Russia is up to something - trouble in Moscow this weekend?

There are signs Russia is up to staging some sort of violent political struggle in the streets of Moscow this weekend.

070413_Russia_hmed_2p.rp420x400.jpg


Special police officers gather near Red Square in central Moscow, April 13, 2007. A coalition of fierce Kremlin critics, called 'Other Russia' are planning to defy an official ban by holding protest rallies in Moscow and St.Petersburg this weekend. REUTERS/Denis Sinyakov (RUSSIA)
5:15 p.m. ET, 4/13/07


See the article, "Putin foes set for huge rallies: Opposition parties plan to march in Moscow, St. Petersburg on Saturday" at:

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/18096644/

When there is this much prepositioning, the situation reeks of orchestration by Kremlin forces. The August coup in 1991 was staged as was the political violence that erupted in October 1993. Never take what happens in Moscow at face value.

That something is up is suggested by the baseless timing of these protests. Why not May Day or some other date of significance for such protests? This is opportunistic....suggesting the Kremlin might be making a play in relation to other global developments, i.e., w/Iran, North Korea, etc.

I posted some more points at:

http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=237594

No one here seems to be paying attention to this....but I think you all soon will be.

UPDATE:

I did some more research....this has a major FSB (KGB) operation written all over it.

Turns out "The Other Russia" extremists planning the protests in the streets of Moscow this weekend are none other than the National Bolsheviks I long ago identified as a critical FSB (KGB) creation for precisely what we are about to witness:

http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=9151811

http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2005/04/c46f0495-183f-42f8-aa39-6de55e8f6fb6.html

http://thefinalphaseforum.invisionzone.com/index.php?showtopic=456&hl=national+bolshevik

http://thefinalphaseforum.invisionzone.com/index.php?showtopic=406&view=findpost&p=3709

Looks like Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky is in on the staged operations....wittingly or not....with his profound claim that he is plotting a coup in Russia:

http://www.guardian.co.uk/frontpage/story/0,,2056322,00.html

My sense was that Alexander Litvinenko, a bonafide defector, was taken out with Berezovsky's blessing given how Litvinenko had been recently cut off from Berezosky's funding just before meeting his nuclear demise.

http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showpost.php?p=2129723&postcount=7

One doesn't get a billion dollars from "former"-Communist coffers without some degree of service to the Kremlin!

http://www.newsmax.com/articles/?a=2000/7/16/131330

Russia is up to something here....be alert...
 
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Caplock50

I am the Winter Warrior
One, maybe two, days too early. Ah well, the 14th is still 'around the middle of the month', isn't it? So, just how big and how bad do you think this can and will be?
 

Kay

Inactive
Maybe Putin has a problem with this:




Berezovsky says planning Russian revolution: paper
Reuters
Thursday, April 12, 2007; 9:14 PM


LONDON (Reuters) - Russian billionaire Boris Berezovsky said he is planning a revolution in Russia to topple President Vladimir Putin, in comments published on Friday.

"We need to use force to change this regime," Berezovsky, who has received asylum in Britain, told the Guardian newspaper.

"It isn't possible to change this regime through democratic means. There can be no change without force, pressure."

Asked if he was fomenting a revolution, he said: "You are absolutely correct."

Berezovsky, a vocal critic of Putin, said he was in contact with members of Russia's political elite.

He said these people -- who he did not name because, he said, that would endanger their lives -- shared his opinion that Putin was eroding democratic reforms, centralizing power and infringing Russia's constitution, according to the Guardian.

"There is no chance of regime change through democratic elections," Berezovsky said.

"If one part of the political elite disagrees with another part of the political elite -- that is the only way in Russia to change the regime. I try to move that."

The businessman said he was offering his "experience and ideology" to his contacts, adding: "There are also practical steps which I am doing now, and mostly it is financial."

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov condemned the comments as a criminal offence and hoped they would prompt questions about Berezovsky's refugee status in Britain, the Guardian said.

"In accordance with our legislation (his remarks are) being treated as a crime. It will cause some questions from the British authorities to Mr Berezovsky," Peskov was quoted as saying. "We want to believe that official London will never grant asylum to someone who wants to use force to change the regime in Russia."

Last month, Berezovsky met Russian investigators in London to answer questions over the killing of ex-KGB spy Alexander Litvinenko. He has also launched a $500,000 foundation in honor of Litvinenko who was poisoned and died in London last November.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/04/12/AR2007041202102.html
 

momof23goats

Deceased
well, I guess we will soon find out , just what is going on over there. interesting. could be just in country, or could be really bad for the world.
 

Perramas

Inactive
Police have arrested Russian opposition leader Garry Kasparov at a banned anti-Kremlin rally in Moscow.
He was detained during a huge security operation to prevent protesters from gathering at Pushkin Square. Police deny reports he has now been freed.

