Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Early gambit to fill Putin vacuum: Garry Kasparov vying to succeed

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

  • Early gambit to fill Putin vacuum: Garry Kasparov vying to succeed

    Christian Science Monitor
    May 3 2005

    Early gambit to fill Putin vacuum

    Several men, including chess great Garry Kasparov, are vying to
    succeed him. But Putin may stay in office.

    By Fred Weir

    MOSCOW The effort to succeed Russian President Vladimir Putin is
    getting started three years early, with a gaggle of unlikely candidates
    lining up at the starting gate.

    They include a disgraced former prime minister, a world chess
    grandmaster, the current Minister of Defense, and the pro-Kremlin
    speaker of Russia's parliament, the Federal Assembly. Although the
    Constitution bars him from seeking a third term, many experts say Mr.
    Putin cannot be counted out.

    Russians are calling it the "2008 problem." Putin has constructed an
    increasingly autocratic system that depends largely on his personal
    control. Unless a trusted successor takes the helm, some fear that a
    change in leadership could provoke conflict among Russia's fractious
    elites.

    A law passed last month by the State Duma, Russia's powerful
    pro-Kremlim chamber of the Federal Assembly, will create a Public
    Chamber, a citizens' assembly made up of representatives handpicked by
    Putin. Experts say it could be the launchpad for a new constitutional
    project that might extend the president's term or return him to office
    under a new system of power.

    Putin weaker

    Putin, elected to a second four-year term by an electoral landslide
    last March, seemed unassailable just a few months ago. But a series
    of political shocks, including a democratic upheaval in neighboring
    Ukraine and an ongoing wave of protests by impoverished Russian
    pensioners, have unnerved the Kremlin and inspired a few opponents
    to position themselves as presidential candidates.

    "A number of disastrous mistakes of the authorities have led to a very
    serious crisis of power," says Andrei Piontkovsky, director of the
    independent Center for Strategic Studies in Moscow. "The main problem
    is a dramatic loss of confidence in Putin by the power elites. This
    has plunged the system into instability, and brought new challengers
    into the open."

    The would-be candidates for Putin's job include former Prime Minister
    Mikhail Kasyanov, fired by the Kremlin a year ago. He has made
    several statements slamming Putin's authoritarian drift. And he's
    hinted that he might lead a democratic revolt such as the one that
    overturned a fraudulent election and vaulted former Prime Minister
    Viktor Yushchenko into Ukraine's presidency late last year.

    "The main thing is not who it's going to be," Mr. Kasyanov said
    recently. "The main thing is that whoever comes to power spearheads
    a movement toward democratic values."

    In March, Kremlin critic Garry Kasparov, arguably the strongest
    chess player in history, quit the game to nurture what many experts
    say may be his own presidential run. "I've done everything in chess
    that I could," Mr. Kasparov said. "Now I intend to use my intellect
    and strategic thinking in Russian politics."

    While few experts take Mr. Kasparov's challenge seriously, some say
    Kasyanov could be a key contender. "Kasyanov has calculated it well,"
    says Alexander Konovalov, director of the independent Institute
    of Strategic Assessments in Moscow. "The fact they've started
    campaigning now suggests the present authorities may not have three
    years. Something may happen soon."

    Russia's largest democratic liberal party, Yabloko, which failed to
    win the votes needed to enter Federal Assembly in 2003, announced
    recently that it aims to build a broad democratic coalition to serve
    as a springboard for anti-Putin forces in the 2007 Duma elections
    and the presidential polls in 2008.

    "We need to unite everyone who believes Russia has a chance to be a
    European country, with democracy, press freedom, and a competitive
    economy," says Alexander Shishlov, a member of Yabloko's governing
    bureau. "We must move into action now."

    Experts say the Kremlin has ordered two Putin confidantes, Defense
    Minister Sergei Ivanov and Duma Speaker Boris Gryzlov, to raise their
    public profiles as potential presidential heirs in 2008.

    But the failure of former Ukrainian President Leonid Kuchma to secure
    his own successor through fixed elections last year may have the
    Kremlin doubting its ability to carry off a similar operation.

    "The events in Ukraine scared Russia's authorities," says Alexei
    Makarkin, deputy director of the Center for Political Technologies
    in Moscow. "It showed the system of control, though stable now,
    has its limits."

    Former President Boris Yeltsin, seriously ill and hobbled by corruption
    scandals, kept everyone guessing until the last moment about his plans
    for the succession. He went through a string of prime ministers -
    the legal heir under Russian law - before appointing Putin in August
    1999. Four months later, Mr. Yeltsin abruptly resigned, giving Putin
    time to consolidate his grip as acting president before having to
    face elections.

    A likely scenario, many experts suggest, is that the Kremlin will do
    an end run around all its opponents by reworking Russia's Constitution
    to keep Putin himself in office after 2008.

    "A new group of oligarchs has come to power under Putin" who stand
    to lose a lot if he leaves, says Dmitri Oreshkin, an expert with the
    Merkator Group, a political consultancy. "Putin himself has developed
    a taste for power. It would be difficult for him to part from it."

    'Public Chamber'

    The Public Chamber will be a kind of parallel parliament, proposed by
    Putin after last September's terrorist siege in Beslan to "increase
    citizens' participation in government."

    All delegates to the 126-member body would be appointed by the
    president or his representatives. The Chamber could put forward
    sweeping constitutional revisions by the end of this year.

    "The Public Chamber can put forward the initiative to change the
    Constitution, and it will seem to have come from the public," says
    Mr. Pribylovsky. He says Putin has the necessary backing in the Duma
    and Russia's regions to impose a new charter, which could include
    a third term for the president or a whole new system of power, but
    needs to get started now to have changes in place by 2008.

    The idea of rewriting fundamental law to suit one man may sound
    odd to Americans, but Russian Constitutions have frequently been the
    playthings of individual leaders. Every major head of state since Czar
    Nicholas II has produced his own, including Vladimir Lenin in 1924,
    Joseph Stalin in 1936, Leonid Brezhnev in 1978, and Boris Yeltsin in
    1993. The last Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, was working on his
    version when the USSR collapsed in 1991.

    "Putin's citadel has weakened," says Mr. Oreshkin. "The idea at the top
    now is that they should do everything to stay in power, at any cost."
Working...
X