Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin ( ; born 7 October
1952) was the second
President of
Russia and is the current
Prime Minister of Russia as well as
chairman of
United Russia and
Chairman of the Council of
Ministers of the
Union
of Russia and Belarus. He became
acting President
on 31 December 1999, when president
Boris
Yeltsin resigned in a surprising move, and then Putin won the
2000 presidential
election. In 2004, he was
re-elected for a second
term lasting until 7 May 2008.
Due to constitutionally mandated term limits, Putin was ineligible
to run for a third consecutive Presidential term. After the victory
of his successor,
Dmitry Medvedev,
in the
2008
presidential elections, he was then nominated by the latter to
be Russia's
Prime Minister;
Putin took the post on 8 May 2008.
Throughout his presidential terms and into his second term as Prime
Minister, Putin has enjoyed high approval ratings amongst the
Russian public. He is credited with bringing political stability
and re-establishing the rule of law. During his eight years in
office, due to strong macroeconomic management, important fiscal
policy reforms and a confluence of high oil prices, surging capital
inflows, and access to low-cost external financing, Russia's
economy bounced back from crisis, seeing
GDP
increase sixfold (72% in
PPP), poverty cut more than half and
average monthly salaries increase from $80 to $640, or by 150% in
real rates.
Analysts have described Putin's economic reforms as impressive.
During his presidency, Putin passed into law a series of
fundamental reforms, including a flat income tax of 13 percent, a
reduced profits tax, and new land and legal codes. At the same
time, his conduct in office has been questioned by domestic
political opposition, foreign governments and human rights
organizations for leading the
Second
Chechen War, for his record on internal human rights and
freedoms, and for his alleged bullying of the former
Soviet Republics. A new
group of
business magnate controlling significant swathes of Russia's
economy - such as
Gennady
Timchenko,
Vladimir Yakunin,
Yuriy Kovalchuk,
Sergey Chemezov, all with close personal
ties to Putin - emerged according to media reports.
Early life

Putin with his mother, Maria Ivanovna,
in July 1958
Putin was
born on 7 October 1952 in Leningrad
, USSR
(now
Saint
Petersburg
, Russia
), to parents
Vladimir Spiridonovich Putin (1911–1999) and Maria Ivanovna
Shelomova (1911–1998). His mother was a factory worker, and
his father was a
conscript in the
Soviet Navy, where he served in the
submarine fleet in the early 1930s,
subsequently serving with the
NKVD in a
sabotage group during
World
War II. Two elder brothers were born in the mid–1930s; one
died within a few months of birth, while the second succumbed to
diphtheria during the
siege of Leningrad.
His paternal
grandfather, Spiridon Ivanovich Putin (1879–1965) was employed at
Vladimir Lenin's dacha at Gorki
as a cook,
and after Lenin's death in 1924, he continued to work for Lenin's
wife, Nadezhda Krupskaya.
He would
later cook for Joseph Stalin when the
Soviet leader visited one of his dachas in the Moscow
region. Spiridon later was employed at a dacha belonging to
the Moscow City Committee of the
Communist Party of the
Soviet Union, at which the young Putin would visit him.
His autobiography,
Ot Pervogo Litsa, (English:
In the
First Person) which is based on Putin's interviews, speaks of
humble beginnings, including early years in a communal apartment in
Leningrad. On 1 September 1960 he started at School No. 193 at
Baskov Lane, just across from his house. By fifth grade he was one
of a few in a class of more than 45 pupils who was not yet a member
of the
Pioneers,
largely because of his rowdy behavior. In sixth grade he started
taking sport seriously in the form of
sambo and then
judo.
In his youth, Putin was eager to emulate the intelligence officer
characters played on the
Soviet screen by actors such as
Vyacheslav Tikhonov and
Georgiy Zhzhonov.
Putin graduated from the International Law branch of the Law
Department of the
Leningrad State University
in 1975, writing his final thesis on
international law. While at university he
became a member of the
Communist Party of the
Soviet Union, and remained a member until the party was
dissolved in December 1991. Also at the University he met
Anatoly Sobchak, who later played important
role in Putin'scareer.
KGB career

Putin in KGB uniform.
Putin
joined the KGB
in 1975 upon graduation from university, and
underwent a year's training at the 401st KGB school in Okhta, Leningrad. He then went on to work
briefly in the Second Department (counter-intelligence) before he
was transferred to the First Department, where among his duties was
the monitoring of foreigners and consular officials in Leningrad,
while using the cover of being a police officer with the CID.
According to
Yuri Felshtinsky and
Vladimir Pribylovsky, he served
at the Fifth Directorate of the KGB, which combated
political dissent in the Soviet Union. He
then received an offer to transfer to foreign intelligence
First Chief Directorate of the KGB
and was sent for additional year long training to the Dzerzhinsky
KGB Higher School in Moscow and then in the early eighties—the Red
Banner Yuri Andropov KGB Institute in Moscow (now the Academy of
Foreign Intelligence).
From 1985
to 1990 the KGB stationed Putin in Dresden
, East Germany
. Following the collapse of the East German
regime, Putin was recalled to the Soviet Union and returned to
Leningrad, where in June 1991 he assumed a position with the
International Affairs section of Leningrad State University,
reporting to Vice-Rector
Yuriy
Molchanov. In his new position, Putin maintained surveillance
on the student body and kept an eye out for recruits. It was during
his stint at the university that Putin grew reacquainted with
Anatoly Sobchak, then mayor of
Leningrad. Sobchak served as an Assistant Professor during Putin's
university years and was one of Putin's lecturers. Putin formally
resigned from the state security services on 20 August 1991, during
the KGB-supported abortive
putsch against Soviet President
Mikhail Gorbachev.
Early political career
In May 1990, Putin was appointed Mayor Sobchak's advisor on
international affairs. On 28 June 1991, he was appointed head of
the
Committee
for External Relations of the
Saint Petersburg Mayor's
Office, with responsibility for promoting international
relations and foreign investments. The Committee was also used to
register business ventures in Saint Petersburg. Less than one year
after taking control of the committee, Putin was investigated by a
commission of the city legislative council. Commission deputies
Marina Salye and
Yury Gladkov concluded that Putin understated
prices and issued licenses permitting the export of non-ferrous
metals valued at a total of $93 million in exchange for food aid
from abroad that never came to the city. The commission recommended
Putin be fired, but there were no immediate consequences. Putin
remained head of the Committee for External Relations until 1996.
While heading the Committee for External Relations, from 1992 to
March 2000 Putin was also on the advisory board of the German
real estate holding Saint Petersburg
Immobilien und Beteiligungs AG (SPAG) which has been investigated
by German prosecutors for money laundering. According to German
author and journalist
Gabriele
Krone-Schmalz, in contrast to Yeltsin and his "family," Putin
did not succumb to the temptation of corruption, pointing out a
citation from
Boris Berezovsky from
2002 - during the times of worst hostilities between the two -
according to which Putin never took bribes during his time in
office in St Petersburg.
From 1994 to 1997, Putin was appointed to additional positions in
the Saint Petersburg political arena. In March 1994 he became first
deputy head of the administration of the city of Saint Petersburg.
In 1995 (through June 1997) Putin led the Saint Petersburg branch
of the pro-government
Our Home Is
Russia political party. During this same period from 1995
through June 1997 he was also the head of the Advisory Board of the
JSC Newspaper
Sankt-Peterburgskie
Vedomosti.
In 1996,
Anatoly Sobchak lost the
Saint Petersburg mayoral election to
Vladimir Yakovlev. Putin was
called to Moscow and in June 1996 assumed position of a Deputy
Chief of the Presidential Property Management Department headed by
Pavel Borodin. He occupied this
position until March 1997. On 26 March 1997 President
Boris Yeltsin appointed Putin deputy chief of
Presidential
Staff, which he remained until May 1998, and chief of the Main
Control Directorate of the Presidential Property Management
Department (until June 1998).
