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Demonization of President Putin bulletin, 2011

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[Dec 31, 2011] Crushing Vladimir Putin by Dan Lieberman

There must be more than coincidence to the observation that the American media's appraisal of a world leader often reflects the State Department's attitude towards the same leader. See also Propaganda
December 26, 2011 | Scoop News

There must be more than coincidence to the observation that the American media's appraisal of a world leader often reflects the State Department's attitude towards the same leader. Just search history; leaders who failed their people but accepted United States foreign policies received only mild criticisms, while leaders who contended U.S. foreign policies, regardless of relations with their populations, received scathing reviews from popular news sources.

China's Chang Kai-Shek, Korea's Syngman Rhee, Vietnam's President Van Thieu, Nicaragua's Somoza and in more recent times, Egypt's Hosni Mubarak, Mexico's Carlos Salinas de Gortari, Russia's Boris Yeltsin, and Georgia's Mikheil Saakashvili fit the former pattern. These friends of Washington received relatively harmless rebukes for nefarious actions.

Soviet leaders until Mikhail Gorbachev, France's Charles de Gaulle, Egypt's Gamal Abdel Nasser, Indonesia's Sukarno, Cuba's Fidel Castro, and Venezuela's Hugo Rafael Chavez, all of whom confronted American foreign policies, were, regardless of their acomplishments, constantly castigated by the American media.

Description of the castigated grow, graduating from being against American policies to being anti-American, then a serious threat to America and finally a danger to everyone. Nothing good can be said about them; anyone muttering kindly remarks is considered ignorant and slightly warped. After the aversion to the anti-Americans who are a danger to everyone engulfs a large percentage of the population, the media joins the bandwagon, aware it best not contradict the one-sided appraisals.

This conditioning enables U.S. foreign policy planners to gain public support for their rejection of foreign critics and for policies that disturb their critics. Initiation of wars in Vietnam, Iraq, Granada, Panama and other countries could not occur before a mention of the name of the leaders of the antagonist nations had aroused an angry emotional reaction in America's psyche. Economic warfare against several nations could not be practiced until Americans were made to feel that the economic warfare was morally correct; a necessary action to defeat and replace the criminal leader of the impudent nation.

Despite Hillary Clinton having pressed the reset button, Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin clearly broadcasts his disfavor with State Department initiatives. Has he also fallen into the Washington character crusher and being leveled due to his alleged antagonism towards America? American media's scornful attacks on the Russian premier hint at that possibility.

The Russian Prime Minister is continually presented as a bad boy, a tyrannical, and corrupt megolomaniac who assists his cronies in pilfering Russia's resources. Lacking is a body of verified evidence to support the allegations. Putin's critics found an opportunity to provide evidence in the recent legislative elections in Russia and promptly accused the Russian premier of personally stealing the election, labeled him rejected by the Russian people, made him responsible for his Party's losses, and described him as lucky. To them, Russia's tremendous growth during Putin's tenure is only due to high energy prices and not his leadership.

Constant repetition of these charges condition the portrait of Vladimir Putin. Are the charges true, specious or a matter of perspective? If the facts are obscure, logic overcomes the obscurity.

Putin stole the election

The New York Times echoed the American media approach to the confusing situation.

Not What Mr. Putin Planned, New York Times, December 7, 2011

"The United States needs Russia's cooperation on a host of issues, most notably Iran, and the Obama administration made the right decision to try to 'reset' the relationship. But that can't mean giving Mr. Putin's authoritarian ways a pass. So it was good to hear Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton express 'serious concerns' that the voting was neither free nor fair."

The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) monitored the election and presented an analysis on "free and fair" in a press release.

MOSCOW, 5 December 2011 "Despite the lack of a level playing field during the Russian State Duma elections, voters took advantage of their right to express their choice.

"The observers noted that the preparations for the elections were technically well-administered across a vast territory, but were marked by a convergence of the state and the governing party, limited political competition and a lack of fairness.

"Although seven political parties ran, the prior denial of registration to certain parties had narrowed political competition. The contest was also slanted in favour of the ruling party: the election administration lacked independence, most media were partial and state authorities interfered unduly at different levels. The observers also noted that the legal framework had been improved in some respects and televised debates for all parties provided one level platform for contestants.

