Finnish suicide
My trip from my home base in Brussels to St Petersburg this past Friday-Saturday was done the same way as my last two trips here, ie, by flying to Helsinki and proceeding the next day by bus to Russia's Northern Capital.
The flight was comfortable aboard a Finnair A-350 on which every one of the 300+ seats was taken. Looking at the fellow passengers at check-in it was clear that somehow the airline has captured a good share of demand for flights to India, with Helsinki as the link. How they managed to do so is not clear, given that they are barred from using Russian air space, so that their planes have a long way to go compared to more southerly European transit hubs and they burn a lot of fuel getting Southeast Asian passengers to destination. However, whatever success the airline has achieved with Indians cannot begin to compensate for their loss of passengers to Far Eastern destinations, ie, precisely the traffic the Finns sought to capture when they greatly expanded their passenger terminals in Helsinki several years ago.
The Chinese were a lost cause after the onset of Covid and their country's lock-down. They have not reappeared. The Japanese and Western tourists, a still more prized passenger flow, are clearly not making Helsinki their European transit point now, as they once did, because closure of the Siberian route to the Finns, Russia's mirror like response to the closure of their air space to Russian planes, forfeits all the time and expense advantages that the Finns could boast in the status quo ante.
Small loss, you may say. Taken by itself, yes. The whole Finnish economy is experiencing vast losses resulting from its sanctions on Russia in commerce and much else, but a visitor passing through does not see that. My point is that the low utilization of Helsinki Airport today is something you can see and feel even if you know nothing about the big picture. And do remember, this is now the peak travel season, the time when Europe is on holiday and air travel in Europe is booming.
Like the Greek islands just off the coast of Anatolia which do not show Turkey on maps distributed to tourists, so the Finns are refusing to look at their own map. During the Soviet period, Finland was a bridge between East and West in both the physical and metaphorical sense. Helsinki was a modest, unassuming city back then, even if Marimekko fabrics gave the country as a whole an image of creativity and fanciful thinking among Americans. It looked dull when you stopped off on the way to Moscow; it looked glamorous only on the return trip in transit to Europe or North America.
Those were the days when Finland imported Russian logs and oil and gas and other precious commodities at knock-down prices that Kremlin offered to its friends, while it exported in return shoes made of tough leather that would leave you foot sore and other consumer goods of less than prime quality. That was a time when there were large flows of Finns down to the Petersburg area, where they all had a tipple of what looked to them like free vodka, heading home by train or bus in an inebriated state, with baggage that rattled from liquor bottles . That was a time when almost no Russians could go to Finland because of travel restrictions of their own government.
The nineteen nineties opened Russia and its raw material wealth to the depredation of the whole West, and little Finland lost its privileged position. At this time the country changed its orientation and looked to improve its commercial ties with its fellow members of the European Union. But of course, Finland ceased being a nearly unique bridge to the East now that the world was coming to Russia from all directions. There were a very few Finnish entrepreneurs who still understood what outsized opportunities there were at its doorstep and made an effort to build market share there. I know. In the 1990s for a time I served as a consultant to a Finnish trucking company which had great ambitions in the Russian market and achieved some successes.
During the 1990s, Russians received passports for travel abroad upon simple demand and by the beginning of the new millennium, when the Russian economy revived and the middle classes reconstituted themselves, about 10 million Russians traveled abroad each year. Here in Northwest Russia tourist cum shopping trips across the border to Finland became very common place. We had friends in Petersburg who drove up to Lappenranta every other week to stock up on delicacies that they had come to know and enjoy when shopping in the two food stores that the large Finnish retailer Stockmann maintained in “Pietari” as we are known in Finland . Small Finnish merchants sold smoked river and lake fish to the Russian cross-border crowd at fancy prices and all sides were pleased with themselves.
In the second decade of the new millennium, Finland joined other EU member states in cutting commercial ties with Russia. After the annexation of Crimea by Russia, Finland introduced the EU wide sanctions and relations with Russia became much cooler. Finally, following the start of the Special Military Operation, Finland became a determined and spiteful enemy of Russia. It closed the door to gas and electricity imports from Russia and it canceled a multibillion dollar contract to buy a nuclear power plant from Russia's Rosatom.
In parallel, last year Finland refused to admit Russians with Schengen passports to transit their country on their way to other European destinations, something which they had studied with care in the past using the services of their consulate in Petersburg. The reason had been purely commercial: to rake in tourist euros and dollars from the transiting Russians by imposing requirements that several days be spent in Finland on the way. Then the Finns choked off issuance of tourist visas to Russians who were intent on spending vacation time in Finland itself. Finally, they refused to renew visas to Russians who owned property in Finland. This, together with the cut-off of all cross border banking ties, means that these property owners can easily fall behind in paying taxes and utility bills. The stage is set for foreclosures and forfeiture.
As I said, the Russian owners of cottages in Finland are just middle class folks, not oligarchs, who have far better places to flaunt their wealth than in the pokey neighbor to the northwest. What we are witnessing is behavior typical of a nation at war, when in fact there is no declared war between Russia and Finland.
Meanwhile, a week ago the Russian Foreign Ministry ordered the Finns to shut their consulate in Petersburg and evacuate staff. This was in response to similar orders by Finnish authorities cutting Russian diplomatic services in Finland. The trajectory of relations suggests it will not be long before both countries shut their respective embassies.
