I would rather escape the "anti-semitism" label if I could but it is hard to escape the truth that most of the oligarchs in post-Soviet Russia behind the trashing of the Russian state were Jews just as the majority of the leading Bolsheviks following the October, 1917 coup were also Jews.
This follows very much the line of the documentary, The Rise and Fall of the Russian Oligarchs, which was, by the way made by an Israeli.
The Silent Coup: Putin vs. the Oligarchs
29
May, 2012
ON
JULY 28, 2000, Vladimir Putin gathered the 18 most powerful
businessmen in Russia for an unprecedented discussion. This was the
beginning of Putin’s campaign to undermine and reduce the power of
a group of men who had made titanic fortunes from reforms designed to
pave the way for a transformation of the Soviet planned economy into
a free market economy. Russian President Vladimir Putin was rewriting
the rules again. In no uncertain terms, Putin told Russia’s
wealthiest that the jig was up, and he denounced them as creators of
a corrupt state.
A
very small number of people — known now as the oligarchs— were
able to concentrate a very large portion of the Russian people’s
wealth into their hands through backroom deals and insider
connections. Some who read this essay might condemn me because I
point out the Jewish identity of the majority of these oligarchs. My
reason for doing so is not to be unfair to Jews or to increase
hostile feelings towards them. The reason is the simple fact that
their Jewishness is a factor and must be taken into consideration
when dealing with Russian politics. In Russia, everyone is aware of
the Jewish identity of these men, and the acts of the Jewish
oligarchs themselves have done quite a bit to increase anti-Jewish
feelings there. The oligarchs themselves recognize this, as do many
Russian Jews, who blame the oligarchs for giving Jews a bad name. In
my opinion, it is much better to be honest about it than try to
pretend that this factor doesn’t exit.
The jig is up!
.”
The
Kremlin launched a series of raids and criminal cases against
Vladimir Gusinsky and Media-Most; the financial-industrial group
Interros, headed by Vladimir Potanin; Lukoil, headed by Vagit
Alekperov; Sibneft, an oil company controlled by Roman Abramovich; as
well as a number of businesses connected with Boris Berezovsky. On
Jan. 24, 2001, Vladimir Putin met with 21 leading oligarchs and told
them that he hoped that things had changed for the better since their
last meeting, basically meaning that he hoped that they had learned a
lesson. He stressed that the Russian state had no plans to
re-nationalize the economy, but added that they should have “a
feeling of responsibility [to] the people and the country” and
asked them to donate $2.6 million to a fund he was setting up to help
families of soldiers wounded or killed in action.1 In
short, Putin told the oligarchs to play ball his way — or no way.
At this point, it appeared that Putin thought he could force the
oligarchs to meet his demands, or he realized that he was not yet
strong enough to take on all of them at the same time.
(footnote
1. Moscow
Times,
January 25, 2001)
These
men were not used to a Russian President treating them this way.
During the Yeltsin years, they could count on a weak president who
needed them for his very political survival. Putin was supposed to
have been an extension of the old system. After all, they helped to
get Putin elected. It was their television channels and newspapers
that provided Putin with one-sided coverage during Yeltsin’s
reelection campaign. It was their money that financed his campaign.
They even created a political party, Unity, just for him. The reason
they installed Putin was to maintain the status quo they enjoyed
under President Yeltsin.
VLADIMIR GUSINSKY: “When I started the
newspaper, I will say it directly as it was: it was nothing but an
instrument of influence. One hundred per cent — influence over
officials and over society."
Putin
was elected on March 27, 2000, but only a few months later he no
longer needed his former “friends.” Still, some of the oligarchs
thought some kind of deal could be reached. Putin would allow them to
keep a portion of the loot they stole through their privatization
schemes and they would agree to “play by the rules” from now on.
Perhaps they hadn’t paid attention to Putin’s rhetoric, or maybe
they thought that such rhetoric was simply meant for the Russian
electorate. Once, when asked during an interview what the future held
for the oligarchs, Putin replied that if one meant “those people
who fuse, or help the fusion of power and capital — there will be
no oligarchs of this kind as a class.”2
(footnote
2. Radio
Mayak,
March 18, 2000)
Rising fear
“You
Jews have seized the TV and the radio and the newspapers. You are
everywhere. You annoy everybody.” — Russian
caller to a state radio call-in program.3
(footnote
3. A caller to the Russian State Radio Service’s Jewish program who
identified herself as Yelena K., quoted by the Canadian
Jewish News,
“Russian Jews Fear Backlash Against Jewish Moguls” May 25, 2000,
Iyar 20, 5760. From my experience living in Russia, this attitude is
not at all uncommon among Russian citizens, who correctly view the
oligarchs as bandits who have helped to make their lives miserable.
Berezovsky is, perhaps, one of the most hated men in Russia, next to
Yeltsin and Gorbachev.)
MIKHAIL KHODORKOVSKY: He became the richest
man in Russia through a stock scheme which valued the entire Russian
industrial base at less than the value of one American corporation.
In
the autumn of 1996, a group of influential oligarchs met in a villa
in the Sparrow Hills district of Moscow to discuss an issue that was
quite troublesome to them: anti-Semitism. The undeniable fact of the
matter was that the overwhelming majority of these oligarchs were
Jewish, and they had very large influence over the Russian media.
Berezovsky and Gusinsky controlled Russia’s two largest television
stations and several of the largest newspapers and magazines.4
(footnote
4. “Jews in Power or Jewish Power? The Captains of Russia’s
Post-Communist Economy Invited Uneasy Questions,” Forward,
Sept. 13, 2002)
At
the time, Jewish publications and even the oligarchs themselves were
quite honest about their shared background. The London
Times reported:
ROMAN ABRAMOVICH: After willingly serving as
governor of a distant Siberian province under Putin, moved to
Britain as investigations of his business dealings began, becoming
the UK’s wealthiest resident.
(footnote
5. The
London Times,
Jan. 27, 1997)
The
small group of oligarchs who met that day were concerned about a
backlash from the Russian population. Boris Berezovsky, Mikhail
Friedman, Vladimir Gusinsky, Mikhail Khodorkovsky, and Alexander
Smolensky collectively decided to appoint one of the few non-Jewish
oligarchs, Vladimir Potanin, to be their public liaison office.