The former chess champion leads the United Civil Front group, part of the opposition coalition Other Russia.

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6554989.stm

Isnt Kasparov a popular person in Russia? If he is dissappeared that might stir things up with the Russian people.
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
No big deal. Does American Idol replay on weekends?

Now that I've given my commentary for the :sheep: out of the way, if you think it's dicey now, just give it 96 more hours.

There are big things in motion this weekend and all of next week.
 

Troke

Deceased
Each day there are less Russians and more Moslems.

And what are the rats doing?

Fighting over the lifeboats maybe?
 

JohnGaltfla

#NeverTrump
It's all related folks....

'Color' Revolutions in Limbo

By JIM HEINTZ
The Associated Press
Saturday, April 14, 2007; 3:57 AM

MOSCOW -- The scenes from Kiev and Bishkek are unsettlingly familiar: thousands of demonstrators crowding the central squares of the capitals of Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan, waving banners and shouting demands.

Less than three years ago, similar protests helped propel reformist politicians into both countries' presidencies, raising hopes that democratic movements across the former Soviet Union would triumph over regimes marked by corruption, stagnation and manipulated elections. The future, briefly, seemed as bright as the cheery names the demonstrators adopted _ Ukraine's Orange Revolution, Kyrgyzstan's Tulip Revolution.

But within a few months both countries were mired in political crises that seemed to recur like a case of malaria _ a raging fever, some relief, and another case of the chills and the sweats. The only difference this time, perhaps, is that the presidents who came to power after the revolutions are themselves in jeopardy.

Georgia, whose Rose Revolution of 2003 was the first of the so-called "color revolutions," has not seen mass protests like Ukraine's and Kyrgyzstan's. But even there, disappointment and dissatisfaction are brewing.

Analysts, though, aren't ready to call any of them outright failures. And in Russia some watch the turmoil with longing, saying the clash of opposing forces in those nations is preferable to their own country's gray, grim stability.

Kyrgyzstan's revolution came after Georgia's and Ukraine's, and its honeymoon period was the shortest.

Kurmanbek Bakiyev became acting president in March 2005, after a mob of demonstrators drove President Askar Akayev into exile. Three months later, thousands stormed the government headquarters to protest the disqualification of a presidential candidate.

Protests broke out again in the months after Bakiyev was elected in what Western observers called the most free and fair election ever held in former Soviet Central Asia, and tensions since then have only increased.

Michael Hall, an analyst in Bishkek for the International Crisis Group, said much of the dissatisfaction stemmed from Bakiyev's efforts to strengthen the presidency, partly driven by how easily Akayev was driven out. "He wanted to ensure the same thing didn't happen to him," Hall said.

But Bakiyev also was saddled with a particularly contentious parliament _ the body whose election had sparked the March protests. The bold legislature, power struggles between the country's southern and northern clans and Bakiyev's inability to rein in corruption and bolster the economy all have kept Kyrgyzstan in a state of political turmoil.

But Hall said Bakiyev's recent concessions to curb his own power and his appointment of an opposition figure as prime minister could eventually mollify his critics.

Although Ukraine also has a bumptious parliament, its presidency is relatively weak. That left the country in a chronic power struggle between the executive and legislative branches.

The parliamentary majority consists of opposition politicians who won their seats a year ago in elections dominated by disappointment in President Viktor Yushchenko's inability to implement reforms.

The current protests broke out after Yushchenko ordered parliament dissolved, claiming his legislative foes were trying to usurp power. The Constitutional Court is to rule on the order's validity.

Ukraine's crisis isn't proof the Orange Revolution failed, said Steve Pifer, a former U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine, now an analyst with the Center for Strategic and International Studies.

"What you have is hardball politics, but it's still essentially democratic ... a fight between the democratically elected president and the parliamentary majority that was chosen in democratic elections," he said.

However, Yushchenko remains in a delicate position. New elections would likely swell the ranks of the opposition in parliament, recent polls indicate; if the court rules his order was unconstitutional, the parliament likely would try to impeach him.

Georgia has not seen large scale protests since its 2003 Rose Revolution despite hardships created by economic reforms and a growing gap between rich and poor.

The country voted in a new parliament just two months after Mikhail Saakashvili was elected president _ while post-revolution optimism was still high _ and the body is dominated by his supporters. Georgia's comparative political stability is also bolstered by concern about neighboring Russia, said Soso Tsintsiadze of the independent Diplomatic Academy.

"One factor unifying the population of Georgia is the fact that Russia has stood and stands for conflict in Abkhazia and South Ossetia," two separatist regions inside Georgia's borders, Tsintisadze said.

For all the problems afflicting the post-revolution countries, they still look good to some in Russia, where opposition forces are increasingly marginalized.