It must be said that not only Finnish economic interests are being sacrificed in the country's vengeful turn against Russia. The country's security is being put in jeopardy.
The decades-long neutrality of Finland was abandoned for the sake of joining NATO in what is supposed to enhance the country's security by gaining Article 5 protection should Russia ever attack. However, the downside is apparent to anyone bothering to look at a map. The 1340 km border of Finland with Russia is comparable to the Ukrainian Russian line of confrontation today. And if the 30 million or so Ukrainians who remain in their country today, (down from 40 million before the present war due to outward flow of refugees) cannot hold the line against the Russian armed forces, how can a Finnish population of 5.5 million succeed in that mission? The simple answer is that it cannot.
These are the thoughts which pass through my mind on the final 3 hour leg of the Helsinki-Petersburg bus trip after crossing over into Russia and watching the still incomplete vast highway project on the Russian side. When about five years ago the Russian government began this extension of the so-called Scandinavian Highway that was built at the end of the 1990s and ended in Vyborg, you could imagine that it was to facilitate the growing passenger vehicle and truck traffic between Russia and Finnish. But it was stunning to see that the work continued at full force even after February 2022, when truck traffic was choked off by broken commercial ties and when passenger traffic dwindled to almost nothing due to visa restrictions.
To my thinking the superhighway that is now in its final days of construction and reaches to the Finnish frontier, together with all the lateral roads into the forest that you see on the way, have a new mission: to facilitate the movement of heavy military equipment and troops to the border region on a moment's notice. It will be a very long time before the Finnish side has anything comparable.
Is Finland committing suicide? It certainly looks that way.
*****
I close today's essay with remarks on a couple of other unrelated subjects that nevertheless provide a feel for what changes there are in Russian daily life in this second year of war.
The first relates to military recruitment. The second pertains to foreign tourists as evidenced by a visit to the Catherine Palace of Tsarskoye Selo, the summer residence of the tsars, that is a 10 minute walk from my apartment.
On my last stay in Russia just six weeks ago, I had seen no advertisements on the streets for the recruitment of “contract soldiers” to fight in the Special Military Operation in Ukraine. There were already back then spot ads on state television which were sophisticated visually and in the concept being promoted: that young men join their peers and go to serve the country. These ads have become more and more frequent on television with the passage of time.
Now there is a new dimension. At a bus stop just near my house, a broadsheet was pasted onto the glass wall of the shelter showing in very big script the offer of a 695,000 ruble (approximately 6,600 euros) sign-up premium to anyone who is accepted as a contract fighter by the Ministry of Defense. Of this amount, 195,000 rubles is provided by the federal government and 500,000 is offered by the region of St Petersburg. Each Russian region decides independently and voluntarily how much to offer to top up the federal premium. Then, following a training period which probably lasts two or three months, the new contract fighters are paid at least 200,000 rubles per month salary during their time in the zone of the Special Military Operation.
Then, when I went shopping at our nearby Pyatyorochka supermarket, I found that a similar recruitment poster had been glued to the entrance door.
If I may put these sums in the context of present-day Russian salaries and pensions, they are highly attractive. The average pensioner living in cities across Russia may receive 20,000 rubles per month from the government, while average workers' salaries In Petersburg begin at perhaps 50,000 – 70,000 rubles, depending on the industry.
Although it goes unmentioned in these advertisements, news programs have explained that the contract fighters receive generous benefits packages for their families. As a matter of course, they have substantial life insurance payouts in case of death while in service. Otherwise there is funding available to ensure that their children will all get proper schooling. And in their eventual status as veterans, they will be eligible for preferential mortgage loans and for educational advancement.
The last named point is still the subject of public controversy. A recently issued directive from the Ministry of Education has specified the addition to veterans' qualification ratings for admission to institutions of higher learning in rather niggardly terms. But Russian patriots, including Vladimir Solovyov on his evening talk show, are demanding that veterans who have been given awards for valor on the field of battle should be admitted to the best Russian universities without passing any other test. Their objective is to secure 50% of the places in these and related institutions for the outstanding veterans, so that, in their words, within 5 years a wholly new elite will be created in Russia. So far this is just talk, but we may expect enacting legislation to be placed before the Duma before long.
Considering all of the foregoing, it is no wonder that the flow of recruits to the Russian army has swelled since the start of the year, numbering well over 150,000. And this explains how and why Minister of Defense Shoigu can confidently say that the armed forces see no need for further call-up of reserves or enlargement of the annual intake of drafted civilians as the forces grow to two million men at arms..
As regards who makes up foreign tourist contingents today, I offer the information I received from one of the tour guides employed by the nearby palace museum of Tsarskoye Selo, which is a must-see tourist site of all overseas visitors. The Chinese have not yet come back, though their arrival is expected. Note that before Covid all museums and tourist sites of this city were overrun with Chinese groups. Now the groups are coming from Iran, and as we saw yesterday at the Catherine palace, they have their own Farsi-speaking guides and so feel very much at home. Times are a-changing!
©Gilbert Doctorow, 2023
https://gilbertdoctorow.com/2023/07/10/ ... nlandaise/
******
Intellectuals Featured in U.S. Media Present 1990s as Heyday of Russian Democracy: In Reality, Chaos and Desperation Reigned Before Vladimir Putin Became President
By Natylie Baldwin - July 11, 2023

Snapshot of Moscow before Vladimir Putin. [Source: varlamov.ru]
Below is an interview that I conducted with Sarah Lindemann-Komarova, an American who has lived in Siberia since 1992. She was a community development activist there for 20 years. She currently focuses on research and writing, mostly about Russia and community activism. Her work has been published in The Nation and she is the co-author of several academic articles and blogs at Echo of Siberia.