Fear
of anti-Semitism caused Friedman and Gusinksy to form the Russian
Jewish Congress, an organization to lobby for Jewish interests in
Russia. It hadn’t always been this way. Earlier, many of the
oligarchs, Berezovsky in particular, seemed to enjoy flaunting their
power and the fact that they were Jewish. Berezovsky, whom US
News & World Report (Jan.
13, 1997) called “the most influential new capitalist tycoon in
Russia,” even bragged about his ability to appoint officials in the
Yeltsin administration: “We hired Chubais. We invested huge sums of
money. We guaranteed Yeltsin’s election. Now we have the right to
occupy government posts and use the fruits of our victory.”6 He
also claimed that Yeltsin had a “moral obligation” to Jewish
business in Russia.7
(footnote
6. Forward,
April 4, 1997)
(footnote 7. Komsomolskaya Pravda, Nov. 5, 1996)
(footnote 7. Komsomolskaya Pravda, Nov. 5, 1996)
MIKHAIL FRIEDMAN: Worried about a backlash
against Jews, formed the Russian Jewish Congress with Gusinsky.
(footnote
8. Segodnya,
Nov. 14, 1996)
Needless
to say, such comments did nothing to reduce resentment among the
Russian population. One does, however, have to give credit to
Berezovsky for being so honest. American Jewish oligarchs would never
say such a thing for public consumption.
Ready to reap — and to rape
How
did all this come to be? How did a small clique gain so much power
and control over the Russian government in such a short period of
time? Of course, the Jewish public position is that under the Soviet
regime, Jews were ‘discriminated against’ and had to form
networks to survive. Yeveny Satanovsky, a lesser Jewish oligarch,
explained it the following way: “This sort of thing happens any
time you have repression and then revolution. When you have a group
of people who are repressed and then those restrictions are suddenly
removed, all the extra efforts they have traditionally made in order
to succeed propel them ahead much faster than the general population.
It’s a natural phenomenon.”9
(footnote
9. Forward,
April 4, 1997)
One
theory, the one given by Soviet Jews, is that, because of Communist
state-sponsored anti-Semitism, many Jews were involved in the black
market during the Soviet era. These unofficial brokers would corner
items in short supply, arrange to find gifted surgeons for clients
able to pay high fees, and set up behind-the-scenes deals with
factory managers. When perestroika came
in 1987, these businessmen used their contacts to form cooperatives,
which later developed into corporations. Gusinsky bought copper wire
on the black market to make bracelets, while Berezovsky traded in
German cars and Italian computers. Future banker Khodorkovsky used
his connections in the Communist Youth League to secure software
contracts.10 When
privatization came after the fall of the Soviet Union, these people
had an overwhelming advantage over ordinary Russians because they
already had networks in place. In addition, because they thought of
themselves as a distinct ethnic group/caste, Russians who thought of
themselves simply as individuals could not compete on the same level.
(footnote
10. Iid.)
With
1992 came the infamous voucher privatization scheme. Anatoly Chubais,
Yeltsin’s prime minister, privatized one-third of Russia’s
economy. His idea was to push privatization at any price, as the
effects would supposedly be irreversible, paving the way to a
capitalist economy. He claimed that the voucher plan “signifies the
death of the command economy and the political system that was built
on the basis of total state property ownership.”11 Each
Russian citizen was given a voucher good for one share. In theory,
the voucher plan made each Russian citizen a shareholder, and
millions of Russians became property holders, on paper, overnight. In
total, 148 million vouchers were given away, which were to be traded
at auctions for shares of companies.12 When pushing
his voucher scheme, Chubais claimed that one voucher would be worth
enough to buy two Volga automobiles.13Having the necessary
capital beforehand, the oligarchs were able to buy up thousands of
vouchers and redeem them for entire industries, which would later be
stripped and sold. Unregulated voucher investment funds walked away
with their clients’ vouchers and then resold them to domestic
criminals, Western investment banks, and international money
launderers. Some of these ‘funds’ were simply companies buying up
their own shares.14 Nearly six hundred voucher funds
obtained 45 million vouchers. The largest, First Voucher, collected 4
million vouchers.15 This left many Russian citizens
feeling cheated, and their first experience with privatization was a
bad one.
(footnote
11. Celestine Bohlen, “Citizens of Russia to be Given a Share of
State’s Wealth,” New
York Times,
October 1, 1992)
(footnote 12. David Hoffman, The Oligarchs: Wealth and Power in the New Russia, p. 193. I reference this book heavily because it contains much valuable biographical information on the various oligarchs. Although Hoffman takes a somewhat favorable view of the various personalities he covers, he is honest enough to include truthful information, which has proven very valuable to me.)
(footnote 13. Chubais press conference, August 21, 1992)
(footnote 14. Anne Williamson, “The Rape of Russia,” testimony before the Committee on Banking and Financial Services of the U.S. House of Representatives, Sept. 21, 1999)
(footnote 15. Hoffman, Op. cit., p. 197)
Due
to widespread opposition to privatization and pressure from the
parliament, a referendum was held on April 25, 1993 over the question
of continued privatization. The voters were asked a series of
questions: (1) do you support Yeltsin, (2) do you support Yeltsin’s
economic policy, (3) do you want early elections for President, and
(4) do you want early elections for parliament? Chubais met secretly
with Jewish financier and currency manipulator George Soros, who
agreed to fund the referendum campaign. Soros transferred $1 million
to offshore accounts.16 George Soros has a long
history of interfering in the affairs of other states. Yeltsin’s
opposition sensed victory, and members of the Duma were openly
talking about prison cells being readied for the ‘reformers.’ Due
to an extensive media campaign, Yeltsin and his reformers just barely
managed to survive, with 52 per cent approving economic reform. The
privatization continued, and wealth was concentrated into fewer and
fewer hands, much to the harm of the Russian population.