On 27 June
1997, at the Saint Petersburg Mining
Institute
Putin defended his Candidate of Science dissertation in
economics titled "The Strategic Planning of Regional Resources
Under the Formation of Market Relations". According to
Clifford G Gaddy, a senior fellow
at The
Brookings Institution,
16 of the 20 pages that open a key section of Putin’s 218-page
thesis were copied either word for word or with minute alterations
from a management study, Strategic Planning and Policy, written by
US professors William King and David Cleland and translated into
Russian by a KGB-related institute in the early 1990s.
6 diagrams and tables were also copied. Gaddy doesn't believe
that the plagiarism was really intentional "in the sense that if
you had wanted to hide where the text came from you wouldn’t even
list this work in the bibliography." The dissertation committee
disagreed with Gaddy's claims. Chairman of the committee Natalia
Pashkevich, accused Gaddy of not reading the dissertation very
well. "There are references to the article mentioned. Everything is
done correctly... It is only a plus for Vladimir Putin that he used
not only Russian authors, but foreign ones as well." Anatoly
Suslov, provost of economics at the Mining Institute, who was
present at Putin dissertation defense, recalled "The opponent was
someone from Moscow. The defense went calmly. There were many
questions, of course, since it was a candidate's dissertation, but
there was no question of plagiarism. No one uncovered anything of
the kind. Vladimir Putin defended himself, and he prepared his own
work. All those conversations about dissertations being bought are
untrue. Ours isn't the kind of institute where you can do that." In
his dissertation, and in a later article published in 1999, Putin
advocated the idea of so-called
National champions, a concept that would
later become central to his political thinking.
On 25 May 1998, Putin was appointed First Deputy Chief of
Presidential Staff for
regions, replacing
Viktoriya
Mitina; and, on 15 July, the Head of the Commission for the
preparation of agreements on the
delimitation of power of regions and the
federal center attached to the President, replacing
Sergey Shakhray. After Putin's appointment,
the commission completed no such agreements, although during
Shakhray's term as the Head of the Commission there were 46
agreements signed.On 25 July 1998 Yeltsin appointed Vladimir Putin
head of the
FSB
(one of the successor agencies to the KGB), the position Putin
occupied until August 1999. He became a permanent member of the
Security
Council of the Russian Federation on 1 October 1998 and its
Secretary on 29 March 1999. In April 1999, FSB Chief Vladimir Putin
and Interior Minister
Sergei
Stepashin held a televised press conference in which they
discussed a video that had aired nationwide 17 March on the
state-controlled
Russia TV channel
which showed a naked man very similar to the
Prosecutor General of Russia,
Yury Skuratov, in bed with two young
women. Putin claimed that expert FSB analysis proved the man on the
tape to be Skuratov and that the orgy had been paid for by persons
investigated for criminal offences. Skuratov had been adversarial
toward President Yeltsin and had been aggressively investigating
government corruption.
On 15 June 2000,
The Times
reported that Spanish police discovered that Putin had secretly
visited a villa in Spain belonging to the oligarch
Boris Berezovsky on up to five different
occasions in 1999.
Premiership (1999)
On 9 August 1999, Vladimir Putin was appointed one of three First
Deputy Prime Ministers, which enabled him later on that day, as the
previous government led by
Sergei
Stepashin had been sacked, to be appointed acting Prime
Minister of the Government of the Russian Federation by President
Boris Yeltsin. Yeltsin also announced
that he wanted to see Putin as his successor. Later, that same day,
Putin agreed to run for the presidency. On 16 August, the
State Duma approved his appointment as Prime
Minister with 233 votes in favour (vs. 84 against, 17 abstained),
while a simple majority of 226 was required, making him Russia's
fifth PM in fewer than eighteen months. On his appointment, few
expected Putin, virtually unknown to the general public, to last
any longer than his predecessors. Yeltsin's main opponents and
would-be successors, Moscow Mayor
Yuriy
Luzhkov and former Chairman of the Russian Government
Yevgeniy Primakov, were already
campaigning to replace the ailing president, and they fought hard
to prevent Putin's emergence as a potential successor. Putin's
law-and-order image and his
unrelenting approach to the
renewed
crisis in Chechnya soon combined to raise his popularity and
allowed him to overtake all rivals.
Putin's rise to public office in August 1999 coincided with an
aggressive resurgence of the near-dormant conflict in the North
Caucasus, when a number of Chechens invaded a neighboring region
starting the
War in Dagestan. Both
in Russia and abroad, Putin's public image was forged by his tough
handling of the war. On assuming the role of acting President on 31
December 1999, Putin went on a previously scheduled visit to
Russian troops in Chechnya. In 2003, a controversial referendum was
held in Chechnya adopting a new constitution which declares the
Republic as a part of Russia. Chechnya has been gradually
stabilized with the parliamentary elections and the establishment
of a regional government. Throughout the war Russia has severely
disabled the Chechen rebel movement, although sporadic violence
still occurs throughout the North Caucasus.
While not formally associated with any party, Putin pledged his
support to the newly formed
Unity
Party, which won the second largest percentage of the popular
vote (23.3%) in the December 1999
Duma
elections, and in turn he was supported by it.
Presidency
First term (2000 – 2004)
His rise to Russia's highest office ended up being even more rapid:
on 31 December 1999, Yeltsin unexpectedly resigned and, according
to the constitution, Putin became
Acting President of
the Russian Federation.
The first Decree that Putin signed 31 December 1999, was the one
"On guarantees for former president of the Russian Federation and
members of his family". This ensured that "corruption charges
against the outgoing President and his relatives" would not be
pursued, although this claim is not strictly verifiable. Later on
12 February 2001 Putin signed a federal law on guarantees for
former presidents and their families, which replaced the similar
decree. In 1999, Yeltsin and his family were under scrutiny for
charges related to money-laundering by the Russian and Swiss
authorities.
While his opponents had been preparing for an election in June
2000, Yeltsin's resignation resulted in the elections being held
within three months, in March.
Presidential elections
were held on 26 March 2000; Putin won in the first round.
Vladimir Putin was inaugurated president on 7 May 2000. He
appointed Financial minister
Mikhail
Kasyanov as his Prime minister. Having announced his intention
to consolidate power in the country into a strict vertical, in May
2000 he issued a decree dividing 89
federal subjects of Russia
between 7
federal
districts overseen by representatives of him in order to
facilitate federal administration. In July 2000, according to a law
proposed by him and approved by the
Russian parliament, Putin also
gained the right to dismiss heads of the federal subjects.
During his first term in office, he moved to curb the political
ambitions of some of the Yeltsin-era
oligarchs such as former Kremlin
insider
Boris Berezovsky, who had
"helped Mr Putin enter the family, and funded the party that formed
Mr Putin's parliamentary base", according to BBC profile. At the
same time, according to
Vladimir Solovyev, it was
Alexey Kudrin who was instrumental in
Putin's assignment to the
Presidential
Administration of Russia to work with
Pavel Borodin, and according to Solovyev,
Berezovsky was proposing
Igor Ivanov
rather than Putin as a new president. A new
group of
business magnate, such as
Gennady
Timchenko,
Vladimir Yakunin,
Yuriy Kovalchuk,
Sergey Chemezov, with close personal ties to
Putin, emerged. A report by opposition leader
Boris Nemtsov claims, that during Putin's rule
corruption grew by the magnitude of several times and assumed
"systemic and institutionalised form." Corruption was characterized
by Putin himself as "the most wearying and difficult to resolve"
problem he encountered during his two terms in office.
Russia's legal reform continued productively during Putin's first
term. In particular, Putin succeeded in the codification of land
law and tax law, where progress had been slow during Yeltsin's
administration, because of Communist and oligarch opposition,
respectively. Other legal reforms included new codes on labour,
administrative, criminal, commercial and civil procedural law, as
well as a major statute on the Bar.