"Oh, how I envy our neighbor," commentator Boris Vishnevsky wrote of Ukraine in the newspaper Novaya Gazeta. "They have a vibrant life and movement toward the future, despite mistakes and stupidity. "
 

Mo Magic

Inactive
No big deal. Does American Idol replay on weekends?

Now that I've given my commentary for the :sheep: out of the way, if you think it's dicey now, just give it 96 more hours.

There are big things in motion this weekend and all of next week.

Thats Just Great! I have to drive to Florida tomorrow, far away from my preps. John I may have to camp out with you!

Mo
 

Kadee

Inactive
http://www.kommersant.com/p-10534/r_530/Berezovsky/

Apr. 14, 2007Print | E-mail | Home Scotland Yard to Examine Berezovsky’s Interview
British law-enforcement authorities will closely examine the interview of Russian businessman Boris Berezovsky, published in The Guardian newspaper on April 13th.
“We plan to find out whether any statements of Berezovsky published in the newspaper violate the law,” Scotland Yard said on Friday.

Earlier that day, the Foreign Office of Great Britain denounced Berezovsky’s statement about the necessity of “using force” to change the political regime in Russia.

British Embassy in Russia said that if Berezovsky keeps making similar statements, his status of political refugee might be reconsidered.

Meanwhile, the Prosecutor General’s Office of Russia initiated a criminal case against Berezovsky on Friday, according to the article “seizure of power by force” which stipulates up to 20 years of imprisonment. Russian authorities have once again asked Great Britain to extradite Berezovsky.

Berezovsky himself said on Friday night in his interview to The Daily Telegraph that he supports “changing the regime bloodlessly”, does not support changing political power in Russia by force, but believes that parliamentary elections will not change the situation in the country.
 

Kadee

Inactive
The wheels are turning. They're going to silence this fellow. . . .

Apr. 13, 2007Print | E-mail | Home RF Prosecutor General Opens Action against “London Revolutionary”
Russia’s Prosecutor General Yury Chaika ordered to initiate a criminal action against exile tycoon Boris Berezovsky in the wake of his statement about plotting a new Russian revolution. Chaika regarded Berezovsky’s interview to The Guardian as “open calls for forcible overthrow of constitutional power.”
Days before, the prosecutors initiated a criminal case against Berezovsky, following his similar interviews to French media. FSB that is the main successor agency to KGB is in charge of investigation.

”We need to use force to change this regime,” the oligarch told The Guardian, specifying personal involvement in funding the coup. “There are practical steps which I am doing now, and mostly it is financial,” The Guardian quoted Berezovsky as saying.

Russia’s prosecutors opened a criminal action against Berezovsky past year, blaming the calls for forcible change of power on him. The reason was oligarch’s interview to Echo Moskva. Afterwards, however, Berezovsky explained that he meant only some bloodless replacement of authoritarian ruling by democracy, as it had happened in Georgia and Ukraine.

A resident of London, Boris Berezovsky was granted political asylum in Britain along with the passport for Platon Elenin’s name. The Kremlin is seeking to extradite this shadowy fugitive billionaire but all requests have been always turned down by Britain’s courts.

www.kommersant
 
Berezovsky is an FSB subcontractor. He's just setting the stage. As a Jew....he is playing the role of a Zionist puppetmaster in the Yid-Masonic/Jewish-American conspiracy to bring harm to Russia. His script is right out of the Protocols of the Elders of Zion....but it is a script nonetheless that fits the distorted worldview of Russia's intelligence services.

http://www.newsmax.com/articles/?a=2000/7/16/131330

BTW, isn't nice how the various revolutions are given such colorful names, i.e., the Orange Revolution in the Ukraine, Georgia's Rose Revolution and Kyrgyzstan's Tulip Revolution. This keeps events simple to understand for Western consumption. You got to keep in mind how stupid the Kremlin thinks the West is which, unfortunately, we've only proven to be true up to now.
 

Rams82

Inactive
Kasparov charged over banned rally in Moscow

Russian authorities have cracked down on an illegal protest against President Vladimir Putin, arresting around 200 of those who tried to take part.

Among them was the former chess champion and opposition activist Garry Kasparov.

As he was being arrested he shouted: "This regime is criminal, it's a police state, they arrest people everywhere because they are scared stiff!"

Kasparov was later released after being charged with public order offences.

Activists had planned to gather at a square close to the Kremlin to protest at what they say is the erosion of democratic freedoms under Putin's leadership.

Riot police pounced on protesters as they appeared in small groups near the venue and swiftly loaded them onto buses.

The demonstrators managed to stage a much smaller and brief rally in another location.

The events in Moscow came a day after exiled multi-millionaire Boris Berezovsky allegedly said in a newspaper interview that he was starting a revolution to overthrow Putin. The protest organisers distanced themselves from Berezovsky.