(footnote
16. Ibid.,
p. 202)
The
fact that the future oligarchs already had capital and connections
gave them the opportunity of purchasing industry at dirt cheap
prices. Khodorkovsky, who would later become the richest man in
Russia, bought up large amounts of vouchers. Using his connections,
he was able to purchase several factories in investment tenders. He
purchased large blocks of shares in timber, titanium, pipe, and
copper smelting. In total, he gained control of more than one hundred
companies. In the auctions, Russian industry was greatly undervalued.
Based on the number of total vouchers that were circulated, the
entire Russian industrial system had a total value of under $12
billion, less than that of many single American companies.
Zil, the Soviet truck and limousine maker with 100,000 workers, was
valued at a mere $16 million. The auto giant GAZ was valued at only
$27 million.17
(footnote
17. Ibid.,
p. 205)
Boris
Berezovsky, the most infamous and hated oligarch, got his start in
the auto business. He became rich when he worked out a scheme taking
advantage of Russia’s hyperinflation, which was in part caused by
the privatizations. His company, Logovaz, was at the time Russia’s
leading auto dealer. His company took thousands of cars from the
Avtovaz factory in Togliatti and paid for them much later in inflated
rubles, which allowed Berezovsky to make a huge profit and left
Avtovaz with virtually nothing. In 1993, Berezovsky came upon the
idea of constructing a new auto factory to create a “people’s
car” like the Volkswagen. Berezovsky thought of the idea of issuing
his own vouchers to people who invested in his company, similar to
what Volkswagen did before World War II. Berezovsky reasoned that he
would need about $2 billion to start, and he claimed that he would
use the money he received from selling his vouchers as startup money.
Berezovsky’s new phantom company was called the All-Russian
Automobile Alliance (AVVA). He had his certificates printed in
Switzerland on expensive paper designed to resemble money. Each
voucher was engraved with a portrait of a well-known
pre-revolutionary Russian industrialist. On the front side, the
certificates read “One Share.” Their face value was ten thousand
rubles. Berezovsky promised that the first dividends would be paid
out to the “shareholders” in 1995.18 The
certificates were so-called “bearer certificates,” which meant
that the holder, in theory, had the right to exchange the certificate
for one real share of AVVA. In reality, Berezovsky was not selling
shares at all, but simply pieces of paper designed to look like
shares. Control of the company was held by companies and banks close
to Berezovsky. In addition, the certificates did not have the name of
the holder printed on them, which was required by Russian law.
(footnote
18. Ibid.,
p. 216)
BORIS YELTSIN: Weak, corrupt, and a creature
of the Jewish oligarchs. Under his ‘watch’ privatization gave
Russian wealth to Jews for less than a cent on the dollar. He likely
made a deal to avoid prosecution.
Such
schemes were very common in the 1990s, and it was one of the many
ways that oligarchs like Berezovsky were able to take advantage of a
population with no experience in a market economy and who were easily
tricked by official-looking pieces of paper.
It’s the media, stupid!
With
their accumulation of wealth, many of the oligarchs began to move
into the media business. Berezovsky and Gusinsky, Russia’s two most
infamous and hated oligarchs, were especially active in the media.
The oligarchs quickly realized that owning newspapers, television
channels, and radio stations was not only a source of income; it
allowed them to protect their other businesses and gave them
political power.
Vladimir
Gusinsky, a one-time theater director, started his business career
hawking imitation sculptures and hood ornaments. During perestroika,
in 1988, he opened a cooperative named Infeks as a consulting company
for foreign investors interested in doing business in the Soviet
Union. Gusinsky then formed Most Bank, which started as an accounting
department. Using his contacts with Moscow Mayor Yuri Lushkov, he was
able to land many of Moscow’s accounts in the early 1990s. By 1992,
banker Gusinsky had already decided to try his hand at running a
newspaper. For him, this was a way to expand his influence, and
wasn’t really about making money. He later recalled, “When I
started the newspaper, I will say it directly as it was: it was
nothing but an instrument of influence. One hundred per cent —
influence over officials and over society. I was creating the
newspaper exactly for this aim. If an official turned bad, I would
attack him with a newspaper and tell the truth that he demanded
money, extorted it, or accepted conditions dishonestly.”19
(footnote
19. Ibid.,
p. 168)
We
often hear the term “corporate media” used, but the real power of
the media is influence over politics. In Russia, as well as in the
United States, making money is often only a secondary goal, while
influencing politicians and the electorate comes first. Gusinsky’s
first newspaper, Sevodnya (“Today”)
appeared in February of 1993. However, an influential paper was not
enough. Using his contacts in the Yeltsin administration, he was able
to lobby the Russian President to sign a decree giving his company
the air time held by one of the Soviet channels, Channel 4. On
October 10, 1993, Gusinsky’s private channel, NTV, went on the air
and by January, it was on the air six hours a day.20 With
his emerging media empire, Gusinksy became a true oligarch and held a
powerful role in Russian politics.
(footnote
20. In Russia, frequencies are often shared between channels.)
Gusinsky
wasn’t the only oligarch eager to become a Western-style media
mogul. Boris Berezovsky, the same Boris that got rich with his
“voucher” scam, had his own plans as well. Originally a
researcher at the Institute of Control Sciences, he dreamed of a
career in politics. According to Berezovsky, the only reason he
didn’t hold a high position in society was because he was a Jew:
“For me, there was no political future. I wasn’t a member of the
political elite. I am a Jew. There were massive limitations. I
understood that perfectly well.”21Later in life, he
would claim that anti-Semitism was the reason Putin had cracked down
on him. As always, criticism of Jews equals “anti-Semitism.” It’s
the same old story.
(footnote
21. Hoffman, Op.
cit.,
p. 130)
By
1992, Berezovsky was already thinking of acquiring his own channel.
He was most interested in Channel 1, which, due to expensive
satellites purchased by the Soviet government, has a strong enough
signal to reach nearly the entire former Soviet Union, an estimated
200 million people. Berezovsky formed Logovaz Press, an advertising
agency. This agency was among the founders of Reklama Holding, which
was set up to monopolize advertising time on Channel 1. Between
1993-1994, Logovaz Press earned $1 million in profit by acting as the
middleman between the station and companies interested in advertising
there. However, merely making money off of television wasn’t enough
for him. He, like Gusinsky, wanted to use television for political
power. During this time, Berezovsky was working his way into
Yeltsin’s inner circle.
