VLADIMIR PUTIN
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VLADIMIR PUTIN

Media Review

4 august 2009
Press Russian International

Stratfor (USA): "Ten Years of Putin"

His coming weekend marks the 10th anniversary of Vladimir Putin»s assumption of a leadership position at the Kremlin. Much has happened since Putin»s appointment as first vice prime minister in August 1999, but Russia»s most definitive evolution was from the unstable but semidemocratic days of the 1990s to the statist, authoritarian structure of today.


3 august 2009

AFP (France): La politesse des rois à la façon de Vladimir Poutine

15 july 2009

ISN: “Stirring Things Up in the Crimea”

Putin strives to further increase Russia’s soft power in the Crimea, but Moscow should avoid discouraging disloyalty among Ukrainians as any violent outburst of instability would be detrimental to all sides, Simon Saradzhyan comments for ISN Security Watch.

7 july 2009

Reuters: “Obama, in Russia, praises democracy, blasts graft”

President Barack Obama appealed to the Russian people on Tuesday to join the United States in overcoming past differences and building a prosperous democratic future free of corruption and the threat of nuclear war.

2 july 2009

Los Angeles Times: “Text of the AP's interview of President Obama”

AP transcript of an interview with President Barack Obama on Thursday.

29 june 2009

Haaretz: “Netanyahu to Putin: Stop selling missiles to Iran”

Relations between Israel and Russia have grown tense over a significant change in Moscow's attitude regarding the possible sale of S-300 air defense missiles to Iran. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu called his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin and asked him to prevent the arms deal from going through.

6 june 2009

Le Figaro: "Vladimir Poutine menace de nationaliser les usines qui ferment”

«Nous avons évité le pire.» Devant un parterre d'investisseurs étrangers et de patrons des géants pétroliers réuni à Saint-Pétersbourg pour le «Davos russe», le président Dmitri Medvedev a donné, ce vendredi, une prudente note d'optimisme. Brutalement fauchée par la crise, la Russie devrait voir son PIB reculer de 6,5 % en 2009 selon les dernières prévisions du Fonds monétaire international (FMI). Ce sera un peu mieux, a assuré ce vendredi Arkadi Dvorkovitch, le jeune (37 ans) conseiller économique du président russe, formé aux États-Unis. Les incendies menacent toutefois dans l'immense maison Russie. Et jeudi, veille de l'ouverture du Forum économique de Saint-Pétersbourg, Vladimir Poutine a joué les pompiers.

1 june 2009

New Europe: “Russia-Ukraine gas feud: something»s gotta give”

Ever since the January Ukrainian-Russian gas agreements reached by Ukrainian Premier Yulia Tymoshenko and Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin in Moscow one-on-one, a second chapter fall-out of the European gas crisis has been imminent.

29 may 2009

Los Angeles Times: “Putin adds genuine article to his resume”

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, already known for numerous exploits, weighs in with a magazine piece on management techniques. It has Russians wondering what he's up to.

25 may 2009

Mainichi: “Judo provides lessons for Japan-Russia diplomacy”

Alongside the Gakushi Kaikan building in Tokyo's Kanda district, where the University of Tokyo's predecessor Kaisei Gakko once stood, is a monument to "the birthplace of the University of Tokyo." At the beginning of the Meiji period, students there keenly participated in western sports including cricket, boating events and baseball, and another monument states that the area is "the birthplace of Japanese baseball."

18 may 2009

Today's Zaman: "Erdoğan seeks Russian backing in Karabakh peace efforts"

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan has discussed the Nagorno-Karabakh problem between Azerbaijan and Armenia in weekend talks with his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, as Ankara seeks to normalize its ties with Yerevan without alienating Azerbaijan.
“Turkey and Russia have responsibilities in the region. We have to take steps for the peace and wellbeing of the region,” Erdoğan said at a joint news conference with Putin in Sochi on Saturday. “This includes the Nagorno-Karabakh problem, the Middle East dispute, the Cyprus problem,” he added.

15 may 2009

The New York Times: "Falling Gas Prices Deny Russia a Lever of Power"

MOSCOW — As energy markets shrink, the same tactics that the Kremlin used to build Gazprom, the giant energy company, into a fearsome economic and political power that could restore Russian influence in the world are now backfiring, slashing both its profits and its influence.

