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  • Gary Kasparov

    ABC Regional Online, Australia

    Gary Kasparov

    Sunday, 3 April 2005

    This week on Sunday Profile, the world's greatest chess player Gary
    Kasparov talks of his decision to leave the world of professional
    chess and enter into the fray of Russian politics. Kasparov, who
    has accused President Vladimir Putin of behaving like a 'tsar', is
    determined to restore democracy in Russia and to thwart any plans
    Putin may have to extend his term.

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    Sunday Profile Transcript: April 3, 2005

    Introduction:

    Hello, Monica Attard here and you're listening to Sunday
    Profile. Tonight Garry Kasparov, the world chess champion who's decided
    to ditch the chessboard for a rather more unpredictable existence as
    a politician in his motherland Russia.

    Well Garry Kasparov became the world junior chess champion at the age
    of 16. His first match in the Big League in 1985 was against Anatoli
    Karpov and it was the longest in chess history. Indeed, authorities
    called off the match after Karpov began showing psychological and
    physical strains after 48 games. But 6 months later Kasparov won
    a re-match, successfully defending the title against Karpov three
    times. In 1996 he was the first world champion to win against Deep
    Blue, the IBM Computer, though it has to be said that Deep Blue
    struck back a year later. Even though younger prodigies have started
    to make their mark, Kasparov is still the world's number one chess
    master though having conquered all comers; Kasparov said his heart
    was no longer in the game. Perhaps it's the search for a new passion
    which has inspired him to take on a new opponent, Russia's President,
    Vladimir Putin. Kasparov has entered politics. He thinks his career
    in chess has set him up perfectly for the role of nemesis to the
    all-powerful increasingly autocratic one-time KGB spy, Putin. The
    man who once commanded the most overwhelming support of the Russian
    people. Kasparov told me from Moscow where he's returned to take on
    the Kremlin that under President Putin Russia's democratic games have
    all but disappeared.

    Kasparov:

    I don't think they're under threat anymore. I think they're ceasing
    to exist everyday and I think we have very steady records of
    President Putin who inherited the country with democratic values,
    with independent parliament, with independent media with elections
    of the government and other officials and now all press is under his
    control, parliament is just another branch of executive office and
    direct elections of the governments is already cancelled. And all
    his steps that are being prepared are giving us clear indications
    that presidential elections will be turned into another farce in 2008
    as well.

    Attard:

    Do you believe that president Putin will alter the constitution to
    run again in 2008?

    Kasparov:

    I don't think we should say 'run again', it's...we're talking about
    reappointment. Putin can't afford to leave the office because he will
    be in real danger of being prosecuted for things he and his people
    did during their stay in power. So I think that it's no longer a
    question about election or running or having campaign, it's building
    mechanisms that will allow them to stay in power as long as they want.

    Attard:

    Why wouldn't President Putin, if he has done things as you say that
    are wrong, why wouldn't he do what his predecessor Boris Yeltsin did
    and do a deal with the authorities to escape prosecution?

    Kasparov:

    Yeltsin's rule was very different because Yeltsin did anything wrong
    against Russian democracy. In 1998 democracy nearly impeached President
    Yeltsin and he was well criticised in different print media and TV
    stations and he accepted it as the price of being leader of democratic
    state. Putin had very different view on democratic institutions and
    also he erased the boundaries between power and business and there
    are many indications, there are many facts showing that Putin's people
    enriched themselves by using power mechanisms so that's why for them
    losing power means losing their fortunes.

    Attard:

    Let's assume that President Putin doesn't move to change the
    constitution to run again in 2008, do you believe that he's in the
    process now of handpicking a successor and who might that be?

    Kasparov:

    The only successor to President Putin is President Putin himself
    and we could of course dream about President Putin stepping down
    voluntarily and picking out successor which would be probably as bad
    as him but at the end of the day he knows better than anyone else
    that no successor could guarantee him and his people a good deal that
    will stay. Probably Putin also gave some guarantees to Yeltsin and
    Yeltsin's people but we could see that these guarantees evaporated
    at a time when Putin needed it.

    Attard:

    Have you met him?

    Kasparov:

    No. I've met enough KGB colonels in my life; I don't think this
    meeting will make any difference.

    Attard:

    I believe you would have in your time. Now you say that you will make
    sure that a new president is elected in 2008, how will you do that?