Supposedly,
after Yeltsin had completed his second memoir, Notes
of the President,
they were looking for a publisher. Berezovsky arranged for a million
copies of the book to be published in Finland by a firm called
Ogonyok. He then presented the royalties to the Russian President’s
family. After this, Berezovsky found himself in favor and was invited
to join the President’s personal sporting club, the Presidential
Club. While there, Berezovsky lobbied for his television channel. He
claimed that this new channel would in effect be the President’s
channel and would be used to support him and his policies. On
November 29, 1994, President Yeltsin signed a decree to privatize
Channel 1 without an auction, contrary to the law.22 The
new channel’s name was Russian Public Television (ORT). The Russian
state retained 51 per cent. of the shares, with the rest divided up
among Yeltsin’s wealthy supporters. The main shareholders were
Berezovsky, Khodorkovsky, Friedman, and Smolensky. An oversight board
was formed, and Yeltsin was the official chairman of the new channel.
Everything was convenient for everyone, and everyone was happy with
the new arrangement.
(footnote
22. Ibid.,
p. 281)
While
the oligarchs often had common interests and worked together to
benefit themselves at the expense of the Russian people, they
sometimes fought among themselves. One example was a highly public
dispute between Berezovsky and Gusinsky. By late 1994, Gusinsky was
ranked the richest banker in Russia and the second most powerful.
Berezovsky was the seventeenth most wealthy banker and the thirteenth
most powerful.23 At the time, Berezovsky had a
political alliance with President Yeltsin, while Gusinsky backed
Moscow Mayor Lushkov. Lushkov is a very popular Moscow mayor because
of his ability to squeeze money out of businessmen for his pet
projects and his genuine desire to make Moscow life better. He has
created many jobs for Muscovites, and he sees to it that his people
are paid on time. Yeltsin was becoming insecure with the growing
popularity of Lushkov, a possible threat in the upcoming Presidential
election. In addition, Berezovsky and Gusinsky were competing over
the right to handle overseas ticket sales from Aeroflot, the Russian
national airline. However, when it really came down to it, the two
were on the same side because they grew wealthy off the same corrupt
system, and needed that system to survivо.
(footnote
23. Julie Tokacheva, “Moscow’s Capitalist Elite: Wealthy and
Wary,”Moscow
Times,
July 22, 1994)
GENNADI ZYUGANOV: If the oligarchs had not
stolen the election, he would likely have been President of Russia
in 1996. But time for the oligarchs was running out.
(footnote
24. Chubais press conference, Feb. 5, 1996)
This
was the moment that Berezovsky and Gusinsky realized that they were
on the same side and had to do anything it took to keep Yeltsin in
power. Gusinsky said, “I was present at the meeting between
Zyuganov and Swiss bankers. It was very important for me to see how
he was going to behave. And when I saw that he was looking into their
eyes and lying to them, that he was saying exactly what they wanted
to hear, a typical Soviet Communist KGB trick, I knew it! They will
close us down. The minute he wins, he’ll shut us down. I was
frightened.”25 Berezovsky
also realized the danger. He called Gusinsky, and the two competitors
agreed to meet. “We didn’t waste time finding a common language.
We both understood that the threat of a return to Communism required
a joint counter-attack,” Gusinsky later recalled.26 Many
of the oligarch’s friends, such as George Soros, were also worried.
Soros predicted to his friend Berezovsky that, if Zyuganov was
elected, he would “hang from a lamppost.”27 As
has always been and will always be the case in history, when
threatened, Jews identify as
a group and
recognize their group interests over all else. That is a key to their
survival strategy, which has worked quite effectively for millennia.
(footnote
25. Hoffman, Op.
cit.,
p. 327)
(footnote 26. Natalya Gevorkayan, “Young Russian Capital Helped the President Win the Election,” Kommersant Daily, June 17, 1997, p. 4)
(footnote 27. George Soros, Open Society: Reforming Global Capitalism (New York: Public Affairs 2000), p. 242)
There
were many everyday working Russians who wanted to see the Berezovskys
and the Gusinskys of Russia hanging from lampposts. However, owning
two of the three major Russian television stations, the two had a
powerful weapon in their arsenal to use against Yeltsin’s enemies:
a media onslaught. Yet, in addition to media control, the two needed
huge amounts of funding for Yeltsin’s campaign. This was a do or
die situation for the oligarchs. Soon, they formed what was called
the “group of seven,” which included Berezovsky, Gusinsky,
Khodorkovsky, Potanin, Vinogradov, Smolensky, and Friedman. Yeltsin
was their man, the person on which their very survival depended.
Without Yeltsin, they were gone, and they would feel the wrath of the
Russian people. What was to follow was the first “Western-style”
political campaign in Russian history. The Communists were at a
distinct disadvantage from the start. Yeltsin’s 1996 reelection
campaign truly showed the world how powerful media control can be —
and how easy it is change the outcome of elections.
The
oligarchs hired Chubais, the man who was largely responsible for
creating their fortunes, as Yeltsin’s campaign manager. He created
a private fund called the Center for the Protection of Private
Property and received $5 million as startup money. It looked
like the task of getting Yeltsin re-elected was nearly impossible.
With only six months left before the election, Yeltsin’s ratings
were 3 to 4 per cent, while Zyuganov led the pack with about 20 per
cent.28
(footnote
28. Hoffman, Op.
cit.,
p. 330)
Certain
members of Yeltsin’s inner circle even considered the idea of
postponing the elections for two years. In fact, Yeltsin came
very close to dissolving the State Duma, banning the Communist Party,
and putting off elections for two years. He even had all the
documents written up and planned, and a decree was nearly sent out.
Yeltsin was convinced that if he indeed followed through with
his decree, the army might not have supported him and a civil war
very well could have broken out. Yeltsin took the advice of his inner
circle and went on with his re-election campaign.