While opposition to Putin is high-profile the president remains popular with much of the country.

http://euronews.net/index.php?page=info&article=416998&lng=1
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
http://www.stratfor.com/products/premium/read_article.php?id=287233&selected=Analyses

Russia: Berezovsky's Bold Statement
April 13, 2007 16 41 GMT

Summary

Exiled Russian oligarch Boris Berezovsky said April 13 he will begin working to trigger a revolution to overthrow the government of Russian President Vladimir Putin. Assuming he lives long enough to try it, Berezovsky is not the man to crack the Kremlin monolith.

Analysis

In comments to London businessmen that were confirmed in an April 13 interview with the Guardian newspaper, Boris Berezovsky said he will begin working to trigger a revolution to overthrow the government of Russian President Vladimir Putin. "I am plotting a new Russian revolution ... and revolution is always violent. We need to use force to change this regime," Berezovsky said. There is "no chance to change it through elections." Subsequent comments toned down the ideas somewhat, but reaffirmed the core point that Berezovsky is seeking regime change in Moscow.

Though the chances of upcoming Duma and presidential elections having any effect on the Russian political system are nil, the idea that Berezovsky can effectively wave the flag of revolution is silly.

Berezovsky is no political dissident like Andrei Sakharov of Soviet times or Garry Kasparov of today. He is an exiled member of the Russian oligarchic class. In fact, one could easily argue that he was the original oligarch -- and he was certainly the most powerful.

During perestroika, Berezovsky essentially was a car salesman who used his contacts in the Communist Party to arrange creative bookkeeping and shipments of Lada automobiles in order to take advantage of the price differences between the domestic and foreign markets. In the West, such operations would have landed Berezovsky in prison in minutes, but in the rough-and-tumble world of immediate post-Soviet Russia, Berezovsky was rewarded with billionaire status.

He quickly ingratiated himself to the government of then-President Boris Yeltsin, who allowed Berezovsky remarkable latitude to push his own agenda. Leveraging his contacts, he became the dominant economic power in the carmaker AvtoVAZ, the airline Aeroflot and the oil firm Sibneft (now part of Gazprom). His corporate empire also included a vast array of media holdings, without which Yeltsin's 1996 re-election effort would undoubtedly have failed. (To this day, Berezovsky is unique among the oligarchs in insisting upon the dubious assertion that he never once used his political connections to enrich himself.)

When Yeltsin selected Putin to succeed him, Berezovsky swung his media influence back into play and helped deliver a neat first-round victory for Putin.

Soon after, Putin and Berezovsky had a falling out -- Berezovsky saw Putin as Yeltsin II, and Putin saw himself as a real president -- that ended with Berezovsky fleeing into exile in London in 2001. Some of his assets passed to his one-time protege Roman Abramovich, who quickly allied with Putin against his former mentor. Since then, nearly all Berezovsky's Russian assets have been whittled away, with state firms taking the lion's share. In exile, Berezovsky has largely been reduced to sniping at the Putin government from afar, but he likely provided some financial support (and certainly provided rhetorical support) to anti-Russian efforts during events such as the Ukrainian Orange Revolution.

Though he obviously sports a big Rolodex, Berezovsky is not loved in Russia. In fact, he is more or less despised. He was an oligarch who looted the state in the 1990s and was part and parcel of the corruption and ineffectiveness of the Yeltsin administration. Even among staunch anti-Putin elements, he is most remembered for using his media to twist public opinion in favor of Yeltsin in 1996, not for having any real concerns about democracy. As a Jew, Berezovsky also faces the reflexive anti-Semitic sentiment in much of Russia that denies him influence. Though he can be financially influential, no one is going to follow his flag -- especially since the well-consolidated Putin government is far from teetering on the edge of the abyss of instability.

Furthermore, in reaction to Berezovsky's pledge to foment revolution, the Russian government already has announced plans to formally charge Berezovsky with embezzlement for his involvement in a scandal involving Aeroflot. London is almost certain to review its 2003 decision to grant Berezovsky asylum after his April 13 call to overthrow Putin's government.

What exactly is going through Berezovsky's head right now is a mystery. He could be positioning himself as the point man for any (as yet unclear) Western effort to undermine the Russian system, setting himself up as "the" dissident voice of a "free" Russia. If he sees a Russian-Western confrontation coming, he could be trying to establish himself as the West's proxy, a position that would obviously bring with it cash and bodyguards at worst, and even grant a (very) long shot at the Kremlin itself.

