Paul Goble
Staunton,
September 5 – Over the last several years, Tatyana Alekseyeva of the Rusmonitor portal has tracked many of the
crimes and mistakes of the Putin regime. Now, as the situation in her country
and his worsens, she offers a summary of what she describes as “the five main
Putin attacks … on Russia” during his presidency.
In a long
and heavily footnoted article, she lists the following five “’achievements’” as
Putin and some his supporters would seek to recast what in fact have been devastatingly
destructive attacks on the country and its people, attacks especially horrific because
they represent missed opportunities for an entirely different trajectory of
national development.
These
include:
·
First,
“more than a trillion oil-dollars have gone into the pockets of the oligarchs and
been taken out of the country when they could have been spent on the
development of industry, technology, roads, medicine, science and education.”
·
Second,
“the country has been de-industrialized,” leaving it less capable of making its
own way in the world because it has been reduced to being a raw materials supplier
to others.
·
Third,
“the Far East has become an arena of Chinese colonization.”
·
Fourth,
the country’s halting steps toward democracy and freedom were not only stopped
but reversed with Russians today having fewer freedoms and being subjected to
more repression than at any point since Soviet times.
·
And
fifth, Russia faces “growing international isolation as a result of the
adventurist and aggressive foreign policy of the Kremlin” (rusmonitor.com/pyat-glavnykh-putinskikh-udarov-po-rossii.html).
She offers details on each of these. “Over
the 20 years of Putin’s rule,” Alekseyeva says, “’the improvement’ of the lives
of ordinary Russians is obvious to the unaided eye: prices have risen, social
standards have fallen, there are no roads or work, educated young people are
fleeting abroad, pensioners are being impoverished,” but the oligarchs have
been living better than ever.
What makes this unbearable is that “everything
could have been entirely different.” If the regime had spent the trillions of
oil-dollars, the country would not only have been able to modernize; but its
citizens would have been living at the standards of the leading Western countries
and not at the level of those in the third world.
Instead, Alekseyeva continues, “trillions
of oil dollars went into the palaces and yachts of the oligarchs and their
foreign bank accounts” or “into wars and senseless image projects like the Olympics
or the World Cup. Among the examples of what this means, she says, are the following:
·
China
is now building 90 times as many kilometers of new highways each year as Russia
is under Putin.
·
Russia
is spending 0.4 percent of GDP on healthcare while Germany is spending 11
percent and Japan 10; and it is spending 0.7 percent on education compared to
the US which is spending 5.4 percent and Great Britain which is investing 5.6
percent. Schools and hospitals are closing far more rapidly than the decline in
population even by sector justifies.
·
Russia
is investing in science half as much as it is spending on paying for the
expanding bureaucracy and “13 times (!!!) less than it is spending on the real
army.”
·
In
Silicon Valley alone, there are 40,000 Russian scholars working for the US who
could be working for Russia.
·
The
country’s housing stock has deteriorated and many houses don’t have indoor
plumbing or reliable heating – and people do not have real prospects that there
will be better housing anytime soon.
·
And
the government is not content just to divert oil wealth into the pockets of the
oligarchs: it has reached into the pockets of ordinary Russians repeatedly
taking their money by playing games with benefits and now pensions.
“Yet another ‘achievement’ of the Putin
regime is the creeping surrender to the Chinese of the Far East,” that Dmitry
Medvedev has pushed through the Duma to enrich his friends even at the cost of
Russian sovereignty. And while 22 million Russians can’t make ends meet, Putin
et al give money to “African dictators and former Soviet satellites.”
The Yeltsin 1990s were not perfect, the Rusmonitor commentator says, “but in the
area of human rights, at the beginning of this century, Russia was
significantly different than it is now.” People could demonstrate and speak
freely and the media could report on almost anything. Putin has ended that and build
a highly repressive state.
Another sad reality is that the Putin
regime has run through the Russian industrial enterprises that had somehow
survived from Soviet times. It closed “more
than 35,000” between 2005 and 2017, and its industrial base fell behind that of
neighboring Kazakhstan and “is approaching the level of Equatorial Guinea.”
Russia has been deindustrialized and
reduced to being a raw materials supplier of the West. That means many things,
including that it cannot respond successfully to any external shock anymore. In
1998, it responded to default and devaluation with a burst of economic activity
even though oil prices were low. Now, it can’t do anything of the kind.
But
it is in the area of foreign policy that Putin’s negative achievements are the
most serious, she continues. “In 1999,
when Putin took power, Russia was a member of the G8; today, Russia is in the
company of countries like Iran and North Korea.” And while in power, he has
unleashed “several senseless wars,” isolating Russia from the civilized world.
“The short-sighted adventurist and
aggressive policy of the Kremlin in the international arena is depriving
Russians of a future.” Putin’s foolish actions mean that “the most powerful
countries of the West are now against our country,” and there is little
indication that the situation is about to change as long as he is in the
Kremlin.
According to Alekseyeva, “the real result
of Putin’s almost 20 years is a destroyed industrial base left to Russia from
the USSR, an increasingly impoverished science, the loss of Russia’s position
in the cosmos, the conversion of the country into a raw materials supplier for
developed countries, unprecedented theft … an aggressive foreign policy which
has led to the growing isolation of the state” – and even that is not a
complete list of his failures.
“If you will,” she concludes, “the most important
thing future generations will hold against Putin is that he had a real chance
to modernize Russia and convert it into an economically developed country, free
and open to the world – and he did not make use of this chance.”
No comments:
Post a Comment