audiences, eagerly commit their budgets to state-controlled television.

This business model and the controlled political content are inseparable and mutually beneficial. The Kremlin-designed television diet is easily digested: Bland information is supplemented by exciting entertainment shows. As he completed his second term, Putin granted special letters of commendation to the top managers of the national channels.

The government has radically curtailed broadcast freedom, but it does not totally control speech. Some broadcast, print and online outlets with smaller audiences have maintained relatively independent editorial lines, which serves to let off steam. These outlets may create an appearance of media freedom, but they are tightly insulated from national television, effectively marginalized and kept politically irrelevant.

Shortly before his inauguration this month, Medvedev disagreed with the view that there has been “regress” in the way Russian media are regulated. He told the popular weekly Argumenty i Fakty that the “mass media develop not badly at all.” “In its quality and the means used,” he continued, “Russian television is among the best in the world” and is not “pro-government.” This is blatantly untrue. People who work in television privately admit that they operate under tight government control. Some have even said so publicly. Prominent TV journalist Vladimir Posner said recently at a public meeting that “on television and not only on television [there is] no press freedom.” During recent parliamentary and presidential election campaigns, Posner added, some issues were “entirely banned” and certain public figures could not be invited on air.

Whether or not Medvedev believes his statements about Russian television, he’ll have to draw on the system of manipulative politics — and its key element, the state-controlled media — that Putin’s Kremlin created. The national TV channels are a political resource of uncontested might. However power-sharing between Putin and Medvedev may evolve, they will have to share the power of television as well.

Sure Looks Like he’s Still President!

First Post reports:

Having recently handpicked the new president’s cabinet, Vladimir Putin shows no sign of relinquishing his stranglehold on Russian politics, nor, it seems, the luxuries of office. For not only does he still reside at the fabulously opulent Konstantin Palace, in St Petersburg, a privilege that should have ceased when he stopped being head of state, he has also bagged some of the state’s art collection to decorate its walls.

Many of the works, 400 in total, were donated to the country by the oligarch Alisher Usmanov, who owns nearly a quarter of Arsenal football club, back in September last year. The idea was that they would be shown in Moscow’s Tretyakov gallery or the Hermitage in St Petersburg. However, all of them are in the Konstantin Palace, known to locals as “Putin’s palace on the sea”.

Said one of the artists whose works is on display, who for obvious reasons declined to be identified: “The Kremlin claims it has preserved these treasures for Russia. Yet they are basically being used to decorate Putin’s walls.”

No one can deny it is a fine setting for the paintings. The palace, which overlooks the Gulf of Finland, was originally built in the 18th century by Peter the Great, but almost totally destroyed during Soviet times. It was rebuilt on Putin’s orders in 2000 at a cost of more than £60 million.

Putin Fails, and then he Fails Again

Last week Russia lost Serbia to Europe. This week it lost Cyprus. The Financial Times reports:

A Cyprus court has refused to extradite a former senior Yukos executive to Russia, saying that the case is politically-motivated.

Judge Alecos Panayiotou refused Russia’s request to extradite Vladislav Kartashov, a former manager at the Russian energy group, because “there is a real risk that his right to a fair trial will be flagrantly violated”.

The judge also said “the charges faced by the respondent in Russia are tainted with political motives” and said he could not be extradited while he was seeking political asylum in Cyprus.

The ruling is another international defeat for Russia as it seeks legitimacy for its legal onslaught against Yukos.

Woody Won’t be Filming in Russia any time Soon


I was there for about two hours and I went to the travel agency in the hotel and I said, ‘Get me the first reservation out of here, I don’t care where it goes.’ That was my memory of it: that I had a terrible terrible time when I was there.”

– Director Woody Allen, on his experience in Russia