Meanwhile,
the Communists smelled victory at hand. On March 15, 1996, the State
Duma voted 250 to 98 for a non-binding resolution to repeal the
1991 agreement at Beleovezhskaya Pushcha between Yeltsin and the
leaders of Ukraine and Belarus to form their own union, which caused
the end of the Soviet Union three weeks later. The vote, in reality,
had no effect, but it was a powerful political statement that
humiliated Yeltsin.
Yeltsin
hit the road to provide images of his mingling with the population
for the television. In four months, he visited two dozen cities. The
most famous scene from this campaign was Yeltsin dancing onstage
during a rock concert held in Rostov-on-Don. Yeltsin presented
himself as the only true alternative to the Communists, eating away
at rival democrat Yavlensky’s poll ratings. By March, Yeltsin’s
ratings were in the teens, and, by April, he had nearly caught up
with Zyuganov. On April 27, the oligarchs published an open letter in
Russian newspapers expressing alarm about a schism in Russian society
and appealing to the military, businessmen, politicians, and opinion
makers to combine their efforts in the search for political
compromise. The letter was highly critical of the Communists and was
signed by the group of seven as well as well as six other businessmen
and industrialists. This letter was an effort to torpedo Zyuganov.
Soon,
“Western-style” campaign ads began to run asking the voter to
“Choose with Your Heart.” Another ad featured Yeltsin’s
family photos, while Yeltsin recalled events in his childhood:
as an athlete, a rebel, a father, and a grandfather.
All the while,
sentimental music was playing in the background. At the end of the
ad, Yeltsin appeared wearing a white shirt offering sympathy for his
countrymen. The idea was to appeal to the voters most likely to vote
for Zyuganov: the person who has been hurt in recent years and who is
affected by emotional appeal. There is little doubt that if the media
coverage had been fair and unbiased, Zyuganov would have easily won
the election.
The
inner circle also decided that it was not enough to cast Yeltsin in a
softer light. They had to make Yeltsin the ‘lesser of two evils’
to win. This is where the oligarchs proved to be especially
effective. One of their tricks was to create a fake newspaper just to
promote their candidate. Each issue of the newspaper had a print run
of ten million. The newspaper contained articles and commentary
critical of Zyuganov. One issue contained a fake transcript of a
Communist Party meeting in which it was said, “We will not be
able to give the people anything that we promised.” 29 The
Yeltsin campaign also paid hundreds of thousands of dollars to
journalists in exchange for favorable coverage. If these things
had happened in another country in another time, the West would have
complained about election irregularities.
(footnote
29. Ibid.,
p. 345)
The
most damaging thing to Zyuganov was the completely biased television
coverage of the election. Berezovsky and Gusinsky controlled two of
the major channels, while the third, RTR, was state owned: a complete
media blackout for Zyuganov.
Since
the Communist and nationalist parties had no access to the media,
other than their own newspapers, they were at a distinct
disadvantage, as they could not get their real message out, and their
enemies created the image of them that they wanted the electorate to
see. Another trick was to secretly support General Alexander Lebed,
the populist general who was also running his own campaign. The
oligarchs knew that Lebed would only cut into Zyuganov’s support,
so any gain he made would be Yeltsin’s as well. In fact, Lebed was
given $10 million for his campaign by Yeltsin’s men. Altogether,
Yeltsin’s campaign spent around $100 million. 30
(footnote
30. Ibid.,
p. 348)
Yeltsin
barely managed to survive the first round of voting. He won 35.28 per
cent, while Zyuganov won 32.03 per cent of the vote. Lebed, the dark
horse, won 14.52 per cent, and Yavlinsky, leader of the Yabloka
(“Apple”) party, won 7.34 per cent.
Yeltsin then gave Lebed a
post in his government as head of the Security Council and prepared
for the second round. On June 26, 1996, Yeltsin suffered from a heart
attack. Polls were showing that Yeltsin’s support was slowly
slipping, and his campaign planned a number of appearances for him.
They were able to keep the state of Yeltsin’s health a secret from
most Russians through their control of the news media. On July 3,
1996, Yeltsin was reelected with 53.82 per cent of the vote to 40.31
for Zyuganov. The oligarchs were victorious, and, for the moment,
they were safe. They even came to feel that they were the real and
rightful rulers of Russia. To them, it seemed that nothing could stop
them. Through their control of the media and Russian banking, the
oligarchs were able to reelect a President who started his campaign
with only 3 per cent. in the polls. However, even in their moment of
triumph, a basically instinctive fear of a backlash and of
anti-Semitism remained.
The
status quo in Russia could not hold, however. The oligarchs and
‘reformers’ simply had too many enemies, and it was only a matter
of time before something would be done about them.
A close call
Due
to a standoff in the State Duma, Yeltsin was unable to have his
appointment of Viktor Chernomyrdin to the post of Prime Minister
confirmed. On September 10, 1998, Yeltsin abandoned his support of
Chernomyrdin and nominated Yevgeny Primakov, a person with whom the
Duma was willing to work. Primakov is a very interesting personality.
By the Western press and the ‘reformers,’ he is regarded as a
Soviet-era spymaster and a person who cannot be trusted. However, he
is trusted and liked in Russia, where he is considered to be one of
the few honest politicians. Himself a Jew, Primakov is an Arabist
known for his support of Saddam Hussein and Arab causes. In fact, he
is one of the few Jews widely accepted in Russian politics, and the
only one to my knowledge often accepted by Russian nationalists.
Unlike
many other Russian politicians, Primakov owed nothing to the
oligarchs and felt free to deal with them as he saw fit. He did not
need their support and was not a weakling who could be influenced by
threats or bribed. He considered them criminals and started to go
after them. On January 28, 1999, Primakov told a cabinet meeting
that, due to a recent amnesty freeing 94,000 prisoners, “we are
freeing up space for those who are about to be jailed — people who
commit economic crimes.”31 Apparently, Primakov
especially disliked Berezovsky, who soon was in the Prime Minister’s
gun sites. It wasn’t long before prosecutors and armed men in
camouflage and black masks raided Berezovsky’s companies in Moscow.
