Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Russia's Espiocrats

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Russia's Espiocrats

    Wired News

    Russia's Espiocrats

    By Bruce Sterling - September 20, 2007 | 11:40:04 PM

    (((The plutocrats have been tamed, and replaced by a vast horde of
    spies. Much as this ominous prospect gives me pause, I have to think
    that maybe the siloviki are an *improvement* over the former
    semibankyrshina. Those moguls were a deeply unpleasant lot, and think
    what you may of Putin's spy petrocracy with its giant bombs, oil
    blackmail and hideously poisoned dissidents, he is hugely popular with
    the general Russian population. Ivan Sixpack loves that guy. Even
    Ivana Winecooler gets all hot and bothered when she sees Putin on
    vacation half-naked in camou pants.))) 'SILOVIKI' TAKE THE REINS IN
    POST-OLIGARCHY RUSSIA

    By Victor Yasmann

    The speculation surrounding Russia's upcoming Duma elections in
    December and the March 2008 presidential election swung into high gear
    this month, but the key question is not whether the country will take
    a new direction but rather how the status quo, the existing
    arrangement of political forces, will be maintained.

    Virtually all key positions in Russian political life -- in government
    and the economy -- are controlled by the so-called "siloviki," a
    blanket term to describe the network of former and current
    state-security officers with personal ties to the Soviet-era KGB and
    its successor agencies. The unexpected replacement of former Prime
    Minister Mikhail Fradkov by former Federal Financial Monitoring
    Service Director Viktor Zubkov is the latest consolidation of this
    group's grip on power in Russia. Although Zubkov is not an
    intelligence officer by background, he has become one de facto during
    his years at the Financial Monitoring Service, and he has intimate
    knowledge of where the country's legal and illegal assets are to be
    found.

    The core of the siloviki group, led by former KGB officer and Federal
    Security Service (FSB) Director Vladimir Putin himself, comprises
    about 6,000 security-service alumni who entered the corridors of power
    during Putin's first term. Now, as Putin's second term winds down,
    their clout is virtually unassailable. Their locus of power is in the
    presidential administration: deputy chief of staff Igor Sechin cut his
    teeth in the KGB's First Main Directorate, which oversaw foreign
    intelligence operations and has since been transformed into the
    Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR). Fellow deputy chief of staff
    Viktor Ivanov worked for the KGB's main successor organization, the
    FSB, which is responsible for counterintelligence operations.

    First Deputy Prime Minister and former Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov
    is a retired SVR colonel general, and he currently oversees the
    military-industrial sector and the high-tech sectors of the
    economy. He also supervises the Defense Ministry, which is nominally
    run by a civilian, Anatoly Serdyukov.

    As might be expected (although not always the case), an FSB colonel
    general, Nikolai Patrushev, heads the FSB. In addition, FSB Army
    General Rashid Nurgaliyev heads the Interior Ministry, which controls
    both ordinary police and some 180,000 internal troops. Andrei
    Belyaninov, a colleague of Putin's from his days as a KGB agent in
    Germany in the 1980s, heads the Federal Customs Service, while FSB
    Lieutenant General Konstantin Romodanovsky is the director of the
    Federal Migration Service. In their current roles, Belyaninov and
    Romodanovsky are able to monitor the movement of goods and people to
    and from Russia. Former FSB Director Colonel General Valentin Sobolev
    is acting secretary of the Russian Security Council.

    Siloviki figures also dominate Russia's relations with neighboring
    countries. FSB Army General Nikolai Bordyuzha chairs the Collective
    Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), a pro-Russian alliance comprising
    Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Tajikistan, and
    Uzbekistan. SVR Lieutenant General Grigory Rapota presides over the
    Eurasian Economic Community, which unites the same countries except
    Armenia.

    Other key siloviki are Rosoboroneksport head Sergei Chemezov, who also
    served in Germany with Putin, and Boris Boyarskov, who heads the
    Culture and Mass Communications Ministry agency that supervises the
    mass media, telecommunications, and cultural heritage.


    Never in Russian or Soviet history has the political and economic
    influence of the security organs been as pervasive as it is now. And
    as the March 2008 presidential election approaches, three of the four
    most commonly named potential successors are siloviki.


    Sergei Ivanov is widely viewed as the current front-runner. A close
    confidante of Putin's, he, like the president, began his career in the
    Leningrad KGB's Main Directorate. Ivanov made his debut with
    international business and financial elites at the St. Petersburg
    Economic Forum, where he delivered a forward-looking address laying
    out Russia's course through the year 2020. Ivanov sounded both liberal
    and presidential, beginning his speech with a promise that Russia in
    15 years will be a democratic state "based on the rule of law and
    respecting the rights of the individual."