Sarah Lindemann-Komarova [Source: exeter.edu]
Natylie Baldwin: When and how did you end up going to Russia and what made you decide to stay?
SLK: In 1988 I was working as the production coordinator on a movie and wanted a career change. With no college degree or any idea what I would like to do, I decided to say “yes” to anything, hoping my fate would reveal itself. My first “yes” was to a trip traveling around the Soviet Union with a peace group to train for and run the Moscow Marathon.
I grew up duck-and-covering with the standard fear and stereotypes about the Soviet Union. As we traveled around, I didn’t need language to understand that a lot had been left out of the narrative, especially in relation to the USSR’s role and sacrifice defeating Nazi Germany.
Traveling over the Caucasus Mountains from Pyatigorsk [Russia] to Tbilisi [Georgia] and then flying to Baku [Azerbaijan], Kyiv, and Byelorussia [now Belarus] to train with local running groups before going to Moscow for the race, I had an epiphany. There was so much energy and excitement and hope for change and peace that I wanted to know more and be a part of it. I returned home to New York and entered Columbia University to major in Political Science with a Soviet Union focus.
Summer of junior year I went back to the Soviet Union, this time to Siberia. It was with a citizen diplomacy group to live with a family, study language, and hang out for a month in Akademgorodok, the university and science center 30 kilometers from Novosibirsk, the third largest city in Russia. It was May of 1990 and Yeltsin had just been elected President of what was still the Russian Republic and, similar to two years earlier, there was energy, excitement and hope. I made many friends, several of them visited me in New York, and a university English teacher agreed to arrange a visa for me when I graduated.
On February 1, 1992, I arrived expecting to spend four months experiencing the transition to democracy and teaching a course at the university before returning home to apply to grad schools. I came with an optimism shared by many Americans: Western companies were moving in, the country was loaded with resources, had a highly educated population, and the guy who stood on the tank won. That was not the mood that greeted me.

Famous image of Boris Yeltsin standing on a tank after the fall of the Soviet Union. [Source: pinterest.co.uk]
Once again the narrative was off as the news in America did not capture the catastrophic dimensions of economic Shock Therapy. No one I met in Siberia expected the change to be so sudden, unpredictable and cruel. Three weeks in, I was skiing through the forest when I knew—it was not a decision, I just knew—I wasn’t going back. Everything was happening here. This transition was going to take a lot longer and, if I wanted to understand it, I had to be here, not in a U.S. classroom. Plus, there were endless opportunities to get involved, promote peaceful change, and generate increased understanding between Russia and America.
NB: What was Russia like in the 1990s and how has it changed in the years since?
There is a myth about the golden age of democracy during the 1990s that was perpetuated by Moscow-based liberal elites. This is how my student described the national scene: “Congress made a strange impression on me. It looks like a group of people who are fighting for power and don’t care about the country. They don’t want to work together…we have just political games and not a real process of building democracy.”
And the exciting world of elections locally? In Novosibirsk, Yeltsin found a way to kick out the elected communist governor and replace him with a more “liberal” guy. The Communist went on to become a banker until he made a comeback when the “liberal” guy was voted out of office.
The “liberal” guy then went on to become a banker, the Communist achieved nothing and was challenged in the next election by the “liberal,” the “democratic” mayor of Novosibirsk, and a Vice Minister of Economics. The “liberal,” the Communist and the Minister lost; two returned to banking and the third to Moscow. Except for the Communist, I have no idea what political party any of them represented, there were over 60 of them competing for offices in Novosibirsk at this time. My personal favorite was the “Beer Lovers Party.”
With regard to economics, in 2013 journalist Masha Gessen’s version was, “Contrary to popular belief the 1990s did see living standards rise…between 1991 and 1996 EVERY Russian household acquired a new washing machine” (see video link above at the 22-minute mark).

Masha Gessen [Source: out.com]
The reality is it was 20th century Dickens with the best of times for Americans and a tiny group of Russians and the worst of times for everybody else. There were three Russias. The first was tiny, rich and getting richer by the minute, leaving nothing for everybody else. I did not have much, if any, exposure to this group.
The second group of 1990s people in Russia consisted of the 99.99% who were busy surviving or not. My first year, the dollar exchange rate went from 95 rubles to 720 rubles and leading researchers at institutes had 90-ruble salaries. Life was a high jump, every time you were lucky or savvy enough to make it over, the bar got raised with salary arrears that could last five months for teachers, or physicists getting land to plant potatoes instead of [receiving] money, or hearing they were lopping the zeroes off the money only later to be told that [the] money wasn’t legal tender any more, it was “old money.” One of my students wrote that her father’s institute “buried three gifted scientists between 50-60 years old in three months.” Purchasing a fully automatic washing machine was the last thing on anyone’s mind or ability to purchase.
The amazing thing was how calm and silent it was considering the desperate situation. People continued going to work. Students attended my classes even when it was -30 degrees [Celsius or -22 degrees Fahrenheit] and there was no heat at the university. One of my students explained, “It is not pleasant or good when you can say nothing about what will happen to you in the near future. The majority of people are simply tired of everything….They just want to live like ‘normal’ people, they want to have comfortable flats and tasty food.” An old woman I shared a coupe with on the train from Moscow to Novosibirsk told me there are only two words you need to know to understand Russians, “terpelivoye” (patient) and “perezhit” (live through it). These traits continue to be both curse and blessing.