"On election day, voting was well organized overall, but the quality of the process deteriorated considerably during the count, which was characterized by frequent procedural violations and instances of apparent manipulations, including serious indications of ballot box stuffing."
http://www.osce.org/odihr/elections/85753

Granted the OSCE press release is only a preliminary and abbreviated summary before a final report, scheduled for its 2012 meeting. Nevertheless, its evaluation uses vague expressions - procedural violations, instances of apparent, serious indications - that don't confirm extensive fraud.

All seven registered political parties were approved to participate in the elections. Is that a narrow field? The Party with the lowest total received only 0.3% of the vote. Did the electorate need more or want more?

Incumbent legislators, certainly those in the U.S., usually have great advantages in elections, monopolize the news and gain more media coverage. Wherever possible, the Party in power slants the election with all its power. What else is new? Proven charges of ballot stuffing and multiple voting demand investigations, but these skewing of elections are minor when compared to the disguised frauds from PACs and lobbies, many of whom control media expressions and campaign funding. Political Parties are shaped to skirt the edges of legality and do everything to assure victory. When the numerical and financial disparity between one political Party and the others is great, as it is between United Russia and its competitors, the favoritism and slant becomes more exaggerated.

By sensationalizing the alleged frauds, constantly repeating and continually re-circulating the same, the media made it difficult to gauge their actual significance. Signals were filtered out and noise amplified so that only the noise was heard. A similar happening occurred with the heavily publicized videos. Subjectively interpreted, lacking verification and possibly being staged, an unlikely situation, but still a possibility that nobody considered to investigate, an appraisal of the condemning videos places them as images of fraud that look good on Court TV but are not sufficiently convincing for judicial courts. Undoubtedly there were severe irregularities, but were they substantiated as massive and organized or were they more driven by local exuberances and incompetent behaviors?

The table below contains significant details for resolving the debate on election validity. It shows that the election results were close to the trend in the polls and to their final readings. If United Russia (UR) did much better than the polls, then fraud would be a definite probability. By doing worse than predicted, either the UR poorly prepared the mechanisms for illegally augmenting vote totals, or the mechanisms did not exist.

United

Russia

Communist Party

Liberal Democratic
Party

A Just Russia

Yabloko

Patriots of Russia

Right
Cause

Opinion poll
19-20 Nov

53.7%

16.7%

11.6%

10%

2.9%

1.6%

1.0%

Final Vote

49.32%
(238 seats)

19.19%
(92 seats)

11.67%
(56 seats)

13.24%
(64 seats)

3.3%

(no seats)

0.97%

(no seats)

0.60%

(no seats)

The Russian people rejected Putin

"The youthful, Internet-savvy Russians who have turned out in the streets in historic numbers in recent weeks want to end Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's untrammeled rule over their country, but whether they can translate their frustration to the political arena - or even whether they will remain fired up - remains an open question."
Washington Post, December 19, 2011

Did voters, who were electing local delegates to the Duma, go to the polls thinking of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin? Unlikely. Interim elections reflect voter opinions on the legislature and somewhat on the president, who is Dmitry Medvedev. In Russia, as in France, the president has considerable power. He nominates the highest state officials, including the prime minister, can pass decrees without consent from the Duma, and is head of the armed forces and Security Council.

The American media might insist that Putin manages everything behind the scenes, but President Medvedev's performance during the last four years contradicts that assertion. No question that several years ago Putin dealed with Medvedev and promised him support for the presidency in return for a promise that Medvedev would not run for a second term. Knowledge of that agreement might have disturbed voters and swayed their preferences. Nevertheless, Medvedev has operated sufficiently independent during his reign. U.S. media portrays Putin as the Russian leader. Putin is prime minister, but Russians and the U.S. State Department interacted with President Medvedev during the last four years.

Putin's United Russia was Defeated

"It's embarrassing enough to do poorly in an honest election. Putin's party managed to crater despite vigorous measures to rig the vote." Chicago Tribune, Steve Chapman, Dec. 15, 2011.