The first major challenge to Putin's popularity came in August
2000, when he was criticised for his alleged mishandling of the
Kursk
submarine disaster.
In December 2000, Putin sanctioned the law to change the
National Anthem of Russia. At the
time the Anthem had music by
Glinka
and no words. The change was to restore (with a minor modification)
the music of the post-1944 Soviet anthem by
Alexandrov, while the new
text was composed by
Mikhalkov.
Many in
the Russian press and in the international media warned that the
death of some 130 hostages in the special forces' rescue operation
during the 2002 Moscow theater hostage crisis
would severely damage President Putin's
popularity. However, shortly after the siege had ended, the
Russian president was enjoying record public approval ratings - 83%
of Russians declared themselves satisfied with Putin and his
handling of the siege.
The
arrest in early July 2003 of
Platon Lebedev, a
Mikhail Khodorkovsky partner and second
largest shareholder in
Yukos, on suspicion of
illegally acquiring a stake in a state-owned
fertilizer firm,
Apatit, in
1994, foreshadowed what by the end of the year became a
full-fledged prosecution of Yukos and its management for fraud,
embezzlement and tax evasion.
A few months before the elections, Putin fired Kasyanov's cabinet
and appointed relatively obscure
Mikhail
Fradkov to his place.
Sergey
Ivanov became the first civilian in Russia to take Defence
Minister position.
Second term (2004 – 2008)
14 March 2004,
Putin
was re-elected to the presidency for a second term, receiving
71% of the vote.
By the beginning of Putin's second term he had undermined every
independent source of political power in Russia, decreasing the
degree of pluralism in the Russian society.
Following the
Beslan school
hostage crisis, in September 2004 Putin suggested the creation
of the
Public Chamber of
Russia and launched an initiative to replace the direct
election of the Governors and Presidents of the
Federal subjects of Russia with a
system whereby they would be proposed by the President and approved
or disapproved by regional
legislatures.
He also initiated the merger of a number of federal subjects of
Russia into larger entities.
Whilst some in Beslan
blamed Putin
personally for the massacre in which hundreds died, his overall
popularity in Russia did not suffer.
According to various Russian and western media reports, one of the
major domestic issue concerns for President Putin were the problems
arising from the ongoing
demographic and social trends in
Russia, such as the death rate being higher than the birth
rate, cyclical poverty, and housing concerns. In 2005,
National Priority Projects
were launched in the fields of
health care,
education, housing and
agriculture. In his May 2006 annual
speech, Putin proposed increasing maternity benefits and
prenatal care for women. Putin was strident
about the need to reform the judiciary considering the present
federal judiciary "Sovietesque", wherein many of the judges hand
down the same verdicts as they would under the old Soviet judiciary
structure, and preferring instead a judiciary that interpreted and
implemented the code to the current situation. In 2005,
responsibility for federal prisons was transferred from the
Ministry of
Internal Affairs to the
Ministry of Justice. The most
high-profile change within the national priority project frameworks
was probably the 2006 across-the-board increase in wages in
healthcare and education, as well as the decision to modernise
equipment in both sectors in 2006 and 2007.
One of the most controversial aspects of Putin's second term was
the continuation of the criminal prosecution of Russia's richest
man, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, President of
YUKOS,
for fraud and
tax evasion. While much of
the international press saw this as a reaction against
Khodorkovsky's funding for political opponents of the Kremlin, both
liberal and communist, the Russian government had argued that
Khodorkovsky was engaged in corrupting a large segment of the Duma
to prevent changes in the tax code aimed at taxing windfall profits
and closing
offshore tax evasion vehicles.
Khodorkovsky's arrest was met positively by the Russian public, who
see the oligarchs as thieves who were unjustly enriched and robbed
the country of its natural wealth. Many of the initial
privatizations, including that of Yukos, are widely believed to
have been fraudulent– Yukos, valued at some $30 billion in 2004,
had been privatized for $110 million– and like other oligarchic
groups, the Yukos-Menatep name has been frequently tarred with
accusations of links to criminal organizations. Tim Osborne of GML,
the majority owner of Yukos, said in February 2008: "Despite claims
by President Vladimir Putin that the Kremlin had no interest in
bankrupting Yukos, the company's assets were auctioned at
below-market value. In addition, new debts suddenly emerged out of
nowhere, preventing the company from surviving. The main
beneficiary of these tactics was Rosneft. It is clearer now than
ever that the expropriation of Yukos was a ploy to put key elements
of the energy sector in the hands of Putin's retinue. Moreover, the
Yukos affair marked a turning point in Russia's commitment to
domestic property rights and the rule of law." The fate of Yukos
was seen by western media as a sign of a broader shift toward a
system normally described as
state
capitalism, Against the backdrop of the Yukos saga, questions
were raised about the actual destination of $13.1 billion
remitted in October 2005 by the state-run
Gazprom as payment for 75.7% stake in
Sibneft to
Millhouse-controlled
offshore accounts, after a series of generous
dividend payouts and another $3 billion received from Yukos in a
failed merger in 2003. In 1996,
Roman
Abramovich and
Boris Berezovsky
had acquired the controlling interest in Sibneft for $100 million
within the controversial
loans-for-shares program. Some prominent
Yeltsin-era billionaires, such as
Sergey Pugachyov, are reported to continue
to enjoy close relationship with Putin's Kremlin.
Although Russia's state intervention in the economy had been
usually heavily criticized in the West, a study by Bank of
Finland’s Institute for Economies in Transition (BOFIT) in 2008
showed that state intervention had had a positive impact to
corporate governance of many
companies in Russia: the formal indications of the quality of
corporate governance in Russia were higher in companies with state
control or with a stake held by the government.
Since February 2006, the political philosophy of Putin's
administration has often been described as a "
Sovereign democracy", the term being
used both with positive and pejorative
connotations. First proposed by
Vladislav Surkov in February 2006, the term
quickly gained currency within Russia and arguably unified various
political elites around it. According to its proponents'
interpretation, the government's actions and policies ought above
all to enjoy popular support within Russia itself and not be
determined from outside the country. However, as implied by expert
of the
Carnegie Endowment
Masha Lipman, "
Sovereign
democracy is a Kremlin coinage that conveys two messages:
first, that Russia's regime is democratic and, second, that this
claim must be accepted, period. Any attempt at verification will be
regarded as unfriendly and as meddling in Russia's domestic
affairs."
During the term, Putin was widely criticized in the West and also
by Russian liberals for what many observers considered a wide-scale
crackdown on
media freedom in
Russia.
Since the early 1990s, a number of Russian
reporters who have covered the situation in Chechnya
, contentious stories on organized crime, state and
administrative officials, and large businesses have been
killed. On 7 October 2006, Anna Politkovskaya, a journalist who ran
a campaign exposing corruption in the Russian army and its conduct in Chechnya
, was shot in the lobby of her apartment
building. The death of Politkovskaya triggered an outcry of
criticism of Russia in the Western media, with accusations that, at
best, Putin has failed to protect the country's new independent
media. When asked about Politkovskaya murder in his interview with
the German TV channel
ARD, Putin
said that her murder brings much more harm to the Russian
authorities than her publications. In January 2008,
Oleg Panfilov, head of the Center for
Journalism in Extreme Situations, claimed that a system of
"judicial terrorism" had started against journalists under Putin
and that more than 300 criminal cases had been opened against them
over the past six years.
At the same time, according to 2005 research by
VCIOM, the share of Russians approving
censorship on TV grew in a year from
63% to 82%; sociologists believed that Russians were not voting in
favor of press freedom suppression, but rather for expulsion of
ethically doubtful material (such as scenes of violence and
sex).
In June 2007, Putin organised a conference for history teachers to
promote a high-school teachers manual called
A Modern History
of Russia: 1945-2006: A Manual for History Teachers which
portrays
Joseph Stalin as a cruel but
successful leader. Putin said at the conference that the new manual
will "help instill young people with a sense of pride in Russia",
and he argued that Stalin's
purges pale
in comparison to the United States'
atomic bombings of
Hiroshima and Nagasaki. At a memorial for
Stalin's victims, Putin said that while Russians
should "keep alive the memory of tragedies of the past, we should
focus on all that is best in the country."
