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COVER STORY
Why we must not appease the Kremlin
Russia’s continuing brutality in
Chechnya is the root cause of the Beslan massacre. So why does Blair
grovel to Putin? The answer, says Simon Heffer, is oil
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Were any of us unlucky enough to be Vladimir Putin, we too would be
keen to make the rest of the world think that what happened in Beslan
last week was yet another chapter in al-Qa’eda’s campaign of international
terrorism. Luckily, you would have some evidence to bear out your
theory. Some of the hostage-takers were Arab mercenaries. Some Chechen
separatists have been trained abroad and have received funding from
international organisations. There is evidence that an externally
inspired campaign is under way not so much to secure Chechen independence
from Russia as to destabilise that whole region, setting predominantly
Muslim Ingus against predominantly Christian Ossetians. Yes, if you
were Mr Putin you would not wish to suggest in any way that your own
prehistoric policy towards Chechnya — one of many brutal, offensive
and downright unacceptable ways in which you have behaved over the
last five years or so — was more to blame than ‘international terrorism’.
Before the West rushes to welcome Mr Putin’s Russia into the family
of shared suffering caused by terrorism, it might care to pause and
reflect on the real nature of the state whose people suffered this
ghastly tragedy in Beslan; and on the real nature of its government.
To use a phrase fashionably in the news in another context, Russia
is a kleptocracy. It is in many respects, and increasingly, a gangster
state. Its politicians and officialdom are widely and systematically
corrupt. Its recent presidential elections were rigged. Its media
are not free — this week the editor of Izvestia was sacked for criticising
Mr Putin’s Chechnya policies. The observation of basic human rights
is in many respects no better than under the old Soviet regime. Rule
is arbitrary and often violent. There is in many cases little distinction
between businessmen and criminals. While being in itself the victim
of attempts at destabilisation, it is seeking to destabilise other
regimes in its orbit, notably in the Baltic states.
Yet Russia is also a country with which Britain is seeking ever closer
ties. We are one of the greatest overseas investors in Russia. The
Prime Minister himself has gone to great lengths to show his personal
affection and regard for Mr Putin. This week Downing Street declared
that now is not the time to discuss Russia’s policies in Chechnya.
In fact, there could not be a better time. In the past five years,
and on Mr Putin’s orders, the Chechen capital of Grozny has been all
but obliterated, the Russian armed forces there have behaved viciously,
and the old fascist/communist staples of detention camps and ‘disappearances’
have become a routine part of life in Chechnya.
Why, when Russia behaves in a way that would normally have a Labour
government calling for sanctions against it, does the Blair administration
turn a blind eye to Putin’s excesses and brutalities? Is it simply
that, with the Cold War consigned to history, our government has decided
that never again — whatever the provocation — must a nation so considerable
and so geographically near as Russia be in the enemy camp? Wasn’t
that why, after all, Mr Blair rushed to Moscow at the end of April
last year to try to make friends with Mr Putin after the two men had
become estranged over the Iraq war?
Certainly, no effort was spared to patch up the quarrel. After Mr
Putin proved to be rather charm-free on Mr Blair’s visit to him, the
boat was pushed out two months later when he paid the first visit
to Britain by a Russian head of state since 1874. At the state banquet
in his honour at the end of June 2003 the Queen herself recognised
that there had been differences in the preceding months but argued
the need for Britain and Russia to remain ‘firm partners’. More to
the point, she said that Mr Putin and his programme of ‘reforms’ had
her — for which read her government’s — ‘admiration, respect and support’.
That was heady stuff. The fact that you can be locked up in Russia
without trial simply for having political ambitions (ask Yukos oil
boss Mikhail Khodorkovsky) would, to take just one example of Mr Putin’s
behaviour, seem worthy of neither respect nor admiration, and definitely
ought not to be supported. Then Her Majesty went on: ‘We support your
efforts to create a modern, prosperous and dynamic state, and we look
forward to working with you on this and on many international questions
on the basis of our shared values.’ If Her Majesty’s ministers, who
wrote such guff for her, seriously believe that we in this country
share ‘values’ with someone so wedded to the notion of the abuse of
state power as Mr Putin, then God help us too. In his own observations
on the Anglo-Russian relationship, Mr Blair said that ‘the things
that bind us together in politics, security and economics, are very
important. Together we can achieve our mutual goals of global stability,
economic growth and international development.’
As if to satisfy the beliefs of all left-wing conspiracy theorists,
money, notably oil money, appears to have been more behind this breathtaking
act of international grovelling than any basic fear of re-opening
the Cold War. On the eve of Mr Putin’s visit Mr Blair said that oil
and gas deals signed with the Russians by British firms would soon
make us the biggest investor in that country. The Putin visit was
marked by a Russia-UK energy conference to celebrate these investments.