    Kasparov:

    I think that it's a vital moment now for Russian democracy to convince
    people that it's only our actions, our joined actions and protests
    could force Kremlin to reconsider its plans to abolish presidential
    elections and even we have a candidate that is not very much accepted
    by my liberal standards, it's not about the quality of this president
    or his or her political views but it's about the process of the
    election itself. It's absolutely vital now for Russia to make sure
    that democratic institutions will be resurrected and will go through
    the election process.

    Attard:

    So are you saying that you'll be encouraging Russians to protest?

    Kasparov:

    There are many ways of showing your protest and discontent without the
    actions of Kremlin. We already witnessed demonstrations against some
    of the governmental actions in January and February but there are more
    and more people in my country recognise the dangers of having their
    governors appointed by Putin and having no influence in parliament
    because Parliament today is also following instructions from Kremlin
    and no longer represents its people.

    Attard:

    Now Garry Kasparov, you've left the world of chess although not
    completely as I understand it and you've entered the political fray
    in Russia, are you not frightened?

    Kasparov:

    Well, I'm not so naïve to ignore any potential threat to my well-being
    but at the same time if you make a decision to fight for future of
    your own country you have to consider all the consequences.

    Attard:

    And what do you think some of those consequences could be?

    Kasparov:

    I don't know but it's very clear that Putin and his people they well
    probably use any means to stay in power but I don't want to think
    about the worst scenario but I'm taking all the necessary precautions,
    as much as I can do under these circumstances.

    Attard:

    So you have heightened security I assume?

    Kasparov:

    yes I have some security that could protect me against provocations
    but of course there are more terrible actions that could not be
    stopped by any security.

    Attard:

    Do you hope that your very high profile both in Russia and
    internationally may go some way towards protecting you?

    Kasparov:

    Probably. I think it will be more difficult to deal with me as Putin
    deals with Khordokovsky. It would more difficult to invent tales about
    my participation in a number of crimes that are being now allegedly
    thrown at Khordokovsky but at the same time, I wouldn't overestimate
    the importance of my popularity in the country and abroad but at the
    end of the day it's not as important because I believe that my presence
    here could make some difference and it could encourage people. It's
    more sort of about sending them the message that if I do participate
    it may change something. If I do not participate it just tells them
    that even the person with this kind of protection doesn't want to
    challenge Putin's regime so that's why it's absolutely hopeless.

    Attard:

    So Garry Kasparov have you had any response, any reaction to your
    return to Russia and to your decision to enter the political field,
    from the Kremlin, from President Putin and his entourage?

    Kasparov:

    I could read out stories about me in the Kremlin controlled press,
    I consider that's a message.

    Attard:

    And are they negative?

    Kasparov:

    Of course, yes. If they consider Kremlin it's all-negative. So far
    it's just more of talking about my background and saying that I'm
    not prepared for that and they're trying to ridicule my decision but
    at the end of the day I could expect other stories because Kremlin
    controlled press never stops short of inventing stories about Putin's
    political opponents.

    Attard:

    Well can we talk for a minute about your preparedness to take on
    this job? Why do you think that you, Garry Kasparov, excellent chess
    player, master though you may be have any hope of changing the course
    of events in Russia? At the end of the day, you're not even Russian are
    you? Does that, do you think that goes against you in the first place?

    Kasparov:

    Depends what you mean 'not Russian'.

    Attard:

    Well you were born in Azerbaijan as I understand it.

    Kasparov:

    Yes I am born in Baku and I am half Armenian-half Jewish but my native
    tongue is Russian, my culture is Russian, my education is Russian. At
    the end of the day Soviet Union was the success of Russian Empire which
    was multinational multi-confessional state and as long as w live in
    the same state I'm part of this state as much as President Putin but I
    don't have to run for Presidency in Russia to feel good about myself. I
    already completed more than many people could have dreamed of...

    Attard:

    Indeed.

    Kasparov:

    But I think that my presence could make some difference and that's
    what I always believed in my life. I have some strategical vision,
    I could calculate some, few moves ahead and I have an intellect
    that is badly missed in the country which is run by generals and
    colonels and also I hope that my presence will help people to get
    united. It's more of fighting for restoration of democracy rather
    than campaigning for any high office and I don't have any insurance
    that it will succeed. I think our chances are not looking great today
    but the only way to fail for me is just not to try.