In a 2007 interview with newspaper journalists from G8 countries,
Putin spoke out in favor of a longer presidential term in Russia,
saying "a term of five, six or seven years in office would be
entirely acceptable".
On 12 September 2007, Russian news agencies reported that Putin
dissolved the government upon the request of Prime Minister
Mikhail Fradkov. Fradkov commented
that it was to give the President a "free hand" to make decisions
in the run-up to the parliamentary election.
Viktor Zubkov was appointed the new prime
minister.
In December 2007,
United Russia won
64.24% of the popular vote in their run for
State Duma according to election preliminary
results. Their closest competitor, the
Communist Party of Russia, won
approximately 12% of votes. United Russia's victory in December
2007 elections was seen by many as an indication of strong popular
support of the then Russian leadership and its policies.
The end of 2007 saw what both Russian and Western analysts viewed
as an increasingly bitter infighting between various factions of
the
siloviki that make up a
significant part of Putin's inner circle.
In December 2007, the Russian sociologist Igor Eidman (VCIOM)
qualified the regime that had solidified under Putin as "the power
of bureaucratic
oligarchy" which had "the
traits of extreme right-wing dictatorship — the dominance of
state-monopoly capital in
the economy,
silovoki structures in governance,
clericalism and
statism
in ideology". Some analysts assess the socio-economic system which
has emerged in Russia as profoundly unstable and the situation in
the Kremlin after
Dmitry Medvedev's
nomination as fraught with a
coup
d'état, as "Putin has built a political construction that
resembles a pyramid which rests on its tip, rather than on its
base".
Gregory Feifer wrote in February
2008: "The main lesson we should have learned from Putin's eight
years in office is a recognition that under the traditional Russian
political system that he has revitalized, not only do officials not
mean what they say, but also that obfuscation is essential to the
way it all works ... Putin's playing of the Russian political
game has been virtuosic." On the eve of his stepping down as
president the
FT editorialised: "Mr
Putin will remain Russia’s real ruler for some time to come. And
the ex-KGB men he promoted will stay close to the seat of
power."
On 8 February 2008, Putin delivered a speech before the expanded
session of the
State Council
headlined "On the Strategy of Russia's Development until 2020",
which was interpreted by the Russian media as his "political
bequest". The speech was largely devoted to castigating the state
of affairs in the 1990s and setting ambitious targets of economic
growth by 2020.
He also condemned the expansion of NATO and the US plan to
include Poland
and the
Czech
Republic
in a
missile defence shield and
promised that "Russia has, and always will have, responses to these
new challenges".
In his last days in office he was reported to have taken a series
of steps to re-align the regional bureaucracy to make the governors
report to the prime minister rather than the president. The
presidential site explained that "the changes... bear a refining
nature and do not affect the essential positions of the system. The
key role in estimating the effectiveness of activity of regional
authority still belongs to President of the Russian
Federation."
Internal policy
Under the Putin administration the economy made
real gains of an
average 7% per year (2000: 10%, 2001: 5.7%, 2002: 4.9%, 2003: 7.3%,
2004: 7.1%, 2005: 6.5%, 2006: 6.7%, 2007: 8.1%), making it the 7th
largest economy in the world in
purchasing power. Russia's
nominal Gross Domestic Product (GDP)
increased 6 fold, climbing from 22nd to 10th largest in the world.
In 2007, Russia's GDP exceeded that of
Russian SFSR in 1990, meaning it has overcome
the devastating consequences of the
1998 financial crisis and
preceding recession in the 1990s.
During Putin's eight years in office, industry grew by 76%,
investments increased by 125%, and agricultural production and
construction increased as well. Real incomes more than doubled and
the average monthly salary increased sevenfold from $80 to $540.
From 2000 to 2006 the volume of consumer credit increased 45 times
and the middle class grew from 8 million to 55 million. The number
of people living below the poverty line decreased from 30% in 2000
to 14% in 2008. A number of large-scale reforms in retirement
(2002), banking (2001–2004), tax (2000–2003), the monetization of
benefits (2005) and others have taken place.
In 2001 Putin, who has advocated liberal economic policies,
introduced
flat tax rate of 13%; the
corporate rate of tax was also reduced from 35 percent to 24
percent; Small businesses also get better treatment. The old system
with high tax rates has been replaced by a new system where
companies can choose either a 6 percent tax on gross revenue or a
15 percent tax on profits. Overall tax burden is lower in Russia
than in most European countries.
A central concept in Putin's economic thinking was the creation of
so-called
National champions,
vertically integrated companies in strategic sectors, that are
expected not only to seek profit, but also to "advance the
interests of the nation." Examples of such companies include
Gazprom,
Rosneft and
United Aircraft
Corporation.
Before the Putin era, in 1998, over 60% of industrial turnover in
Russia was based on barter and various monetary surrogates. The use
of such alternatives to money now fallen out of favour, which has
boosted economic productivity significantly. Besides raising wages
and consumption, Putin's government has received broad praise also
for eliminating this problem.
The flow of
petrodollars was the
foundation of Putin's government and masked economic woes. The
share of oil and gas in Russia's gross domestic product has more
than doubled since 1999 and as of Q2 2008 stood at above 30%. Oil
and gas account for 50% of Russian budget revenues and 65% of its
exports.
Some oil revenue went to
stabilization
fund established in 2004. The fund accumulated oil revenue,
which allowed Russia to repay all of the Soviet Union's debts by
2005. In early 2008, it was split into the Reserve Fund (designed
to protect Russia from possible global financial shocks) and the
National Welfare Fund, whose revenues will be used for a pension
reform.
Inflation remained a problem however, as
the government failed to contain the growth of prices. Between
1999–2007 inflation was kept at the forecast ceiling only twice,
and in 2007 the inflation exceeded that of 2006, continuing an
upward trend at the beginning of 2008. The Russian economy is still
commodity-driven despite its growth. Payments from the fuel and
energy sector in the form of customs duties and taxes accounted for
nearly half of the federal budget's revenues. The large majority of
Russia's exports are made up by raw materials and fertilizers,
although exports as a whole accounted for only 8.7% of the GDP in
2007, compared to 20% in 2000. There is also a growing gap between
rich and poor in Russia. Between 2000–2007 the incomes of the rich
grew from approximately 14 times to 17 times larger than the
incomes of the poor. The income differentiation ratio shows that
the 10% of Russia's rich live increasingly better than the 10% of
the poor, amongst whom are mostly pensioners and unskilled workers
in depressive regions (see
Gini
coefficient).
Environmental record
In 2004 President Putin signed the
Kyoto
Protocol treaty designed to reduce green house gasses.
Although, because the Kyoto Protocol limits emissions to a
percentage increase or decrease from their 1990 levels Russia did
not face mandatory cuts since its greenhouse-gas emissions fell
well below the 1990 baseline due to a drop in economic output after
the breakup of the Soviet Union.
Recently during the past election Putin and his assumed successor
have been talking about the need for Russia to crack down on
polluting companies and clean up Russia’s environment. He has been
quoted as saying “Working to protect nature must become the
systematic, daily obligation of state authorities at all levels.”
President Medvedev has also been quoted as saying "There is not
much they fear because the penalty for environmental damage is
frequently 10 times, even 100 times less than the fees to meet
environmental requirements."
Foreign policy
In
international affairs,
Putin has been publicly and increasingly critical of the
foreign policies of the
US and other Western
countries. Some commentators have linked this increase in hostility
towards the West with the global rise in oil prices. In February
2007, at the annual
Munich Conference on
Security Policy, he criticized what he calls the United States'
monopolistic dominance in global relations, and pointed out that
the United States displayed an "almost uncontained hyper use of
force in international relations". He said the result of it is that
"no one feels safe! Because no one can feel that
international law is like a stone wall
that will protect them. Of course such a policy stimulates an arms
race."