BP announced it was investing $6.75 billion and setting up Russia’s
third largest oil company, TNK-BP. Shell announced that it would be
part of a consortium putting $10 billion into the oil industry in
Sakhalin, in the Russian Far East. The two countries also signed a
memorandum of understanding about their future co-operation in constructing
a $5.7 billion, 1,200 km gas pipeline under the Baltic from Russia
to Britain.
If Britain is not currently aware of how much it might come to depend
on Russia for energy, it is only because we have not been listening.
The Labour MP and former energy minister Brian Wilson said at the
time of Mr Putin’s visit that Britain will be generating 70 per cent
of its electricity by gas by the year 2020 and that 90 per cent of
that gas will be imported, much of it from Russia. Then, in recent
weeks, we should all have seen the effect on the price of crude oil
whenever it has been feared that Yukos might stop production as a
result of the company’s (and Mr Khodorkovsky’s) persecution by the
Russian government. Only last week a court in Russia was reported
to have agreed to a request from those prosecuting the imprisoned
oligarch that would prevent the company from accessing its bank accounts
and therefore engaging in production. The request was to enable the
authorities to help themselves to $2.6 billion of Yukos’s money which
they claim belongs to the state. The price of New York light crude
rose 42 cents a barrel on the news, and London Brent 48 cents.
When Mr Putin came to London he put on a white tie and, looking the
very model of a 1930s capitalist, told captains of industry at a Guildhall
dinner that he was pushing through reforms that would take his country’s
economy further along the ‘European vector’. Judging by the way in
which they showed such willingness to reach for their corporate chequebooks,
they believed him. Our Foreign Office, too, has long had great ambitions
for the future of the Russian economy. In Moscow in 2001 I remember
being astounded to hear a senior British diplomat say, in all seriousness,
that Russia had the potential within a couple of decades to join the
EU. Yet Mr Putin has a strict order of priorities, at the top of which
comes the preservation of himself and his regime. Mr Khodorkovsky
got very rich very quickly — at the age of 40 he was worth $8 billion
— on the back of a deal he did with Boris Yeltsin. Once Mr Putin got
wind of the fact that Mr Khodorkovsky was considering a career in
politics, it was conveniently discovered that he had probably committed
fraud and tax evasion.
That was 11 months ago and he has been awaiting trial ever since.
His friends and counsel expect the trial to be held in secret. The
effect has been devastating on Yukos and on its shareholders, many
of whom are British. Even the normally emollient British ambassador
to Moscow, Sir Roderic Lyne, has been forced to express his concern
at the indirect consequences to British shareholders of the Russian
state’s treatment of Yukos. It is quite likely that Mr Khodorkovsky
was chancing his arm in some respects. However, the whole case is
a paradigm of what is wrong with Russia: no real democracy, and no
real rule of law as the civilised world would understand either concept.
In the aftermath of the horrors of Beslan, Mr Putin will be relying
on the goodwill of the civilised world to a greater extent than ever
before. Clearly, in terms of that world’s energy needs, it increasingly
relies on Mr Putin too. It should alarm us that problems with Russian
oil supply can affect the price of crude in a way that we thought
only problems in the Middle East could. But the West is doing itself
no favours, and Russia neither, if it continues to fête Mr Putin and
condone his various manifestations of extreme behaviour. The al-Qa’eda
element in Chechen terrorism is widely accepted, but its root cause
is the idiotic way in which the Putin regime has behaved towards that
territory since 1999. The West must not let Mr Putin blame the mismanagement
of his country and his economy on ‘international terror’. More to
the point, it should consider whether a government that relies on
expropriation and arbitrary arrest as important tools of its economic
and constitutional policies is fit to assume a place at the top table
of nations. Why on earth should Russia, in its present state, continue
to be invited to attend G8 meetings? Aren’t the main criteria for
G8 membership that a nation should be a democracy and a free economy?
Russia is palpably neither.
Sadly, our Foreign Office seems determined to put up with any appalling
behaviour by the Putin regime in the interests of keeping Russia in
the club. If Russia is to stay in the G8, then it might as well invite
China to join as well, and give up any pretence about capitalism and
democracy. All talk of ‘shared values’ is, increasingly, nonsense,
and an insult to this country. In seeking to destabilise some of the
Baltic states — by engaging in the corruption of businessmen and politicians
there and engaging in varying degrees of espionage — Russia is seeking
to undermine the European Union.
No one can dispute that Mr Putin has an awesome job on his hands to
improve the lot of the average Russian; but it is one he will accomplish
more effectively through freedom and the rule of law than by his enthusiastic
use of means inherited from his old Soviet mentors. We should not
be beaten into appeasing him because of our need for his energy supplies;
his tottering economy needs to sell it to us even more than we need
to buy it. Out of respect for Western values, governments like ours
need to become a lot more discriminating in their endorsements of
and support for President Putin and his friends. Before enlisting
him as our fully fledged partner in the war against terror, we should
consider whether we are, in fact, fighting the same enemy.
Simon Heffer is a columnist for the Daily Mail.
© 2004 The Spectator.co.uk
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