The future of Russia studied
A report called “Alternative Futures for Russia” will be issued in
Washington today by the authoritative nonprofit Center for Strategic
and International Studies. Besides the usual criticism of democracy in
Russia, some parts of the report are downright fantastic. One of the
alternative futures the report contains is a scenario built around the
possible assassination of Russian President Vladimir Putin on January
7, 2008, in Moscow. Kommersant Washington correspondent Dmitry Sidorov
has read the report.
The authors of the 59-page report are director of the CSIS Russia and
Eurasia program Andrew Kuchins, former senior director for Russian
affairs at the National Security Council Thomas Graham, Assistant
Professor of International Affairs at George Washington University
Henry Hale, senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International
Economics Anders Aslund and others. On the report’s cover are five
photographs: Russian President Vladimir Putin with the G8 leaders,
Putin with the Chinese President Hu Jintao, the recent arrest of Other
Russia leader Garri Kasparov, snow-covered oil wells and children in a
computer class.
Although the scenarios for Russian development suggested by the
American experts differ noticeably from each other in accordance with
their personal points of view, they hold ... more »
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Saturday, December 15
by
Publisher
on Fri 14 Dec 2007 09:11 PM AKST
by
Publisher
on Fri 14 Dec 2007 09:10 PM AKST
Vladimir Putin may be popular in Russia for saving the nation from the
chaos of the 1990s, but a sect in the country has taken its devotion a
step further by praying to 'presidential icons.'
The Bolshaya Elnya village in the Nizhny Novgorod Region is home to the "Rus' Resurrecting" sect, a group of local residents who believe that President Putin was both the Apostle Paul and King Solomon in previous lives. Rus' is the term used for the medieval East Slavic nation that gave its name to modern Russia. "We didn't choose Putin," Mother Fontinya told the Moskovsky Komsomolets paper, expounding on the first time she laid eyes on the "holy one." "It was when Yeltsin was naming him as his successor [during a live New Year's Eve TV broadcast in 1999]. My soul exploded with joy! 'An ubermensch! God himself has chosen him!'" I cried. "Yeltsin was the destroyer, and God replaced him with his creation," claimed Fontinya. The sect possesses a President Putin icon that Fontinya claims miraculously appeared one day. "He has given us everything," she said, pointing to the sky. A special newspaper published by the sect - 'The Temple of Light' - features interviews ... more » |
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