Will Putin Survive?
Politics / Russia Jul 23, 2014 - 10:38 AM GMTBy: Andrew_McKillop
 From Khruschev to Putin
From Khruschev to Putin
  The chief editor of STRATFOR, George  Friedman in a strangely eccentric article titled 'Can Putin Survive?' tells us  he can't survive, but also says: “And the West no matter how opposed some countries  might be to a split with Putin must come to grips with how effective and  rational he really is”.
Putin is rational – get rid of Putin.
According to Friedman, based on impeccable US sources, “it appears to be the case” that a Russian-supplied BUK SAM battery was used by the rebels of eastern Ukraine to shoot down Malaysian Airlines flight MH17. In turn, at least for Friedman, this means that Moscow's “...ability to divide the Europeans from the Americans would decline. Putin then moves from being an effective, sophisticated ruler who ruthlessly uses power to being a dangerous incompetent supporting a hopeless insurrection with wholly inappropriate weapons”.
Perhaps he should hand them a few nuclear-tipped ballistic missiles from Russia's large stocks?
As of July 22, increasing but unsure  information reopens the thesis that an air-to-air missile may have been used to  destroy the airliner. In that case, only Russian or Kiev government military  aviation could have done it. Friedman sticks to the land-based SAM story. At  least that enables the theory of the pro-Russian rebels downing the airliner to  hang in, hold up and roll along another day.
  Friedman unfortunately excels in  antinomic prose and the classic definition of “antinomic” is when you have two  propositions which seem equally logical and are founded on “indubitable”  reasoning but in fact one – or both of them – are false. Taking only his  affirmation, which isn't the same thing as a fact, that pro-Russian rebels or  any other rebels fighting the Kiev government downed the airliner with a BUK  SAM system needing several vehicles and ground-support radar, would it have  been rational for Putin to supply these weapons? Would the Kiev government have  rationally stationed their own BUK systems near Donetsk and south of the MH17  crash zone to protect against Russian aviation attack in support of the rebels?
The Coming Anti-Putin Insurrection
   To  be sure the propaganda offerings on STRATFOR sites are vastly more  sophisticated and less crude than the anti-Putin hysteria from Wall Street  Journal or other supposed “great newspapers”. These work the lowest-possible  propaganda, for example “Putin's Dirty War” and “Putin's Dirty Money Economy”. 
  Friedman tells us that the regime that  Putin has helped craft “may not be the key to understanding what will happen  next”. Being a KGB man, Putin has restored Soviet-type government, even using  the term "Politburo" for his inner Cabinet. Despite the cabinet  members being hand-picked oligarchs and insiders, however, Friedman tells us  that Putin can at any time face a Khruschev-type or Yeltsin-type inner sanctum  cabal, putsch, or even physical assassination. 
  Friedman uses the really bad example of  Khrushchev's removal from power – which according to some historians came close  to physical removal. Several of Khrushev's supposed “loyalists” were shot dead  shortly after he was deposed – but the detail is that Khrushchev probably  ordered their execution. Dead men dont talk.
  Friedman says Khrushchev had fumbled the  Cuban missile crisis standoff with John F. Kennedy, messed up the  Ukrainian-focused “agricultural recovery” program, and the economy, but makes  no mention at all of Khrushchev's almost instant and never-explained handover  of Crimea to Ukraine as another reason he was deposed.
  Putin's Crimean referendum operation, and  recovery of Crimea is widely approved, even hailed in Russia today as  correcting one huge error of Khrushchev.
  Supposedly, according to Friedman (and  the US State Dept as well as Wall St Journal) Putin is running out of luck with  the Russian economy. His ability to hold things together will now decline as  trust in his ability to manage the economy declines. Politburo oligarchs will  soon become concerned about the consequences of staying too close to Putin. Friedman  says they will melt away. Remaining oligarchs ...”closely tied to a failing  leader [will] start to maneuver. Like Khrushchev, who was failing in economic  and foreign policy, Putin could have his colleagues remove him”.
  Russian observers will be interested by  the line-up that Friedman proposes as putschists who can or may overthrow  Putin. He lists Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, Moscow Mayor Sergei Sobyanin,  Chief of Staff Sergei Ivanov and Security Council Chief Nicolai  Patryushev as possible contenders. Using another bad analogy he asks who would  have expected the emergence of Mikhail Gorbachev? Today, majority Russian  opinion on Gorbachev ranges from that of a failed and corrupt politician, to a  traitor who sold Russia to the west for a glass of Pepsi..
