Showing posts with label PUTIN. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PUTIN. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Syria Crisis and Putin’s Return Chill U.S. Ties With Russia

By PETER BAKER
Published: June 13, 2012 51


WASHINGTON — Sitting beside President Obama this spring, the president of Russia gushed that “these were perhaps the best three years of relations between Russia and the United States over the last decade.” Two and a half months later, those halcyon days of friendship look like a distant memory.

Gone is Dmitri A. Medvedev, the optimistic president who collaborated with Mr. Obama and celebrated their partnership in March. In his place is Vladimir V. Putin, the grim former K.G.B. colonel whose return to the Kremlin has ushered in a frostier relationship freighted by an impasse over Syria and complicated by fractious domestic politics in both countries.

The tension over Syria has been exacerbated by an accusation by Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton on Tuesday that Russia is supplying attack helicopters to the government of President Bashar al-Assad as it tries to crush an uprising. Russia’s foreign minister, Sergey V. Lavrov, rejected the assertions on Wednesday, saying that Moscow was supplying only defensive weapons and countering that the United States was arming the region.

The back-and-forth underscored the limits of Mr. Obama’s ability to “reset” ties between the two countries, as he resolved to do when he arrived in office. He has signed an arms control treaty, expanded supply lines to Afghanistan through Russian territory, secured Moscow’s support for sanctions on Iran and helped bring Russia into the World Trade Organization. But officials in both capitals noted this week that the two countries still operated on fundamentally different sets of values and interests.

The souring relations come as Mr. Obama and Mr. Putin are preparing to meet for the first time as presidents next week on the sidelines of a summit meeting in Mexico. With Mr. Obama being accused by Mitt Romney, his Republican presidential opponent, of going soft on Russia and Mr. Putin turning to anti-American statements in response to street protests in Moscow, the Mexico meeting is being seen as a test of whether the reset has run its course.

“We were already at a place with the Russians where we were about to move to a new phase,” said Benjamin J. Rhodes, a deputy national security adviser to Mr. Obama. “A lot of this is can we continue to build on the initial steps we’ve taken with the Russians even as we’ve had differences emerge, most notably on Syria.”

Others see relations between the two countries more pessimistically. “There is a crisis in the Russian-American relationship,” said Aleksei K. Pushkov, the hawkish head of Russia’s parliamentary foreign affairs committee. “It is a crisis when the sides have to balance their interests but they cannot do so because their interests diverge. It is developing into some kind of long-term mistrust.”

The signs of that divergence have been there for a while but have seemed increasingly pronounced in recent months. Michael A. McFaul, a former Russia adviser to Mr. Obama, has been subjected to an unusual campaign of public harassment since arriving in Moscow as ambassador. A Russian general last month threatened pre-emptive strikes against American missile defense sites in Poland in the event of a crisis.

Reclaiming the presidency after a four-year interregnum wielding power as prime minister, Mr. Putin has responded to sustained demonstrations with a crackdown and accusations of American perfidy, singling out Mrs. Clinton. He snubbed Mr. Obama by skipping the annual Group of 8 summit meeting, hosted by the president at Camp David last month.

“The reset failed to change the underlying suspicion and distrust of America shared by a majority of Russians as well as Putin himself,” said Masha Lipman, an analyst at the Carnegie Moscow Center. “America is seen as a threat, an agent seeking to undermine Russia, to weaken it, to do harm to it. Russia always has to be on the alert, on the defensive.”

Adding to the tension have been moves in Congress to impose visa and banking restrictions on Russian officials implicated in human rights abuses. The bipartisan legislation, named for Sergei L. Magnitsky, a lawyer whose corruption investigation led to his death in prison, passed a House committee last week and will be taken up by a Senate panel next week.

“I see this as part of an effort to make clear the expected international conduct as it relates to human rights,” said Senator Benjamin L. Cardin, a Maryland Democrat who has pushed the legislation. “This is what friends do. We point out when you need to do better.”

The Obama administration, seeking to avoid a rupture, opposes the legislation on the grounds that the State Department has already banned visas for Russians implicated in Mr. Magnitsky’s death.

Instead, the administration is highlighting separate legislation introduced on Tuesday by a bipartisan group, including Senators John McCain, Republican of Arizona, and John Kerry, Democrat of Massachusetts, that would repeal decades-old trade restrictions on Russia.

Hours after Mrs. Clinton lodged her helicopter allegations on Tuesday, she sent an under secretary of state, Wendy Sherman, to a Russia Day reception at the Russian Embassy in Washington, where she pointed to the proposed repeal of the Jackson-Vanik restrictions and talked about treating Moscow “with respect.”

The complication for Mr. Obama is that lawmakers like Mr. Cardin and Mr. McCain want to link the Jackson-Vanik repeal to the Magnitsky legislation, seeing it as the only way to win enough votes. Mr. Cardin said he agreed with an administration push to broaden the Magnitsky bill to cover all countries, not singling out Russia, but others in Congress oppose such a move.

Mr. Obama is focusing on enlisting Russia’s help on issues like stopping Iran from building nuclear weapons. The next round of talks between Iran and international powers open in Moscow next week, and the administration hopes that Russia’s role as host will prompt it to use its influence with Tehran to extract more concessions.

One of the biggest successes of the reset, however, has also made the United States more dependent on Russia. With Pakistan cutting off supply lines to Afghanistan, the so-called northern distribution network through Russia is the primary reinforcement route for America’s war on the Taliban.

“We need more from them than they need from us at the moment,” said Angela E. Stent, a former national intelligence officer on Russian affairs who now directs Russian studies at Georgetown University. The Russians are less invested than Mr. Obama in the notion of a reset. “They look at that as an American course correction. But it’s not their policy, it’s an American policy,” Dr. Stent said.

Publicly, the administration rejects any connection between Syria and the Afghan supply route. “We’re not linking the two,” said Capt. John Kirby, a Pentagon spokesman. But, privately, officials worry that Russia will try to use the leverage provided by the supply route.

So far, Russian officials have reassured their American counterparts that they will not link the issues. If anything, Moscow worries that the United States is pulling out of Afghanistan too soon, recognizing that a collapse in security there would pose problems for Russia’s southern flank.

For Mr. Obama, who considers improved ties with Russia one of his signature accomplishments, the question is whether the current friction is temporary or is a sign that the reset has accomplished what it can. At some point, administration officials said, it was inevitable that the two countries would settle into a situation in which they cooperate in some areas and clash in others.