[Source: varlamov.ru]
The third Russia was the one for the Americans and for us, every door was open based on the assumption we had all the answers. The opportunities in all spheres were endless, [Russia was] the place where frogs came to become princes. We felt powerful and hopeful and for the most part the Americans who came here were good people swept up not only in the excitement of opportunities and being able to immediately operate above [their] pay grade, but because they believed they were part of a great and positive mission for peace and prosperity.
As for how it has changed, everything is different. Statistically, the Levada Center has been covering “right track, wrong track” since 1996 and in November of that year 21% said right track and 58% wrong track. In April of this year, it was 68% right track and 21% wrong track. There are still fabulously rich people as well as people with outside toilets but there is also everything in between with an ever-growing middle class. It has been nothing short of astonishing to see the changes that have taken place in my village in one of the poorest regions in the country since we built our house in 2001.
NB: How did you get involved in community activism in Russia? How has community activism evolved there over the years? What types of issues are likely to precipitate activism in Russia and what form does it take?
SLK: It was organic. It began by using my English classes as a means of civics education. This was inspired by my students’ response to the question, “What is democracy?” There was only one answer: “freedom.” When I prompted for more answers, it was more freedoms: religion, speech, etc. Never did anyone say “responsibility” and that was shocking and troubling to me having been raised in the Kennedy “ask not what your country can do for you” era. I developed a mock government curriculum for my classes and discovered that, as long as you called it a master class in English, you could talk about anything. I went on to conduct open seminars starting with the first gender seminar in Siberia with the only Russian feminist in the region and then, with AIDS raging in New York. I decided it was important to conduct the first sex seminar with an American male psychologist.
After a year, money was a problem. I was saved by a woman in an American delegation who was impressed with my work and organized for me to apply to an American foundation for support. My first grant of $18,000 was to travel around to universities with my “Democracy Seminar.”
In the meantime, people started knocking on my door asking questions about organizing. The U.S. foundation encouraged me to create a U.S. NGO and apply to open an information center. I got the grant, left the university, and opened the ECHO information center and the first free access Internet node in Siberia. I only found out later that this was possible because a former student who became my technical director illegally tapped into a cable at a technology company several floors above our office.
A year later USAID gave me almost $2 million through a U.S.-based organization to expand what I was doing and create the Siberian Civic Initiatives Support Center and Siberian Network of community development/NGO resource centers in 11 regions covering a territory larger than the United States. An American colleague moved to Krasnoyarsk to take over the “democracy seminars.” After several months, he told me that university [level] is too late, we needed to work with schools. He started conducting school seminars in small towns that were all decimated by the transition.

[Source: opendemocracy.net]
Throughout the country the enterprises and institutions that supported these communities were shuttered, all that was left were the schools. He came up with the idea of developing a community school model that, instead of the U.S.’s life-long learning focus, would be about creating schools as centers for community development. This led us to John Dewey, the great American democratic education philosopher. One particular quote provided the foundation for our overall development approach, “Wherever democracy has fallen, it was too exclusively political in nature. It had not become part of the bone and blood of people in daily conduct. Unless democratic habits of thought are part of the fiber of a people, political democracy is insecure.”
Both of these organizations continue to do important work and the models they promote are being practiced not only throughout Russia but in other former Soviet republics. Management was turned over to Russians years ago and I continued to work with them as an expert until the pandemic.
Still, most Americans have no idea that their taxpayer dollars were invested so successfully in Russia. That is because they only hear about and from a very small group of mostly Moscow-based human rights groups that applied a completely different strategy to their development work. The blowback from their strategy became so pronounced that it started to impact anyone receiving U.S. funding.
Prior to Obama coming to the White House my colleagues and I were often invited to debrief new USAID staff and other visiting delegations. I developed a democracy paradigm comparison Power Point to outline the two strategies as I perceived them [traditional transition vs. new Siberian]. It included an emphasis on freedom vs. responsibility, being against something vs. being for something, PR vs. one-on-one organizing, civil society equated with human rights and NGOs vs. civil society equated with anyone who chooses to use the space, NGO development vs. community and economic development, and human rights vs. quality of life.
We all agreed that human rights was a key goal, our problem was using it as a means for democratic development because it tended to generate criticism and conflict instead of partnership and trust. The step one I was raised on [was to] find that small patch of common ground and build from there.
My Russian colleagues told me early on, if we start demanding and lecturing local government, they will squish us like a bug. Instead, we invited them to observe a grant committee and introduced them to supporting NGOs in open competition. Next, we invited them to contribute some money and conduct a competition together. This led to the first Russian government money in history distributed to NGOs through a transparent competition. So, from zero rubles to non-government-related organizations to multiple millions yearly through national, regional and local competitions that often include NGO leaders as judges.
Another example is coalitions. In 1995 we organized sectoral meetings for Novosibirsk NGOs (environment, disabled, women’s, etc.) and were surprised that most of them didn’t know each other. We offered to finance an all-Siberian conference for their issue if they would organize it. No one was interested; there was real resistance to working with people they didn’t know. I thought of it as the “nashi” (ours) Soviet hangover. We were desperate until USAID gave me permission to find a real U.S. grassroots activist (most of the experts used in these programs are trained trainers with no real experience). He came over from Maine and asked NGO leaders several questions. When they left, he told us, “weak organizations don’t create coalitions, concentrate on institutional development and create opportunities for people to meet and work together and coalitions will appear.” He was right.