14 may 2009

Arab News: "Moscow-Tokyo ties warming up"

It is not generally appreciated that Russia and Japan are still technically at war and have been for the last 64 years. Moscow declared war on Japan in the closing days of World War II in 1945, seeking to benefit from any gains in the peace. The prospect of a Japanese invasion in the East had haunted Soviet generals after the German attack in 1941. However, a year later, a remarkable espionage coup by Victor Sorge, a KGB spy working in the German Embassy in Tokyo, confirmed to Stalin that the Japanese had refused a request from Hitler that they also attack Russia. Thus the Soviet Army was able crucially to release substantial forces in the East to reinforce their Western front.

14 may 2009

Japan Times (Япония): "New approach to a dispute?"

In meeting with Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in Tokyo on Tuesday, Prime Minister Taro Aso apparently wanted to achieve some progress in the Northern Territories issue. But Mr. Putin apparently gave priority to strengthening bilateral economic ties. Thus the two leaders mostly talked past each other. Mr. Aso only managed to have the Russian side agree to continue efforts to solve the territorial dispute over the four Russian-held islands off Hokkaido.

13 may 2009

The National: "Medvedev: no longer his master’s voice in the Kremlin"

Dmitry Medvedev, who marked his first year as Russian president last week, is often said to be in office but not in power. Many observers believe that the former president and current prime minister Vladimir Putin is the country’s real ruler. But Mr Medvedev’s growing stature is raising the prospect that he will stand for re-election in 2012, despite widespread assumptions that Mr Putin, constitutionally barred from seeking a third presidential term in 2008, wants the top job back.

13 may 2009

The Wall Street Journal: "Putin's Ninth Year in Power"

It has become fashionable to speak of change and liberalization in Russia under President Dmitry Medvedev. May 7 marked his one-year anniversary in office. He has recently granted an interview with an opposition newspaper, allowed a few human-rights activists to criticize Russia's regime, and even started a blog. There is also a new administration in Washington that wants a fresh start with foreign powers.

12 may 2009

World Politics Review (США): "Global Insights: How Many More Anniversaries for Medvedev?"

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev's political legacy is inextricably linked to that of his predecessor, Vladimir Putin, in ways that go beyond mere political lineage.

10 may 2009

The Guardian: "Vladimir Putin signals he is pondering a presidential comeback in 2012"

Russia's prime minister, Vladimir Putin, tonight gave his strongest hint yet that he is pondering a comeback that would see him return to the Kremlin as president in 2012.

10 may 2009

The New York Times (США): "Putin Says NATO Exercises in Georgia Hinder U.S.-Russia Relations"

MOSCOW — Prime Minister Vladimir V. Putin said Sunday that the planned “reset” in relations between Russia and the United States had been hampered by NATO exercises in Georgia, and that he hoped the United States would “step on the brake hard” to prevent the relationship from deteriorating.

9 may 2009

American Thinker (США): "Russia and the NYT"

A May 2nd analysis piece from New York Times Russia correspondent Clifford Levy highlighted the paper's hopeless inability to offer readers real insights about Vladimir Putin's neo-Soviet regime.

8 may 2009

The Wall Street Journal: "Putinist Show Trial"

Stalinist show trials ended a long time ago in Russia but the modern-day Putinist variety continues to lock away political opponents in Siberia.

8 may 2009

The Vancouver Sun: "Dmitry Medvedev’s underwhelming year as lapdog"

And as Dmitry Medvedev marked his first year as president on Thursday the West, led by new American president Barack Obama and his «reset» button, seems programmed to pounce on any signs of liberalization or reform emanating from the Kremlin.

7 may 2009

Berliner Zeitung: "Sehnsucht nach Frühling"

Ein Jahr lang ist Medwedew jetzt Präsident. Auf ein Tauwetter warten die Russen bisher vergeblich

5 may 2009

New Europe: "Putin’s energy Royal Flush, Ukraine’s Dead Man’s Hand"

After a first-round draw in the high-stakes energy poker game between Russia, Ukraine and the EU, Vladimir Putin has the highest hand. The Russian premier avoided two energy conferences in Bulgaria and Turkmenistan knowing all too well that the key energy issues would be discussed in Russia’s bilateral talks with Bulgarian Prime Minister Sergei Stanishev, Ukrainian Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenkoand EU Energy Commissioner Andris Piebalgs last week in Moscow.