Crater? A defeat? Steve Chapman misrepresented the election. Gaining 49.3% of the vote in a five Party system is an astonishing victory, not as large as previous United Russia victories, but a total that any European political Party would envy. In the last national elections in United Kingdom, France and Germany, no political Party received more than 36% of the vote. Don't weep for UR. They are not too sad.

The electorate normally anguishes when the same political Party dominates its life for a decade. Lower totals for United Russia reflect that usual discontent. After ten years of power, it is surprising that Russia's leading political organization still retains 50% support from the electorate. Evidently, the populace has not tired of United Russia's managed economy, which features statist and nationalist positions, both of which have irked the western powers. The statist Communist Party and nationalist Liberal Democratic Party of Russia (misnamed) showed increased vote totals from their 2007 vote totals.

... ... ...

Dan Lieberman is the editor of Alternative Insight, a monthly web based newsletter. His website articles have been read in more than 150 nations, while articles written for other websites have either appeared or been linked in online journals throughout the world. Many have served as teaching resources in several universities and several have become Internet classics, each attracting about ten thousand readers annually

[Dec 30, 2011] The Pumpkin Sherbet Revolution

Huge pressure from the West which is ready to go "va bank" for any anti-Putin candidate and coordinate and finance color revolution
The Kremlin Stooge

Kievite:

This is a war the Kremlin can win.

IMHO the situation is actually pretty serious. Like was in case with Orange Revolution the opposition now wants to exploit weak spots of "Putin's regime". Among them:

1. Huge pressure from the West which is ready to go "va bank" for any anti-Putin candidate and coordinate and finance color revolution. That point does not require further comments.

2. Results of Yeltin's privatization. there is wide discontent about it and this is probably the most powerful tool the opposition has. My impression is that this demand has a lot of support of middle (and part of upper) class. I remember that similar noises were heard from Orange Revolution leaders, especially from Timoshenko (who for her role correlates with Navalni well). Of course after coming to power this was swiped under the rug: the only action I remember that can be classified as "re-privatization" was confiscating from Kuchma son-in-law and selling giant Krivorozhstal for 4.8 billions (more then total sum of previous Ukrainian privatization) to Indian billionaire Lakshmi N. Mittal the German subdivision of the British-Dutch Mittal Steel. (http://www.kommersant.com/page.asp?id=620652)

3. Medvedev weakness as a politician. His tremendous personal blunders (stupid dances, extreme, childish happiness when he was giver a new iPhone, stupid, badly though out initiatives, like Skolkovo, stupid initiatives as a lawmaker like flirting with amnesty for economical crimes and weakening of punishment for embessement, multiple humiliations from his Presidential council on human rights, latest rush with badly thought out reforms, etc) as well as his naive and stupid flirting with liberalism are serious source of discontent that hurt Putin because people see this as a betrayal of Putin's own principles and course by his most trusted lieutenant. In more way then one Medvedev is a knife in Putin's back.

4. The fact that in 10 years in power very few people were brought in and "Leningrad cycle of friends" (aka Leningrad mafia) still dominates (rotation of elite question).

5. Huge problems with the corruption of law enforcement and links between law enforcement and organized crime which are inherited from Yeltsin's days. Including crimes committed by acting policemen (so called werewolfs) are projected on the party in power and personally on Putin despite the fact that this is impossible to change. Complicity and fear of police to investigate crimes committed by "people from Caucasus" because of fear of retaliation.

6. Net of western NGO (actually Navalni in a way is one person NGO as he is no other job but "protester").

7. Betrayal of the part of the current elite (Kudrin, etc).

8. Wide discontent about government officials abuses of their status as well as part of the elite behaviors "above the law" especially various traffic accidents and using extra expensive cars (Mercedes-Benz, Bentley Continental GT, Maybach, Lamborghini etc) as well as driving with flashing lights without regard to other drivers life or property. Often against the traffic on the opposite side of the road. BTW Prokhorov's Maybach on which he came to the Sakharov Sq meeting did have flashing lights despite the fact that he is not a senior government official.

9. National problems including well-known "Kavkas problem" and problems with gastarbeiters from Turkmenistan and other Southern ex Soviet republics.

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