The Strongman.
Handley, John M.
Text:
The Strongman
Review by John M. Handley, Ph.D.
The Strongman: Vladimir Putin and the Struggle for Russia, by Angus
Roxburgh; New York, NY: I. B. Tauris, 2012, ISBN 978-1-78076-016-2, 337
pp., $28.00 (hardcover)
Angus Roxburgh is a distinguished British foreign correspondent and
Russian specialist. He served as the Sunday Times Moscow correspondent
in the mid-1980s and the BBC's Moscow correspondent during the
Yeltsin years. He is the author of The Second Russian Revolution, and
Pravda: Inside the Soviet Press Machine. Angus is particularly well
placed to write this specific book. While working for a BBC four-part
documentary entitled "Putin, Russia and the West," he
conducted hundreds of interviews with high level officials in Russia,
the US, the UK, France, Germany, Ukraine, and Georgia. He worked from
2006 to 2009 as an advisor to Putin's press secretary, Dmitry
Peskov. Before his career as a journalist, Angus taught Russian and
worked as a translator in Moscow.
In the introduction, the author describes Putin as extremely vain
and while exceedingly well informed on some subjects, he is surprisingly
ignorant about Western life. He is both courteous and boorish. He has
created a top-down system, which instills fear and stifles initiative.
The author's task in this book is to explain why Putin became more
and more authoritarian; how he challenged the West and how the West
challenged him; and why each side failed to understand the concerns of
the other, creating mutual mistrust and lost opportunities.
Additionally, the author evaluates the struggle for reform inside Russia
and addresses the question of whether Dmitry Medvedev as president was
either a frustrated liberal or mere window dressing.
The book depicts Putin in power. Although not a biography, it does
include a look at Putin's background and the path he took to reach
the highest office in Russia, with particular emphasis on the roles he
played, and assistance he provided, to Yeltsin, both during and after
the Yeltsin presidencies. Chapter 1 also includes Putin's reaction
to the 1999 NATO expansion, the NATO war against Serbia, the 1996
withdrawal of Russian troops from Chechnya and their re-introduction in
1999. Chapter 2 treats Putin's desire to re-integrate Russia into
Europe, the Bush-Putin summit, Russia's support for the US against
the Taliban, Putin's concerns over the US withdrawal from the ABM
treaty, and the creation of a new, albeit greatly watered-down,
strategic arms limitations treaty both Putin and Bush needed for
symbolism. Chapter 3, on economic reform, addresses the efforts taken
early in Putin's administration to stimulate the economy, entrench free market ideas, and abandon any remaining vestiges of communism. The
Gref Plan, created by German Gref and his Centre for Strategic Research,
reduced taxes from 30% to a flat tax of 13%, corporate tax fell from 35%
to 24%, and a new land privatization bill allowed people to buy and sell
commercial and residential land for the first time since 1917. With
these accomplishments, Putin refused to consider any tampering with
Gazprom, which, in time, became one of his most effective levers of
power.
Putin's development as an authoritarian comes to light in
Chapter 4 as the author describes the methods Putin employed to muzzle
the Russian press, to implement his idea of vertical power, to appoint
his cronies to high office, to prosecute the war in Chechnya, to his
callous reaction to the sinking of the Kursk, and to his ability to
"tame the oligarchs." The chapter includes a lengthy section
on the Khordorkovsky affair, resulting in the latter's loss of both
his freedom and his fortune. Chapter 5 deals specifically with NATO and
Putin's expectation of an invitation for Russia to join this body,
but the best the West would offer was a NATO-Russia Council. Six months
after setting up this NRC, seven former Soviet satellites received
actual invitations to join NATO. Putin was not amused. Chapter 6
describes the January 2004 "Rose" Revolution of Georgia and
the election of Saakashvili, a West-leaning democrat, as president.