These are just two key examples of how things have changed. Also, essential for us was the inclusion of regional NGO leaders in all national decision-making processes. In general, more people are active addressing a wider range of issues than ever before. For the most part, today things are similar to the U.S.
Community development almost always begins with beautification actions [like] collecting litter, landscaping, building playgrounds and benches, etc. Issue-specific groups most often appear in response to a personal experience such as a child born with disabilities, breast cancer, a passion for nature or animals, etc. The big difference is the numbers. They are increasing but still relatively small compared to the U.S. Still, when we first tried to introduce volunteerism, we were universally met with pushback, “we were all volunteers during the Soviet Union and what good did it do us?” By the end of the ’90s our [program] mobilized over half a million volunteers throughout Siberia.
The challenges 30 years ago continue to be relevant: to encourage more people to be active, to help those who were active to be more effective and to get government and business to be supportive of these initiatives. There is no question that over the last 5-6 years the situation has become more challenging for NGOs and that is sad and frustrating, but it has not stopped the community development-focused organizations I have worked with.
Most significantly, in terms of how all this can ultimately lead to the kind of responsibility-focused democracy I believe in, are the results of a recent Levada Center survey. They asked “to what degree do you feel responsible for what happens in your town and in the country?” The number who feel fully or significantly responsible for their town went from 3% in 2006 to 21% in December 2022 and in the country from 15% to 39%.
The number who felt no responsibility registered a 19% drop for town and 30% for country. Equally important they asked “to what degree do you think you can influence what happens in your town fully or significantly?” Influence went from 8% to 23% and in the country from 4% to 19%. Here there was a 22% drop for town and 29% drop in the number of people who feel they have no influence on what happens in the country. This is more characteristic of democracy than the totalitarian state some people in America have been led to believe exists in Russia.
My final examples come from my village. For 20 years I was one of two activists in the community and there were no grassroots NGOs. Things really started to change when there was a COVID influx of middle-class people and the appearance of a broader middle class among “locals” thanks to increased economic opportunity from tourism. Since then, there have been dozens of initiatives from pickets to planting trees, and saving a riverbank park from privatization.
Not all have been successful; perhaps more have failed than succeeded but the dynamic has changed. Everything came full circle for me last year. A colleague from the Siberian Center days contacted me. He is now working for a major private foundation in Moscow and was coming for a site visit to an NGO they were supporting in my village! A month later I sat next to a woman at a dinner party who told me about her NGO that had just won a [Russian] presidential grant. None of this existed 30 years ago, [so] how can I not be hopeful?
NB: In terms of activism in Russia, Westerners tend to hear about Western-supported opposition activists like Alexei Navalny and expats like Garry Kasparov and Mikhail Khodorkovsky. How well do these people represent Russian opinion in general? How well do they represent actual grassroots Russian activists and their concerns?
SLK: I have never heard a Russian talk about Kasparov or Khodorkovsky in relation to politics. Navalny is not as popular as people in America think. Navalny appeared on the list of Levada Center responses to the question, “Name politicians or public figures you trust the most.” He peaked at 5% in January 2021. A January 2023 survey asked if people approved of Navalny’s activities and 9% approved, 57% did not, 23% said they hadn’t heard about him, and 11% said it was hard to answer.

Garry Kasparov [Source: pcmag.com]

Alexei Navalny [Source: bbc.co.uk]
At a more grassroots level, I followed the 2020 Novosibirsk City Council elections closely because there were several non-systemic opposition candidates running, some as part of the Navalny Coalition and others as Independents. The Navalny candidate said that “Elections in Novosibirsk are elections for all of Russia. Today in Novosibirsk, we will decide how the electoral landscape in general will look next year. We have the capital cities Moscow and St. Petersburg, they have their electoral behavior, and we have villages with their electoral behavior. Novosibirsk is the golden middle, how people vote in Novosibirsk, plus or minus, is how the rest of the country votes.”
With a miserable 18.4% turnout, only 3% of eligible voters showed up to support Coalition candidates. So, despite a video about corruption in Novosibirsk that went viral with 4.9 million views, Navalny’s massive PR campaign was not generating votes, there was an enthusiasm gap, the turnout for all Coalition candidates was even slightly lower than the overall. This could have been a style rather than a policy issue because a less confrontational Independent candidate garnered the most votes in the election and 27.6% of her district’s eligible voters turned out.
NB: Can you talk about the effect of government crackdowns on foreign funding of media and NGOs in Russia? How much of an effect has this had on Russian activism both qualitatively and quantitatively?
SLK: I can only speak authoritatively about the initial “Foreign Agent Law” [of 2012] requiring certain NGOs to register as foreign agents or to be identified by the government to be put on the list. The hysteria [about] the initial appearance of the “Foreign Agent Law” and the crushing of civil society was not borne out in practice.
The organization I founded was in the first wave and shortly thereafter a number of my colleagues’ organizations were listed. The reality was that listed groups had three options. They could forgo foreign funding and apply to be removed from the list (as did the organization I started) and continue to do their work. They could make their objections public while following the increased reporting and labeling requirements, keep their foreign funding, and continue to operate. Lastly groups who refused to comply with the requirements could be assessed large fines and eventually liquidation. Some in this latter group found work-arounds registering new entities. There was a chilling effect but I did not see the work of activists notably diminished qualitatively or quantitatively.