He called for a "fair and democratic world order that would ensure
security and prosperity not only for a select few, but for all". He
proposed certain initiatives such as establishing international
centres for the
enrichment of
uranium and prevention of
deploying weapons in outer space. In
his January 2007 interview Putin said Russia is in favor of a
democratic
multipolar world and of
strengthening the systems of
international law.
While Putin is often characterised as an
autocrat by the Western media and many opposition
politicians (most notably,
Boris
Nemtsov,
Mikhail Kasyanov and
Ilya Yashin), his relationship with
former American President
George W.
Bush, former
German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder, former
French President Jacques Chirac, and
Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi are reported to be
personally friendly. Putin's relationship with Germany's new
Chancellor,
Angela Merkel, was
reported to be "cooler" and "more business-like" than his
partnership with Gerhard Schröder. This observation is often
attributed to the fact that Merkel was raised in the former DDR,
the country of station of Putin when he was a KGB agent.
In the wake of the
September
11 attacks on the United States, he agreed to the establishment
of coalition military bases in
Central
Asia before and during the
US-led invasion of
Afghanistan. Russian nationalists objected to the establishment
of any US military presence on the territory of the former Soviet
Union, and had expected Putin to keep the US out of the Central
Asian republics, or at the very least extract a commitment from
Washington to withdraw from these bases as soon as the immediate
military necessity had passed.
During
the Iraq crisis of 2003, Putin
opposed Washington's move to invade Iraq
without the
benefit of a United
Nations Security Council resolution explicitly authorizing the
use of military force. After the official end of the war was
announced, American President
George
W. Bush asked the
United Nations to lift sanctions on Iraq
.
Putin supported lifting of the sanctions in due course, arguing
that the
UN commission first be given
a chance to complete its work on the search for weapons of mass
destruction in Iraq.
In 2005, Putin and former German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder
negotiated the construction of a
major gas
pipeline over the Baltic exclusively between Russia and
Germany. Schröder also attended Putin's 53rd birthday in Saint
Petersburg the same year.
The
CIS, seen in
Moscow as its traditional sphere of
influence, became one of the foreign policy priorities under
Putin, as the EU and NATO
have grown
to encompass much of Central Europe
and, more recently, the Baltic
states.
During the
2004
Ukrainian presidential election, Putin twice visited Ukraine
before the election to show his support for
Ukrainian Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych, who was widely seen as
a pro-Kremlin candidate, and he congratulated him on his
anticipated victory before the official election returns had been
announced. Putin's personal support for Yanukovych was criticised
as unwarranted interference in the affairs of a sovereign state.
Crises
also developed in Russia's relations with Georgia
and Moldova
, both former Soviet republics who accused Moscow of
supporting separatist entities in their territories.
John McCain views Moscow's policies
under Putin towards these states to be attempts to bully them.
Putin took an active personal part in promoting the
Act of
Canonical Communion with the Moscow Patriarchate signed 17 May
2007 that restored relations between the Moscow-based
Russian Orthodox Church and the
Russian Orthodox
Church Outside Russia after the 80-year schism.
In his annual address to the
Federal Assembly on 26 April
2007, Putin announced plans to declare a moratorium on the
observance of the
CFE Treaty by
Russia until all NATO members ratified it and started observing its
provisions, as Russia had been doing on a unilateral basis. Putin
argues that as new NATO members have not even signed the treaty so
far, an imbalance in the presence of NATO and Russian armed forces
in Europe creates a real threat and an unpredictable situation for
Russia.
NATO members said they would refuse to
ratify the treaty until Russia complied with its 1999 commitments
made in Istanbul
whereby Russia should remove troops and military
equipment from Moldova
and Georgia
. The
Russian Foreign Minister,
Sergey Lavrov, was quoted as saying in
response that "Russia has long since fulfilled all its Istanbul
obligations relevant to CFE". Russia suspended its participation in
the CFE as of midnight
Moscow time on 11
December 2007. On 12 December 2007, the United States officially
said it "deeply regretted the Russian Federation's decision to
'suspend' implementation of its obligations under the Treaty on
Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (CFE)." State Department
spokesman Sean McCormack, in a written statement, claimed that
"Russia's conventional forces are the largest on the European
continent, and its unilateral action damages this successful arms
control regime." NATO's primary concern arising from Russia's
suspension was that Moscow could accelerate its military presence
in the
North Caucasus.
The
months following Putin's Munich
speech were
marked by tension and a surge in rhetoric on both sides of the
Atlantic. So, Vladimir Putin said at the anniversary of the
Victory Day, "these
threats are not becoming fewer but are only transforming and
changing their appearance. These new threats, just as under the
Third Reich, show the same contempt for
human life and the same aspiration to establish an exclusive
dictate over the world."
On the eve of the 33rd Summit of the G8 in
Heiligendamm
, neoconservative author Anne Applebaum opined that "Whether by waging
cyberwarfare on
Estonia, threatening the gas supplies of Lithuania, or
boycotting Georgian
wine and Polish meat, he [Putin] has, over the past few years,
made it clear that he intends to reassert Russian influence in the
former communist states of Europe, whether those states want
Russian influence or not. At the same time, he has also made
it clear that he no longer sees Western nations as mere benign
trading partners, but rather as
Cold
War-style threats."
Max Hastings opined that a scenario of
military confrontation reminiscent of the
Cold
War was unlikely, he stated his belief that warm ties between
Russia and the West was untenable notion. Both Russian and American
officials always denied the idea of a new Cold War. The US defence
secretary
Robert Gates said on the
Munich Conference: "We all face many common problems and challenges
that must be addressed in partnership with other countries,
including Russia. ... One Cold War was quite enough." Vladimir
Putin said prior to 33rd G8 Summit, on 4 June: "we do not want
confrontation; we want to engage in dialogue. However, we want a
dialogue that acknowledges the equality of both parties’
interests."
Putin publicly opposed plans for the
U.S. missile shield in Europe, and
presented President
George W.
Bush with a counterproposal on 7 June 2007 of
modernising and sharing the use of the Soviet-era Gabala
radar
station in Azerbaijan
rather than building a new system in the Czech
Republic
.
Putin
proposed it would not be necessary to place interceptor missiles in
Poland then, but interceptors could be placed in NATO member
Turkey
or Iraq
.
Putin suggested also equal involvement of interested European
countries in the project.
In a 4
June 2007, interview to journalists of G8
countries, when answering the question of whether Russian nuclear
forces may be focused on European targets in case "the United
States continues building a strategic shield in Poland
and the
Czech
Republic
", Putin
admitted that "if part of the United States’ nuclear capability is
situated in Europe and that our military experts consider that they
represent a potential threat then we will have to take appropriate
retaliatory steps. What steps? Of course we must have new
targets in Europe."
The end of 2006 brought strained
relations between Russia
and the United Kingdom in the wake of the death by poisoning of
Alexander Litvinenko in London.
On 20 July 2007
UK
Prime Minister Gordon Brown
expelled four Russian
envoys over Russia's
refusal to extradite
Andrei Lugovoi
to face charges on the alleged murder of Litvinenko. The Russian
constitution prohibits the extradition of Russian nationals to
third countries.
British
Foreign Secretary David Miliband
said that "this situation is not unique, and other countries have
amended their constitutions, for example to give effect to the
European Arrest Warrant".
Miliband's statement was widely publicized by
Russian media as a British proposal to
change the Russian constitution. According to
VCIOM, 62% of Russians are against changing the
Constitution in this respect. The
British Ambassador in
Moscow Tony Brenton said that the
UK is not asking Russia to break its Constitution, but rather
interpret it in such a way that would make Lugovoi's extradition
possible.