The coming meeting in Los Cabos, Mexico, on the sidelines of a Group of 20 gathering, could prove uncomfortable for Mr. Obama. The first time the two men met, in July 2009, when Mr. Putin was prime minister, Mr. Putin delivered an hourlong harangue about the United States.

Los Cabos may be no more congenial. “This should be an awkward meeting, because otherwise the president runs a risk of palling around with a guy who’s cracking down on the opposition, who’s selling attack helicopters to a murderous regime in Syria and is just going in the wrong direction,” said David J. Kramer, a Bush official who is now executive director of Freedom House, an advocacy organization.

“The president’s going to be yearning for the days of meetings with Dima,” Mr. Kramer added, using Mr. Medvedev’s nickname. “It probably won’t be a pretty meeting. And it shouldn’t be a pretty meeting.”


Ellen Barry contributed reporting from Moscow, and Thom Shanker from Washington.



Wednesday, June 06, 2012

Putin emphasizes military ties with Chinese VP

Posted on Wednesday, 06.06.12


Russia's President Vladimir Putin attends a bilateral meeting with China's Vice Premier Li Keqiang on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) summit at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing Wednesday, June 6, 2012. Putin is emphasizing



THE ASSOCIATED PRESS


BEIJING -- Russian President Vladimir Putin emphasized burgeoning military ties with China on Wednesday on the second day of a visit to his nation's eastern neighbor.

Putin told Vice President Xi Jinping that he and Chinese President Hu Jintao have vowed to expand military exchanges and he also recalled recent Russian-Chinese naval exercises in the Yellow Sea.

Military exchanges between Moscow and Beijing have accelerated under a regional security grouping that has hosted regular border protection and anti-terrorism drills.

China is a major customer for Russian fighters, submarines, missiles frigates, and other high-tech arms, but mistrust lingers from their Cold War rivalry. Ties have warmed steadily, however, over Putin's decade-long dominance of Russian political life.

Putin's visit is his first to China since returning to Russia's presidency last month and comes ahead of his first visit to the U.S. in a move seen as signaling an eastward pivot in Russian foreign policy.

In Beijing, Putin reaffirmed targets of raising bilateral trade to $100 billion by 2015 from $83.5 billion last year, and to $200 million by 2020.

Warming ties between China and Russia have counterbalanced U.S. influence and shielded Syria from international moves to halt its crackdown on a 15-month uprising.


Source: http://www.miamiherald.com/2012/06/06/2835240/putin-emphasizes-military-ties.html#storylink=cpy

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Sunday, March 11, 2012

Russian protesters face challenge after Putin win


MOSCOW (Reuters) - Russian opposition leaders on Sunday called for a clear agenda and a grassroots focus on local elections to re-energize a protest movement running out of steam after Vladimir Putin convincingly won a six-year presidential term.

After the crowd at a rally in central Moscow on Saturday fell well short of expectations, activists who have mounted the biggest protests of Putin's 12-year rule said supporters should dig in for a long fight for political change.

wind out of protesters' calls for a "Russia without Putin" and their demands for a rerun of both elections, which Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev have rejected.

While protest leaders dismiss Putin's portrayal of the opposition as a divided and amorphous group of critics with few constructive ideas, activists suggested it was now critical for the protest movement to mix firm demands on Putin's government with a clear agenda of its own.

'FIVE MINUTES OF HATE'

"The next demonstration must not be 'against' but 'for'," Dmitry Gudkov, an opposition lawmaker, said in a blog on Sunday. "We need to move away from the format of 'five minutes of hate' and announce a plan of action, answer the question 'What next?' and demand the authorities conduct reforms."

Opponents hoped Putin would win less than half the vote on March 4 - forcing a runoff, eroding his aura of invincibility and setting the stage for a new series of protests.

But Putin won the presidency outright with nearly 64 percent by the official count, enough to let him claim majority support despite allegations of fraud and criticism by international observers who said he had an unfair advantage.

With no national election due until 2016, some opposition leaders said activists must work to make sure local and regional elections are run fairly as part of a strategy of seeking change from the ground up in a country with a history of top-down rule.

In a move to placate protesters, Putin and outgoing president Dmitry Medvedev have promised to restore popular elections of the governors of Russia's 83 regions. But Kremlin critics fear legislation now in parliament may give the president a say in who gets to run.

Opposition leaders hope Kremlin plans to enlarge the city of Moscow will lead to a new election for its legislature. Leonid Parfyonov, a prominent journalist and protest organizer, said such a vote would be "the next step in political life" and that change could originate in Moscow, where Putin's support is weak.

"We need to prepare for various elections - local votes, mayoral elections in Moscow and governor's elections - primarily to make sure they take place," opposition politician and former Deputy Prime Minister Boris Nemtsov told Interfax news agency in remarks posted on his website on Sunday.

Nemtsov and Gudkov said the opposition should not try to hold frequent protests.

"So as not to tire people out with frequent demonstrations, we have decided to take a pause - to wait until May and hold a mass action at which we will make new demands," Gudkov said.

In contrast to previous rallies, opposition leaders set no date on Saturday for the next big protest. But a consensus seems to be emerging that it should be held shortly before Putin's inauguration on May 7 - and that it must be big.

One prominent activist, Sergei Udaltsov, called on Saturday for a 1 million-strong protest in Moscow on May 1.

MILLION IN MOSCOW?

At about 10 times the size of the biggest protest this winter, that goal is a huge stretch. But Nemtsov agreed that "to demonstrate jointly and clearly ahead of the presidential inauguration would be very good".

After a hiatus of nearly two months, such a plan would be major test of what Russians call the "protest mood".

The winter protests evoked the heady days when the collapse of the Soviet Union brought an end to decades of oppressive Communist rule, but much of that euphoria has faded.

"I'm afraid the protest movement will ebb but we have no other tools to influence those in power - only protests," Yegor Sukhanov, 37, said at Saturday's protest, holding a cardboard sign that read: "Putin, leave!"

No clear figure has emerged to lead the disparate opposition groups and activists behind the protests. In a country with a history of authoritarian one-man rule, the sense of collective leadership is a draw for some, particularly in a movement trying to counter propaganda that portrays Putin as indispensable.

But for Darya Ponomaryova, a 17-year-old student at Saturday's protest, the need for a unifying leader is urgent.

"The opposition must keep unnerving the authorities for now, but there is no doubt that after a few months things must change" she said.

"A clear program is needed, new candidates are needed who represent the street. We need one clear leader for our support to continue."