As for timing, the Putin government is in the process of locking down for its leadership transition, so this could be the last window for anyone on the outside to influence the process. Berezovsky also could surmise that someone as high-profile as himself is immune to assassinations, because it would be next to impossible for the Kremlin to deny involvement with the termination of someone who actively called for a violent government overthrow. But even among the very few who staunchly insist that the Kremlin had nothing to do with the polonium poisoning of former KGB agent turned Putin critic (and Berezovsky ally) Alexander Litvinenko, such a denial is a very risky bet at best.
 
Well said, Spirit of Truth. What concerns me about such statements of yours, will
you be silenced?

Fred

It's possible. What's really incredible is how I've been silenced in every forum I've presented my views in thus far except for TB2K. FreeRepublic.com, LibertyPost.org and even the Final Phase Forum all have banned me. Where self-censorship in the West doesn't get me, murderous censorship from the East might eventually catch up with myself and/or others of publicized like-minded views, particularly J.R. Nyquist who is probably the most influential writer on this topic. Nevertheless, I would gladly lay down my life for the cause of truth and freedom in the battle against lies and tyranny. I see this war as nothing less than the final conflict between good and evil for man....between Christ and the antiChrist:

-----------------------------------------------------------------

SOME INTRIGUING GORBY QUOTES:

(Note that Gorbachev supposedly "resigned"
on Christmas Day of 1991.)

On Friday, October 25, 1996 ABC television commentator
Charles Gibson asked Mikhail Gorbachev the following
question during an interview:

"It is an interesting paradox to so many Americans-
you are so honored throughout the world for
fundamental changes, but, I don't have to recite the
election results to you, in the last election you got
a very small, tiny percent of the vote. Why is
Gorbachev seen so differently outside Russia and
inside Russia?"

This was Gorbachev's response:

"Well, let's recall another example. Jesus Christ was
pelted with stones. He was blamed and condemned, and
then he was put with a bandit and they were taken for
execution. And when it was said that one of them could
be spared, the people said the bandit should be spared
and Christ was crucified."


Here are some more recent quotes from Mr. Gorbachev:

"Communist ideology in its pure form is akin to
Christianity. Its main ideas are the brotherhood of all
peoples irrespective of their nationality, justice and
equality, peace, and an end to all hostility between
peoples."

(from Gorbachev's new book- 'Memoirs')

"The socialist tradition....goes back to Jesus Christ,
not (Karl) Marx."

(USA Today, October 28th, 1996)

"Jesus Christ, he was also a reformer. He was pelted
with stones and insulted."

(New York Times, October 25th, 1996)

The excerpt below is from Reuters World Service, December 8,
1996, Sunday, BC cycle:

HEADLINE: FEATURE - "Vital Gorbachev refuses to let go of
politics"

(Gorbachev) is frank, though hardly contrite, about the
failures of judgement that led him to promote to senior
positions the very men who would plot to overthrow him in
1991.

"How do you explain Judas -- right there next to Jesus
Christ?" he asks. "How do you explain that? And Christ
did not recognise him for what he was. You could say
that's a metaphor."

-----------------------------------------------------------------
 

Rams82

Inactive
It does make me wonder why all these Russian billionaires want to get involved in politics? Why not just take your money and go live the life somewhere? The hell with politics.:shr:
 
It does make me wonder why all these Russian billionaires want to get involved in politics? Why not just take your money and go live the life somewhere? The hell with politics.:shr:

This story being weaved for world consumption is that evil Russian capitalists are causing political upheaval in Moscow that will result in world destruction.

Check out this article, "Kremlin fears oligarchic coup":

http://thefinalphaseforum.invisionzone.com/index.php?showtopic=456&view=findpost&p=5665
 

David the Aspie

Resident Aspie
Berezovsky = Goldstein

Mr. Berezovsky is, whether willingly or unwittingly, playing the part of Emmanuel Goldstein from Orwell's "1984".

Berezovsky is despised by the populace and deeply distrusted. By extension of that, any position on policy he takes makes it an unpopular policy in Russia.

Ergo, by supporting the bona fide dissidents on the ground, he is ostracizing them and alienating them from the general public by embracing them. His seal of approval is indeed the kiss of death!

It is possible, even likely, that Berezovsky IS a true enemy of Putin. However, he might be kept alive as a useful idiot for the Kremlin. The Kremlin is using him as a tool for control and he's probably too dumb to realize it!!!

Now, Mr. Berezovsky is obviously a wizard at mathematics and business administration as his curriculum vitae suggests. However, there are many forms of intelligence and he could indeed be a bumbling idiot when it comes to geopolitics.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
http://news.independent.co.uk/europe/article2449990.ece

Putin moves against Kasparov and the 'white knight' revolution
Show of force from President as thousands of riot police break up Moscow protest
By Andrew Osborn in Moscow
Published: 15 April 2007

A protest staged by opponents of President Vladimir Putin in the heart of Moscow was broken up by thousands of baton-wielding riot police yesterday and one of the event's main organisers, former world chess champion Garry Kasparov, detained.