At a meeting with Russian youth
organisations, he stated that the United Kingdom
was acting like a colonial power with a mindset stuck in the
19th or 20th centuries, due to their belief that Russia could
change its constitution. He also stated, "They say we should
change our Constitution – advice that I view as insulting for
our country and our people. They need to change their thinking and
not tell us to change our Constitution."
When
Litvinenko was dying from
radiation poisoning, he allegedly accused Putin of directing the
assassination in a statement which was released shortly after his
death by his friend
Alex Goldfarb. Goldfarb,
who is also the chairman of
Boris
Berezovsky's
International
Foundation for Civil Liberties, claimed Litvinenko had dictated
it to him three days earlier.
Andrei
Nekrasov said his friend Litvinenko and Litvinenko's lawyer
composed the statement in Russian on 21 November and translated it
to English. Critics have doubted that Litvinenko is the true author
of the released statement. When asked about the Litvinenko
accusations, Putin said that a statement released after death of
its author "naturally deserves no comment", and stated his belief
it was being used for political purposes. Contradicting his
previous claim, Goldfarb later stated that Litvinenko instructed
him to write a note "in good English" in which Putin was to be
accused of his poisoning. Goldfarb also stated that he read the
note to Litvinenko in English and Russian, to which he claims
Litvinenko agreed "with every word of it" and signed it.
The expulsions were seen as "the biggest rift since the countries
expelled each other's diplomats in 1996 after a spying dispute." In
response to the situation, Putin stated "I think we will overcome
this mini-crisis. Russian-British relations will develop normally.
On both the Russian side and the British side, we are interested in
the development of those relations."
Despite this, British
Ambassador Tony Brenton was told by the
Russian
Foreign Ministry
that UK diplomats would be given 10 days before
they were expelled in response. The Russian government also
announced that it would suspend issuing visas to UK officials and
froze cooperation on counterterrorism in response to Britain
suspending contacts with their
Federal Security Service.
Alexander Shokhin, president of
the Russian Union of Industrialists and Entrepreneurs warned that
British investors in Russia will "face greater scrutiny from tax
and regulatory authorities. [And] They could also lose out in
government tenders". Some see the crisis as originating with
Britain's decision to grant Putin's former patron, Russian
billionaire
Boris Berezovsky,
political asylum in 2003. Earlier in 2007, Berezovsky had called
for the overthrow of Putin.
On 10 December 2007, Russia ordered the
British Council to halt work at its regional
offices in what was seen as the latest round of a dispute over the
murder of Alexander Litvinenko; Britain said Russia's move was
illegal.
Following the Peace Mission 2007 military exercises jointly
conducted by the
SCO member states, Putin
announced on 17 August 2007 the resumption on a permanent basis of
long-distance patrol flights of Russia's strategic bombers that
were suspended in 1992. US State Department spokesman
Sean McCormack was quoted as saying in
response that "if Russia feels as though they want to take some of
these old aircraft out of mothballs and get them flying again,
that's their decision."
The announcement made during the SCO summit
in the light of joint Russian-Chinese military exercises,
first-ever in history to be held on Russian territory, makes some
believe that Putin is inclined to set up an anti-NATO
bloc or the
Asian version of OPEC. When presented
with the suggestion that "Western observers are already likening
the SCO to a military organisation that would stand in opposition
to NATO", Putin answered that "this kind of comparison is
inappropriate in both form and substance". Russian Chief of the
General Staff
Yury Baluyevsky was
quoted as saying that "there should be no talk of creating a
military or political alliance or union of any kind, because this
would contradict the founding principles of SCO".
The
resumption of long-distance flights of Russia's strategic bombers
was followed by the announcement by Russian Defense Minister
Anatoliy Serdyukov during his
meeting with Putin on 5 December 2007, that 11 ships, including the
aircraft carrier Kuznetsov
, would take part in the first major navy sortie
into the Mediterranean since Soviet times. The sortie was to
be backed up by 47 aircraft, including strategic bombers.
According to Serdyukov, this is an effort to resume regular Russian
naval patrols on the world's oceans, the view that is also
supported by Russian media.
In
September 2007, Putin visited Indonesia
and in doing so became the first Russian leader to
visit the country in more than 50 years. In the same month,
Putin also attended the APEC meeting held in
Sydney
, Australia where he met with Australian Prime Minister John Howard and signed a uranium trade
deal. This was the first visit by a Russian president to
Australia.
On 16
October 2007 Putin visited Iran
to
participate in the Second Caspian Summit in Tehran
, where he
met with Iranian President
Mahmoud Ahmadinejad.
Other
participants were leaders of Azerbaijan
, Kazakhstan
, and Turkmenistan
. This is the first visit of a Soviet or
Russian leader to Iran since
Joseph
Stalin's participation in the
Tehran Conference in 1943. At a press
conference after the summit Putin said that "all our (Caspian)
states have the right to develop their peaceful nuclear programmes
without any restrictions". During the summit it was also agreed
that its participants, under no circumstances, would let any
third-party state use their territory as a base for aggression or
military action against any other participant.
On 26
October 2007, at a press conference following the 20th Russia–EU Summit in Portugal
, Putin proposed creating a Russian-European
Institute for Freedom and Democracy headquartered either in
Brussels or in one of the European capitals, and added that "we are
ready to supply funds for financing it, just as Europe covers the
costs of projects in Russia". This newly proposed
institution is expected to monitor human rights violations in
Europe and contribute to development of European democracy.
Vladimir
Putin strongly opposes the secession of Kosovo
from
Serbia
. He
called any support for this act "immoral" and "illegal". He
described Kosovo's declaration of independence a "terrible
precedent" that will come back to hit the West "in the face". He
stated that the Kosovo precedent will
de facto destroy the
whole system of international relations, developed not over
decades, but over centuries.
Another neoconservative
Robert Kagan,
reflecting on what underlay the fundamental rift between Putin's
Russia and the EU wrote in February 2008: " Europe's nightmares are
the 1930s; Russia's nightmares are the 1990s. Europe sees the
answer to its problems in transcending the nation-state and power.
For Russians, the solution is in restoring them. So what happens
when a 21st-century entity faces the challenge of a 19th-century
power? The contours of the conflict are already emerging—in
diplomatic stand-offs over Kosovo, Ukraine, Georgia and Estonia; in
conflicts over gas and oil pipelines; in nasty diplomatic exchanges
between Russia and Britain; and in a return to Russian military
exercises of a kind not seen since the Cold War. Europeans are
apprehensive, with good reason."
Talks on
a new Partnership and Co-operation Agreement (PCA), signed in 1997,
remained stymied till the end of Putin's presidency due to vetos by
Poland and later Lithuania
.
A
January 2009
dispute led
state-controlled Russian
company
Gazprom to halt its deliveries of
natural gas to Ukraine.
During the crisis,
Putin hinted that Ukraine
is run by criminals who cannot solve economic
problems.
Premiership (since 2008)
Vladimir Putin was appointed Prime Minister of Russia on May 8,
2008.
On July 24-25, 2008, Putin accused the
Mechel
company of selling resources to Russia at higher prices than those
charged to foreign countries and claimed that it had been avoiding
taxes by using foreign subsidiaries to sell its products
internationally. The Prime Minister's attack on Mechel resulted in
sharp decline of its stock value and contributed to the
2008 Russian financial
crisis.
In August 2008 Putin accused the US of provoking the
2008 South Ossetia war, arguing that
US citizens were present in the area of the conflict following
their leaders' orders to the benefit of one of the two
presidential
candidates..
In
December 2008, car owners and traders from Vladivostok
and other regions protested against highly
unpopular new duties and regulations on the import of foreign-made
used cars (the tariff hike was introduced by Putin in violation of
the international commitments undertaken by Medvedev at the
G20 Summit in November
2008), one of the slogans being "Putin, resign!" This was
seen as the first visible public anger at one of the government's
responses to
the
crisis. The following month, the protests continued, with the
slogans having become of a mostly political nature.