As relations between the West and Russia worsened over the years, the effects became more pronounced for some groups, especially those with Western funding which did not have any domestic sources of funding. Still, the organizations that I know continue to work. There was a great quote from a community foundation leader responding to a couple of people complaining about how hard it was to work with their local government. He said, “Don’t spend your energy trying to break through, find a way to go around.” It has never been easy for activists.
The “foreign agent” label became noticeable to a broader group of the public with its expansion to include media in 2021 and 2022. None of this is good and the space for civil society has constricted but it has not been crushed. I do not offer this as justification but to add some context to the initial appearance of the foreign agent label. It was a blowback response to activities by some foreign-funded groups that the Russian government did not feel were appropriate. There had been numerous warnings that went ignored. Based on my personal experience, it would and should be unacceptable for a wholly Russian-funded NGO to conduct some of the activities I saw here in the U.S. There were issues to be addressed; however, considering their lack of connection to the grass roots, the government response was an over-reaction.
NB: How would you characterize democracy in Russia? From what I’ve studied and heard Russians say is that what happened there in the ’90s gave many Russians a negative association with democracy. Would you say that Russians want democracy and, if they do, what will that democracy look like compared to American democracy? For example, Russians do not have the kind of libertarian hostility toward the role of the state that underlies American democratic philosophy.
SLK: As I said when I first asked my students their word association to “democracy,” there was one response: “freedom.” When I returned to the classroom in 2016, in addition to freedom, student associations included “compromise,” “lie,” “choice,” “majority,” “not Russia,” “liberality,” “inefficient,” “quality,” “respect,” “sham,” “Ancient Greece,” “impossible.” Still no “responsibility.”
The assumption that freedom is both necessary and sufficient for a sustainable democracy may be why some elites still see the 1990s as the heyday of democracy when it was chaos and desperation for most. The ’90s democracy was also problematic because of things like the constitutional crisis and Yeltsin bombing the Moscow White House Parliament building. A student wrote, “The most amazing thing is that Yeltsin swore to obey the Constitution…but a few days ago he said he would not pay attention to Congress’s decisions.” So, this was not a great environment for an ends-justifies-the-means situation.

Russia under Yeltsin—not Putin. [Source: wsj.com]
Another issue surfaced later. When I asked my follow-up question, is Russia a democracy, only a smattering of hands went up if any. Then, “Is America a democracy?” and instantaneously all hands up until 2001 when I attended a conference for school directors in Voronezh, 500 kilometers south of Moscow, [which] was used by the Germans as a staging ground for [the five-month battle of] Stalingrad and school kids still pull bullets and helmets out of the ground for school museums. “Is America a democracy?” and no hands went up. There was an awkward silence as the directors traded looks of embarrassment and confusion until a large, commanding woman sitting in the middle of the front row asked, “why didn’t they count the votes?” [NB: referring to the 2000 Bush-Gore election]
Despite all those mixed messages and quality-of-life negative results, what I consider the real indicators for a democracy continue to improve—i.e., more people actively addressing a wider range of issues. Yes, the civil society space has contracted but there is still plenty of room to be active and it is being used. I don’t think any response to the question “do you want democracy?” would be meaningful here because of the wide variety of ways people define it, they are still trying to figure out what it means.
Thirty years in, what did we expect? I know I thought, like most, four months, maybe a year and bing-bang-boom democracy. Well, the U.S. has been defining and redefining its democracy for over 200 years. It’s an on-going process. However, if it cannot be connected in any way with improved quality of life or hope for it, people will not be attracted to it. That said, I do think that people here are more predisposed to a more social democratic format (Europe vs. U.S. free market) since, as you noted, they are comfortable with a bigger government role and safety net.
NB: What is your personal observation about the effect of the “special military operation” in Ukraine in general on Russians? What about the mobilization?
SLK: What strikes me most is how different it is from the American experience of war in the 21st century. In the U.S., wars have been a constant, tragic but largely ignorable fact for most people I know. Here, there are two fronts, the kinetic special military operation [SMO] and economic sanctions, and everyone I know is impacted by both of them.
The degree of impact varies with some leaving Russia while others volunteered to serve. Another big difference is that this is personal for so many people who have relatives or friends in Ukraine and/or who grew up there. Some of those relationships have survived while others have not. Even for those who do not have relatives or friends living or fighting in Ukraine the realities of war are more visceral to people here. Perhaps it is fading among some in the younger generation, but the horrors of what is called the Great Patriotic War are part of every family’s history. Most of the people I know are supportive of the SMO—they do not think it was “unprovoked”—but none of them are “rah-rah” about it.
As for the sanctions, everyone was terrified at first, scrambling to do what they could to mitigate the effects. The big hit never came even though everything is different. People here are good at being creative, making ends meet as the most significant impact has been inflation that all countries are suffering. Most of what left is not really missed or has a work-around. On the plus side, there are big opportunities for those ready to take advantage of them. For example, the closing of the West to Russia has generated an economic boom for people in my village, which has become a major tourist destination with two flights a day from Moscow.
NB: How have friends and family that you may still have in the U.S. reacted to your living in Russia all these years? Did you notice any change at various times when tensions between the U.S. and Russia were heightened, such as during Russiagate and after the start of the “special military operation”?