The protesters, who numbered up to 2,000 people, ignored a warning not to march from Moscow's central Pushkin Square to another square after their application to do so was rejected. They argued that free speech was more important, and the response from thousands of camouflage-clad riot policemen wearing full body armour was immediate.

Within 10 minutes, Mr Kasparov, one of Mr Putin's fiercest critics, was detained then whisked away to a police station. Up to 200 anti-Putin activists shared a similar fate and were bundled into police vans, at times with extreme force.

Appearing briefly outside a central Moscow court after being charged with public order offences Kasparov later said: "Today the regime showed its true colours, its true face."

He said protesters had been beaten throughout the day. "There was simply a criminal attack by people in riot-police uniforms on Russian citizens who were just walking along," he said. "Every possible violation has been committed, from the moment we were grabbed up to this court."

The protesters, part of the Another Russia movement, were drawn from disparate political groupings including liberals and nationalist radicals; all of them called themselves "dissenters".

They are united by one thing: an implacable opposition to Mr Putin whom they accuse of stifling freedom of speech and moving the country in an increasingly authoritarian direction. Among the marchers was former prime minister Mikhail Kasyanov and outspoken former presidential adviser Andrei Illarionov.

The demonstration comes at a time of rising tension on Russia's Kremlin-controlled political scene. The country faces crunch parliamentary elections in December, and in March of next year Mr Putin is due to step down and hand the reins of power to someone else in his inner circle. Aware that presidential elections occur only every four years, the opposition is desperately trying to galvanise its supporters.

Sitting in self-imposed exile in the UK with hundreds of millions of pounds in his war chest, controversial oligarch Boris Berezovsky is trying to lend a hand. Last week he drew a furious response from the Kremlin when he said he was plotting to overthrow Mr Putin using force and was financing shadowy political forces opposed to the Russian President. His statements are being studied by Scotland Yard and the Foreign Office to ascertain whether he broke UK law.
_________________
Photos from MilitaryPhotos.net, http://www.militaryphotos.net/forums/showthread.php?t=109760
 

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
BBC NEWS
Russia opposition in fresh rally
Anti-Kremlin demonstrators plan to take to the streets of St Petersburg on Sunday, a day after a rally in Moscow ended in scuffles and arrests.

The protesters, allied under the Other Russia coalition, say the Russian president is stifling democracy.

During Saturday's march in the capital, 170 people were arrested, including activist Garry Kasparov.

The former chess champion was freed several hours later after being fined $40 (£20) for public order offences.

Organisers said that the tough reaction to the Moscow march would boost the turnout at the rally in Russia's second-largest city.

"After what Moscow and Russian authorities are doing, I think far more people will come tomorrow," said Olga Kurnosova, the leader of Mr Kasparov's United Civil Front in St Petersburg.

March banned

Organisers have yet to decide whether they will try to march down the city's main street.

It is no longer a country... where the government tries to pretend it is playing by the letter and spirit of the law
Garry Kasparov

Russian authorities have sanctioned the rally but banned a march.

Police are expected to encircle the square where the rally is taking place to prevent any march going ahead.

President Vladimir Putin denies he is trampling on democracy, accusing the opposition of destabilising Russia.

In Moscow on Saturday, a huge security operation, including more than 9,000 police, was launched to prevent protesters from gathering at Pushkin Square.

Mr Kasparov's swift arrest followed warnings by the prosecution office on the eve of the march, stating that anyone participating risked being detained.

After being released Mr Kasparov said: "It is no longer a country... where the government tries to pretend it is playing by the letter and spirit of the law."

The security operation in Moscow came as Russia warned it wanted the extradition of London-based exile Boris Berezovsky.

Mr Berezovsky told the UK's Guardian newspaper he was plotting "revolution" to overthrow Vladimir Putin.

Accusing Mr Putin of creating an authoritarian regime, the tycoon said that Russia's leadership could only be removed by force.

Later, he clarified his words, stating that he backed "bloodless change" and did not support violence.

Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe/6556739.stm

Published: 2007/04/15 01:51:30 GMT

© BBC MMVII
 

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Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
http://www.stratfor.com/products/premium/read_article.php?id=287375

The Coming Era of Russia's Dark Rider
April 17, 2007 17 52 GMT

By Peter Zeihan

Russian opposition members rallied in Moscow's Pushkin Square on April 14. The so-called Dissenters' March was organized by Other Russia, an umbrella group that includes everyone from unrepentant communists and free-market reformers to far-right ultranationalists whose only uniting characteristic is their common opposition to the centralization of power under President Vladimir Putin's administration.

