Boris Nemtsov, a leader of Russia’s democratic opposition, spoke
Monday at a conference held by the Foreign Policy Initiative.
“Russians do not know what Obama thinks about human rights and
democracy,” the former deputy prime minister and Solidarnost
cofounder said. Nemtsov elaborated when Eli Lake of the
Washington Times
talked to him later:
“I have no illusion about help from America. I don’t think an
American president or the American Congress will establish
democracy in my country,” he said, adding that this was the job of
Russians and Russians alone.
“But I think the position of the U.S. establishment is important
for the atmosphere around the Kremlin,” he said.
Mr. Nemtsov was particularly critical of a decision by Mr.
[Michael] McFaul[, senior director of Russian and Eurasian affairs
on the Obama Administration’s National Security Council,] to launch
a civil-society dialogue with Vladislav Surkov, a Putin loyalist
who founded Russian nationalist youth organizations that Mr.
Nemtsov likened to Nazi youth groups in Germany under Adolf
Hitler.
Mr. Nemtsov said it was perverse that Mr. Surkov, whose youth
groups intimidated independent journalists in Russia, would be
representing Russia in a forum aimed at expanding civil
society.
Instead, Mr. Nemtsov recommended the United States government
bar Mr. Surkov from traveling to the United States.
I
mentioned an FPI proposal to shun Vladislav Surkov in this
space a few months ago; needless to say, the Obama administration
has not embraced this policy. Turning down the volume on criticism
of Putinist authoritarianism is of a piece with the
administration’s “reset” policy with Russia.
The centerpiece of the reset policy is the New START arms
control agreement, which seems to be doomed given
Republican opposition. This is probably a bad thing — I’m
somewhat ambivalent on this point — but be wary of assertions
that the GOP is simply “playing politics” with the treaty (there
are legitimate problems with it; reasonable people can disagree on
how serious they are), and be very wary of attempts to blame
the Senate when friction with Russia inevitably resurfaces. As
Nemtsov said at the FPI conference, an arms control treaty will not
change the fact that “Putin has absolutely different values” than
those found in Western liberal democracies.
Kevin Dunn| 11.18.10 @ 7:12AM
Has everyone forgotten that US-Russian relations, and also human rights in Russia, were at their best ever when Reagan was President - ie when the Russians knew they were dealing with an American leader who was determined, patriotic and strong?
pineapple1| 11.18.10 @ 7:20AM
Reagan believed and practiced PEACE THROUGH SUPERIOR FIREPOWER.
sarah| 11.18.10 @ 10:18AM
hey your blog design is very nice, clean and fresh and with updated content, make people feel peace and I always enjoy browsing your site.
wholesale wigs
human hair wigs wholesale