Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 25 – Vladimir Putin
rose to power with a promise to suppress Chechnya’s drive for independence, but
his actions in recent years, including his new decision to hand over to Grozny
the oil refinery there have put that North Caucasus republic on “the final
stage” toward the establishment of an independent country, according to Ilya
Yashin.
Indeed, the liberal Russian
politician argues in an article in today’s “Yezhednevny zhurnal,” Chechnya’s
Ramzan Kadyrov has effectively “unmasked Putin’s imperialism as an absurd
caricature,” one that has real content in some directions but is completely
false in others (ej.ru/?a=note&id=29136).
Earlier this week, it became known
that Putin has “agreed to transfer to the control of Ramzan Kadyrov the oil
industry in the Chechen Republic. Until now, the company, Chechenneftekhimprom,
had been controlled by the federal government, in fact by Rosneft (read Igor
Sechin).”
That represents yet another step
along a path in the course of which “the head of the republic has concentrated
in his hands extraordinary authority” far beyond that of any other Russian
region, Yashin suggests.
“Chechnya has become the only
subject of the Russian Federation where
a regional army functions.” Its officers and men are nominally in the FSB or
MVD of the Russian Federation, but “in reality, they are loyal only to the head
of the republic.” And their commanders are “former militants, amnestied by
Kadyrov, that is, they are obligated to him not only for their pay but their
freedom and even lives.”
Moreover, Yashin continues, “the
influence of the federal siloviki in fact does not extend to Chechnya – the only
law there is the word of Kadyrov. Everyone understands” that Kadyrov feels free
to attack Moscow only because they lack the power to do anything about him or
his criticisms.
As a result, Kadyrov’s appetites are
only growing. And with the acquisition of the oil processing company, he has
taken from the federal authorities important economic levers. “A few years ago, it would have been
impossible to imagine that someone would aspire to take something away from
Sechin, a key Putin oligarch.” But the
Chechen leader now has.
In recent months, many have called
Russia an empire, and it is clear that “Putin himself likes such rhetoric.
However, the Kadyrov phenomenon unmasks Putin imperialism as an absurd
caricature” of the real thing.
“An empire runs its own territories.
In Russian realities, however, one of ‘the colonies’ boldly dictates its will
to the center of the empire and receives many billions in subsidies from the
state treasury,” even though that colony is headed by “a former militant who
fought the Russian military with arms in his hands.”
And consequently, it is possible to
conclude, Yashin says, that “Kadyrov is plying a most important role in Russian
politics. He is the little boy in [Hans Christian] Anderson’s story who shouts
at Putin, ‘But the king is naked!’”
No comments:
Post a Comment