Minutes after the march began, the 2,000 or so protesters found themselves outnumbered more than four to one by security forces. They quickly dispersed the activists, beating and briefly detaining those who sought to break through the riot-control lines. Among those arrested were chess-champion-turned-political-activist Garry Kasparov and Maria Gaidar, the daughter of Russia's first post-Soviet reformist prime minister. Former Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov only avoided arrest because his bodyguards helped him to escape. A Reuters crew was permitted to capture the events and disseminate them to the West. A day later, another protest, albeit far smaller, was broken up in a similar way in St. Petersburg, though Kasparov was detained before the protest even began.

What gives? The protests were insignificant in both numerical and political terms. Moreover, with all that is going on in the world right now, the last thing the Putin government needs is to attract negative attention to itself. The answer becomes apparent when one considers Russia's point in its historical cycle and the mounting pressures on Putin personally that have nothing whatsoever to do with "democracy."

The Russian Cycle

At the risk of sounding like a high school social studies teacher (or even George Friedman), history really does run in cycles. Take Europe for example. European history is a chronicle of the rise and fall of its geographic center. As Germany rises, the powers on its periphery buckle under its strength and are forced to pool resources in order to beat back Berlin. As Germany falters, the power vacuum at the middle of the Continent allows the countries on Germany's borders to rise in strength and become major powers themselves.

Since the formation of the first "Germany" in 800, this cycle has set the tempo and tenor of European affairs. A strong Germany means consolidation followed by a catastrophic war; a weak Germany creates a multilateral concert of powers and multi-state competition (often involving war, but not on nearly as large a scale). For Europe this cycle of German rise and fall has run its course three times -- the Holy Roman Empire, Imperial Germany, Nazi Germany -- and is only now entering its fourth iteration with the reunified Germany.

Russia's cycle, however, is far less clinical than Europe's. It begins with a national catastrophe. Sometimes it manifests as a result of disastrous internal planning; sometimes it follows a foreign invasion. But always it rips up the existing social order and threatens Russia with chaos and dissolution. The most recent such catastrophe was the Soviet collapse followed by the 1998 financial crisis. Previous disasters include the crushing of Russian forces in World War I and the imposition of the Treaty of Brest-Litovsk; the "Time of Troubles," whose period of internal warfare and conspiracy-laden politics are a testament to the Russian predilection for understatement; and near annihilation under the Mongol occupation.

Out of the horrors of defeat, the Russians search desperately for the second phase of the cycle -- the arrival of a white rider -- and invariably they find one. The white rider rarely encapsulates what Westerns conceive of as a savior -- someone who will bring wealth and freedom. Russian concerns after such calamities are far more basic: they want stability. But by Russian standards, the white rider is a rather optimistic fellow. He truly believes that Russia can recover from its time of trial, once a level of order is restored. So the Russian white rider sets about imposing a sense of consistency and strength, ending the free fall of Russian life. Putin is the current incarnation of Russia's white rider, which puts him in the same category as past leaders such as Vladimir Lenin and, of course, Russia's "Greats": Catherine and Peter.

Contrary to portrayals of him by many in the Western media, Putin is not a hard-nosed autocrat set upon militarization and war. He is from St. Petersburg, Russia's "window on the West," and during the Cold War one of his chief responsibilities was snagging bits of Western technology to send home. He was (and remains) fully cognizant of Russia's weaknesses and ultimately wanted to see Russia integrated as a full-fledged member of the Western family of nations.

He also is pragmatic enough to have realized that his ideal for Russia's future and Russia's actual path are two lines that will not converge. So, since November 2005, Putin has been training two potential replacements: First Deputy Prime Ministers Dmitry Medvedev and Sergei Ivanov. At this point, nearly a year before Russia's next presidential election, determining which one will take over is a matter of pure guesswork. Also unclear is what role, if any, Putin will grab for himself -- up to and including a continuation of his presidency.

The question of who takes over in March 2008 is generating much interest and debate among Kremlinologists. It clearly matters a great deal both politically and economically, though geopolitically the discussion misses the point. The real takeaway is that Russia's current white horse period is coming to an end. Putin's efforts to stabilize Russia have succeeded, but his dreams of Westernizing Russia are dead. The darkness is about to set in.

The Dark Rider

In the third phase of the Russian cycle, the white rider realizes that the challenges ahead are more formidable than he first believed and that his (relative) idealism is more a hindrance than an asset. At this point the white rider gives way to a dark one, someone not burdened by the white rider's goals and predilections, and willing to do what he feels must be done regardless of moral implications. The most famous Russian dark rider in modern times is Josef Stalin, of course, while perhaps the most consuming were the "Vasilys" of the Vasily Period, which led to the greatest civil war in Russian medieval history. In particularly gloomy periods in Russia's past (which is saying something) the white rider himself actually has shed his idealism and become the dark rider. For example, Ivan the IV began his rule by diligently regenerating Russia's fortunes, before degenerating into the psychotic madman better known to history as Ivan the Terrible.