5 may 2009

EurasiaNet : "Coping with the constraints of the Kremlin's «Tandemocracy»"

Western attitudes toward Russia tend to shift much like a swinging pendulum: euphoria quickly turns to dismay, or, alternatively, despair in no time morphs into hope. The reason that perceptions of Russia are so volatile is that the West tends to harbor all sorts of extravagant expectations about its proverbially enigmatic eastern neighbor. More often than not, these notions are based not on hard knowledge, but on wishful thinking.

5 may 2009

The New York Times: "Medvedev’s First Year"

On Thursday, Dmitri Medvedev marks his first year as president of Russia. There is little cause for celebration as the Russian economy is facing its worst crisis for more than a decade. Unemployment is approaching 10 percent, inflation 15 percent, and the credit squeeze is hurting all Russians from the factory floor to the oligarchs.

3 may 2009

Reuters: "Medvedev brings new style to the Kremlin"

MOSCOW (Reuters) - After a year in office, President Dmitry Medvedev is showing a different Kremlin style to that of predecessor Vladimir Putin, though analysts can only guess if this might herald major change or not.

1 may 2009

The Financial Times: "Russian leaders in election dilemma"

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s growing political stature is increasing the possibility that he will stand for re-election in 2012 in spite of widespread assumptions that Vladimir Putin will return, according to a Kremlin adviser.

27 april 2009

Journal of Democracy: "The rules of survival"

In an attempt to explain the Russian Revolution to Lady Ottoline Morrell, British philosopher Bertrand Russell once remarked that Bolshevik despotism, appalling though it was, seemed the right sort of government for Russia. “If you ask yourself how Fyodor Dostoevsky’s characters should be governed, you will understand,” was his not-sosubtle point. In explaining the recent resurgence of authoritarianism in Russia, most political theorists have abstained from referring to Dostoevsky’s novels or Russia’s authoritarian political culture.

26 april 2009

American Thinker: "Putin panicking on Russian economy"

Most educated people understand two simple facts about central banks. They can increase or decrease the national money supply by raising or lowering the «discount rate» they charge banks to borrow from the treasury, and they need to be independent so that decisions about the money supply are based on economics, not politics.

25 april 2009

Newsweek: "Medvedev’s Moscow Spring"

Putin's successor as president seemed like a smooth-talking yes man. That's changing now.

23 april 2009

Berkeleyan Online: "Black-leather pragmatist"

Focused more on domestic political stability than on empire-building, Vladimir Putin may be — for all his faults — a better leader than Russia might otherwise be obliged to endure

21 april 2009

United Press International: Analysis: Russia's ambitious nuclear-power expansion plans

WASHINGTON, April 21 (UPI) -- The global recession has severely hammered the world's leading energy producers as oil has fallen from its July 2008 record high of $147.27 per barrel to slightly more than $50 a barrel today. For Russia, the world's second-largest oil producer, the news has not led to a reduction in production, as on April 16 its Energy Ministry issued a statement noting that it does not expect the country's 2009 crude oil output to fall this year from last year's rate of 9.735 million barrels per day.

21 april 2009

United Press International (USA): "Analysis: Russia's ambitious nuclear-power expansion plans"

The global recession has severely hammered the world's leading energy producers as oil has fallen from its July 2008 record high of $147.27 per barrel to slightly more than $50 a barrel today. For Russia, the world's second-largest oil producer, the news has not led to a reduction in production, as on April 16 its Energy Ministry issued a statement noting that it does not expect the country's 2009 crude oil output to fall this year from last year's rate of 9.735 million barrels per day.

18 april 2009

Foreign Policy: "The List: Five Governments That Deserve to Fail"

A number of leaders around the world are on the ropes right now. That's not necessarily a bad thing.

18 april 2009

The New York Times: "The Georgian and Putin: A Hate Story"

SOON after taking power in a pro-Western uprising in Georgia, President Mikheil Saakashvili journeyed in February 2004 to Moscow, his country’s former taskmaster, for his first talks with Vladimir V. Putin.

18 april 2009

The New York Times (USA): "The Georgian and Putin: A Hate Story"

SOON after taking power in a pro-Western uprising in Georgia, President Mikheil Saakashvili journeyed in February 2004 to Moscow, his country's former taskmaster, for his first talks with Vladimir V. Putin.

17 april 2009

The Times: "Chechen rebellion has been crushed, says Kremlin"

Russia declared victory yesterday in its war to crush separatists in the rebel republic of Chechnya; a conflict that has cost the lives of an estimated 100,000 people since the region claimed independence in 1991.

