Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 15 – Two recent
developments, the clearly improvised process of amending the constitution and
the move which has triggered the collapse of oil prices indicates that the
decision-making process in the Kremlin is increasingly chaotic and may become
even more so, Anatoly Nemiyan who writes under the screen name “El Myurid”
says.
The occasion, timing and process of the
amendments suggest improvisation rather than a clear decision the blogger says;
and doubts about that have only been reinforced, Nemiyan continues (glavred.info/opinions/10157156-putinskaya-vertikal-poshla-v-otkrovennyy-raznos.html).
Unlike Boris Yeltsin, Putin had not
won a victory over opponents and thus both needed and was in a position to
rewrite the country’s basic law. “Putin hasn’t defeated anyone,” and thus
changes aren’t those of a victor but of someone who has acted with fraud and
sleight of hand. “And this means that just as it has been adopted, it can be
changed yet again.”
Moreover, Putin moved four years
ahead of when he faced the issue of running or not running for president, a
violation of his normal practice of keeping his counsel on this to himself. To
be sure, he can still milk the situation for drama but only with all the
players knowing that the outcome is not in doubt, a recognition that changes
the political game.
That raises the possibility that he
acted impulsively or out of concern that someone might steal a march on him, a
possibility that gains even more credibility from the fact that the entire
process was chaotic in the extreme. It even appeared that “everything was
taking place” in reaction to others and thus “an improvisation” rather than
according to a carefully made plan.
One can thus conclude, “with an extremely
high degree of certainty,” that “in the ruling nomenklatura are rapidly growing
destructive processes which are leading the Russian vertical into open
confusion.”
Such a conclusion is only
strengthened by the Kremlin’s decision to break with OPEC and send oil prices
tumbling. “A large part of the companies
of the oil branch clearly weren’t prepared for the decision” and their top
managers reacted in anything but a fully supportive manner to the negative
consequences this decision led to.
Such “chaos” in decision making, Nemiyan
continues, also appears to explain why the Kremlin is pushing to hard to get
the amendments to the constitution confirmed “despite any legal arrangements.”
And that leads to the most disturbing of conclusions: “chaos is growing” and in
some future crisis, that could lead to the most unexpected outcomes.
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