    Attard:

    Now it has been written of you by one particular chess writer that you
    don't kindly to people who waste your time or say things that don't
    make any sense, now I can imagine how true that would be of you in
    a chess sense and I'm wondering how that's going to transpose into a
    political sense in Russia. We see news footage this week of Vladimir
    Jirinovski, the ultranationalist in the Duma, the Russian Parliament
    in a fist cuff fight with other parliamentarians. Now that doesn't
    seem to me to be something that you would tolerate very easily. Am
    I wrong in saying that?

    Kasparov:

    I don't think that any scenes of Russian Parliament is a
    reflection of Russian political life. Jirinovski is the best-paid
    clown. All responsible to KGB and the man who he fought with belongs
    probably to another faction of the same organisation. It's another
    ultranationalist. So Russian Parliament today is a bunch of puppets
    that just fall in with the instructions from Kremlin. The real
    political life in Russia unfortunately is not in the parliament but
    on the streets and in the media. So that's why today the only way
    to restore democracy in Russia is to make sure that people could
    influence the decisions of the parliament and Kremlin. Otherwise the
    Russian political life will be reduced to the clowns fighting in the
    parliament premises.

    Attard:

    Now you haven't ruled out taking a crack at the Presidency yourself
    in 2008. Can you see yourself running for president?

    Kasparov:

    I'm not looking that many moves ahead. I believe that we need
    a healthier position first. It's about stopping the bleeding. The
    country is not yet ready to start a new campaign for presidential
    elections because first we have to make sure that we have this
    mechanism restored and we have election that looks like elections
    not just appointment of the Kremlin candidate.

    Attard:

    What sort of democracy do you think Russians want? Do they want
    democracy American style or British style? What do they want do
    you think?

    Kasparov:

    I don't know. Unfortunately last few years and last two elections,
    2000 and 2004 the opinion of Russian public was not asked properly
    and I think it's probably premature to judge the form of Russian
    democracy. I would rather to say it should look like French democracy
    in a presidential republic with a really strong parliament rather than
    British or German type. But Russians are dreaming about better living,
    about the quality of the living standards, the economical hardship
    and the fact that country's getting richer with these high oil prices
    the living standards are deteriorating across our land. Those issues
    are far more important for ordinary man than the structure of the
    political system.

    Attard:

    Yes I was going to ask you because I've just returned from a year
    or so in Moscow and it seemed to me that a lot of Russians see wild
    capitalism and democracy as being essentially the same thing. Is that
    the way, do you think that's the correct observation?

    Kasparov:

    I think Russians today have a distorted picture of capitalism,
    liberal democracy and market economy. The only way to experience them
    was just to go through the system that was created by Yeltsin and
    enhanced by Putin and it's not capitalism, it's not liberal democracy,
    it's not market economy, it's state monopoly and it's, there is no
    free competition and most important elements of free market are not
    installed in Russia. Virtually you can't see the boundaries between
    the business and the government. No one knows where the business ends
    and the government begins and vice versa and I think that it should
    take some time before Russian people could recognise the virtues of
    liberal democracy and market economy but we need first to make sure
    that political system will be based on those principles.

    Attard:

    Do you think that recent events in the former soviet states of Ukraine,
    Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, the displays of people power are having any
    impact inside Russia itself?

    Kasparov:

    I don't know about Kyrgyzstan but definitely Ukraine had quite serious
    impact on the many Russians. They could see that ordinary people in
    Ukraine which is a bordering state, very close to Russia, the people
    of this state are, they didn't want to tolerate anymore the power
    abuse by Ukrainian officials and they not only protested but they
    were successful and I think people in Russia are slowly recognising
    the power of the protest, the power of the street manifestations,
    the power of unity and they also recognise that at a certain point
    the government could crack under this pressure.

    Attard:

    But they've had that experience before have they not? They've
    experienced people power. They came out onto the streets in tens of
    hundreds of thousands during the reign of Mikhail Gorbachev and at
    the end they got Boris Yeltsin. Do you think they still believe in
    the notion of people power?

    Kasparov:

    Yes but probably it's a demonstration of people power, they got Boris
    Yeltsin, the man they wanted. It's just another story how these men run
    the country but one could argue that first couple of years were quite
    successful but the net result was that they removed communist leaders
    and replaced them by a man who was popularly elected. I think it's a
    long but steady somehow painful educational process. I think Russian
    people are learning that democracy is not an alien thing; it's not
    a western invention. It's probably the most affordable mechanism to
    solve problems inside the country, inside the society because Putin
    proved to all of us that democracy has a world of alternatives,
    security forces and police and power abuse and that's why I think
    eventually the people of Russia will embrace democracy as the least
    costly institution to help them to solve their daily problems.