(Additional reporting by Lidia Kelly and Andrey Ostroukh; Editing by Kevin Liffey)


Source

Obama finally congratulates Putin on election win after five days of Stalin’





Russian President Dmitry Medvedev, second right, and Prime Minister and presidential candidate Vladimir Putin, left, arrive for a rally with supporters outside the Kremlin, in the background, in downtown Moscow, Sunday, March 4, 2012. Vladimir Putin has claimed victory in Russia's presidential election, which the opposition and independent observers say has been marred by widespread violations. (AP Photo/RIA-Novosti, Dmitry Astakhov, Presidential Press Service, pool)

President Barack Obama called Russian President-elect Vladimir Putin on Friday to congratulate him on his win in Russia’s presidential election earlier this week, even as international poll monitors continued to raise questions about the integrity of the nationwide vote.

The congratulatory call came five days after Putin’s win, raising speculation that the president was intentionally snubbing his Russian counterpart.

Other world leaders, including British Prime Minister David Cameron, stopped short of congratulating Putin. Cameron, for example, said only that he looks forward to working with the Russian leader.

Putin, who has served as prime minister during the last four years, had previously served as president of Russia from 2000-2008. The former KGB agent did not run for the presidency in 2008 because he was constitutionally ineligible to hold the post for three consecutive terms.

Putin’s hand-picked successor, Dmitry Medvedev, served as president instead, in what was widely seen as an arrangement designed to keep the seat warm for Putin’s return.

But that return hasn’t exactly gone off without a hitch. International observers, such as the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), noted that there were “procedural irregularities” in almost one-third of the country’s polling stations.

“There were serious problems from the very start of this election,” said Tonino Picula, the head of the OSCE observer mission in the country. “The point of elections is that the outcome should be uncertain. This was not the case in Russia. There was no real competition and abuse of government resources ensured that the ultimate winner of the election was never in doubt.”

“In this election, candidates could not compete on an equal footing,” he continued.

On Monday, Russian riot police detained hundreds of protesters who questioned the legitimacy of the March 4 election.

The Obama administration’s ambassador to Russia, Michael McFaul, tweeted that it was “troubling to watch arrests of peaceful demonstrators at Pushkin Square. Freedom of assembly and freedom of speech are universal values.”

Russia’s Foreign Ministry shot back by criticizing the U.S. government’s handling of Occupy Wall Street protesters.

“The police on Pushkin were several times more humane than what we saw in the break up of the Occupy Wall Street protests or the tent camps in Europe,” the ministry said in a Twitter response to McFaul.

Demonstrations have continued in Russia. On Saturday, a protest rally against Putin drew 20,000 people. That number, which represents a steep decline from protest tallies in December, suggests that the opposition movement in the country is waning in the wake of Putin’s win.

Still, one of Putin’s rivals in the race, Communist Party leader Gennady Zyuganov, has refused to recognize Putin’s victory.

“I, at least, have decided to refrain from comments for several days, till all the investigations are completed,” he said.

The White House did not mention the irregularities in the voting or the subsequent protests its statement announcing the president’s decision to congratulate Putin.

“President Obama called Russian President-elect and Prime Minister Putin to congratulate him on his recent victory in the Russian Presidential election,” the White House said in a statement.

While it took the president five days to call Putin after his win — a possible sign that the White House didn’t want to seem too enthusiastic about his win — the White House chalked the delay up to scheduling difficulties.

“I would not read anything into it beyond the busy schedules of the two,” said White House spokesman Jay Carney.

The president has taken his time making congratulatory phone calls in the past. Last year, for example, the St. Louis Cardinals were left hanging after their World Series win.


Source: http://dailycaller.com/2012/03/09/obama-congratulates-putin-on-election-win-after-five-days-of-stalin/#ixzz1opb1f6z0
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Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Blogosphere under attack as election looms


11/30/2011 10:56
RUSSIA


by Nina Achmatova

The blogging platform LiveJournal has suffered yet another hacker attack less than a week from elections. This is the main platform in Russia for the free circulation of ideas and dissident voices.

Moscow (AsiaNews) - The Russian blogosphere is once again under attack with one week to the parliamentary elections, while the Internet continues to be the only true space for voices of dissent. According to Ria Novosti, the blogging platform LiveJournal (LJ), which publishes some of the most influential and followed Russian blogs, suffered another heavy attack (DDoS acronym for denial of service) last November 28th after those already registered in April and July this year. SUP Mtdia, the agency that runs the service, confirmed the incident which blocked access to the site for several hours.

Rustam Adagamov, one of the most famous Zh Zh bloggers (as Russian Live Journal is known, taken from its Cyrillic initials) sees the attack as an attempt to muzzle the Internet less than a week before elections for the Duma, the Lower House of Parliament.

During the April attacks, the UAS requested the authorities to prosecute the hackers responsible. Even President Dmitri Medvedev, who loves social networks, demanded justice. But nothing has happened since then.

ZhZh publishes six of the seven of the most influential blogs in Russia. And the most embarrassing for the Kremlin. According to rankings compiled by Globalvoiceonline.org, the most popular is Alexei Navalny, renamed the Russian Julian Assange for having revealed, with documented proof, numerous cases of corruption in public administration. It is he who coined Putin’s United Russia as the "party of thieves and swindlers", once favored in the polls, but now seeing a sharp decline in support after years above the 60% threshold.

Twitter to YouTube, Vkontakte (the Russian Facebook) RuNet, the network that writes in Cyrillic, are all now full of parody and satire against the Putin-Medvedev tandem. Forbidden on TV and newspapers, popular discontent has found an outlet on the web which is reflected in a hemorrhage of consensus never before experienced by United Russia. The ruling party could lose two-thirds majority of seats in the Duma at the December 4 elections in favor of the communists and nationalists. According to sociologists a new public perception has converged on the web and in the future it will increasingly impact on national policy. The Federal Agency for the media believes that 24% of Russians now access information exclusively through the internet. "Almost a quarter of citizens is a very significant number for a country like Russia," said the director of the Agency, Mikhail Seslavinsky.

And the figure is expected to grow according to a study by Comscore, Russia is the first country in Europe for number of Internet users (50.8 million). A fact that Putin, who termed online content "pornography", will have to take into account.

Sunday, November 27, 2011

Putin Warns West on Interference

EUROPE NEWS
NOVEMBER 28, 2011

By ALAN CULLISON

MOSCOW—Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin launched his official
presidential campaign on Sunday, accusing foreign powers of trying to influence
Russia's elections and promising to press ahead with plans to boost defense
spending to safeguard the country's dignity.




