News Photos
Search Advanced Sign in / Register fans
 
WORLD NEWS    
 

Advertisement

Medvedev-Putin show brings Kremlinology back in fashion
By Stuart Williams
Agence France-Presse
Page 9
2009-11-23 12:00 AM
+ Enlarge This image
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, left, and Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, talk in a restaurant in St. Petersburg, Russia yesterday. Medvedev and Putin attended a congress of the United Russia party in St. Petersburg.
Associated Press
+ Enlarge This image
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev speaks at a congress of the United Russia party in St. Petersburg, Russia yesterday. Medvedev yesterday sharply criticized officials in the dominant Kremlin-backed party for violations in recent regional elections, saying it must learn to win fairly.
Associated Press
A presidential marionette controlled by a master prime minister-puppeteer?

Or is Russia's President Dmitry Medvedev a visionary reformer with a mind of his own, slowly but surely sidelining his mentor, Prime Minister and former president Vladimir Putin?

The last days in Russia have reignited the debate about the balance of power within the country's ruling duumvirate, sending Kremlin-watchers hurrying to confirm or reassess opinions over who runs the country.

Medvedev in a state-of-the-nation address on Nov. 12 outlined his blueprint for modernizing the Russian economy, blasting the state corporations and dependence on oil exports that had ballooned in the Putin presidency.

Seated in the front row, the poker-faced prime minister barely blinked but several commentators saw Medvedev's words as an attack on the "Putin system" that has ruled Russia over the last decade.

On Saturday the roles were reversed, with Medvedev listening this time as Putin gave strikingly forthcoming backing to his modernization plan and showing, in public at least, that the two men were in perfect lockstep.

"I am sure that this call reflects the mood of all of Russian society," Putin said in an hour-long speech to the annual congress of the ruling United Russia party in Saint Petersburg.

Under the Soviet Union, Kremlinology was a favourite sport amongst observers who scrambled to guess what was really going on behind the 10m walls of the Moscow Kremlin

Such uncertainty did no harm to outside preconceptions about the mysteries of Russia, summed up by Winston Churchill's famous phrase that the country "is a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside an enigma."

The ascendancy of Putin appeared to bring a new era of simplicity to Russia-watching, with few doubting who was really in charge of Russia.

But particularly after Medvedev's assertive state-of-the-nation address, voices are multiplying that complicate this interpretation by implying the president's influence is on the rise.

This week Medvedev fired the long serving Kremlin media advisor Mikhail Lesin, seen as a Putin ally, for abuse of office in what Russian newspapers saw as his biggest change in the administration yet.

The move sparked a flurry of interest, not least in the Moskovskii Komsomolets daily, a paper known for its close ties to the Medvedev team that had energetically promoted his standing over the last months.

"What's important is that Medvedev here showed himself to be the sole leader of the Kremlin. He sacked an important official without consulting Putin," wrote the paper.

"Will Lesin be the last to go? If not, then this week could go down in history as the moment when the balance of power in Russia's ruling tandem started to change," it added.

 
Have Your Say :

We welcome your comments on this and other stories. Comments are submitted for possible publication on the condition that they may be edited. Please provide your full name and suburb/location. We also require a working e-mail address – not for publication, but for verification only.

 
Post your feedback
 
 
 
More WORLD News Stories
Dog sleds, raw seal meat and biting cold await G-7 finance ministers   2010-02-05
Toyota says Prius had brake design problems   2010-02-05
Haiti business community seeks to help rebuild economy   2010-02-05
As Toyota troubles mount, Congress wants answers   2010-02-05
Google, U.S. intel to team up to fight cyberattacks   2010-02-05
Deutsche Bank bounces back with strong 2009 profit   2010-02-05
U.S. stocks take breather after two-day rally   2010-02-05
U.S. dollar little changed in Asia   2010-02-05
Asian stocks drop after Wall Street resumes slide   2010-02-05
Oil prices down in Asian trade, stay above US$76   2010-02-05
Child slavery in Haiti is common and legal   2010-02-05
Sri Lanka leader says Tamils should work with gov't   2010-02-05
Pandas leave U.S. for new homes in China   2010-02-05
Talks unlikely   2010-02-05
Cambodia to draft new law against acid attacks   2010-02-05
Oil discovery   2010-02-05
Obama's aunt readies fresh fight   2010-02-05
Speedy vehicle plows into Nevada casino; 2 dead, 8 hurt   2010-02-05
Suns end Nuggets hot home form   2010-02-05
Milito gives Inter slight advantage   2010-02-05
 
01     02   03   04   05   06   07   08   09   Next   >
 
To search for articles form the past seven days, Click on ARCHIVES
  7day free
 
 
TOP

©2009 Taiwan News All Rights Reserved.