(Cross-posted at The Reaction.)
I’ve been doing a lot of international-news-oriented posts recently — not because I’m turning away from the U.S. — I’m still mostly U.S.-focused — but because, well… because there’s been lot going on around the world. The situation in Burma is the big story at the moment, and rightly so, and I and others been covering it extensively, but here are a couple more fairly high-profile stories, both from the former Soviet Union:
1) Russia: It looks like Putin might be pulling a Chavez after all. He’s not trying to change the rules to keep himself in power — no, he hasn’t gone that far, yet — but he may not step aside, or out, when his presidential term is up:
President Vladimir Putin, in a surprise announcement, opened the door Monday to becoming Russia’s prime minister and retaining power when his presidential term ends next year.
The popular Mr. Putin is barred from seeking a third consecutive term in the March presidential election, but has strongly indicated he would seek to keep a hand on Russia’s reins after he steps down.
Mr. Putin’s remarks Monday at a congress of the dominant, Kremlin-controlled United Russia party hint at a clear scenario in which he could remake himself as a powerful prime minister and eclipse a weakened president.
You know what they say about power, especially the absolute variety.
Putin may install a puppet as president — say, current Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov, a Putin loyalist whom Putin recently put in place — and rule from parliament, the Duma.
Garry Kasparov, chess master and now the leader of the pro-democracy, anti-Putin forces in Russia, is right: “In fact, Putin has done nothing more than decide to use United Russia [Putin's political party] as the main mechanism for retaining power.” He is also right to attack “the anti-democratic and anti-constitutional nature of this whole electoral process”.
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2) Ukraine: Another close election, too close to call:
Leaders of the two main political parties in Ukraine both claimed victory on Monday in crucial parliamentary elections, but the vote appeared so tight that it could be many days before a new prime minister takes office.
Supporters of Yulia V. Tymoshenko, the former prime minister who was a stalwart of the Orange Revolution of 2004, insisted that the final tally would show that she was the victor. But her chief rival, Prime Minister Viktor F. Yanukovich, dismissed those statements as premature.
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Officials said late Monday night that with 93 percent of the votes counted, Mr. Yanukovich’s party had 34 percent and Ms. Tymoshenko’s had 31 percent. But those numbers could fluctuate as polling places finish reporting.
Ms. Tymoshenko’s party said she would become prime minister again by reaching a deal with President Viktor A. Yushchenko’s party, which received 14 percent, rekindling an alliance that was triumphant in the Orange Revolution, but collapsed in acrimony later on.
Nothing is certain, however, and many votes remain to be counted. Yanukovich could still pull ahead.
But what the Ukraine needs is a Yushchenko-Tymoshenko alliance, that is, a continuation of the Orange Revolution that has brought genuine democracy and the prospect of a brighter future to a country still trying to emerge from the dark shadows of its former totalitarian masters.
More here.
[...] Clark Back in the Former USSR: News from Russia and the Ukraine » This Summary is from an article posted at The Moderate Voice » Domestic and international news [...]
This is no surprise to those of us watching Russia and its New Dictator. Putin has been positioning himself for a power grab for quite some time now.
His continual turning away from the west guarantees that a power grab will be met with cold silence as the threat of stemming the flow of oil if we protest too loudly will be sure to silence the West.
He is more powerful now then the old Soviet Union because for the first time in 90 years Russia has something everyone wants and desperately NEEDS.
OIL/Energy.
Also has anyone been monitoring the fact that the US has had to scramble fighters to intercept Russian Bombers skirting US airspace for the first time in years?
Bush and his Missile shield. Putin pulling out of the European treaty and sending bombers to fly the US airspace sure sounds like a perscripton for returning to a form of the old “cold war”
The biggest difference is that Russia now has huge allies in the Muslim world and is oozing in energy and oil.
I have always maintained that our biggest victory might well turn out to be our biggest headache….the Collapse of the USSR and a subsequent chain of events has actually heightened a sense of forboding in this world..not diminished it.
Thanks for a very timely post;
A lot of people are looking to knock the US off the ‘only suprerpower’ throne.
Russia is employing some very nasty means to consolidate power at home, and it’s actions abroad are hardly nicey-nicey: internet attack on Estonia, using gas and oil to pressure European states.
Russian is a very big thunder cloud on the horizon.
[...] Back in the Former USSR: News from Russia and the UkrainePutin is barred from seeking a third consecutive term in the March presidential election, but has strongly indicated he would seek to keep a hand on Russia’s reins after he steps down. Mr. Putin’s remarks Monday at a congress of the … [...]
[...] Back in the Former USSR: News from Russia and the UkrainePutin is barred from seeking a third consecutive term in the March presidential election, but has strongly indicated he would seek to keep a hand on Russia’s reins after he steps down. Mr. Putin’s remarks Monday at a congress of the … [...]