As expected,
Vladimir Putin’s United Russia Party won a landslide victory
in yesterday’s parliamentary elections, garnering over 63% of
the vote as of this writing, which will give it 70% of the seats
in the Duma, or national assembly.
The Communist
Party won only 11.6%. Its leader, Gennady Zuganov, cried foul,
claiming the elections were fraudulent, a pretty rich accusation
from the party that never held an honest vote in its entire
history.
Two other
small parties that vote with Putin’s United Russia gained about
15% of the vote. One of them is led by the Russian neo-fascist
Vladimir Zhirinovsky. Liberal, western-oriented parties were
shut out.
President
Vladimir Putin’s earthy phrases seemed to have captured Russia’s
current muscular mood. Reacting to sharp western criticism of
Russia’s parliamentary elections, Putin, playing "Vlad
the Bad," warned western powers not to "poke their
snotty noses" in his nation’s business.
Putin,
who has been increasingly outspoken of late, mocked President
George Bush’s double standard in accusing Russia of dubious
elections, squashing opposition, and roughing up dissenters
while ignoring similar behavior by US ally Georgia. He could
have also added other key US clients like Pakistan, Egypt, Algeria,
Iraq, Morocco, Afghanistan, and Uzbekistan.
The decision
by the US-backed dictator of Pakistan, former Gen. Pervez Musharraf,
to exclude former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif from January elections
made Washington’s rebuking of Moscow look particularly two-faced.
President
Putin was right to tell off western critics and limit foreign
observation of Russian elections. Russia is a great, historic
power, not some banana republic. If western observers were really
needed to supervise votes in Moscow, Omsk and Kaluga, then why
shouldn’t Russian observers supervise America’s sometimes dodgy
elections? For example, in Chicago, where the dead routinely
vote; in Florida, where blacks are turned away; or Ohio where
rigged voting machines gave Republicans victory in 2004 elections.
It would
be better if we dropped the pretense that Russia conducts free,
fair, western-style elections. Elections under former US protégé
Boris Yeltsin were all rigged or voters bought. Today, Russian
opposition parties have almost no funding, they are excluded
from most media, which is largely government controlled. Parties
winning less than 7% of the vote are excluded, and there is
no independent electoral commission.
Sunday’s
vote was really a referendum on President Putin’s popularity.
Most polls show him with 7080% approval, making Putin
one of the world’s most successful and admired leaders. Election
returns confirmed this fact, particularly among young Russians.
Former
intelligence officer Putin and his KGB old boys network have
worked wonders for Russia. After a coup that ousted the sick,
besotted Yeltsin, Putin inherited a bankrupt, demoralized nation
subsisting on cash handouts from Washington. So low did "Weimar"
Russia sink, much of its advanced military technology was sold
to the US for large cash payoffs.
Thanks
to tough management, nationalizations, and rising oil prices
caused in part by George Bush’s foolhardy invasion of Iraq,
Russia’s national income more than tripled under Putin, and
the ruble became a hard currency. Equally important, Putin restored
pride and sense of dignity to this fiercely chauvinistic nation.
In the
process, he centralized all power in the Kremlin, muzzled the
independent press, intimidated opponents, jailed oligarchs,
and created a cult of personality. He ruthlessly crushed the
life out of independence-seeking Chechnya, thrilling Muslim-hating
Russians by vowing to "kill the Chechen bandits in their
shithouses." Russians simply didn’t care about the atrocities
their soldiers and police committed against the Chechen, whom
they branded "terrorists," any more than Americans
cared about the vast suffering they inflicted on Iraq and Afghanistan.
Most Russians
couldn’t care less about the feeble little liberal parties clamoring
for western-style democracy. It’s a sad truism that Russians
want order, economic progress and national pride, not democracy.
Judo champion, abstemious Putin fits this bill perfectly as
the historic "white czar," a good, fatherly autocrat
who is strong, manly, and pure.
To most
Russians, "democracy" is associated with the thieving
oligarchs who pillaged Russia’s industries and resources during
Yeltsin’s rule, and the ivory-tower economists who debauched
Russia’s currency, leaving millions of pensioners to starve.
Democracy
is also seem by many Russians as a Trojan Horse the US used
to assert financial and political influence over Russia, and
later in Ukraine, Georgia and Central Asia. Meanwhile, President
Bush’s policies of ordering NATO around the way the Soviets
treated the old Warsaw Pact, pushing NATO to Russia’s western
borders, and the daft scheme to emplace US ABM systems in the
Czech Republic and Poland enflamed Russia’s nationalist passions
and reignited its historic fears of western threats.
Putin says
he wants to continue leading Russia. But he is constitutionally
banned from a third presidential term. So does Putin plan to
run Russia as an all-powerful prime minister? As leader of his
United Russia Party? Will he become a youthful elder statesman?
Or will he simply get the Duma to change the constitution?
He may
follow the example of Czar Ivan the Terrible, temporarily withdrawing
from public life until throngs of supplicants beg him to return
to Moscow as Czar.
Or
he could just remain Citizen Vladimir Putin. The only formal
title the great Deng Xiaoping held when he so brilliantly ruled
China was Chairman of the Chinese Bridge Association. But no
one doubted for a second who ran China.
Whatever
Putin’s near-term political plans, he clearly intends to restore
Russia’s role as a world power, and to challenge US global domination.
Russia’s withdrawal last week from the European conventional
arms treaty is the latest ominous sign.
President
Putin wants to restore the old Soviet Union’s borders, but minus
the Communist Party, which has sunk miserably low public support.
Putin believes Russia’s vast energy and mineral resources will
eventually make it the world’s leading power. Only 55 years
old, Putin might even live to see this triumphant day for Mother
Russia.