On February 5, 2009, Russia's
liberal
democratic political movement,
citing the regime's "total helplessness and flagrant incompetence"
maintained that "the dismantling of
Putinism" and restoration of democracy in Russia
were prerequisites for any successful anti-crisis measures and
demanded that Putin's government resign. The Russian government's
anti-crisis measures have been praised by the World Bank, which
said in its Russia Economic Report from November 2008: "prudent
fiscal management and substantial financial reserves have protected
Russia from deeper consequences of this external shock. The
government’s policy response so far—swift, comprehensive, and
coordinated—has helped limit the impact."
On June
9, 2009, after 16 years of slowly progressing accession talks with
the World Trade
Organization, which, according to the European Union, might be completed by the end
of the year, Vladimir Putin announced that Russia withdrew from the
negotiations and instead would make a new joint bid with Belarus
and Kazakhstan
. Senior Kremlin officials had earlier
signalled, that Russia was losing patience with Western promises to
let it join.
Support and popularity

Putin's approval (blue) and
disapproval (red) ratings during his eight year presidency.
According to public opinion surveys conducted by
Levada Center, Putin's approval rating was 81%
in June 2007, and the highest of any leader in the world. His
popularity rose from 31% in August 1999 to 80% in November 1999 and
since then it has never fallen below 65%. Observers see Putin's
high approval ratings as a consequence of the significant
improvements in living standards and Russia's reassertion of itself
on the world scene that occurred during his tenure as President.
Most Russians are also deeply disillusioned with the West after all
the hardships of 90s, and they no longer trust pro-western
politicians associated with Yeltsin that were removed from the
political scene under Putin's leadership.
In early 2005, a youth organization called
Nashi (meaning 'Ours' or 'Our Own People') was
created in Russia, which positions itself as a democratic,
anti-fascist organization. Its creation was encouraged by some of
the most senior figures in the Administration of the President, and
by 2007 it grew to some 120,000 members (between the ages of 17 and
25). One of Nashi's major stated aims was to prevent a repeat of
the 2004
Orange Revolution during
the Russian elections: as its leader
Vasily Yakemenko said, "the enemies must
not perform unconstitutional takeovers". Kremlin adviser, Sergei
Markov said about the activists of Nashi: "They want Russia to be a
modern, strong and free country... Their ideology is clear —
it is modernization of the country and preservation of its
sovereignty with that."
A joint poll by
World Public Opinion in the U. S. and
NGO Levada Center in Russia around June–July 2006 stated
that "neither the Russian nor the American publics are convinced
Russia is headed in an anti-democratic direction" and "Russians
generally support Putin’s concentration of political power and
strongly support the re-nationalization of Russia’s oil and gas
industry." Russians generally support the political course of Putin
and his team. A 2005 survey showed that three times as many
Russians felt the country was "more democratic" under Putin than it
was during the Yeltsin or Gorbachev years, and the same proportion
thought human rights were better under Putin than Yeltsin..
Putin was
Time magazine's
Person of the Year for 2007,
given the title for his "extraordinary feat of leadership in taking
a country that was in chaos and bringing it stability".
Time said that "TIME's Person of the Year is not and never
has been an honor. It is not an endorsement. It is not a popularity
contest. At its best, it is a clear-eyed recognition of the world
as it is and of the most powerful individuals and forces shaping
that world—for better or for worse". The choice provoked sarcasm
from one of Russia's opposition leaders, Garry Kasparov, who
recalled that
Adolf Hitler had been
Time's Man of the Year in 1938, and an overwhelmingly
negative reaction from the magazine's readership.
On 4
December 2007, at Harvard University
, Mikhail Gorbachev
credited Putin with having "pulled Russia out of chaos" and said he
was "assured a place in history", "despite Gorbachev's
acknowledgment that the news media have been suppressed and that
election rules run counter to the democratic ideals he has
promoted".
In August 2007, photographs of Putin were taken while he was
vacationing in the Siberian mountains. The Russian tabloid
Komsomolskaya Pravda
published a huge colour photo of the bare-chested president under
the headline: "Be Like Putin."
Putin's name and image are widely used in advertisement and product
branding. Among the Putin-branded products are
Putinka vodka,
PuTin
brand of canned food,
caviar Gorbusha
Putina,
Denis Simachev's
collection of T-shirts decorated by images of Putin, etc.
In April 2008, Putin was put on the
Time 100 most influential people in the world list.
Madeleine Albright wrote: "After
our first meetings, in 1999 and 2000, I described him in my journal
as "shrewd, confident, hard-working, patriotic, and ingratiating."
In the years since, he has become more confident and — to
Westerners — decidedly less ingratiating." She added "It is
unlikely that Putin, 55, will wear out his welcome at home anytime
soon, as he has nearly done with many democracies abroad.
In the
meantime, he will remain an irritant to NATO
, a source of
division within Europe and yet another reason for the West to
reduce its reliance on fossil fuels."
Criticism
Putin has also been the target of much criticism. Several
government actions made under Putin’s presidency have been
criticized by some independent Russian media outlets and many
Western commentators as anti-democratic..
In 2007, "
Dissenters' Marches"
were organized by the opposition group
Other Russia, led by former chess champion
Garry Kasparov and
national-Bolshevist leader
Eduard
Limonov. Following prior warnings, demonstrations in several
Russian cities were met by police action, which included
interfering with the travel of the protesters and the arrests of as
many as 150 people who attempted to break through police lines. The
Dissenters' Marches have received little support among the Russian
general public, according to popular polls. The Dissenters' March
in Samara held in May 2007 during the Russia-EU summit attracted
more journalists providing coverage of the event than actual
participants. When asked in what way the Dissenters' Marches bother
him, Putin answered that such marches "shall not prevent other
citizens from living a normal life". During the Dissenters' March
in Saint Petersburg on 3 March 2007, the protesters blocked
automobile traffic on Nevsky Prospect, the central street of the
city, much to the disturbance of local drivers.
The Governor of
Saint
Petersburg
, Valentina Matvienko, commented on the
event that "it is important to give everyone the opportunity to
criticize the authorities, but this should be done in a civilized
fashion". When asked about Kasparov's arrest, Putin replied
that during his arrest Kasparov was speaking English rather than
Russian, and suggested that he was targeting a Western audience
rather than his own people. Putin has said that some domestic
critics are being funded and supported by foreign enemies who would
prefer to see a weak Russia. In his speech at the
United Russia meeting in
Luzhniki: "Those who oppose us don't want us to
realize our plan.... They need a weak, sick state! They need a
disorganized and disoriented society, a divided society, so that
they can do their deeds behind its back and eat cake on our
tab.".
In July 2007,
Bret Stephens of
The Wall Street
Journal wrote: "Russia has become, in the precise sense of
the word, a fascist state. It does not matter here, as the
Kremlin's apologists are so fond of pointing out, that Mr. Putin is
wildly popular in Russia: Popularity is what competent despots get
when they destroy independent media, stoke nationalistic fervor
with military buildups and the cunning exploitation of the Church,
and ride a wave of petrodollars to pay off the civil service and
balance their budgets. Nor does it matter that Mr. Putin hasn't
re-nationalized the "means of production" outright; corporatism was
at the heart of Hitler's economic policy, too."
In its January 2008 World Report,
Human Rights Watch wrote in the section
devoted to Russia: "As parliamentary and presidential elections in
late 2007 and early 2008 approached, the administration headed by
President Vladimir Putin cracked down on civil society and freedom
of assembly. Reconstruction in Chechnya did not mask grave human
rights abuses including torture, abductions, and unlawful
detentions. International criticism of Russia’s human rights record
remains muted, with the European Union failing to challenge Russia
on its human rights record in a consistent and sustained manner."
The organization called President Putin a "repressive" and "brutal"
leader on par with the leaders of Zimbabwe and Pakistan.