On April 5, 1999, the Prosecutor’s Office issued an arrest warrant
for Berezovsky for his involvement in a scam involving Aeroflot
ticket sales. In May, members of the State Duma tried to impeach
President Yeltsin. The impeachment failed, but it was rumored that
votes had to be bought by the Kremlin at $30,000. apiece.32 It
seemed that attacks were coming from all sides. It was probably
during this time that Yeltsin began thinking about protecting himself
from prosecution after his second term expired, and the oligarchs
began thinking about making sure that the next Russian President
would not go after them. However, these were merely signs of what was
yet to come. Behind the scenes, there was something else going on.
People who had remained silent were about to make their move.
(footnote
31. Ibid.,
p. 459)
(footnote 32. Ibid., p. 461)
The putsch
It
all started with NATO’s criminal war of unprovoked aggression
against the sovereign state of Yugoslavia. The war was extremely
unpopular in Russia, where the Serbs are viewed as Russia’s “little
brothers” and fellow Orthodox Slavs. While he was in flight to the
US to meet with American leaders, Primakov was told by Al Gore about
the decision to bomb Yugoslavia. In mid-flight, Primakov ordered the
plane to turn around and return to Moscow. Because Russia depended on
loans and other financial aid from the West, Yeltsin’s government
was not willing to risk confronting the United States and did nothing
for the Serbs. Beginning to flounder, Yeltsin replaced Primakov with
Sergei Stepashin. I happened to be in Moscow when the bombing
started, and I remember seeing angry crowds as far as the eye could
see protesting against the war. Upon learning that I was an American,
every Russian I met wanted to express his opposition to the war and
wanted me to try to explain why the United States government was
acting in such a manner.
The
American administration either did not know it at the time, or simply
was too arrogant to care, but its actions had a huge impact on the
future of Russia and its relations with the West. For many Russians,
the bombing of Yugoslavia was simply too much: It was the ultimate
sign that America could not be trusted and would attack Russia if it
could. On June 11, 1999, the Russian military rejected the Kremlin’s
capitulation and ordered Russian troops to seize the airport in
Pristina, Kosovo. Yeltsin had lost control over his military. This
was the beginning of a silent coup.
With little choice, Yeltsin’s administration agreed to require the
Foreign Ministry to coordinate its activities with the military and
security apparatus. Yeltsin was left in office, but his time was
running out. On August 10, Yeltsin fired Prime Minister Sergei
Sephashin and replaced him with Vladimir Putin, an unknown former KGB
officer and former head of the FSB.
Nobody
knew what to think of Putin. He had very little political experience;
he had only served as deputy mayor of St. Petersburg for a short
time. He mouthed the right words about ‘democracy’ and ‘open
markets.’ His actions as Prime Minister would soon increase his
popularity. The Chechen war was reignited when Chechen rebels
attacked several towns in the neighboring Russian Republic of
Dagastan in August of 1999. Putin responded to the crisis with a firm
hand. Without hesitation, he sent in the Russian military to crush
the rebels. A series of apartment bombings in Moscow gave Putin even
more room to move. Putin said that he would wipe out the Chechens “in
the outhouse.” It is important to point out the widespread
hostility many Russians have for Chechens and other ethnic groups
from the Caucasian region. Soon, Putin’s popularity ratings went
sky-high. After years of Yeltsin’s weak leadership, it seemed that
a strong leader had finally arrived.33
(footnote
33. Many historians argue that Russians have historically preferred
strong leaders.)
The hunters become the hunted
For
Berezovsky and the others, it seemed that Putin was the man they
could count on for a “continuity of power.” However, Putin wasn’t
their man at all. He represented different interests, and the
security agencies were in the process of reclaiming power.
Berezovsky
went about the task of preparing for the 2000 Presidential election.
He organized and funded a new political party to back Putin called
Unity. Even though this party had no real ideology, it won enough
seats to make Unity the second largest bloc in the Duma, all on
account of Putin’s popularity. (Other than the Communist Party,
most political parties in Russia are not grass-roots organizations.
They are simply parties set up to support a politician and people
simply vote for the party that is headed by the politician they most
agree with.
When Russians think of the LPDR, they think of
Zhirinovsky. When they think of Fatherland, they think of Lushkov.
When they think of Unity, they think of President Putin.) At this
time, Yeltsin’s primary concern was shielding himself and his
family from future prosecution. The Duma’s earlier attempt to
impeach him gave him an idea of what these forces might do if they
ever came to power. He was even accused of “genocide against the
Russian people.” In short, he believed his enemies would make him
pay for his real or alleged crimes against Russia.
Most likely, as
part of the silent coup, a deal was struck to protect Yeltsin and his
family from prosecution in exchange for Putin becoming Prime Minister
and later President. When he became President, Putin’s very first
act was to sign a decree granting Yeltsin immunity from prosecution.
Yeltsin was saving his skin. After nine years of impoverishment,
privatization scandals, the rise of the oligarchs, the use of the
military against opposition forces, and two wars in Chechnya, Yeltsin
had plenty to fear. And it seemed at first that Putin was indeed “one
of the boys,” willing to play along with the Jewish money men.
On
New Year’s eve 1999, President Yeltsin gave a surprise address to
the nation. He announced that he was stepping down as President and
naming Vladimir Putin acting President. In March of 2000, Putin
easily won the election, but nobody knew exactly what to expect. They
would soon find out.
Putin
began to move with lighting speed. He announced that he would create
one set of rules for everyone, including the oligarchs. He stated
that he would initiate “vertical control” over the country, and
began to move on the regional governors, who enjoyed a great deal of
autonomy under Yeltsin. To do this, he launched a plan to divide the
country into federal districts, with each district controlled by a
supergovernor appointed by Putin. The existing 89 regional chiefs now
had to report to these Putin appointees. Five of the seven men
appointed by Putin were either former KGB or military officers —
all people loyal to Putin. He followed this up with a campaign to
oust certain governors on corruption charges. Then, Putin began to
move against the same people who had supported him and helped him get
elected: the oligarchs. Putin’s words about gaining control over
“bandit capitalism” were for real, but he couldn’t go after all
of the oligarchs at once. First on his hit list was Gusinsky.
