By Michael Stott Reuters - Thursday, October 18 06:17 pmMOSCOW
(Reuters) - Russian President Vladimir Putin called on Thursday for a
powerful parliament, his likely future power base, and unchanged
policies after he leaves the Kremlin.(A
Putin's intentions after his second presidential term ends next year
have attracted intense interest following his decision to head the
candidates' list of United Russia, the biggest political party, and
consider becoming a future prime minister.
"In 2007 and 2008 we have parliamentary and presidential elections and
there will be a different person in the Kremlin," Putin said in a
three-hour question-and-answer session with citizens televised live.
"In these conditions it is extremely important to preserve a stable
path of development for our state and the continuity of decisions taken
in the past few years... It is vital that parliament is effective."
Putin spent most of the session talking about domestic,
bread-and-butter issues such as pensions, wages, schools, prices and
investment in Russia's crumbling infrastructure.
With an eye on a parliamentary election in December, Putin repeatedly
hailed Russia's strong economic growth and improved living standards.
He promised higher pensions to help fight runaway inflation, which is
heading for double digits this year.
Speaking to soldiers at the Plesetsk Cosmodrome in Russia's far north
who earlier on Thursday test-fired a ballistic missile, Putin promised
new nuclear and conventional weapons as part of Moscow's military
build-up.
He referred more than once to the situation in Iraq, which he said
showed the need for Russia to keep strong defences to counter countries
that might try to grab its energy resources.
"Thank God Russia is not Iraq," Putin told a questioner. "It is strong
enough to protect its interests."
Putin told the United States to set a date for withdrawing all troops
from Iraq and said it was "absolutely unacceptable to keep the
occupation force in place ... for eternity.
CENTRE OF GRAVITY
An analyst said Putin's remarks about a strong parliament contained
clues to how he will retain influence after 2008.
"One of the scenarios is that there will be a strong pro-Putin majority
in parliament and the centre of gravity of political life will move
towards that majority," independent analyst Dmitry Oreshkin told
Reuters.
Putin also emphasised continuity when he spoke to Russian reporters
later, comparing himself to Franklin D. Roosevelt, the U.S. leader who
served three full terms and is credited with laying the foundations for
his country's prosperity.
"At the end of the day it turned out that the implementation of that
(Roosevelt's) plan benefited ordinary citizens and the elites and
eventually brought the United States to the position it is in today,"
Russian news agencies quoted Putin as saying.
On foreign policy, Putin warned Washington against striking Iran, whose
nuclear programme has been the subject of United Nations sanctions.
Touching on Washington's plans for a missile defence shield in Europe
and Asia, which have angered Russia, Putin said the United States was
trying to address Moscow's concerns.
But he said Russia may decide to re-deploy its weapons if its interests
were not heeded.
Speaking in front of a studio backdrop decorated in Russia's national
colours, the president congratulated troops on successfully test-firing
a long-range missile, praised the national soccer team for beating
England the previous day and pledged new and better weapons for the
armed forces.
"We will develop missile technology including completely new strategic
(nuclear) complexes, completely new," Putin said. "Work is continuing
and continuing successfully."
"We will not only give attention to the whole nuclear triad --
strategic rocket forces, strategic aviation and the nuclear submarine
fleet -- but also other types of weapons".
Putin has said he will lend his support to a preferred presidential
candidate in the elections but gave no hint on Thursday of who that
might be.
Prime Minister Viktor Zubkov was the only top official he praised by
name. Putin extolled the virtues of Zubkov's fight against corruption
in his previous role running a anti-money laundering watchdog.
Original
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Putin calls for powerful Russia parliament
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