Reuters
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, left, with President
Dmitry Medvedev at the United Russia party congress in Moscow on
Sunday.


Mr. Putin's appearance in a soccer stadium here before 10,000 flag-waving
supporters was a clear signal that he planned no changes to the top-down
political system that he has shaped since assuming the presidency in 2000,
despite some weakening of his own popularity in public-opinion polls.
It was his first appearance before a large public arena since he was booed a
week ago at a martial-arts competition.

He lashed out at domestic opponents—many of whom have been excluded from the
coming parliamentary and presidential elections—accusing them of playing a role
in the Soviet collapse in 1991 and looting the country during the ensuing
chaos.

He praised Russia's neighbors Kazakhstan and Belarus for helping with his
plan to reintegrate former Soviet states into a "Eurasian Union" whose members
would enjoy exclusive trade ties.

Mr. Putin, 59 years old, is expected to switch places with his longtime
protégé, President Dmitri Medvedev, after March presidential elections in what
critics and Kremlin officials alike have called a "castling"—referring to a
chess move—of the two leaders. Elections for the State Duma on Dec. 4 will be a
closely watched precursor to that contest; the Kremlin-controlled party, United
Russia, is expected to win a majority of seats.

Kremlin officials say there are few differences between Messrs. Putin and
Medvedev, and that their switch in roles will bring scant change. But analysts
say the official return of Mr. Putin to the Kremlin may present difficulties for
the West, amid his insistence that the U.S. and European Union are trying to
undermine him.

Mr. Putin's speech Sunday before the pro-Kremlin United Russia party was
riddled with parallels to a speech he delivered a few months before Russia's
last presidential elections four years ago, where in the same stadium he
promised a revival in Russia's government and denounced his critics as
foreign-financed "jackals."

After accepting the party's formal nomination for president on Sunday, he
told the cheering audience that "some foreign countries are gathering those they
are paying money to—so-called grant recipients—to instruct them and assign work
in order to influence the election campaign themselves."

He called the alleged funding a "wasted effort, as we say money thrown at the
wind, firstly because Judas is not the most respected biblical character in our
country."

In a clear jab at the financial troubles in the EU and the U.S., he advised
governments that "it would be better to pay off their debt with this money and
stop pursuing inefficient and costly economic policies."

Mr. Putin, who was initially installed in the Kremlin after the resignation
of Boris Yeltsin 12 years ago, said he believed that only his government had the
experience to take Russia into a better, more prosperous future. His critics, he
said, had already discredited themselves with their own efforts to run the
country and "ran it to complete collapse—I mean the collapse of the Soviet
Union—while others went on to degrade the government and organize the
unprecedented looting of the 1990s" in Russia.

"They destroyed industry, agriculture and the social sphere," he said, and
"thrust the knife of civil war into Russia's very heart," referring to the two
wars the Kremlin fought against Chechen separatists.

Because he stepped down from the presidency for the past three years, Mr.
Putin now is eligible for two more six-year terms in office, and so could become
the longest-serving Kremlin leader since Joseph Stalin.

Mr. Medvedev, who introduced Mr. Putin at the party meeting Sunday, said
"there is no more successful, experienced or popular politician in Russia" and
that in nominating him for president "we have officially determined our
political future not just for the short term but for the long term."

Another high-level member of Mr. Putin's circle, Finance Minister Alexei
Kudrin, resigned from the government in September after the so-called castling
of leaders was announced. People close to Mr. Kudrin said he was disappointed
that he wasn't offered the prime minister's job; Mr. Kudrin also said he was
against a planned boost in military spending after elections.

Mr. Putin said on Sunday that he did plan such a boost and that "in the next
five to ten years, we have to bring a new level and our armed forces to a new
level."

"Of course it will be expensive," said Mr. Putin. "But we must do this if we
want to protect the dignity of the country."


Source

Wednesday, October 05, 2011

Putin Calls for New ‘Euroasian Union’ of Former Soviet Countries


Tipping his hand on his foreign policy priorities if re-elected president next year, Prime MinisterVladimir Putinhas called for the creation of a "Eurasian Union" of former Soviet countries that could serve as "a bridge" between Europe and Asia.

The new union would further integrate the economies of existing customs union members Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan and gradually expand to include Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, Putin said in an article published Tuesday in Izvestia.

"We won't stop with this and have set an ambitious goal to reach the next, higher level of integration — the Eurasian Union," he wrote.

The Eurasian Union, which is supposed to become "a powerful supranational body" and "an effective bridge between Europe and the dynamic Asia-Pacific region," will welcome accession of other countries, with the CIS nations having a priority, the article said.


But it would be wrong to associate the new body with the Soviet Union, Putin said.

"It's naive to try to restore or copy what has already been left in the past, but tight integration on a new political, economic and value basis is the requirement of the time," he said.

The union will be part of "a greater Europe with common values of freedom, democracy and market laws," which will provide a faster integration into Europe for its members, Putin said.

He moved forward the idea of creating a free-trade zone between Russia and the European Union, which he voiced in his article published in Germany's Sueddeutsche Zeitung late last year.

In the Izvestia article, Putin reiterated that Russia and Europe could form a free-trade zone stretching "from Lisbon to Vladivostok."

The article indicates that the focus of the Kremlin's foreign policy is likely to move to strengthening ties with former Soviet countries after Russia has a new president next year, said Tatyana Stanovaya, a France-based analyst with the Center for Political Technologies.

If Putin returns to the Kremlin as the country's next president, Russia is likely to pursue a tougher foreign policy focused on developing the post-Soviet region, she said by telephone.

This issue is currently the No. 2 priority because PresidentDmitry Medvedevis largely focusing on the "reset" with the United States and the treaty on reducing the nuclear weapons, Stanovaya said.

But Putin's spokesman Dmitry Peskov said integration of the post-Soviet region does not cancel the reset with the United States, since these are two priorities of Russia's foreign policy.

"Both these vectors can be developed simultaneously and independently. But the pace of the vectors' development can be different," he said by telephone.

Putin's article is "sort of a presidential manifest" aimed at outlining his initiatives after he returns to the Kremlin, said Alexei Portansky, a professor of the global economy and policy department at the Higher School of Economics.

But the idea of the Eurasian Union is not new because forming this body is the next integration step after creating the customs union and setting up a common economic space between Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan, he said by telephone.

But it is likely to take a while before implementing this initiative becomes possible, since the customs union has yet to prove its ability to work properly, he said.

"The economic crisis in Belarus in June proved that the customs union isn't working the right way yet," he said.