Putin regarded the election as a threat to Russia, perhaps in part
because the first trip outside Georgia Saakashvili made was to the US
where he requested US military personnel to train and equip his army as
well as membership for Georgia in NATO. The chapter ends with a lengthy
account of the attack on Beslan and Putin's belief that this attack
was part of a Western conspiracy to dismember the Russian Federation
The Orange Revolution, as depicted in Chapter 7, nearly failed in
November 2004 due to blatant corruption and election vote rigging, but
after considerable outside (and inside) pressure a new late-December
run-off resulted in victory for the pro-Western candidate, Viktor
Yushchenko, over the pro-Russian candidate, Viktor Yanukovych. The
author describes Putin's bitter disappointment as he viewed the
results of the election as the work of US special operations who he
believes have been working on a "Destroy Russia" project since
1990. The chapter ends with Putin's use of energy as an economic
weapon in his first 'gas war' in 2005 against Ukraine. Chapter
8, on a new cold war, addresses the September 2006 eruption of violence
between Russia and Georgia over South Ossetia; the murder of journalist
Anna Politkovskaya; Putin's increased control over Russia's
energy sources; a Putin confrontation with US Secretary of State
Condoleezza Rice; and the assassination in London of Soviet KGB defector
Alexander Litvinenko. Chapter 9 reveals the coordination undertaken
between Putin and Medvedev as Putin puts Medvedev forward to succeed him
as president after his 2 terms (eight years) with Medvedev agreeing to
appoint Putin as Prime Minister, thus allowing Putin to run for election
to a third presidential term in 2012. Medvedev also had the Duma pass a
constitutional change that would extend the next president's term
of office from 4 to 6 years. As the author opines, the West may
eventually have to deal with 20 collective years of Putin presidencies
Chapter 10 begins with Russia's negative reaction to
Kosovo's February 2008 declaration of independence and its
subsequent US recognition, fearing such recognition would encourage
Chechen separatism. Paradoxically, Putin was prepared to support South
Ossetia and Abkhazia in their secessionist efforts against Georgia. The
remainder of this chapter deals with the Russo-Georgia War, which
resulted in both a Russia military victory, and Russia recognizing the
independence of both secessionist countries, recognized only by
Venezuela, Nicaragua, and the Pacific island of Nauru. In Chapter 11,
the author describes the repercussions of the Caucasus War--a war,
according to Putin, caused by the US in an effort to boost the
presidential campaign of John McCain. While Putin continued to engage in
economic blackmail with energy supply to various European countries, the
new Obama administration decided to "push the reset button."
The July 2009 Obama-Putin summit gave the prime minister the opportunity
to lecture the US president for an hour on NATO's bombing of
Serbia, ABM, Iraq, WTO, NATO expansion, missile defense, and Kosovo.
Obama listened and the reset showed some success, especially with a
change of attitude by Russia toward Iran and the latter's nuclear
program, as well as a US-Russia arms reduction treaty signed in April
2010 called New Start
Chapter 12 describes how Putin, as Prime Minister and thus
responsible for Russia's economy, managed to weather the financial
storms that began in 2008. The chapter ends, sadly, on the realities of
dealing economically with and in Russia--everything and everyone has a
price. Corruption is rampant, from the highest cabinet official, to the
manager of any business venture, to the policeman on the street. Out of
183 countries rated, the World Bank rates Russia at 123 for "ease
of doing business," while Georgia comes in at 19 and Kyrgyzstan is
44. In terms of "dealing with construction permits," Russia is
182 ahead only of Eritrea. The last chapter deals with the
"confrontation" between Putin and Medvedev as both men sought
their party's nomination for president. The "phony"
campaign ended in September 2011 when Putin announced he would be the
United Russia Party presidential candidate and Medvedev would be his
prime minister. The author goes to some length to explain what Medvedev
did to actually try to win the opportunity to run for a second term, but
Medvedev simply did not have access to the same Gazprom resources that
stood at the center of Putin's power system.
All in all, The Strongman is a well-written, well-researched,
well-documented account of Putin in power as both president and prime
minister. The author's style is eminently readable. Although the
freedom and democracy that flowered during the Gorbachev and Yeltsin
years led to considerable chaos, Putin has returned Russia to a sense of
stability at the cost of curtailing democracy. One wonders if Medvedev
could have given the Russians both.
About the Author
Dr. John M. Handley, American Diplomacy Publisher's
Vice-President, is a Professor of International Relations for Webster
University's Ft. Bragg, NC campus. A retired US Army Colonel, Dr.
Handley spent his Army career in military intelligence, including as a
Defense Attache, the Dean of the School of Attache Training at the
Defense Intelligence College, and Deputy, Resource Management, for the
Defense Intelligence Agency.