By George H. Wittman on 10.2.09 @ 6:07AM
Whether on stage or behind the scenes, Dmitry Medvedev is no
longer serving as Vladimir Putin's understudy.
In the spring of 2012 there will be a national election in
Russia. Long before that a decision will be made as to who will
be the next president and prime minister. The higher ranking of
these jobs surely is going to be held by Vladimir Vladimirovich
Putin. Does it really matter who holds the other?
That's the question that is making the rounds in Moscow
these days. There is clear acceptance that Putin intends to take
back the presidency. It is less clear that Dmitry Medvedev will
be willing to return to the job of prime minister he held before
2008. The siloviki, the cadre of security
and military personalities who guard and guide Vladimir Putin's
ascendancy over Russian political and governmental life, have
mixed feelings about a Medvedev who has none of their experience
on his résumé.
Dmitry Medvedev was well accepted as Putin's trusted
administrative staff chief and later to a lesser degree as a
faithful prime minister. However, little Dimi's performance as
Putin's handpicked "understudy president" already has met with
some annoyance in the ranks of the Putin faithful.
Perhaps it is the ease with which Medvedev has slipped into
the role of head of state that bothers them. It hasn't helped
that President Medvedev apparently has enjoyed emphasizing his
self-perception as a socially concerned leader -- a concept that
grates against the instincts of the more authoritarian and
institutionally rigid siloviki.
Democracy in Russia is a management decision in which the
predominant votes come from the elite of the security services,
business leaders, and top members of the well-structured, if less
than efficient, bureaucracy. The popular vote essentially
ratifies what these power centers have agreed upon. There is, of
course, considerable "noises off," but the work center stage is
accomplished by the established actors.
The staffs of Putin and Medvedev have developed serious
competition in both foreign and domestic matters. Press coverage
is also a point of contention. Medvedev's early exclusive
interview with the liberal newspaper, Novaya
Gazeta, was especially galling to the Putin
staffers whose boss is regularly battered by articles in that
publication.
This is not to say that outside factors do not influence
political matters. When President Obama announced the American
about-face on anti-missile deployment in Eastern Europe, it was
President Medvedev who rushed forward to accept credit for his
personal relations with the new Washington administration as key
to the altered U.S. strategy. Prime Minister Putin was left in
the uncomfortable position of playing a supporting role to the
leading man he had created.
There are other signs that the tandem rule is wearing at
the edges. Dmitry Medvedev openly took a shot at his old boss and
teacher during a meeting with economic experts in the middle of
September. He pointedly referred to his own background in
business and his considerable acquaintance with the ethos and
realities of that world as an excellent match with Putin's
security skills. This distancing of himself from his partner's
KGB upbringing was construed by some Kremlin watchers as little
Dimi slyly setting forth his individuality and
independence.
Medvedev emphasizes his good relations with Barack Obama.
The Russian president noted he spent eight hours in talks with
his American counterpart, while Putin had never spent more than
one and a half hours with George Bush. In Washington this was
taken as a slap at Bush, but in Moscow it was clearly upstaging
Putin. These are not inconsequential matters in the highly
theatrical world of Russian politics.
So far Putin is still accepted as the true star of the
Russian scene. If Putin decides he wants to run for President
again in 2012, under the newly arranged constitutional change he
will be eligible to have two more terms of six years each. This
would bring the Putin era to 2024, at which time he will be 71
years old. Medvedev, on the other hand, would be a still youthful
59.
In spite of his increasing popularity at the polls, Dmitry
Medvedev might decide to step off the Putin merry-go-round for a
term or two, acquire some wealth in international business, and
return for an unrestricted try again at the presidency of the
Russian Federation when Putin is no longer eligible. There are
plenty of people in the Moscow entourage who would encourage that
scenario.
It all depends on how hard Dmitry Medvedev has been bitten
by the leading man bug. Upstaging the established star of the
Kremlin Art Theater can bring one very swiftly to the point of
"never working in this town again."
topics:
Vladimir Putin, Russia, Dmitry Medvedev