Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 19 – Many people
continue to carry with them an image of the iron curtain as consisting of
barbed wire, concrete blocks, raked earth, and KGB guards. That was certainly part of the institution of
isolation that the Soviet government imposed on its own people and its empire
in Eastern Europe.
But it was only a part: Moscow’s iron
curtain also consisted of rules that restricted the right of people to travel,
even to border zones, and sent a message to those under its control that they
might be able to flee from the territory of the empire but they would never be
able to escape the attentions and possible retribution by the Soviets for their
actions.
Both because of the image of the
iron curtain that many have and because this deeper and broader meaning of the iron
curtain, it should come as no surprise to anyone that Vladimir Putin, with his
passion for a “hybrid” approach in all things, one that offers him plausible
deniability, is increasingly seeking to send a new message that no one can
escape his clutches.
Sometimes that has involved murders
of people abroad like the Litvinenko case in London; sometimes it has involved
penetration efforts directed against émigré Russian, Cossack, Circassian and
other groups; and sometime it has featured stories in the Kremlin-controlled
media about the sad fate of those who think they will have a better life and escape the Kremlin if they
“go West.”
But increasingly, it involves targeted
and superficially legal attacks at individuals and their families who have
moved there that typically take place under the radar screens of most Western
governments and Western media but that sends the message Putin wants to peoples
still within the borders of the Russian Federation.
And all these cases not only reflect
the cultural “code” of Russian siloviki like Putin who remember that a tiny
group of emigres returned to Russia in 1917 and overthrew the government but
also the desire to shut Russia off from the world without doing anything so
crude as building a new Berlin wall or erecting barbed wire fences, at least
for the time being.
One such case involves the family of
Igor Bitkov who founded a major timber company in northwest Russia only to have
it raided by banks with close ties to the Kremlin, his daughter kidnapped and
drugged by persons unknown and himself threatened as many Russian businessmen
have been with criminal charges of corrupt activities.
Bitkov and his wife fled to
Guatemala in 2008 – their adult daughter eventually joined them – where they
acquired residence and working permits and where they had a son, Vladimir. As
Michael Weiss puts it, the Bitkovs fled “7,000 miles” to be safe from “Putin’s
people” only to find out they were wrong (thedailybeast.com/articles/2015/06/17/ran-7-000-miles-putin-still-got-them.html).
They
have been pursued by Russian officials, held without bail by Guatemalan
officials, had their youngest child taken away from them, and are now
threatened with possible extradition even though Russia and Guatemala do not
have an extradition treaty. All of this,
Grigory Pasko reports on Ekho Moskvy, has received intensive coverage in
Kremlin-controlled media (echo.msk.ru/blog/bordo07/1568380-echo/).
As
Pasko suggests, many Russians would be inclined to dismiss this as the latest
case of “raiding” by Kremlin-linked businesses against other businesses whose
leaders didn’t “cooperate” with Putin. But there is more involved than that, he
suggests, including Moscow’s heavy-handed use of a UN agency and its own
investments in Guatemala to get its way.
And
consequently, the real message has been delivered to the population of the Russian
Federation: don’t think you can escape the Kremlin just by leaving the country,
a message Putin may be especially interested in sending because so many
educated and entrepreneurial Russians have already left and polls suggest that
more will.
Except
for Weiss’ extremely detailed article and a few others which have viewed it
through the optic of the Kremlin’s abuse of its power to get its hand on
economic assets, the Bitkov case has not attracted the attention in the West
that it should given both the human tragedy involved and the
broader message Moscow clearly intends.
But
there is an online petition circulating which can be signed at supportthebitkovs.com/. It deserves support because the Bitkovs are clearly
innocent victims of one of Putin’s most recent crimes and because what he and
his regime are doing to them is part and parcel of the construct of a “hybrid”
iron curtain.
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