The customs union has been operating as a free-trade zone since July 1, when internal customs controls were removed at the borders of its member-countries.

But in a measure to protect the local consumer market, Belarus, in a severe economic crisis, restricted individuals from exporting food items and a number of other goods beyond the customs union borders in June. The country's authorities also restricted gasoline sales at the pumps.

Portansky said the move had not been agreed with the customs union commission, the organization's joint oversight body.

"It's impossible to imaging this in a developed customs union. A customs union member can't make such decisions without getting a permission from the supranational body," he said.

Meanwhile Putin pointed out that the Eurasian Union could be crucial for strengthening the global economy, as "the process of creating post-crisis models for global development is progressing with difficulties."

The Doha round of international trade talks "has almost stalled, and there are objective obstacles inside the World Trade Organization, the very principle of freedom of trade and the markets' openness is facing a serious crisis," he said.

The comments appeared as Russia made significant progress in its 18-year talks on its accession to the WTO.

Russia, which aims to join the organization by the end of this year, has reached an agreement on meat import quotas, which have been a sticking point in the negotiations, Deputy Economic Development Minister Andrei Slepnyov said Tuesday.

He declined to elaborate on the conditions of the agreement, saying only that they are "comfortable" for the Russian side and "imply a certain decrease in quota deliveries compared to what we had before," Reuters reported.

First Deputy Prime MinisterIgor Shuvalov, who is the country's main negotiator for joining the WTO and currently on a trip to the U.S., said Russia hopes to complete its entry into the organization this year.

"We are trying to complete the deal by the end of December and, I am pleased to say, thanks to the leadership in the United States, we are closer to that goal," he told a Russia-U.S. business group in Chicago, Reuters reported.

Putin said earlier this year that Russia would not fulfill the obligations that come with WTO accession until after joining the organization.

Meanwhile, his spokesman Peskov told The Moscow Times on Tuesday that a number of discrepancies remain before Russia can join the organization.

Shuvalov said that there are "a few minor things" that are hurdles to WTO membership, and mentioned a "third party I don't want to discuss publicly.

The main obstacle for accession is Georgia's position requiring that Russia remove customs points on borders with North Ossetia and Abkhazia, Stanovaya said. Georgia is already a WTO member and has the right to block Russia from joining.

U.S. Trade Representative Ron Kirk, who met Shuvalov in Washington on Monday, expressed his hope that "remaining issues, including satisfactory resolution of bilateral discussions between Russia and Georgia, would be addressed constructively and in a manner enabling Russia to meet its objective of concluding the WTO negotiations by the end of the year," according to a statement issued after their meeting.



Source:http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/putin-calls-for-new-euroasian-union-of-former-soviet-countries/444856.html#ixzz1ZtgUiaMt
The Moscow Times


Sunday, August 22, 2010

3,000 Rally in Kaliningrad for Putin's Resignation

Photo (Coutesy) http://raketa.bloghi.com/2005/07/11/kaliningrad.html


3,000 Rally in Kaliningrad for Putin's Resignation

22 August 2010
Combined Reports

About 3,000 people rallied in Kaliningrad on Saturday to demand Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's resignation and a return of direct gubernatorial elections.

The gathering was considerably smaller than a protest of 10,000 people — one of the largest since Putin rose to power a decade ago — that was staged in the economically struggling exclave on the Baltic coast in January.

Boris Nemtsov, leader of the opposition Solidarity group, called the authorities "thieves," to chants from the crowd of "Fire Putin! Fire Putin!"

Both organizers and police said the demonstration ended peacefully.

Although Saturday's rally was relatively small, "this protest was more radical," Nemtsov said later by telephone.

After the January demonstration, Putin scolded his ruling party, United Russia, for not paying more attention to ordinary voters.

Nemtsov dismissed police estimates that only 700 to 800 people took part in the rally. Organizers, witnesses and a Reuters reporter estimated that about 3,000 turned out.

"[The police] are fulfilling Putin's orders," said Nemtsov, who three weeks earlier was detained during a Moscow rally against restrictions on freedom of assembly. He was also detained Sunday while attempting to lead a march of about 100 opposition activists with a giant flag in central Moscow to mark the Flag Day holiday.

In Kaliningrad, protesters from groups like Patriots of Russia, the Communist Party, Solidarity and The Other Russia adopted a resolution demanding the reinstatement of gubernatorial elections and the resignation of Putin's government. Putin scrapped the elections in favor of presidential appointments in 2004.

The January rally in Kaliningrad was mainly a call for the dismissal of the region's unpopular governor, Georgy Boos, a Putin appointee. Saturday's protest was to have conveyed the same message, but last week United Russia decided not to include Boos on its list of nominees for a new term. Boos' current term ends next month.


(Reuters, AP, MT)

Source: http://www.themoscowtimes.com/news/article/3000-rally-in-kaliningrad-for-putins-resignation/413402.html
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Russian police detain opposition leaders




Lynn Berry
August 22, 2010 - 11:14PM
AP

Police prevented about 100 opposition activists from marching through Moscow on Sunday with a giant Russian flag and detained two of their leaders, including prominent politician Boris Nemtsov.

The opposition activists were celebrating Flag Day, a holiday honouring the tricolour flag adopted by a newly democratic Russia when the Soviet Union collapsed.

Nemtsov said the decision to stop a march honouring the Russian flag showed the mentality of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's government.

"The flag is a symbol of freedom and democracy, only not for Putin," Nemtsov said, speaking to The Associated Press from a city police precinct.

The date for the holiday was chosen to celebrate the defeat of a hardline communist coup on August 22, 1991. Boris Yeltsin, who famously climbed on to a tank to lead the resistance against the coup plotters, turned the flag into a symbol of an independent Russia.

When the Soviet Union ceased to exist on December 25 of that year, the white, blue and red flag was raised over the Kremlin.

Nemtsov accused Putin, a former KGB officer, of sharing the mentality of the coup plotters, who were determined to prevent the democratisation of the Soviet Union.

Putin did not support the coup plotters at the time, but as president he lamented the demise of the Soviet Union and rolled back many of the democratic reforms that Yeltsin had introduced.

Nemtsov, who stood with Yeltsin in 1991, served in Russia's government in the 1990s, including two stints as deputy prime minister.

Moscow police said Nemtsov and Mikhail Shneider were detained for trying to lead an unsanctioned march. They had permission to hold a rally, but not to march through central Moscow.

"You get the impression that Nemtsov and Shneider intentionally provoked the police," police spokesman Viktor Biryukov told Russian news agencies.

