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  • Garry Kasparov, Dissident

    http://www.opinionjournal.com/columnists/dhenninge r/?id=110010808

    Garry Kasparov, Dissident

    Running for president in Russia is a dangerous enterprise.

    BY DANIEL HENNINGER

    Thursday, November 1, 2007 12:01 a.m.


    One of the current truisms of the news business is that the Internet
    has shrunk the world, and that everyone knows everything from the Web
    the moment it happens. Yet sometimes, we know nothing. Last month, the
    former world chess champion Garry Kasparov announced his candidacy for
    the presidency of Russia, to be decided in March. The world shrugged
    at the Kasparov candidacy, and went back to surfing the Web.

    Is this because we in the wired world already know all there is to
    know about what's up in 21st century Russia? Or in fact are we
    clueless about the place Churchill described as the deepest enigma?
    Garry Kasparov believes the latter, and so as leader of a grab-bag
    coalition called Other Russia, he has undertaken his doomed effort to
    succeed Vladimir Putin. He works hard to get his message out in the
    West, but he is given relatively short shrift by the professional
    skeptics among the Western media and its intellectuals. Yes, he has no
    chance, but the inattention is a mistake.

    I believe Garry Kasparov should be regarded as Russia's first
    post-Soviet dissident. Starting in the 1960s, deep in the Cold War,
    the world essentially put under its protective custody a generation of
    anti-Soviet dissidents. Their names became household names--Sakharov,
    Sharansky, Bukovsky, Medvedev, Sinyavsky, Kopelev,
    others. Solzhenitsyn, too hot to handle, was exiled in 1974.

    The primary reason for analogizing Mr. Kasparov to these dissidents is
    not for his opposition to the Putin government and his views on
    Mr. Putin, though these are worth listening to. The more relevant
    reason is that he believes his life is in danger.

    In an interview this past weekend for "The Journal Editorial Report"
    on Fox cable news, Mr. Kasparov spoke with his characteristic force
    and animation about what he believes are the underlying weaknesses of
    a Russia that looks to be thriving under Mr. Putin. Mr. Kasparov was
    scheduled to fly back to Russia a few days after the interview, and at
    the end he was asked if he feared for his safety. One could not help
    but notice that his answer came after a brief but obvious hesitation.

    "Yes," he said, "I am. I'm afraid, my family's afraid. It's our
    greatest concern."

    Why? Logic argues against killing Mr. Kasparov. The street
    demonstrations in Moscow by his group number in the low thousands
    (though they attract truncheon attacks by a small army of police
    agents). A murder would make him a martyr in Russia, where he is still
    revered as a Soviet and Russian hero. As a political threat, he is a
    fly on the back of the Putin rhinoceros.

    But this is Russia. For all the same reasons one could have said the
    same of the Russian journalists killed or mysteriously dead there in
    recent years. Their names are also a "dissident" list: Ivan Safronov
    of Kommersant, Iskandar Khatloni of Radio Free Europe, Paul Klebnikov
    of Forbes Russia, Anna Politkovskaya of Novaya Gazeta. Freedom House
    estimates some two dozen journalists have been killed since Mr. Putin
    came to power. Earlier this month, in Prague and Washington, Radio
    Free Europe/Radio Liberty held symposiums on the status of Russian
    media, tied to the first anniversary of Ms. Politkovskaya's
    murder. Mr. Kasparov was there. Other than the Washington Times, the
    symposiums received virtually no press coverage in the West.

    Mr. Kasparov is no political dilettante. His first article on the
    status of democracy in Russia appeared on this page in August 1991. He
    was 28 years old. He came to our offices near the World Trade Center
    for lunch, and one has to say that at first it was hard to set aside
    that the fellow discoursing over Chinese food on the West's unseemly
    affection for Mikhail Gorbachev possessed the most mammoth chess brain
    in history.

    We made him a contributing editor to the Journal editorial page, and
    in the years since he has written often for these pages on Russia's
    wild ride to its current state. Across 16 years, Mr. Kasparov's
    commitment to democratic liberty in Russia and in its former republics
    has been unstinting. At that September 1991 lunch, Mr. Kasparov
    proposed an idea then anathema to elite thinking in Washington and the
    capitals of Western Europe: The West should announce support for the
    independence of the former Soviet republics--the Baltics, Ukraine,
    Armenia, Georgia, Moldova and the rest.

    One suspects that Vladimir Putin noticed what the young chess champion
    was saying in 1991 about the old Soviet empire. The Russian president
    has famously said, "The demise of the Soviet Union was the greatest
    geopolitical catastrophe of the century."

    Russia today is not what it was. Mr. Kasparov, however, has not
    stopped analyzing what it has become. Briefly, he argues that
    Mr. Putin's internal and external politics should be seen almost
    wholly as a function of oil prices, the primary source of revenue for
    the Russian state and the prop beneath the extended Putin political
    family. Mr. Putin's "unhelpful" policies on Iran and the like,
    Mr. Kasparov argues, keep the oil markets boiling--but not boiling
    over. Money in the bank, at $94 a barrel. He says Mr. Putin is the
    glue that binds this fabulously wealthy family, and if he left
    politics in any real sense they would start killing each other.

    As to Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice's argument that the West
    needed Mr. Putin inside the G-7 structure so it could "influence" him,
    the former chess champion replies: "Occasionally you have to look at
    the results of your brilliant theories." Bringing Mr. Putin in as G
    No. 8, he says, "jeopardized the whole concept of this club, seven
    great industrial democracies."

    Arguably these views make Mr. Kasparov a dissident even in the
    increasingly cynical, "pragmatic" West. To their credit, the West's
    political elites in the 1970s protected the Soviet Union's
    dreamers. Today Mr. Putin wants Russia to be seen again as
    dangerous. It is that. Garry Kasparov deserves protection. He stands
    for something important. A word from 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue would be
    a start.

    Mr. Henninger is deputy editor of The Wall Street Journal's editorial
    page. His column appears Thursdays in the Journal and on
    OpinionJournal.com.


    Copyright © 2007 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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