Miscalculate and Mismanage
  Ultimately, politicians who miscalculate  and mismanage tend not to survive – but that reality is not yet known by  current-crop western leaders, from Obama and the European muppet crew, to  Shinzo Abe in Japan. Friedman's constant claim that “Putin miscalculated in  Ukraine” by imagining that the elected Yankovitch government would stay in  place, then “stumbling badly in trying to recoup” by helping the rebels in  eastern Ukraine, is difficult to take seriously. Putin's very clear present  hands-off treatment of the rebels, avoiding open and massive military  commitment to them from Russia, signals that it is not Putin who wants a world  war fought over the Ukraine issue.
  Those seeking a world war and saying so  are much closer to Washington, London, Brussels and Paris.
  Supposedly, if we believe STRATFOR, Putin  has fumbled the economy and his mismanagement of the economy is poised to deal  him a heavy blow. Economic sanctions wielded by Washington, if not by the  Europeans may in fact force the pace of Russia abandoning and removing  petrodollars from as much of its energy trading as possible. Almost daily there  are announcements by Russia, China, India and Iran to move away from the dollar  in trade relations – but is this economic mismanagement? 
  Putin is far from finished. Friedman says  this but then claims he is suffering leadership fatigue after 14 years of power  counting the time Dmitri Medvedev was officially in charge. This could be  compared with the leadership fatigue of France's Francois Hollande, which  started weeks, if not days after he stepped into the Elysees Palace. 
  Granted that Putin himself has said,  several times, he isn't likely to try staying in power much longer, but that is  not the same thing as admitting defeat. For Friedman however, what Putin has to  do – to avoid a Night of The Long Knives ouster -  and regain his footing is to retreat “in the  face of the West and [accept] the status quo in Ukraine”. That is accept a  long-drawn-out civil war on the frontier with Russia that Friedman has the  American arrogance to compare with the Kosovo debacle of Russia – which sealed  the fate of Yeltsin! Yeltsin abandoned all Russian support to Serbia in the  Kosovo war in return for Clinton's promises that “Russia would participate” in  administering the new Kosovo. 
  Western promises were worth nothing, and  the Kosovo war was perceived by almost all Russians as a major  humiliation.  Supposedly, if we believed  Friedman, Putin would firstly face difficulties by accepting a “Kosovan solution”  to the Ukraine crisis: “This would be difficult, given that the Kosovo issue  helped propel him to power and given what he has said about Ukraine over the  years”. Friedman even says that the wild card is that if Putin finds himself in  serious political trouble, “he might become more rather than less aggressive”.  This is a real danger, for the West!
Getting Honest About Putin
  Whether Putin is in real domestic  political trouble or not is very hard to say, and Friedman manages to admit  that. The claims that – since the Syrian standoff with west, followed by  Ukraine – Putin's Russia is experiencing a long series of misfortunes, or for  Friedman a situation where “too many things have gone wrong”  is in no way certain to be how Russians  perceive things. But Friedman is for once right when he says that “as in any  political crisis, more and more extreme options are contemplated if the  situation deteriorates”. The one-word term for that is escalation.
  Friedman does have the residual honesty  in his confused article mainly recycling State Department propaganda to admit  that Putin was and is one of the least repressive or aggressive Russian leaders  the country has had. As one example, the supposedly peace-oriented Gorbachev,  before he turned to selling Pepsi Cola had dug in and hung on to the war in  Afghanistan long after it became totally unpopular in Russia. He only abandoned  Afghanistan in 1988 when Soviet defeat was total. The US of golf-playing Obama  is doing the same thing after its 13-year Afghan war.
  Friedman even cites the Lenin years in  the USSR, paving the way for Stalin's long repression, after which even  Khrushchev seemed a peacenik. Friedman has the honesty to conclude that after  Putin, the rest of the world could regret his departure – but not his forced  departure. There could soon be a time when the world looks back at the Putin  era as a time of liberality. 
  Whipping up and fomenting power struggles  inside the Kremlin to unseat Putin, which is now the clear strategy of the US  and several European states, is dangerous meddling. Internal struggle to  replace Putin would almost certainly result in a major increase of Russian  rejection of existing ties with Europe and the US and increased willingness of  all players to become more brutal.
By Andrew McKillop
Contact: xtran9@gmail.com
Former chief policy analyst, Division A Policy, DG XVII Energy, European Commission. Andrew McKillop Biographic Highlights
Co-author 'The Doomsday Machine', Palgrave Macmillan USA, 2012
Andrew McKillop has more than 30 years experience in the energy, economic and finance domains. Trained at London UK’s University College, he has had specially long experience of energy policy, project administration and the development and financing of alternate energy. This included his role of in-house Expert on Policy and Programming at the DG XVII-Energy of the European Commission, Director of Information of the OAPEC technology transfer subsidiary, AREC and researcher for UN agencies including the ILO.
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