Opposition marches and rallies are regularly broken up by police. In some cases, officers detain dozens of participants, carrying or pushing them into waiting buses. Most are freed within a day, but some have served jail time or been fined.
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Source: http://news.smh.com.au/breaking-news-world/russian-police-detain-opposition-leaders-20100822-13b2c.html
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Monday, July 06, 2009

Michelle Obama to Russia, Ghana, Italy, Will Meet Pope Benedict

Posted:
07/2/09
Filed Under:The Daily FLOTUS with Lynn Sweet



First Lady Michelle Obama and daughters Sasha and Malia, along with her mother, Marian Robinson, will join President Obama when he travels to Russia, Italy and Ghana next week. The First Couple will meet with Pope Benedict XVI on July 10 at the Vatican.
The White House announced in May that Mrs. Obama would visit Ghana -- and only recently confirmed that she will be with the president for the entire swing. The president will deliver two major speeches during the trip -- in Moscow, on U.S.-Russia relations, and in Accra, before the Ghanaian parliament.

Not all details about Mrs. Obama's activities on this trip are out yet, but a Wednesday briefing at the White House revealed some of her plans.

This is Mrs. Obama's second overseas trip in less than a month; she, her mom and daughters flew to Paris and London in June, marking Sasha's eighth birthday in London. Malia turns 11 on July 4. The next day, the Obama family flies to Russia aboard Air Force One, landing in Moscow on Monday.

Unlike the Paris and London trip -- basically a vacation for Mrs. Obama, with the exception of a side visit to Normandy to mark the anniversary of D-Day -- this travel is official business.

Once in Moscow, the president will meet with Russian leader Dmitry Medvedev, said Denis McDonough, deputy national security advisor for strategic communications.

"He will hold a press conference that afternoon in Moscow. After the meeting with President Medvedev, then he and the first lady will have dinner Monday evening with President and Mrs. Medvedev.

"They'll overnight in Moscow and the next morning will have breakfast with Prime Minister [Vladimir] Putin; will have a meeting with former President [Mikhail] Gorbachev. The president will give a major speech at the New Economic School that afternoon on U.S.-Russia relations. And then the president will hold meetings with a variety of Russian political, business leaders during the course of that afternoon."

On Wednesday morning, it's on to Rome and then to L'Aquila, Italy, for G8 meetings. It's not known yet what schedule, if any, Mrs. Obama will have in connection with the G8 spouses before returning to Rome on Friday for the meeting with the pope. The president will also meet with the Vatican secretary of state.

Next up, McDonough said, is Accra, Ghana, where the presidential party will arrive late Friday evening. On Saturday, the president will attend a series of meetings as well as make a major address in the Ghanaian parliament on development and democracy. After the speech, he and the first lady will tour the Cape Coast Castle, and then leave for Washington.


Michelle Gavin, the White House senior director for African Affairs, said the Ghana stop is an acknowledgement of the nation's stability and that Obama "certainly looks forward to traveling more widely in Africa in the future."

She noted that said the president wanted to emphasize "the importance of governance for stability. And Ghana is a truly admirable example of a place where governance is getting stronger, a thriving democracy. They just had an extraordinarily close election at the end of last year, decided ultimately by about 40,000 votes, that remained peaceful, power was transferred peacefully, and they continue to pursue a development agenda and bolster the rule of law.

"And this is worth pointing out, because far too often discussions of Africa are focused on crisis. Ghana is not in crisis, and it's an example for the region and more broadly."

Mrs. Obama was last in Africa in 2006 when, with her daughters and some of her friends, she flew to Nairobi to join then-Sen. Obama in Kenya, the homeland of his father.
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Source: http://www.politicsdaily.com/2009/07/02/michelle-obama-will-travel-to-russia-italy-ghana-meet-pope-be/

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Sunday, February 01, 2009

Putin Tells Davos That Financial Crisis Is 'Perfect Storm'


"All countries have found themselves in the same boat," Putin told those gathered in Davos.


Putin Tells Davos That Financial Crisis Is 'Perfect Storm'

January 29, 2009


(RFE/RL) -- Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has told the World Economic Forum in Davos that the global financial crisis is a "perfect storm" whose destructive powers have been multiplied.

Putin compared the economic meltdown to the Great Depression of the late 1920s and early '30s, but said the difference this time is that every country in the world has been affected.

"In an era of globalization, the crisis has affected all countries without exception, regardless of their political or economic system," Putin said. "All countries have found themselves in the same boat."

Putin said he did not blame the United States for the crisis, but he reminded his audience that at last year's Davos forum, then-U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice said the U.S. economy was fundamentally stable.

"I will remind you that only a year ago we heard our American friends talk on this podium about the fundamental stability and unclouded future of the U.S. economy," Putin said. "Today, Wall Street's pride -- investment banks -- have practically ceased to exist. In a matter of one year, they had to acknowledge losses exceeding their profits for a quarter of a century."

He said that fact spoke louder than any criticism could.

Putin warned world leaders against reacting to the crisis by sliding into isolationism "and unrestrained economic selfishness." He brought up the agreement by world leaders at the last G20 summit to refrain from erecting barriers against trade, and said Russia still advocates that position.

Putin also cautioned against allowing the state to intervene in the market, saying it could lead to a concentration of assets "in the hands of the state."

"Another possible mistake is excessive intervention by the state in economic life, the blind belief in the omnipotence of the state," he said. "Yes, the strengthening of its role in the conditions of a crisis is a natural reaction to the failure of [free market mechanisms]. However, instead of improving market mechanisms, there is now a temptation to expand the state's direct involvement in the economy as much as possible. The reverse side of anticrisis measures almost in every country is the concentration of excessive assets in the hands of the state."

'Cooperate Constructively'

The Russian prime minister called on the new U.S. leader, President Barack Obama, to "cooperate constructively" in international affairs and said he wishes the new administration success.

As president of Russia, Putin presided over a huge increase in Russia's defense. Today, he said militarization will not solve the world's problems.

"Militarization does not help resolve the problem but only pushes it back, taking from the economy vast financial and material resources that could be used much better elsewhere," Putin said. "I'm confident that reasonable constraints on military spending along with the strengthening of global security will ultimately yield economic dividends."

He said "multilateral political mechanisms" had failed to end conflicts like 2008's Russia-Georgia war, the attacks in Mumbai, and the recent fighting between Palestinians and Israelis in Gaza.

And he called for a new international legal framework to guarantee energy security. Earlier this month, a dispute with Ukraine interrupted supplies of Russian natural gas to Europe.

