Paul
Goble
Staunton, August 16 – Increasingly,
corporations, clans within the government, and federal subjects in the Russian
Federation are taking their own positions on foreign policy issues, a
development that is preventing Moscow from being able to speak with a single voice
on foreign policy especially with regard to the country’s neighbors, Dmitry
Solonikov says.
The director of the Moscow Institute
for Contemporary State Development says that if Moscow is to be effective in
this area and especially in its relations with Belarus and Ukraine, it needs to
put its own house in order and establish central control over corporations, on
the one hand, and regions and republics, on the other.
Some in the capitals of these two
countries and in the capitals of others as well, he says, are getting mixed
messages from Moscow at present (eadaily.com/ru/news/2020/08/14/vnutri-rossii-mnogo-otdelnyh-gosudarstv-nam-ne-do-belorussii-ekspert
reposted at politobzor.net/220267-net-edinogo-centra-kiev-i-minsk-poteryany-iz-za-vnutrenney-razroznennosti-rossii.html).
As a
result, the governments of these countries use these alternative sources of
messaging to interpret what the message the Kremlin wants them to receive.
Indeed, Solonikov says, “the main cause of the failures of Russia in relations
with its nearest neighbors, Ukraine and Belarus, is that there is no single
center in our country coordinating all foreign policy processes.”
On the
one hand, his words are no more than the usual lament of supporters of the
leaders in many countries who are upset that many others in these states
presume to speak for more than they do and whose clash of opinions sometimes
causes problems when foreign states draw conclusions on the basis of such
clashes.
But on
the other, it constitutes an attack on the way business is being conducted in
Russia by the Presidential Administration and the foreign ministry and making
an argument that some will see as a justification for change in both places as
well as a tightening of the screws over corporate leaders and heads of federal subjects,
at least on foreign policy issues.
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