17 april 2009

The Times (Great Britain): "Chechen rebellion has been crushed, says Kremlin"

Russia declared victory yesterday in its war to crush separatists in the rebel republic of Chechnya; a conflict that has cost the lives of an estimated 100,000 people since the region claimed independence in 1991.

13 april 2009

Le Monde: "Dmitri Medvedev, bon lieutenant de Vladimir Poutine, par"

Au sommet du G20 à Londres, la Russie est restée au second plan. Dmitri Medvedev n'a vraiment existé que grâce à son entretien avec Barack Obama le 1er avril, et plus modestement à sa conférence à la London School of Economics, le lendemain. Le président russe aurait pu être plus accrocheur. Mais la Russie n'avait rien à proposer de sérieux au G20 et n'a, pour le moment, pas versé un dollar au plan de relance du Fonds monétaire international (FMI).

13 april 2009

"Handelsblatt": "Präsident Kadyrow: Prolet oder Prophet?"

GROSNY. Auf einem schlammigen Acker bei Grosny versammelt sich Tschetscheniens Elite. Bürgermeister, Minister, Unternehmer, ein russischer General – mit Schlips und Kragen warten sie auf dem roten Teppich. Auf der Wiese beginnt heute der Bau einer Wurstfabrik mit 330 neuen Jobs. Fehlt nur noch der, der den ersten Spatenstich setzt.

13 april 2009

Foreign Policy (USA): "The List: Five Governments That Deserve to Fail"

A number of leaders around the world are on the ropes right now. That's not necessarily a bad thing.

13 april 2009

Handelsblatt (Germany): "Präsident Kadyrow: Prolet oder Prophet?"

In Tschetschenien lässt Wladimir Putin Ex-Warlord Ramsan Kadyrow ein autoritäres Regime aufbauen. Doch das organisierte Verbrechen bekommt er nicht in den Griff.

13 april 2009

Le Monde (France): "Dmitri Medvedev, bon lieutenant de Vladimir Poutine, par Marie Mendras"

Au sommet du G20 à Londres, la Russie est restée au second plan. Dmitri Medvedev n'a vraiment existé que grâce à son entretien avec Barack Obama le 1er avril, et plus modestement à sa conférence à la London School of Economics, le lendemain. Le président russe aurait pu être plus accrocheur. Mais la Russie n'avait rien à proposer de sérieux au G20 et n'a, pour le moment, pas versé un dollar au plan de relance du Fonds monétaire international (FMI).

12 april 2009

"The Observer": "Journalism in the shadow of death and Putin"

Russia's Novaya Gazeta, the paper of murdered reporter Anna Politkovskaya, dares to tell the truth but has paid a high price

12 april 2009

The Observer (Great Britain): "Journalism in the shadow of death and Putin"

Russia's Novaya Gazeta, the paper of murdered reporter Anna Politkovskaya, dares to tell the truth but has paid a high price

8 april 2009

"Forbes (USA)": "Russia: Big Spender After All?"

Russian opposition before the G-20 for setting of a minimum fiscal stimulus may have given the impression that the Kremlin was falling more into the German and French camps rather than going with big Britain's big spenders, but that initial impression appears to be deceptive. Earlier this week, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin pledged $90.0 billion of fiscal spend this year to prop up the economy.

8 april 2009

Forbes (USA): "Russia: Big Spender After All?"

Prospects for the Russian market are looking up say analysts, after the latest round of stimulus announced by Vladimir Putin earlier in the week.

26 march 2009

Le Monde (France): "Encore de l'eau dans le gaz"

Après la «guerre du gaz» qui a fait rage en janvier entre l'Ukraine et la Russie, à quand celle des gazoducs ? Les hostilités ont été ouvertes, lundi 23 mars à Bruxelles, lorsque l'Union européenne a proposé son aide à l'Ukraine pour rénover son système de canalisation. Pour les Européens, le calcul est simple : plutôt que d'investir des dizaines de milliards d'euros dans la construction de nouveaux tubes, mieux vaut débourser 2,5 milliards d'euros pour améliorer le réseau ukrainien, par lequel transite 80 % du gaz russe consommé par le Vieux Continent.

24 march 2009

Christian Science Monitor (USA): "Russia: Unclenching its fist?"

The wary rapprochement between Warsaw and Moscow holds some hope for President Obama's stated goal of restarting American-Russian relations. Let's call this the Polish hypothesis.

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