    Another often-mentioned possible successor is Deputy Prime Minister
    Sergei Naryshkin. According to some reports (including "Kommersant" in
    February), Naryshkin studied in the same group as Putin at the KGB's
    foreign intelligence training center. In the 1980s, he served at the
    Soviet Embassy in Brussels, possibly as a KGB agent. In February,
    Putin placed Naryshkin in charge of foreign trade and relations with
    the CIS. He also heads the board of directors of the Channel One state
    television network. Because of his last name -- the Naryshkins are an
    old noble family that included the mother of Peter the Great -- he is
    often associated with the growing monarchist sentiment in Russia.

    The third silovik-connected potential presidential successor is
    Russian Railways President Vladimir Yakunin. During the Soviet era,
    Yakunin worked abroad for the Committee on Foreign Trade Relations and
    the Soviet mission to the United Nations, both of which were fronts
    for KGB foreign intelligence operations. Interestingly, during this
    period he was awarded a state order of military merit, which is
    normally awarded only for combat service.

    Yakunin heads the board of trustees of the St. Andrew Foundation, a
    powerful patriotic organization set up in 1992 to promote the
    restoration of national values. Under Yakunin, the foundation has
    launched several high-profile projects, including the repatriation and
    reburial of two anticommunist heroes -- White Guard General Anton
    Denikin and philosopher Ivan Ilin. Yakunin also heads the Center of
    National Military Glory. The media often refer to this body as "the
    order of Russian Orthodox Chekists" because its boards also include
    Ivanov, FSB Colonel General Viktor Cherkesov (who heads the Federal
    Antinarcotics Committee), and FSB Major General Georgy Poltavchenko
    (who is Putin's envoy to the Central Federal District).

    The true size of the siloviki community is difficult to assess
    accurately because many Soviet citizens cooperated covertly with the
    KGB, and lustration in Russia has been staunchly resisted. The media
    occasionally reported, for instance, that former Prime Minister
    Fradkov, who worked abroad for Soviet foreign-trade organizations in
    the 1980s, had links to the KGB. At least one of his sons is known to
    be an FSB officer. Likewise, there have been persistent media reports
    that Russian Orthodox Patriarch Aleksy II cooperated with the KGB
    while a priest in Estonia. The Orthodox Church denies these reports.

    As the siloviki clan has tightened its grip politically, it has also
    made vast inroads into the Russian economy, spearheading the
    accelerating expansion of the state sector and the formation of new
    state corporations. Its members have played key roles in the
    renationalization of the Russian oil industry; since 2001, about 44
    percent of the oil sector has returned to state ownership. Much of the
    process has been quiet, but it came to international attention with
    the crackdown and destruction of oil major Yukos beginning in
    2004. The primary beneficiary of the dismantling of Yukos was Rosneft
    -- whose board is headed by deputy presidential chief of staff and
    silovik clan leader Sechin. Rosneft is now Russia's biggest oil
    company, with a capitalization of $78 billion and annual production of
    about 100 million tons.

    Renationalization in the oil sector continues, with former Russneft
    head Mikhail Gutseriyev becoming the latest victim. He has been forced
    to flee the country to avoid arrest, and the assets of Russneft,
    Russia's seventh-largest oil company, have been frozen by a court
    order. A poll of leading political and economic experts by the Moscow
    Institute of Situation Analysis in April concluded that the political
    influence of the richest businesspeople is "negligibly small" compared
    to that of the siloviki.

    The next, more ambitious step in the silovik concentration of economic
    power is believed to be the creation of state-controlled
    megacorporations that would dominate key sectors of the economy by
    merging the major companies within them. The goal seems to be a form
    of authoritarian capitalism such as can be found in some Southeast
    Asian countries.

    In May, the Kremlin created the United Aviation Corporation, which
    combines leading civilian and military aircraft producers such as MiG,
    Sukhoi, and Tupolev. United Aviation is headed by Sergei Ivanov. Two
    months later, the Kremlin followed up with the United Shipbuilding
    Company that combines all Russia's civilian and naval
    shipbuilders. United Shipbuilding is headed by Naryshkin.

    Similar state-driven consolidation is afoot in the banking sector as
    well. After a series of merging acquisitions, state-controlled
    Vneshtorgbank (VTB) has emerged as the first major Russian player on
    global financial markets. Two of the bank's vice presidents -- former
    FSB Economics Department head Yury Zaostrovtsev and Dmitry Patrushev,
    son of the current FSB director -- anchor this financial giant firmly
    to the silovik group.

    Such megacorporations are expected to swallow up Russia's defense,
    nuclear, and automaking sectors in the near future, and it is a safe
    bet siloviki will be found to head all of them.

    Copyright (c) 2007 RFE/RL, Inc. All rights reserved.
Working...
X