Putin Fails To Recognize People Power

NATO AIR

Senior Member
Jun 25, 2004
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USS Abraham Lincoln
bah humbug to him for being a tyranny exporting dictator

(the NYT and all of us will suffer a loss when safire retires at the end of the year)
http://www.nytimes.com/2004/12/06/o...Opinion/Editorials and Op-Ed/Op-Ed/Columnists

Putin's 'Chicken Kiev'
By WILLIAM SAFIRE

Published: December 6, 2004

The elder President Bush's most memorable foreign-policy blunder took place in Kiev in 1991, then under Communist rule. With the Soviet Union coming apart, the U.S. president - badly advised by the stability-obsessed "realist" Brent Scowcroft - made a speech urging Ukrainians yearning for independence to beware of "suicidal nationalism." His speech, which he now insists meant only "not so fast," was widely taken as advice to remain loyal to Moscow's empire.

I dubbed this the "Chicken Kiev" speech. That so infuriated Bush, who mistakenly saw the phrase as imputing cowardice rather than charging colossal misjudgment, that he has not spoken to me since.

Contrariwise, the reaction of President Vladimir Putin of Russia to the latest manifestation of the desire of the majority of the Ukrainian people for independence from Moscow is that of a dictator gripped by fear.

Putin's "Chicken Kiev" moment came when his plan to put in a Ukrainian puppet backfired. He put the Putin system of a phony election, so successful in Russia, in place: central control of major media, lavish government spending on its candidate, harassment of the opposition and, most of all, overt embrace by the powers that be in Moscow.

But Putin's Ukrainian puppets were sucked into the undercurrent called "people power." This unexpected democratic force manifests itself when dissenters are willing to defy authority in the streets and on the Internet; when troops and police are unwilling to fire on demonstrating compatriots; and when worldwide disapproval makes the costs of a crackdown prohibitive.

People power failed in Tiananmen Square because workers were not involved and China's rulers called in troops from outlying areas. But in this generation, peaceful uprisings have succeeded in Poland, Czechoslovakia, South Korea and Indonesia - and Russia.

Putin remembers all too well how people power worked in Moscow for Boris Yeltsin, overturning 70-year Communist rule; that is why he panicked this month. The K.G.B. alumnus hailed the fraudulent victory of his puppet prematurely; as protests rose, he summoned to Moscow the Ukrainian president, ostentatiously to give him marching orders; and with all else failing, he stooped to standard anti-Americanism.

The U.S. sought the "dictatorship of international affairs," Putin charged, deriding Bush's "beautiful pseudo-democratic phraseology." His spin-niks called attention to the opposition candidate's American wife, and hinted at danger ahead in case the stolen election did not stay stolen: Putin's fallback position is to encourage the division of Ukraine, absorbing the pro-Russian east and rejecting the pro-European west - a breakup plan he also has in mind for the "near abroad" people of independent Georgia.

This is the reaction of a man who fears the contagion of people power. Up to now, conventional wisdom has been that - with some brave exceptions - most Russians long for an authority figure like Putin, embrace his takeover of parliament and provincial government, believe all they see and hear from obedient state-controlled media and befog Russia's declining population with vodka.

It could be, however, that Putin sees in his Ukrainian setback the handwriting on the Berlin Wall. He knows how many Ukrainians welcomed Hitler's army as a lesser evil than Stalin. He senses the danger to his rule of a Ukraine that turns westward to join the European Union. He fears that the outbreak of people power in his huge neighbor could abort his plan to change the Russian constitution to make himself president for life.

As an unreconstructed idealist (and, as the global mushrooming of democracy proves, idealists are the real realists), I believe people power will be unstoppable. But new democracies will not be our clones, and newly liberated peoples will irritate the superpower.

The pockmarked fresh face in Ukraine has already promised to withdraw that nation's 1,600 troops from Iraq. The repressed youth of Iran, when they overthrow the repressive theocracy, will still press for a nuclear bomb. The free federalists of Iraq will cut shadowy deals with post-Chirac France and post-Putin Russia. The young lion of a democratic Palestine will lie down most grudgingly with the lamb of Israel.

Thorns in tomorrow's rose garden? You bet. But it is America's calling, as well as in our self-interest, to foster the flowering of freedom.
 

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