    Attard:

    Now you say that you want to see Russia join Europe. Do you think
    that the Russians will embrace that as well?

    Kasparov:

    If majority of my compatriots could see economical benefit of joining
    Europe it will happen. So far it's very hard to prove that joining
    Europe or joining any other international organisation could change
    their lives for better and that's why we have to make sure that they
    just recognise the values of liberal democracy and market economy
    first.

    Attard:

    Now it's been 15 years since the collapse of Soviet communism. To
    what extent do you think Soviet reality still dominates Russia?

    Kasparov:

    Unfortunately we can't write them off. Some of the myth of the Soviet
    time are still dominating the minds or many Russians. Now with the
    60th anniversary of D Day Putin's government is trying to restore the
    positive image of Stalin and they all try, they're trying to play with
    this nostalgia of the time when the Soviet Union was one of the two
    superpowers and the country looked very very strong and unfortunately
    many people they tend to believe that there were many good things
    that were lost in the past while disregarding the terrible crimes
    committed by the Soviet regime. I think it will disappear with the
    new generation coming into the political scene in Russia but first we
    have to stop the propaganda, the shameful propaganda used by Kremlin
    to rehabilitate these old types.

    Attard:

    Can I ask you, at a personal level: Have you always been interested
    in politics?

    Kasparov:

    As a professional chess player in a communist country I was involved in
    this political turbulence from early days because chess in the Soviet
    Union was a very important ideological tool to parade the superiority
    of the communist regime over the decadent west and that's why I learnt
    that political factors, they're very important in the decision making
    process in the chess world and as a chess player who could analyse
    the reality that surrounded me I could make my own conclusions and it
    didn't take long to recognise the shortcomings of the Soviet regime
    and to see the values of the free world. And it was inevitable for
    me to step into the political fight after playing these long endless
    matches with Anatoli Karpov who was my greatest rival and also darling
    of the system and I learned that fighting on the chess board could
    also have an impact on the political climate in the country because
    for many Soviet citizens in mid 80's the Kasparov-Karpov matches were
    sort of a symbol of fight between new and old.

    Attard:

    Did you ever make peace with Karpov?

    Kasparov:

    We have reasonable relations as two professional players but our
    political views are very different. Karpov was Communist Russian
    Nationalist and I belonged to an opposite part of political spectrum.

    Attard:

    So you still haven't found, you never had a common language and you
    still don't have one with him?

    Kasparov:

    No, we speak Russian both. That's our common language; I don't think
    we have anything else in common.

    Attard:

    Garry Kasparov, you won't miss chess?

    Kasparov:

    I don't know. I don't want to give an answer that I'm sorry in
    a few months or a few years time. It's quite difficult for me to
    imagine my life without chess. So I didn't stop analysing games and
    following games of my colleagues or ex-colleagues now or working on
    my chess books and I hope that while I continue working on my great
    predecessors this is the long series and I completed four volumes
    now. Volumes five and six are on the way. I will be keeping my ties
    with this game and I may play some exhibition games so I don't want
    to quit the game of chess completely. I just decided and it's a firm
    decision not to play competitive chess anymore.

    Attard:

    Because you have said that your mental powers were waning and that's
    one of the reasons that you gave up.

    Kasparov:

    'Mental power waning?' Maybe you're right but I'm still number one and
    I just recently won a major tournament ahead of my toughest rivals so
    I think I had a few years ahead of me if I decided to stay. You know
    people say 3, 4, 5 years but definitely 2 or 3 to play as successfully
    as I played before. It was not about losing my mental power; it's
    about not feeling good about my contribution to the game. I reached
    more than I could have imagined in the game of chess and playing a
    few years, winning a few more tournaments wouldn't add anything to
    my own self-satisfaction. I sense that my energy, my experience could
    be used somewhere else.

    Attard:

    Well good luck. Garry Kasparov I thank you very very much for your
    time this evening.

    Kasparov:

    Well thanks for having me.

    Conclusion:

    And that was Garry Kasparov the one-time world chess master who's
    left the game to take on President Vladimir Putin and that ends Sunday
    Profile for this week. Thanks for listening and thanks also to Jennifer
    Feller the producer and to Dan Driscoll for technical support. I'm
    Monica Attard we're back next week so join me then. Coming up next:
    Speaking Out.

    Last Updated: 3/04/2005 9:36:00 PM AEST

    --Boundary_(ID_TdTEjo9Xz2o/T9HEp0a4pw)--
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