Paul
Goble
Staunton, October 24 – For the
amount of debt relief Vladimir Putin is prepared to give African countries to
curry favor with them, Moscow economist Natalya Zubarevich says, he could
provide funds for hard-pressed Russians equal to the entire annual budget of
much “optimized,” that is, cut, health care of the country’s regions.
In citing Zubarevich’s figures,
Nikolay Rybakov, deputy head of the opposition Yabloko Party, notes that once
again, as in Soviet times, the Kremlin is “spending billions” on geopolitics;
and the supreme leader has forgotten he heads a country where two-thirds of the
population is at the brink of poverty or over it” (echo.msk.ru/blog/nikolayrybakov/2525423-echo/).
Indeed, the Yabloko leader
continues, Russia today is a country of crumbling roads, housing and other
infrastructure and “where all the territory beyond Moscow’s ring road reminds
one of Burundi or Sierra Leone.” But
Russia’s leader wants to spend money not on solving Russian problems but
competing with other powers over countries far away.
And history suggests, Rybakov says,
that Moscow won’t succeed in buying friends in Africa. They will still look to the US, the EU and China whose
economies will allow
them to do more for and in Africa. All this Putin largesse will do is further impoverish and ultimately enrage the Russian people.
Other opposition figures,
commentators, and bloggers make similar points, that Moscow is impoverishing Russians
without any real chance of achieving the Kremlin’s long-term goals if indeed it
has any. The Kasparov portal provides a remarkable collection of these (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5DB2A42A01C6E).
This response to Putin’s actin is
significant for three reasons. First, when people in any country begin
discussing foreign policies in terms of their costs for people at home, those policies
do not have much support, however much ballyhooed they may be in the media and
political establishment.
Second, the costs of actions abroad
are especially infuriating to the population when a country’s leaders insist
there is no money available for domestic needs, something the Putin regime has
been arguing for almost a decade even as it has continued t enrich itself and
its immediate supporters.
And third, when the costs of a foreign
policy are so publicly proclaimed, it is hard for anyone t ignore them. Had
Putin talked about debt relief but not given a number, there would have been
less outrage, but by offering one, he unwittingly invited them, even as he
displayed his lack of concern and even contempt for the Russian people.
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