|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Europe
: Russia
& the former USSR
Russian President Putin names his putative successor
By Vladimir Volkov
18 December 2007
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
The December 10 announcement proclaiming Vice-Premier Dmitri
Medvedev the Kremlins leading candidate for the post of
president was aimed at ameliorating the protracted crisis in the
upper echelons of the Russian political establishment. The aim
is to find a successor to President Vladimir Putin who can consolidate
the various groupings within the ruling elite. Medvedevs
candidacy was supported by four parties and quickly received the
backing of Putin.
It now falls upon Medvedev to serve as the guarantor of the
continuity of the capitalist reforms that were carried out by
the Putin administration while preserving the leading role of
the bureaucracy and the security services. He must also act as
the proxy for the current president, who is leaving his post in
2008.
Analyzing the Kremlins immediate intentions in relation
to the successor and summing up the essence of the
selection of Medvedev, political scientist Stanislav Belkovskii
wrote that under a Medvedev presidency, the legitimization
of the Yeltsin-Putin ruling elite in the West and the liquidation
of the Soviet social system will be carried through to the end.
Regardless of whether or not the plan to have Medvedev elevated
as the new president in elections scheduled for March 2 is successful,
the announcement of his candidacy intensifies the struggle of
the Kremlin groupings and sharpens the social opposition of the
ruling elite to the broad masses of workers.
The announcement was carried out in the spirit of the former
Kremlin order and recalled the traditions of the old Soviet bureaucracy.
The initiative was taken by leaders of the parties that are obedient
puppets of the Kremlin. Two of themUnited Russia and A Just
Russiacommand an absolute majority in the newly formed parliament
(Duma). The other twothe Agrarian Party and Citizens Powerhaving
garnered between them less than three percent of the December
2 parliamentary vote, are the obvious outsiders.
The actual weight of the parties, as expressed in the official
result of the parliamentary election, was not important. Rather,
the four parties were supposed to reflect the essential layers
of the population. If the two leading parties of power
embody the interests of business, the bureaucracy and the middle
class, Citizens Power ostensibly reflects the outlook of the liberal
intelligentsia and the Agrarian Party represents the rural electorate.
Medvedev unhesitatingly accepted the nomination. The following
day he publicly requested that Putin agree to serve, in the event
of his election, as prime minister.
Medvedevs candidacy, formalized at the December 17 congress
of United Russia, provoked a series of commentaries noting that
he had already been considered a potential successor for some
time. He occupies one of the leading posts in the Putin administration
and oversees national projects in the areas of housing,
education, health care and agriculture. As a candidate for the
succession, Medvedev represented Russia at the elite
Davos forum this past winter.
However, last September his likely succession faltered. At
that point Putin was expected to announce the presidential candidacy
of the other vice-premier in his administration, Sergei Ivanov.
This coincided with a reorganization of the administration, in
which the head of government, Mikhail Fradkov, was replaced by
long-time associate of Putin, Viktor Zubkov.
At the same time, Putin announced there was no single candidate
for president, but rather several. This was interpreted as a move
by Putin to induce competition among potential candidates, with
the experienced and loyal apparatchik Zubkov serving as arbitrator,
and, if necessary, himself becoming the candidate.
Shortly thereafter Putin announced that he would lead the list
of candidates for United Russia in the December parliamentary
elections, throwing his weight behind the effort to guarantee
a parliamentary majority for the party of power, whose
public authority had steeply fallen.
In the ensuing months, Putin evidently attempted to forge a
compromise between the bureaucratic-oligarchic groupings, not
giving any of them preference and postponing the final decision
on the candidate to succeed him. This only fueled rumblings and
conflicts within the ruling elite.
The day after Putins decision to lead the United Russia
list in the parliamentary elections, a general in the Federal
Service for the Control of Narcotics Trafficking (FSNK), Aleksandr
Bulbov, was arrested, along with a number of his co-workers. This
opened a new stage in the war of the security services,
which has been ongoing for several years.
The FSNK, headed by Victor Cherkesov, was created in 2003.
It is considered a governing structure in competition with the
more powerful security service, the FSB, which is the direct continuation
of the Stalinist KGB.
Politically, the FSNK is oriented toward Kremlin liberals,
including Medvedev, at a time when the FSB, headed by Nikolai
Patrushev, is linked to right-wing nationalists and supporters
of a harder line toward the West. The most important figure among
this group of siloviki (people connected with the
various security services) is Igor Sechin, the grey cardinal
of Putins Kremlin, who occupies the post of deputy head
of the presidents administration.
The arrest of General Bulbov has provoked several new episodes
in this confrontation.
One of them was the arrest on November 15 of the deputy minister
of finance, Sergei Storchak, accused of embezzling more than 40
million rubles from public funds.
This is seen as a blow to the minister of finance, Aleksei
Kudrin, who is close to the Kremlin liberals, and
also an attempt by Sechins siloviki to establish
their control over the expenditure of resources from the Stabilization
Fund, which has been swollen by the influx of petrodollars in
recent years.
The liberals responded by publishing a scandalous
interview with the entrepreneur Oleg Shvartsman, which appeared
in the newspaper Kommersant on November 30. In this interview,
the hitherto practically unknown businessman announced that under
the aegis of Sechin, a scenario of velvet re-privatization
was unfolding, in which certain private firms were being seized
by means of soft raids in the interests of state structures
and companies, particularly Rosoboroneksport (Russian Defense
Export), headed by Sergei Chemezov.