On 28 January 2008,
Gorbachev in his
interview to
Interfax "sharply criticized
the state of Russia’s electoral system and called for extensive
reforms to a system that has secured power for President Vladimir
V. Putin and the Kremlin’s inner circle." Following Gorbachev's
interview
The Washington
Post's editorial said: "No wonder that Mikhail Gorbachev,
the Soviet Union's last leader, felt moved to speak out. "Something
wrong is going on with our elections", he told the Interfax agency.
But it's not only elections: In fact, the system that Mr. Gorbachev
took apart is being meticulously reconstructed."
Corruption under Putin has increased and assumed "systemic and
institutionalised form", according to a report by opposition leader
Boris Nemtsov as well as other
sources.
Family and personal life

Vladimir Putin addressing the
International Olympic Committee in Guatemala City in 2007.
On 28
July 1983 Putin married Kaliningrad
-born Lyudmila
Shkrebneva, at that time an undergraduate student of the
Spanish branch of the Philology Department
of the Leningrad State
University and a former Aeroflot
flight attendant.
They have
two daughters, Maria Putina (born 28 April 1985 in St.
Petersburg
) and Yekaterina Putina (born 31 August 1986 in
Dresden
).
The
daughters grew up in East
Germany
and attended the German School in Moscow until his
appointment as Prime Minister. After that they
studied international
economics at the Finance Academy
in Moscow
, although it
was not officially reported due to security reasons. Putin
also owns a black
Labrador
Retriever named
Koni, who has been
known to accompany him into staff meetings and greeting world
leaders.
Since
1992, Putin has owned a dacha on the eastern
shore of the Komsomolskoye Lake in Solovyovka, Priozersky District in Leningrad
Oblast
. On 10 November 1996, Putin and his
neighbours instituted the
cooperative
Ozero which united their properties. This was
confirmed by Putin's income and property declaration as a nominee
for the Presidency in 2000. However, this real estate was not
listed in his income and property declaration for 1998–2002
submitted before the 2004 elections.
Putin speaks German with near-native fluency. His family used to
speak German at home as well. After becoming President he was
reported to be taking English lessons and could be seen conversing
directly with Bush and native speakers of English in informal
situations, but he continues to use interpreters for formal talks.
Putin
spoke English in public for the first time during the state dinner
in Buckingham
Palace
in 2003 saying but a few phrases while delivering
his condolences to the Queen.
He made a
full English speech while addressing delegates at the 119th
International Olympic
Committee
Session in Guatemala City
on behalf of the successful bid of Sochi
for the
2014 Winter
Olympics.
Religion
Putin's father was "a model communist, genuinely believing in its
ideals while trying to put them into practice in his own life."
With this dedication he became secretary of the Party cell in his
workshop and then after taking night classes joined the factory’s
Party bureau. Though his father was a "militant atheist", Putin's
mother "was a devoted Orthodox believer". Though she kept no
icons at home, she attended church regularly,
despite the government's persecution of the
Russian Orthodox Church at that
time. She ensured that Putin was secretly christened as a baby and
she regularly took him to services. His father knew of this but
turned a blind eye. According to Putin's own statements, his
religious awakening followed the serious car crash of his wife in
1993, and was deepened by a life-threatening fire that burned down
their dacha in August 1996.
Right before an official visit to Israel
his mother
gave him his baptismal cross telling him to get it blessed “I did
as she said and then put the cross around my neck. I have
never taken it off since.” Putin repeated the story to
George W. Bush
in June 2001, which might have inspired Bush to make his remark
that he had "got a sense of Putin's soul". When asked whether he
believes in God during his interview with
Time, he responded saying: "... There are things I
believe, which should not in my position, at least, be shared with
the public at large for everybody's consumption because that would
look like self-advertising or a political striptease."
Personal wealth
According to the data submitted during the
Russian legislative election,
2007, Putin's wealth is limited to approximately 3.7 million
rubles (approximately $150,000) in
bank accounts, a private apartment in Saint Petersburg, 260
shares of
Bank Saint Petersburg
(with a December 2007 market price $5.36 per share) and two 1960s
Volga M21 cars that he
inherited from his father and does not
register for on-road use. Putin's 2006
income totalled 2 million rubles (approximately $80,000). According
to the data Putin did not make it into the 100 wealthiest
Duma candidates of his own
United Russia party.
There have also been allegations that Putin secretly owns a large
fortune.According to former
Chairman of the Russian
State Duma Ivan
Rybkin, and Russian
political
scientist Stanislav
Belkovsky, Putin controls a 4.5% stake (approx. $13 billion) in
Gazprom, 37% (approx. $20 billion) in
Surgutneftegaz and 50% in the
oil-trading company
Gunvor run by
Gennady Timchenko, a close friend.
Gunvor's turnover in 2007 was $40 billion.. The aggregate estimated
value of these holdings would easily make Putin Russia's richest
person. In December 2007, Belkovsky elaborated on his claims:
"Putin's name doesn't appear on any shareholders' register, of
course. There is a non-transparent scheme of successive ownership
of offshore companies and funds.
The final point is in Zug
Switzerland
and Liechtenstein
. Vladimir Putin should be the beneficiary
owner." This claim, however, has never been supported with
evidence.
When asked at a press conference on 14 February 2008 whether he was
the richest person in Europe, as some newspapers claimed; and if
so, to state the source of his wealth, Putin said "This is true. I
am the richest person not only in Europe, but also in the world. I
collect emotions. And I am rich in that respect that the people of
Russia have twice entrusted me with leadership of such a great
country as Russia. I consider this to be my biggest fortune. As for
the rumors concerning my financial wealth, I have seen some pieces
of paper regarding this. This is plain chatter, not worthy
discussion, plain bosh. They have picked this in their noses and
have smeared this across their pieces of paper. This is how I view
this."
Martial arts
One of Putin's favorite sports is the
martial art of
judo.
Putin
began training in sambo (a
martial art that originated in the
Soviet
Union
) at the age of 14, before switching to judo, which
he continues to practice today. Putin won
competitions in his hometown of Leningrad
, including the senior championship of
Leningrad. He is the President of the
Yawara Dojo, the same Saint Petersburg
dojo he practiced at when young. Putin co-authored a
book on his favorite sport, published in Russian as
Judo with
Vladimir Putin and in English under the title
Judo: History, Theory,
Practice.
Though he is not the first world leader to practice judo, Putin is
the first leader to move forward into the advanced levels.
Currently, Putin holds a 6th
dan (
red/white belt) and is best known
for his
Harai Goshi (sweeping hip
throw). Putin earned
Master of
Sports (Soviet and Russian sport title) in
Judo in 1975 and in
Sambo in 1973. After a state visit to
Japan, Putin was invited to the
Kodokan Institute where he showed the
students and Japanese officials different judo techniques.
Honors
- On 12
February 2007 Saudi
King Abdullah awarded Putin the
King Abdul Aziz Award, Saudi Arabia's top civilian
decoration.
- On 10
September 2007 UAE
President Khalifa bin Zayed Al Nahyan
awarded Putin the Order of Zayed,
UAE's top civilian decoration.
- In December 2007 Putin was named Person of the Year by
Expert magazine, influential and
respected Russian business weekly.
- In September 2006, France's president Jacques Chirac awarded Vladimir Putin the
insignia of Grand-Croix (Grand Cross) of the Légion d'honneur, the highest French
decoration, to celebrate his contribution to the friendship between
the two countries. This decoration is usually awarded to the heads
of state considered very close to France.
Key speeches
During his terms in office Putin has made eight annual addresses to
the
Federal Assembly of
Russia, speaking on the situation in Russia and on guidelines
of the internal and foreign policy of the State (as prescribed in
Article 84 of the Constitution). The 2007 election campaign of the
United Russia party went under the
slogan "Putin's Plan: Russia's Victory". When asked on the "Putin's
plan", Vladimir Putin said the last five Addresses contained some
key parts "devoted to the state’s medium-term development", and "if
all these key ideas were put together to build a coherent system,
it can become the country's development plan in the
medium-term".
See also
References and notes
Bibliography
External links