It wasn't Putin at the Abba tribute show - he's more of a Beatles man anyway
WHILE Western leaders remain mired in 20th-century thinking, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin of Russia has reinvented dictatorship for a new century. The new czar's creation is tolerant totalitarianism.
Vladimir V. Putin's Russia has become so controlling that political and economic liberalization may be an essential part of engineering an economic recovery here, a close aide to President Dmitri A. Medvedev said Monday.
Insider trading in Russia is widespread but offenders are rarely caught.
Al termine del discorso pronunciato giorni fa da Putin al Forum di Davos, il primo da due anni a questa parte senza più toni arroganti né allusioni minacciose, gli interrogativi s' accavallavano. Come bisognava spiegarsi le parole concilianti del primo ministro russo, la sua esplicita e improvvisa apertura a migliori rapporti con l' Occidente?
Russia has lost an empire and not yet found a role. As we approach the 20th anniversary of the fall of the Berlin Wall, we should pay tribute again to the fact that a nuclear-armed superpower surrendered its vast continental empire with scarcely a shot fired. Unfortunately, though not surprisingly, many Russians have been regretting that act of historic magnanimity ever since.
The Russian economy, already pummelled by falling oil prices, trade disputes with neighbours and fleeing investors, took another step towards the abyss yesterday as the country's credit rating was downgraded. Russia is the first G8 nation to have suffered a downgrade since the start of the global financial crisis.
Amid economic crisis and political feuding, the Kremlin invites Gorbachev to share his thoughts. President Dmitry Medvedev has even taken to criticizing his mentor and prime minister, Vladimir Putin.
In its recent disputes with Georgia and Ukraine, Russia has been crashing around like a bear in a china shop. As a result, the west has been hyperventilating about the dangers of Russia's resurgence and a new cold war. But as the global financial crisis and collapsing commodity prices shake Russia's economy and strain its political system, the west may soon be worrying again about the country's weaknesses rather than its strengths.
Before the fall of communism, arms control was the yardstick by which all East-West relations were measured. Soviet-US détente produced a series of agreements to cut back the huge nuclear arsenals of each superpower. But although the Cold War ended with the collapse of the Soviet Union, the nuclear stand-off remains. And the recent worsening in Russia's relations with the West, together with the expiry in December of the crucial 1991 Start pact to reduce nuclear warheads, has again made arms control a vital component of global security. It is an issue that President Obama now seems ready to tackle with an urgency not seen for two decades.
Des milliers de manifestants ont protesté dans plusieurs villes de Russie, samedi 31 janvier, mécontentés par la crise et la politique du gouvernement. A Moscou, le rassemblement, de faible envergure, a été contré par 8 000 policiers anti-émeutes. Déployés dans les moindres recoins du centre, ils donnaient à la capitale l'aspect d'une ville en état de siège.
Sir, Your editorial "Approach Russia with great caution" (January 30) accuses Vladimir Putin, Russia's prime minister, of ‘anti-US bile' and of ‘crowing over the US's role in causing the crisis' in his speech to the World Economic Forum in Davos.
The Kremlin's rule is beginning to look much shakier than at any time since Vladimir Putin came to power, after a series of protests in cities across its vast landmass this weekend by Russians disgruntled about the economy. And as the country starts to feel the effects of the global credit crunch, there are also signs of a growing rift between Prime Minister Putin, and his hand-picked successor as President, Dmitry Medvedev.
"Le communisme, c'est les soviets et l'électricité", disait Lénine, "le poutinisme, c'est le gaz et la télévision", estime l'ancien vice-premier ministre Boris Nemtsov, passé à l'opposition. A cette liste, il convient depuis peu d'ajouter le cinéma. Depuis décembre, l'avenir du 7e art est entre les mains du premier ministre Vladimir Poutine, qui a pris la tête d'une nouvelle agence gouvernementale chargée de favoriser son essor.
"How could we have been so stupid?" That was the refrain of several experts at a session of the World Economic Forum last week about "What Went Wrong" to produce the global financial crisis. Not that they had been wrong, mind you. It being Davos, the chosen commentators had mostly been right in warning several years ago of disaster ahead. But there was at least a note of collective chagrin.
Over the last eight years, as Vladimir V. Putin has amassed ever more power, Russians have often responded with a collective shrug, as if to say: Go ahead, control everything - as long as we can have our new cars and amply stocked supermarkets, our sturdy ruble and cheap vacations in the Turkish sun.
Vladimir Putin, the Russian prime minister, does not make it easy to grasp the barbed olive branch that he may be trying to offer. Speaking at the Davos gathering of world leaders, he called for global co-operation in response to the global economic crisis. And he made the not unhelpful, though hardly original, suggestion that "excessive dependence" on the US dollar as the single reserve currency was "dangerous for the global economy".
The leaders of China and Russia on Wednesday turned the tables on their western counterparts who have dictated the world's economic agenda, lecturing them for policy failures they said had led to the global financial crisis.
The titans of Russia's energy industry gathered around an enormous map showing the route of a proposed new pipeline in Siberia. It would cost billions and had been years in the planning. After listening to their presentation, President Vladimir Putin frowned, got up from his chair, whipped out a felt pen and redrew the map right in front of the embarrassed executives, who quickly agreed that he was right.
Le World Economic Forum s’est ouvert avec les discours successifs des premiers ministres chinois et russe. Ils désignent les responsables de la crise, Etats-Unis en tête, et proposent leurs remèdes.