In his interview, Shvartsman boasted that he was being helped
by 600,000 retired security agents with colossal experience
as operatives. These people, in Shvartsmans opinion,
were engaged in useful activities, otherwise they might
be used by criminals in the most varied affairs and undertakings.
The interview caused a great scandal because it raised the
curtain on the degree to which leading state functionaries and
Russian companies are employing semi-criminal methods for seizing
private property at a time when, according to government propaganda,
the period of the privatization of the state by private
individuals had come to an end.
Such episodes are only the starkest examples of the heightened
struggle for power within the Kremlin. In actual fact, the range
of the confrontations is much wider. Up for grabs is access
to powerful levers of authority and enormous sums of money.
The Sechin group, in particular, was the main driving force
in the struggle against the billionaire Mikhail Khodorkovsky,
who has been behind bars for several years. The employees of his
oil company, Yukos, have almost completely passed over to the
control of the semi-state Rosneft, whose board chairman is Sechin.
Shifts in power under modern Russian conditions inevitably
mean transfers of wealth to the newly emerging victors, something
those currently in positions of authority do not want to happen.
They are prepared to defend their positions by any means.
More generally, the war of the security services
is a manifestation of the profound degeneration of official Russian
politics. The less the ruling elite is inclined to allow any open
disagreements in its midst, the less that the most important governmental
decisions correspond to the will of society at large and depend
on formal procedures of a public character, the more the purely
bureaucratic levers, behind-the-scenes semi-criminal machinations
and security special operations become a necessary
and even dominant element of political life.
Several commentators believe that Putin has created his own
system of checks and balances, which to a significant
degree is based on the competition between various security services
directly connected with big business and clans of the bureaucratic
elite. As present events show, this system is becoming ever more
internally unstable.
On October 9, the head of the FSNK, Cherkesov, published an
article in Kommersant in which he called for the cessation
of the war of the security services and outlined his
views on Russias recent history. In his opinion, it is precisely
the security services which saved the country from collapse in
the 1990s. Then, he wrote, the country was experiencing a full-scale
catastrophe. But, as it was falling into the abyss,
post-Soviet society latched onto... a chekist hook,
and was now hanging from it.
Now, in Cherkesovs words, Russia has created out
of the chaos a minimal amount of order, which, however,
can be destroyed if agreement is not found among the rival groups
of the ruling elite. Then, the hook that saved the
countrythe security servicewill break because
it will have rusted through. Along with it, the entire
social structure will begin to shatter. The country will
perish.
As one can see, Putins condemnation of the legacy of
the 1990s, which occupied such a prominent place in the campaign
for the elections to parliament, reflects a broad consensus regarding
the Yeltsin era among various layers around the current president.
This is joined by a glorification of the role of the special services
as Russias saviors.
The alarm which resounds in Cherkesovs article reflects
the depth of the contradictions within the ruling establishment.
In the words of an editorial in Nezavisimaia Gazeta published
on December 6, the split within the elites has already ceased
to be a simple dogfight proceeding under the rug, and has instead
turned into a war for survival.
Proposing Medvedev as successor must be seen against
the background of this growing conflict. His candidacy must be
regarded as a partial strengthening of the position of the liberals,
as well as a gesture of sorts toward a new reconciliation.
It is unlikely, however, that a compromise will be found. Some
commentators paint a picture of full-scale political destabilization.
One such prognosis was advanced by the authoritative Western Russian
specialist, Andrew Kuchins, the former head of the Carnegie Foundation
in Moscow.
In a report, Alternative Scenarios of Russias Future,
prepared by the well-known non-governmental Center for Strategic
Research, Kuchins speaks of the possibility of Putins assassination
and the introduction of emergency rule headed by an authoritarian
dictatorship of security forces headed by Sechin and a number
of other figures.
Among the actions of this regime could be, according to Kuchins,
the shooting of striking oil workers in Surgut and
bloody purges among the ruling elite.
Despite its highly speculative and seemingly fantastic character,
Kuchins prognosis was taken very seriously by the Russian
mass media. As the newspaper Kommersant commented on December
13, the author is one of the most informed and authoritative
American Kremlinologists and continues to be among
the narrow circle of Western experts who meet each year with Vladimir
Putin at sessions of the so-called Valdaiskii Club,
including a meeting this last summer.
The danger of a growing confrontation was also underscored
by the head of the Trade Industrial Chamber, Evgenii Primakov,
during a meeting with President Putin on December 11. According
to Primakov, two dangers threaten the continuity of Putins
course of development for Russia: the oligarchy and the coalescence
of bureaucrats and businessmen. In essence, both of these dangers
are a euphemism for the orange revolution which would
be carried out by dissatisfied representatives of the business
elite if they were to win over to their side key layers of the
state apparatus.
Proceeding from the experience of post-Soviet history, when
the continuity of a capitalist course and the positions of the
dominant power groups were secured by shelling the parliament
with tanks (in 1993), and exploiting, if not organizing, explosions
in apartment blocs in Moscow and Volgodonsk, no provocations or
bloody adventures at the hands of todays Kremlin rulers
can be ruled out.
See Also:
Russian parliamentary elections: Putins
party retains control
[6 December 2007]
The parliamentary elections and the crisis
of the authoritarian regime in Russia
[1 December 2007]
Strike at Russian Ford planta
sign of renewed struggle by Russian workers
[20 November 2007]
Putin in Tehran: US-Russia
rift widens
[18 October 2007]
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |