On September 9, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin held a meeting on the aircraft industry in Ulyanovsk. Military-Technical Cooperation bulletin presents excerpts of the meeting record revealed to the media.
The day after Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin had hours-long meeting with political analysts and journalists and members of the Valdai Club, the same group attended another meeting with President Dmitry Medvedev. Speaking on Russia's role on a global scale, the Prime Minister and the President actually switched roles: Putin elaborated more on Russia's domestic and foreign policy, while Medvedev spoke on strengthening the rouble, the national economy and investment appeal. This re-casting of roles came as no surprise to meeting attendees.
Western Europe lacks its own foreign policy. The United States wasted time and money training Georgian soldiers. Russian fuel and energy can be redirected to the East. These were the main points of Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's remarks at a meeting with foreign political analysts.
"Did you expect us to wipe our bleeding nose and bow our head down?" "What did you expect us to do, wield a pen knife there?" "Did you expect us to fight with slingshots?" If the West thought that such would be the Russian response to Georgia, it was sorely mistaken, as Prime Minister Vladimir Putin explained to the Valdai Discussion Club yesterday. He reassured leading foreign experts on Russia that Moscow had no imperialist ambitions and was willing to stay in contact with the West, but that, at the same time, contacts demanded reciprocity.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin met with 45 members of the Valdai International Discussion Club in Sochi on Thursday. President Eduard Kokoity of South Ossetia and President Sergei Bagapsh of Abkhazia met club members shortly before the meeting commenced. The Valdai Club brings together major foreign political scientists and journalists, such as Alexander Rahr, an expert from the German Council on Foreign Relations; Professor Anatol Lieven of King's College London; Professor Nobuo Shimotomai of Hosei University, Tokyo; and Dr Nikolai Zlobin, Director of Russian and Asian Programmes at the World Security Institute in Washington, to name just a few.
Yesterday in Sochi, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin cut short with a witty and graphic rebuke renewed Western attempts to depict Russia as an aggressor. He said at the Valdai International Discussion Club that the conflict in the Caucasus was also conditioned by Europe's lack of a clear-cut foreign policy stance.
Yesterday, during his meeting with western political scientists and journalists, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin responded to the accusations of "disproportionate use of force" in Georgia. Meanwhile, South Ossetian President Eduard Kokoity stated that his republic will "certainly become part of Russia". Later Mr Kokoity said he was misunderstood, but Kommersant special correspondent Andrey Kolesnikov believes that Mr Kokoity's statement could be interpreted in only one possible way.
"Prime Minister Vladimir Putin warned domestic aircraft makers that duties on all civil aircraft imports could be abolished if the Russian industry "acts too slowly"."
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's visit to Ulyanovsk yesterday was totally devoted to civil aircraft building. The Prime Minister visited the Aviastar aircraft factory, examining the Antonov An-124 and Tupolev Tu-204 airliners produced there. Mr Putin highlighted that import duties on foreign-made aircraft could be reduced if domestic plane makers are unable to speed up aircraft production.
Yesterday, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin held a meeting on the civil aircraft industry. As Kommersant had predicted the day before, the participants discussed the possibility of abolishing aircraft import duties. Although the Prime Minister did not support the initiative directly, he warned the aircraft manufacturers that this could be done if enterprises continued with low output. Experts and participants in the meeting say, however, that the yesterday's outcome was rather favourable for the Russian aircraft industry.
Import duties for foreign aircraft and component parts may be reduced if domestic aircraft manufacturers fail to meet their targets, said Prime Minister Vladimir Putin during his visit to Ulyanovsk yesterday. These coercive measures will not hinder the country's aircraft industry, but will encourage air transportation growth, the Prime Minister said during the meeting dedicated to civil aircraft production. Participants didn't seem too sure, however, that Russia's aircraft industry has a bright future ahead.
The United Russia party has not given up its ambition of conferring the status of national leader on Vladimir Putin, the Prime Minister and leader of the party. For starters, they decided to promote him to the role of the country's top human rights champion. Mr Putin's public reception offices have been opened in all the Russian regions. Anyone can come to the office to complain about the actions of the governor or the mayor and get legal advice.
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin spent a day in Astrakhan to have a look at preparations for the city's 450th anniversary, due October 5. There is no chance to commission many planned projects-modernisation of the highways, the bridges and the regional airport among them-before the deadline, so Mr Putin demanded construction and reconstruction to proceed at the previous pace after the celebration.
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin put an end to weekly Government meetings. Even its presidium will not gather regularly. The latest meeting was on August 25. Last week's meeting was cancelled as the Prime Minister was away-first in the Far East and Uzbekistan, and then in Astrakhan. He will travel around Russia this whole week, too, and will have no chance to attend a Government meeting.
During the Beijing Olympic Games President Bush made another of his many blunders when he patted the female captain of the American beach volleyball team on her bare back with his hand. It was not his idea, he was asked to do it by the team. This is thought to be a good omen. If the president pats the team captain before a game, the team is sure to win the gold medal (which, incidentally, came true). In this instance, the girl mischievously turned her back to the President and thrust out her butt.
Last week, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin paid a two-day working visit to Tashkent. His talks with the Uzbek leadership produced important intergovernmental documents on the expansion of bilateral trade and economic cooperation.
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin visited Astrakhan yesterday. The city will celebrate its 450th anniversary in a month, and federal jubilee allocations are being channelled into the social sphere, transport, economic development, and protection of historical monuments, including the Astrakhan Kremlin. Federal funding started only two years ago, and construction is well underway. So Putin inspected mainly sites during his visit.
Astrakhan will celebrate its 450th anniversary in early October, and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin came here yesterday to see jubilee preparations. He met with local authorities and visited construction sites. Regrettably, some of the projects will not be ready by City Day. As far as Izvestia knows, the celebrations are being organised by top-notch stage decorator Boris Krasnov, a Muscovite, who intends to make the city an epitome of pageantry. Astrakhan has been promised a gala concert featuring celebrities ranging from the Igor Moiseyev Dance Company to pop icon Filipp Kirkorov. It is a pity that they will not appear at the new Music Theatre, which the city knows as Astrakhan's La Scala, and which is still under construction.
Autumn started with celebrity ratings. Vanity Fair followed Forbes in compiling a list of the world's most influential people, putting Vladimir Putin at the top and forcing previous leader Rupert Murdoch down a spot.
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin signed a package deal in Tashkent yesterday. He secured the consent of Uzbekistan's President Islam Karimov to the building of a new gas pipeline in his country and to the European price formula for the gas bought by Gazprom, but Mr Putin failed to include Uzbekistan's support for the independence of Abkhazia and South Ossetia in the deal, as our special correspondent ANDREI KOLESNIKOV reports.