SLK: My family and friends have always been very supportive of my work here. The fact is I could never have done what I did without their support. You have to remember, when I arrived there was no Internet. If I wanted to call home, I had to order a call in advance through an overseas operator. My sister, who is a lawyer, set up and ran an American NGO when I started to get American funding. She was an essential resource strategically and helping identify American activists who could enlighten our work.
My other sister owns a successful coffee business and introduced me to the double bottom line business model with profit equal to social mission. I presented this and her company as a case study in my seminars on social entrepreneurship at the university and on a tour around Yamalo- Nenets (Autonomous Okrug) sponsored by the regional government in the far north. On the personal front, I got together with my future husband when one of my best friends came to visit and encouraged me to take another look at him [as a romantic prospect].
As for changes in response to increasing tensions between the U.S. and Russia, until Trump they were only noticeable in relation to my work. A shift in the press was noticeable with Putin’s decision to run and opposition protests were launched in 2011. The coverage was based on a Moscow-centric liberal point of view that had every right to exist but promoted a very limited view of the country. This skewed narrative over time has led to inaccurate assumptions with disastrous policy implications. It is also the reason I turned my attention to writing and academic research.
The appearance of Russiagate brought it home. During a 2017 visit to America, MSNBC blared from enormous flat-screened TVs in homes of friends where I never noticed a TV before. In 2018 things grew even more ominous when my Russian husband and I went to dinner at a friend’s fiancé’s family home in Maine. An American, he was our neighbor for years in Altai before returning to the U.S. The next morning, he told us the liberal matriarch said we were not welcomed back. He apologized saying, “she gets her news from Rachel Maddow.” Around that time, my teenage daughter asked me, “why are the Russians in American TV shows and movies always bad people?”

A poisonous influence. [Source: sott.net]
When the SMO began, it became necessary to navigate relationships with some friends in regular COVID-inspired ZOOM groups. Others reached out and asked, “tell me what I don’t know.” When friends shared my pieces on Facebook, there were some shocking comments from their friends and any attempt to have a mutually beneficial dialogue was useless. One high school friend compared me to a diarist in 1930s’ Nazi Germany and said that any Russian who supports the war should burn in hell.
I was allowed to enter the country but my elite private high school told me I would not be welcomed at the reunion because I had the Sputnik vaccine. When the SMO happened three months before the reunion, a couple of friends said America would not be a good environment for me so I canceled the 2022 trip. A classmate said he was worried I would get in trouble if he mailed me our reunion book of memories. I follow the American press daily so I am not surprised by the assumptions. It is the deeply hate-filled attitudes of a very few people that scare me. I never experienced hatred before and nothing good can come of it. Despite the sounds of distant thunder growing louder over the past 20 years, I never imagined it would come to this, it is heartbreaking and so, so dangerous and unnecessary.
NB: What do you most want Americans and Westerners to know about Russia?
SLK: No Russian has ever thrown me out of their home. I was concerned when the SMO and sanctions began but it is almost as if people go out of their way to be kind. When I meet new people, they always ask where I am from because of my awful accent. When I tell them, their response is the same as it was 30 years ago, “What is it like there? Why are you still here?” My answers are more complicated now as my daughter loves studying math at the university and my husband has his dream machine-learning job. Still, for me it is the same now as it was 30 years ago. The best way for me to contribute to America is to generate increased understanding and peace between our two countries. I do spend a lot of time now drowning in a sense of failure and yet I am starting to see some green shoots, things I spent years looking for here in relation to civil society and now evidence of real reason for hope. There is an anti-war candidate running for [U.S.] President [Robert F. Kennedy Jr.] and people ask me for sources so they can learn more.
There are four things I am sure of:
1)This war/SMO was wholly avoidable, it has nothing to do with democracy, and the American people need to be better educated about developments in the post-Soviet world.
2)There were countless lost opportunities for America to continue supporting civil society. We stopped trying to make things work. Krasnoyarsk, the largest and one of the richest regions in the country, was the first region to establish a major NGO grant competition. In 2006 the governor asked us to develop and implement a training and information center model that could be established throughout the region so everyone had access to the information and skills necessary to develop and conduct effective projects. At the time, USAID was looking for Russian institutional development partnerships so we pitched the idea of expanding the project. The governor agreed, the head of USAID agreed, and a meeting between them was set up. Then, what became known as the “spy rock scandal” [a scandal involving UK spying in Russia via a fake rock that camouflaged recording equipment to pass information] happened and the meeting was canceled. I met with the USAID head and he said, “Don’t worry Sarah, let’s give it a few days and we’ll work something out.” And they did. The meeting got bumped down to vice governor and assistant head, they agreed, and numerous U.S.-supported NGOs provided development services to the region for two years. When it came time to renew, toward the end of the Bush administration, Krasnoyarsk was interested, [but] the U.S. was not.
3)Americans’ assumptions about Russia are based on the opinions of a very small group of people who have every right to their opinions, but they should not be mistaken as reliable narrators for the largest country on Earth.
4)In relation to democratic development in Russia and elsewhere, America cannot impose its priorities and models on people. They will figure it out themselves if they have an opportunity to identify their own interests and prosper economically. The best thing America can do now to promote democracy worldwide is to concentrate on making their own democracy real.
https://covertactionmagazine.com/2023/0 ... president/
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Putin, Prigozhin and the management principle: “work with the hand you are dealt”
There has been a lot of talk these past couple of days about the revelation that on 29 June, less than a week after the Wagner Group's armed mutiny, Vladimir Putin received Yevgeny Prigozhin and 35 of his senior military commanders in the Kremlin for three hours of talks.