GEORGE BUSH, VLADIMIR PUTIN: One slavishly
follows the orders of the Jewish power structure, spilling his
people’s blood and squandering their wealth without limit to curry
favor with the aliens. The other has begun to deal justly with the
Jewish crime bosses and killers who raped his people financially,
materially, and spiritually for many decades. How much farther is
Putin willing to go beyond his carefully-worded statements, which
may be designed to guide the Russian ship of state through the
dangerous waters of diplomacy and economic relations with the
Zionist-ruled superpower? Now that Putin has been reelected with a
massive mandate from the Russian people, time may eventually reveal
his motivations and ultimate goals.
Gusinsky was arrested as a suspect in a fraud case in a privatization deal involving a St. Petersburg television company, Russian Video. Gusinsky, one of Russia’s wealthiest men, a person who thought he was untouchable, was thrown into Moscow’s most notorious prison, Butyrskaya, an overcrowded eighteenth century jail.
While
on a trip to Spain, Putin was asked about the scandal, but he replied
that it was all a matter of business disputes. He replied that
Gusinsky had taken out $1.3 billion in loans for his Media-Most and
had “returned almost nothing.” He also added that “several days
ago Gusinsky did not pay back another $200 million loan, and Gazprom
again paid the outstanding debt. I wonder why Gazprom should spend
money on this.”34 The Kremlin’s plan was brutally
simple: to force Gusinsky to repay all of the loans at once,
bankrupting him. Although the Western media did make claims that this
was a matter of free speech in Russia being crushed, and President
Clinton did speak with Putin on behalf of Gusinsky, the writing was
already on the wall. Gusinsky’s time was up. The feared backlash
had started. Once again, the cry of “anti-Semitism” was voiced,
but this wouldn’t help Gusinsky. If the other oligarchs had
realized that Putin wasn’t only after Gusinsky, they might have
been able to come to his defense and save their corrupt system. They
didn’t, and it would only be a matter of time before their turn
came.
(footnote
34. Hoffman, Op.
cit.,
p. 469)
Gusinsky
was formally charged with fraud and released on June 16. The pressure
continued. Mikhail Lesin, the recently appointed Press Minister, was
given the task of destroying the oligarch. Secret negotiations were
held. In total, Gusinsky owed $473 million in dept to Gazprom. An
ultimatum was presented to Gusinsky: If he sold his media empire to
Gazprom, he would go free. Quite simple, really. They even offered
the oligarch $300 million in cash, proving that this wasn’t really
about money, but about control over Gusinsky’s media. Threats
continued against Gusinsky. Raids continued against his businesses.
On July 7, investigators hauled off boxes of documents from NTV.
According to Gusinsky, “They said it more than once. There were
constant threats to put me in jail cells with tubercular prisoners
and people with AIDS…. I was indeed a hostage. When you have a gun
to your head, you have two options: To meet the conditions of the
bandits or take a bullet in your head.”35 It was
wheeling and dealing, Russian style.
(footnote
35. Ibid.,
p. 481)
On
July 18, Gusinsky signed a written statement saying that he was being
forced against his will to sell his business, in exchange for a
promise to drop the criminal charges and permission to go abroad.
According to Gusinsky, it was Lesin who was forcing him to do it. On
July 20, he signed a secret agreement to sell his empire for $300
million. On July 27, the prosecutors announced that they were
dropping all charges against Gusinsky. He immediately boarded his
private jet and flew to Spain, never to return to Russia. While in
Spain, Gusinsky changed his mind about the deal, which resulted in
prosecutors issuing arrest warrants through Interpol. Gusinsky was
indeed detained in Spain and twice jailed, but the Spanish high court
threw out the case. In April, Gazprom held a board meeting and moved
to seize control of NTV. A new general director was appointed. On
April 14, NTV was taken over by armed men, and the new director
assumed control. Sevyodna,
Gusinsky’s first newspaper, was closed. Gusinsky should have taken
the $300 million while he had the chance, but he foolishly thought
that he could fight Putin. Now it was all over for him.
Gusinsky
was only the first. Other oligarchs who thought that they could
escape were sadly mistaken. One of these was Boris Berezovsky, the
man who did more than anyone else to get Putin elected. Berezovsky
was under the mistaken impression that Putin owed him something for
his support and that he was therefore ‘immune.’ When asked about
any charges being brought against him, he replied: “To be honest, I
am not expecting this, neither tomorrow nor in the near
future.”36 However, as Putin had said during his
meeting with the oligarchs, the rules of the game were now different.
Berezovsky was next.
(footnote
36. Ibid.,
p. 486)
In
August, Putin said that the oligarchs and their television channels
had been destroying the state, as well as the army and navy. Kremlin
aide Alexander Voloshin told Berezovsky “Listen, either you give up
ORT within two weeks or you will follow Gusinsky.”
“This
is not the way to talk to me,” Berezovsky replied. “You are
forgetting something. I am not Gusinsky.”37Berezovsky
arranged a meeting to speak directly with President Putin and get to
the bottom of things. Apparently, he felt that he was powerful enough
to convince the President to change his mind. Putin told Berezovsky
that he had something to tell him. He opened a file, the same file
prepared by Primakov when he started to go after Berezovsky. Putin
began to read a document, which detailed the corruption of ORT.
Berezovsky was in shock. Putin was completely serious, and he meant
business. Realizing that it was useless to fight and that he could
very well end up in prison, Berezovsky sold his interest in ORT and
left the country. However, his troubles were not over. He would not
be safe in London, and Berezovsky could not resist the temptation to
continue to meddle in Russian politics. He was an addict, and power
and politics were his drugs of choice. It is simply not in
Berezovsky’s nature to keep quiet and be content with his money.
This was his downfall.
(footnote
37. Ibid.,
p. 487)
While
in London, Berezovsky set up yet another new political party in
Russia, Liberal Russia, in 2002. Liberal Russia was meant to be an
opposition party, and was bankrolled by Berezovsky. The fact that
Berezovsky is such an unpopular figure in Russia gave this party
little chance of success from the start. Berezovsky also continued to
make accusations against the Kremlin, accusing the FSB of being
behind a series of apartment blasts in 1999. He even accused the FSB
of being behind the 2002 siege of a Chechen-seized theater in Moscow
that left 129 hostages dead. Putin’s government responded by
releasing information indicating that, in fact, Berezovsky has very
close ties to the Chechen separatists — and has funded them.