Putin said Russia wants to build a new gas pipeline to the Pacific and China that would parallel a new oil pipeline on Russia's Far East coast.



Source: http://www.rferl.org/content/Putin_Tells_Davos_That_Global_Financial_Crisis_Is_Perfect_Storm/1376267.html

Wednesday, December 19, 2007

PUTIN: TIME'S PERSON OF THE YEAR 2007

Sunday, December 16, 2007

RUSSIA: NATIONAL SECURITY ISN'T 'COLD WAR'


Russian President Vladimir Putin (R) and his Belarussian counterpart Alexander Lukashenko attend an official ceremony in Minsk December 14, 2007. [Agencies]


Russia: safeguarding national security irrelevant to 'cold war'

(Xinhua)
Updated: 2007-12-14 11:29



MOSCOW -- Allegations that Russia is reverting to the "cold war" times are baseless, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Thursday in an interview with BBC.


"It is strange to hear claims that we are returning to the 'cold war' times. We are doing everything necessary to guarantee our national security, be it the patrol flights of our bombers or the cruise of our naval squadron in the Mediterranean," Lavrov said.










Related readings:
NATO urges Russia to rescind decision to suspend CFE treaty
US says to talk with Russia on missile defense plans
Russia retreats from arms treaty

At the same time, Moscow sees that "strategic nuclear forces and the US ABM system are being moved to Eastern Europe without any reasons whatsoever", he said.

The NATO infrastructure is also being gradually moved closer up to the Russian borders and these processes are not disturbing anybody in the West, the Itar-Tass news agency quoted him as saying.


"However, empty talks about a 'cold war' comeback begun right after we decided to resume something that was done in the past, something that is absolutely normal and within the framework of what was previously done," Lavrov said.


"We are not threatening anybody," he added.


"We have muscles, but we are not flexing them. We have closed down our military bases in Cuba and in Vietnam and, in reply, we got even more NATO military bases next to our borders ... In other words, we are relaxing our muscles while the other side is tensing theirs," he said.


Russia suspended fulfilling obligations in the Conventional Forces in Europe treaty on midnight Wednesday according to a law signed by President Vladimir Putin.


Source: http://www.chinadaily.com.cn/world/2007-12/14/content_6322170.htm

Monday, November 26, 2007

PUTIN ACCUSES U.S. of MEDDLING IN RUSSIAN VOTE

Putin accuses U.S. of meddling in Russian vote
Mon Nov 26, 2007 4:18 PM EST143


By Oleg Shchedrov

ST PETERSBURG, Russia (Reuters) - President Vladimir Putin accused Washington on Monday of plotting to undermine parliamentary elections on December 2, seen widely as a demonstration of his enduring power in Russia.

Putin, drawing on resurgent nationalist sentiment ahead of Sunday's poll, said Russia must maintain its defenses to discourage others from "poking their snotty noses" in its affairs.

Europe joined the United States in voicing concern over a weekend police crackdown on protests by an opposition that says it has been banished from the airwaves and from the streets by the Kremlin.

U.S. President George W. Bush, who hosted Putin at his family's seaside estate for a "lobster summit" in July, said he was "deeply concerned" about the detention of rights activists and political leaders, as well as the force used at rallies.

Putin, who must step down as president early next year, said he saw Washington's hand in a decision by the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe's ODIHR monitoring arm to abandon plans to observe the parliamentary election.

"We have information that, once again, this was done on the recommendation of the U.S. State Department," the 55-year-old leader, running as No. 1 on United Russia's slate of candidates, said at a meeting with party activists.

"Their aim is to deprive the elections of legitimacy, that is absolutely clear," Putin said in his home city of St Petersburg.

ODIHR has said Russian obstruction left it with no choice but to cancel the monitoring mission.

U.S. State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said that while Washington supported the OSCE's decision, it had not influenced OSCE representatives.

"Our very clear message (to them) was that this is your decision. We don't want to try to influence you one way or another," McCormack told reporters.

He dismissed Putin's sharp language as election rhetoric. Continued ...


Source: http://ca.today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2007-11-26T211756Z_01_L26562040_RTRIDST_0_NEWS-RUSSIA-VOTE-COL.XML

Wednesday, November 21, 2007

PRESIDENT PUTIN RATTLES NUCLEAR SABRE (AGAIN)

November 21, 2007

President Putin rattles nuclear sabre at Nato





Russian President Vladimir Putin

President Putin accused Nato yesterday of threatening Russia’s security and ordered the military to place the country’s strategic nuclear arsenal on a higher state of alert.

“In violation of previous agreements, certain member countries of the Nato alliance are increasing their resources next to our borders,” Mr Putin told generals in a meeting broadcast on state television. “Russia cannot remain indifferent to this obvious muscle-flexing.”

Mr Putin, whose rhetoric has become more strident as relations with the West have deteriorated, went on: “One of the most important tasks remains raising the combat readiness of the strategic nuclear forces. They should be ready to deliver a quick and adequate reply to any aggressor.”

He issued his stark message as Russia confirmed that it would pull out of a landmark arms limitation treaty on December 12. The Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) treaty was fundamental to ending the Cold War.

Mr Putin hit out at Nato less than two weeks before Russians vote in parliamentary elections. While there is a clear element of sabre-rattling for domestic purposes, the Kremlin has also been alarmed by what it regards as a Nato plot to contain Russia.

Mr Putin is determined to increase pressure on Nato in an attempt to divide European members over a United States plan to place a missile defence shield in Poland and the Czech Republic. He has already threatened to station nuclear missiles in the Russian exclave of Kaliningrad, which is surrounded by EU states, if Nato ignores Moscow’s objections.

Poland’s new Government has stated that it is willing to review the US proposal to place interceptor missiles on its territory. Washington says that the shield is aimed at rogue states such as Iran, but Russia is adamant that its own security is at risk.

The Kremlin is also angry at the prospect of Nato expanding to take in former Soviet satellites such as Georgia, Ukraine and Azerbaijan, bringing the military alliance along most of Russia’s western border.

The 1990 CFE treaty imposed limits on the deployment of tanks and other forces in Europe. Nato refused to ratify an updated treaty in 1999 until Russia pulled troops out of the former Soviet republics of Georgia and Moldova.

Moscow has rejected any link between the two issues. Mr Putin said that Russia had honoured the CFE treaty while Nato members had continued to build up their military capabilities.

Mr Putin said that Russia would return to the CFE treaty only after Nato countries had ratified it. He urged the generals to seek “new ways to mitigate threats in the early stages”.

