Paul
Goble
Staunton, May 19 – As one would
expect, the Moscow media and the international media in its wake have given
enormous attention to and even praise for Vladimir Putin’s apparent willingness
to meet the protesters in Yekaterinburg part way by holding a poll to determine
whether the cathedral they oppose will be built.
But they have devoted far less
attention to three real developments over the last ten days which suggest that
the Kremlin leader expects more protests against his regime and is taking steps
to ensure that in that event, he will have all the resources and loyalty he
needs to crack down hard on the population.
That pattern, playing “good cop” for
the media and acting as “the bad cop” on the ground has long been Putin’s modus
vivendi. But it seems to be intensifying in recent days, perhaps because of his
fears about what may happen now that warmer weather will allow even more
Russians to take to the streets against him.
The three developments are these:
First, the interior ministry has
purchased at auction a record quantity of crowd control shields for the police,
13,000 in all, almost twice as many as it purchased during last year or in 2017.
In reporting this, the Forbidden Opinion telegram channel says “the closer to
the end of the ruling chekist-oligarch regime, the more it spends on its
defense. Will this help? We don’t think so” (t.me/TheForbiddenOpinion/3434,
at kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5CE04B5373C21).
Second, in a transparent move to
ensure the loyalty of those in the force structures, Putin has signed a new law
that will allow those who work for the police and other control groups to
retire as early as 45, a move that will make them happy but offend many
Russians who face the prospect now of having to work to 60 if they are women or
65 if they are men (sobkorr.org/news/5CD01B82E0E3A.html).
And third, in yet another move
designed to boost support for the Kremlin among officers in the organs but certain
to offend many Russians, the finance ministry is calling for cutting the pensions
of ordinary people still further in order to boost spending on the police and
officials (finanz.ru/novosti/aktsii/minfin-predlozhil-porezat-pensii-i-uvelichit-raskhody-na-policiyu-i-chinovnikov-1028206672).
Some
Russian commentators warn that Putin is devoting every bit as much effort to
the war against his own people that he is for his war against the West, but
they concede that the full extent of both is largely hidden from view because
so much spending in this area has been classified (windowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2019/04/putins-preparation-for-war-against-west.html).
But
the signs are clear, and they shouldn’t be ignored just because Putin on occasion
talks nice.
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