The
Kremlin had had enough of Berezovsky’s mischief. In March of 2003,
Berezovsky was arrested in London on an extradition warrant charging
him with fraud while head of the Logovaz car company.
Though
he has so far managed to remain in his safe haven in Britain, it is
very likely that Berezovsky could end up paying for some of his early
crimes against the Russian people. In an effort to gain immunity,
Berezovsky announced in early April 2003 that he was planning to run
in the legislative elections in Russia: As a member of the Russian
State Duma, he would enjoy parliamentary immunity. His effort fizzled
out, and he has lost most of his support. Berezovsky is like a
gambler who cannot quit while he is ahead. If he continues to insist
on trying to influence Russian politics, it is very likely that he
could end up in prison for the rest of his life, or even could lose
his life. Those who know what he has done are now in a good position
to fight him — and they are never going to forgive.
‘Anti-Semitism’ or immunity from criticism?
Of
course Putin’s highly visible fight against Russia’s oligarchs
has been accompanied by charges of ‘anti-Semitism.’ The fact that
the overwhelming majority of these oligarchs are Jews means that
high-profile Jews are being targeted. For some, it is simply Putin
going after criminals who just happen to be Jewish. For others, it is
something similar to Stalin’s anti-Jewish crackdowns. It wasn’t
that Stalin hated Jews because of their religion or any other reason.
Stalin viewed Jews as a powerful interest group that could never be
trusted — and as a threat to his personal power. Putin’s
crackdown has increased his popularity in Russia, and the fact that
so many of the people he is cracking down on happen to be Jewish
can’t hurt him in the eyes of the Russian population. To many
ordinary people, these Jewish swindlers defrauded the Russian people
out of property that was supposed to belong to the people and used
their wealth to buy up the Russian media and influence to control the
government. Some Jews in Russia view this as a good thing, because it
counters the image of the Russian media being owned and controlled by
Jews, and some Jews believe this will reduce anti-Jewish feelings in
Russian society.
In
a very shrewd move, President Putin has managed to protect himself
from charges of anti-Semitism by splitting various Jewish groups and
seemingly supporting others. On January 23, 2001, Israeli President
Moshe Katsav visited Moscow. This gave Putin a chance to promote one
Jewish leader as the authentic chief rabbi in Russia. For the
reception of Katzav. the only Russian rabbi invited was Berl Lazar,
who was contending for the title of chief rabbi. Lazar was fighting
with Adolf Shayevich, who is associated with the Russian Jewish
Congress, which was founded by Gusinsky in an effort to bring Russian
Jews together to promote their own interests. Lazar is part of the
Chabad movement and head of the Federation of Jewish Communities.
In effect, the Kremlin has named Lazar chief rabbi. In return, Lazar
follows the party line and backs the Kremlin when it feels
it needs a “Jewish voice.” Lazar, for all purposes, is a
Kremlin-controlled rabbi and is now considered Russia’s chief
rabbi. Lazar has defended the Russian government from charges of
‘anti-Semitism’ and has even supported the return of the “Stalin
hymn.” Now, whenever the administration wants to defend itself
against charges of ‘anti-Semitism’ it can just bring
out Russia’s “chief rabbi” and have him make a few statements
of support.
How far will he go?
Of
course, the question of whether or not the Putin government is
serious about tackling the oligarchs remains. Some argue that
this has more to do with controlling the flow of information in
Russia and that the excuse of cracking down on the oligarchs is used
to garner support among the population. One thing is certain: Putin’s
campaign has indeed been very popular in Russia, and it has done
quite a lot to convince Russians that his government it at least
trying to take steps to do what is right, unlike Yeltsin’s.
The
real test starts now. Putin has just been re-elected. He will have a
much freer hand in implementing his policies and installing his
people in leadership positions throughout the country. For now, it
seems that the Russian government is willing to allow some
oligarchs to remain if they do as they are told. A good example of
this is Roman Abramovich, who moved to the region of Chukotka
and became governor. He has spent a good deal of his own money trying
to improve the region, and he has expanded business ties with foreign
countries and brought in investment. The most important thing
about Abramovich is that he does not visibly try to influence the
Kremlin, unlike other oligarchs. I remember that at the time he
made the move to Chukotka some people had a hard time understanding
his actions. One theory is that Abramovich was given a choice:
either go to Siberia and help the people there as a governor, or
go to Siberia as a prisoner. There have most likely been many such
behind-the-scenes deals made. In the long run, it does make sense,
because the remaining oligarchs know that they must play by the
new rules that Putin has made, and they know what will happen to them
if they don’t. Yet, even Abramovich doesn’t seem to be immune, as
investigations have recently been launched into some of his past
business dealings. Abramovich recently moved to Britain, becoming its
wealthiest resident (edging out the Duke of Westminster by some
50 per cent.) and buying the Chelsea Football Club.
It
appears that the silent coup has worked and Russia’s security
services are now in control. A new set of players is running
today’s Russia, which cannot but be better than the Yeltsin gang.
One can only hope that Putin and his team really have Russia’s best
interests at heart and that this is the beginning of a national
awakening in Russia. I firmly believe that Putin’s interests
are of a long-term nature and that he will continue to maneuver in a
cautious manner with an eye on the future. Russian politics
are not what they might at first seem, and Putin will continue to
play his enemies off against each other. Stalin did the same
while he was consolidating his power and weakening the Jewish grip on
Russian society. Putin will continue to say what needs to be said in
public in order to implement his long-term plans. Yet, when one looks
at the bigger picture, one can see that the new rulers of Russia are
moving Russia in a direction much different from that of Yeltsin
and his ‘pro-Western reformers’ and mafia-style Jewish ‘family.’
Putin’s second term will provide some answers to the questions so
many of us have asked for so long.
Originally
published June 2004
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