How can this be? What is the sense of it? Why would Putin talk to the man he had denounced a few days before as a traitor?
Anyone asking these questions has not been paying much attention to Vladimir Putin's “people management” record these past twenty-three years. It all follows the principle that you find practiced in many large institutions, both private and public: work with the hand you have been dealt, considering that most everyone under you is good for something. This is the operating principle I saw around me during my four years working for United Parcel Service. It surely is the ruling principle in the United States armed forces.
When he came to power in 2000, Putin was dealt with a large contingent of rapacious oligarchs whom he tamed, especially by breaking the back of Mikhail Khodorkovsky's presumptuous political ambitions and sending the troublemaker to a long stay behind bars. Once tamed, the robber barons stayed clear of politics and spent their time developing the broad swathes of the economy that they had come to control, even if they skimmed off unseemly profits for themselves.
Back in the year 2000, Putin also inherited Liberal functions of doubtful loyalty to himself and to the country. Geniuses in organizational matters or financial management, they often had thieving proclivities. Anatoly Chubais comes to mind. He had run Boris Yeltsin's re-election campaign in 1996 which achieved victory by all means fair and foul. He went on to head several state enterprises, in particular, in charge of nano technologies, from which he stole with both hands. But the same disloyalty could be said of Alexander Kudrin, who long served as Russia's Finance Minister and was named the best finance minister over a succession of years by his West European peers.
Both Chubais and Kudrin are now in self-imposed exile abroad, together with many smaller ranking Liberals who served in the Russian government or state enterprises until the start of the Special Military Operation. And a charge of doubtful loyalty could even be brought against German Gref, who has in recent years overseen the total transformation of Russia's largest bank, Sber, into a customer oriented, highly efficient and technologically advanced institution. Gref remains at his post, though he has lost some feathers in terms of air time on State television. In his decision to serve on, he may be paired with the Central Bank Governor, Elvira Nabiullina, who also is a strong defender of the Liberal, market driven economy at a time when Russia has had to take further central control to put the country on a war jogging.
None of these very capable if equivocal political and economic actors during the Putin years has been squeezed dry. They were allowed to spread dissension and/or to steal in small doses while they contributed a lot of “juice” to the cocktail of Russia's economic success during the Putin years.
Then there are many prominent members of the Russian political Establishment who were deeply flawed in one way or another but were retained and, as justified, promoted to ever greater responsibilities. Here, speaker of the Federation Council, the upper chamber of Russia's bicameral legislature, Valentina Matviyenko is a prime example. You see a lot of her on Russian television as she performs her public functions of all kinds. Yesterday she was in Beijing where she was received for talks by Chinese President Xi Jinping. In official ranking, Matviyenko is the second most important political figure in the Russian state hierarchy after Putin.
But where did Matviyenko come from?
When I was living and working in St Petersburg in 1994 and later, we saw a lot of Matviyenko. She was a known drunkard who occasionally appeared in public 'under the influence' and her son was widely known for his corrupt practices making a fortune in speculative real estate deals that were enabled by his mother's position. I recall seeing denunciations of mother and son on park benches in Petersburg.
After her candidacy for re-election as mayor of the city was withdrawn and she was replaced by a relatively unknown candidate favored by the Kremlin, a certain Yakovlev, she returned to Moscow. There she sobered up and was given a new chance to succeed, which she has done with élan.
*****
A couple of weeks ago, in my first commentary on the Wagner Group rebellion, I remarked that over the centuries Russian history has had a number of rebellions that were more similar to the Wagner affair than the February 1917 “revolution” that Vladimir Putin evoked when he first spoke on television following restoration of order. Among these previous episodes was the treason committed in 1708-09 by the hetman of the Zaporozhie Cossacks, Ivan Mazepa, who had been the Peter the Great's man on the ground in what is now part of Ukraine, but who turned against the tsar and joined the forces of the Swedish King Charles XII who was then engaged in a life or death struggle with Russia. Like Prigozhin, Mazepa was one of the wealthiest people in the land with extensive land holdings, and like Prigozhin he rebelled when he understood that the new military reforms being introduced by Peter would strip him of much of his power as a freebooter. Mazepa was a rare instance when Peter the Great's trust in his subordinates was misplaced. Otherwise, over the course of his reign, Peter raised to high and responsible positions many ambitious men of very modest backgrounds. Some were scoundrels who abused their power, others less so, but nearly all contributed their superior intelligence and talents to the cause of Russia's greatness. Peter raised to high and responsible positions many ambitious men of very modest backgrounds. Some were scoundrels who abused their power, others less so, but nearly all contributed their superior intelligence and talents to the cause of Russia's greatness. Peter raised to high and responsible positions many ambitious men of very modest backgrounds. Some were scoundrels who abused their power, others less so, but nearly all contributed their superior intelligence and talents to the cause of Russia's greatness.
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We have heard very little about what Vladimir Putin may have discussed with the leaders of the Wagner Group at their meeting in the Kremlin. According to his press secretary Peskov, these commanders all swore allegiance to the State and to Putin and he laid down ground rules for their returning to active fighting in the Special Military Operation.
We may expect to learn more in the weeks to come.
©Gilbert Doctorow, 2023
https://gilbertdoctorow.com/2023/07/12/ ... are-dealt/