Mr Putin also praised the military potential of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), which links Russia, China and four former Soviet states in Central Asia. The group held its first joint military exercises in August at Chebarkul in the Urals.

Source: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/world/europe/article2910112.ece

******P.S.******

President Putin accused Nato yesterday of threatening Russia’s security and ordered the military to place the country’s strategic nuclear arsenal on a higher state of alert.

Is any one making a big fuss about Russia and her nuclear weapons?

No, yet, why the obsession about Iran and its nuclear ambitions?

Are there any double standards here?

The way I see it; Iran is a relatively small country in comparison to the world's only 'super power'(US).

But, it's a sure win when you pick on a little guy! Who wants to fight fair? Blogmaster

Friday, October 26, 2007

PUTIN: US PLAN EVOKES '62 CUBAN CRISIS

Putin: US Plan Evokes '62 Cuban Crisis

Russia's President Vladimir Putin addresses journalists at the end of the EU/Russia summit in the library of the 18th century Mafra Palace Friday, Oct. 26 2007, in Mafra, north of Lisbon, Portugal. (AP Photo/Armando Franca)

MAFRA, Portugal (AP) — President Vladimir Putin on Friday evoked one of the most dangerous confrontations of the Cold War to highlight Russian opposition to a proposed U.S. missile defense system in Europe, comparing it to the Cuban missile crisis of 45 years ago.

The comments — made at the end of a summit between Russia and European Union that failed to resolve several festering disputes — were the latest in a series of belligerent statements from the assertive Putin.

Emboldened by oil- and gas-fueled economic clout, Russia is increasingly at odds with Washington and much of Europe on issues ranging from Iran and Kosovo to energy supplies and human rights.

Putin used a news conference at the summit's conclusion to reiterate Russia's stalwart opposition to U.S. plans to put elements of a missile defense system in the former Soviet bloc countries of Poland and the Czech Republic — both of which are now NATO members.

"Analogous actions by the Soviet Union, when it deployed missiles in Cuba, prompted the 'Caribbean crisis,'" Putin said, using the Russian term for the Cuban missile crisis.

"For us the situation is technologically very similar. We have withdrawn the remains of our bases from Vietnam, from Cuba, and have liquidated everything there, while at our borders, such threats against our country are being created," he said.

The October 1962 crisis erupted when President John F. Kennedy demanded that Soviet leader Nikita S. Khrushchev remove his country's nuclear missiles from Cuba because they could have been used to launch a close-range attack on the United States. The Americans imposed a naval blockade on Cuba and the world teetered on the edge of war before the Soviets backed down.

Putin also suggested that the tension was much lower than in 1962 because the United States and Russia are now "partners," not Cold War enemies. His relationship with President Bush, Putin said, helps solve problems, calling him a "personal friend."

The Russian leader said there has been no concrete U.S. response to his counterproposals for cooperation on missile defense, but added that the United States is now listening to Russia's concerns about its plans and seeking to address them.

In Washington, White House press secretary Dana Perino underscored those remarks rather than the Cuban missile crisis analogy, saying "there's no way you could walk away without thinking that he thinks that we can work together."

The U.S. plan is part of a wider missile shield involving defenses in California and Alaska which the United States says are to defend against any long-range missile attack from countries such as North Korea or Iran.

Russia strongly opposes the idea, saying Iran is decades away from developing missile technology that could threaten Europe or North America, and it says the U.S. bases are aimed at spying on Russian facilities and undermining Russia's missile deterrent force.

State Department spokesman Sean McCormack told reporters there were "clear historical differences between our plans to deploy a defensive missile system designed to protect against launch of missiles from rogue states, such as Iran, and the offensive nuclear-tipped capability of the missiles that were being installed in Cuba back in the 1960s."

"I don't think that they are historically analogous in any way, shape or form," he said.

Turning to his future, Putin said he would not assume presidential powers if he became prime minister after finishing his term next May.

Putin is barred from seeking a third consecutive term in the March 2008 presidential election. But he suggested this month that he could become prime minister, leading to speculation that the substantial powers now invested in the presidency might be transferred to the prime minister.

"If someone thinks that I intend to move, let's say, into the government of the Russian Federation and transfer the fundamental powers there, that's not the case," Putin said. "There will be no infringement on the powers of the president of the Russian Federation, at least while it depends on me."

After repeating his insistence that he does not intend to change the constitution in order to run for a third term, Putin said he had not yet decided where and in what capacity he would work as former president. He is expected to remain an influential figure in Russia.

Putin will lead the ticket of the dominant United Russia party in December parliamentary elections. An overwhelming victory for the party could turn the legislature into a new power base for Putin and give him a claim to continued authority based on his popularity.

Putin traveled to Portugal, which holds the EU's rotating presidency, for talks with leaders of the 27-nation bloc. But despite a positive spin put on the meeting by Putin and EU President Jose Manuel Barroso — who called it "open, frank and productive" — the summit yielded no major breakthroughs.

The EU and Russia have been without a new cooperation agreement for more than a year, during which time doubts have grown in many European capitals about the reliability of Russia's energy supplies and trade policies toward EU member nations, such as Poland.

Topping the list of concerns is Russia's energy policy — the reliability of supplies and the intentions of state-run oil and gas companies. Russia already provides 30 percent of EU energy imports, including 44 percent of natural gas imports.

The state-controlled gas giant OAO Gazprom has recently moved to acquire assets in Europe and strike bilateral deals with some EU countries.

That has led the EU to consider new restrictions on non-EU companies owning majority stakes in gas pipelines or electricity power grids without additional agreements — much to the Russians' consternation.

Earlier, Putin tried to assure European leaders that Russian investment was not to be feared.

"When we hear in some countries phrases like, 'The Russians are coming with their scary money,' it sounds a bit funny," he said.

Associated Press Writer Barry Hatton in Mafra contributed to this report.

Source: http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5iKMjecqC90uBjKIC5EtH5pwe10UAD8SH46DO3

P.S. IT'S BAFFLING THAT NO ONE IN 'THE BULLY' ADMINISTRATION COULD HAVE NOTICED THE SIMILARITIES IN THESE TWO SITUATIONS; I DID, I IMMEDIATELY SAW THE PARALLELS. DIDN'T YOU SEE IT TOO?

"WE'LL PUT SOME ICBM'S IN YOUR BACK YARD, FOR YOUR PROTECTION OF COURSE." IT'S A FINE OPPORTUNITY FOR THE 'NIMBY' RESPONSE! Blogmaster.