Under the rule of the dark rider, Russia descends into an extremely strict period of internal control and external aggression, which is largely dictated by Russia's geographic weaknesses. Unlike the United States, with its deep hinterland, extensive coasts and lengthy and navigable river networks, Russia's expansive barren landscape and lack of maritime transport options make trade, development and all-around life a constant struggle. Russia also lacks any meaningful barriers to hide behind, leaving it consistently vulnerable to outside attack.

Understanding that this geographic reality leaves Russia extremely insecure is critical to understanding Russia's dark periods. Once the dark rider takes the state's reins, he acts by any means necessary to achieve Russian security. Internal opposition is ruthlessly quashed, economic life is fully subjugated to the state's needs and Russia's armies are built furiously with the intent of securing unsecurable borders. That typically means war: As Catherine the Great famously put it: "I have no way to defend my borders except to extend them."

After a period of unification and expansion under the dark rider, Russia inevitably suffers from overextension. No land power can endlessly expand: the farther its troops are from core territories, the more expensive they are to maintain and the more vulnerable they are to counterattack by foreign forces. Similarly, the more non-Russians who are brought under the aegis of the Russian state, the less able the state is to impose its will on its population -- at least without Stalin-style brute force. This overextension just as inevitably leads to stagnation as the post-dark rider leadership attempts to come to grips with Russia's new reality, but lacks the resources to do so. Attempts at reform transform stagnation into decline. Stalin gives way to a miscalculating Nikita Khrushchev, a barely conscious Leonid Brezhnev, an outmatched Mikhail Gorbachev and a very drunk Boris Yeltsin. A new disaster eventually manifests and the cycle begins anew.

Why the Crackdown?

The April 14-15 protests occurred at an inflection point between the second and third parts of the cycle -- as the white rider is giving way to a dark rider. Past Russian protests that involved 2,500 total people at most would have been allowed simply because they did not matter. The Putin government has a majority in the rubber-stamp Duma sufficient to pass any law or constitutional change in a short afternoon of parliamentary fury. All meaningful political parties have been disbanded, criminalized or marginalized; the political system is fully under Kremlin control. The Kasparov/Kasyanov protests did not threaten Putin in any meaningful way -- yet in both Moscow and St. Petersburg a few dozen people were blocked, beaten and hauled off to court.

This development was no accident. Roughly 9,000 riot police do not spontaneously materialize anywhere, and certainly not as the result of an overenthusiastic or less-than-sober local commander. A crackdown in one city could be a misunderstanding; a crackdown in two is state policy. And one does not send hundreds of batons swinging but allow Reuters to keep filming unless the objective is to allow the world to see. Putin chose to make these protests an issue.

Putin, then, is considering various groups and rationalizing his actions in the context of Russia's historical cycle:

* The West: Putin certainly does not want any Western capital to think he will take exiled oligarch Boris Berezovsky's recent threats of forcible revolution lying down. Berezovsky says violence is a possibility -- a probability even -- in the future of regime change in Russia? Fine. Putin can and did quite easily demonstrate that, when it comes to the application of force in internal politics, the Russian government remains without peer.


* The people: Putin knows that governance is not so much about ruling as it is about managing expectations. Russians crave stability, and Putin's ability to grant that stability has earned him significant gravitas throughout Russia as well as a grudging respect from even his most stalwart foes. He is portraying groups such as the Other Russia as troublemakers and disturbers of the peace. Such explanations make quite attractive packaging to the average Russian.


* The opposition: It is one thing to oppose a wildly powerful and popular government. It is another thing when that government beats you while the people nod approvingly and the international community barely murmurs its protest. Putin has driven home the message that the opposition is not just isolated and out of touch, but that it is abandoned.


* The Kremlin: Just because Putin is disappointed that his dreams are unattainable, that does not mean he wants to be tossed out the proverbial airlock. Showing any weakness during a transition period in Russian culture is tantamount to surrender -- particularly when Russia's siloviki (nationalists) are always seeking to rise to the top of the heap. Putin knows he has to be firm if he is to play any role in shaping Russia during and after the transition. After all, should Medvedev and Ivanov fail to make the grade, someone will need to rule Russia -- and the only man alive with more experience than Putin has a blood-alcohol level that precludes sound decision-making.
 

deja

Inactive
http://www.cnn.com/2007/WORLD/europe/04/17/berezovsky.threats.reut/index.html

Berezovsky: Putin to fall in 2007
POSTED: 9:19 a.m. EDT, April 17, 2007

MOSCOW, Russia (Reuters) -- Russian tycoon Boris Berezovsky stuck by his threat to try to topple President Vladimir Putin by fomenting a revolution and said he was in contact with members of Putin's circle to that end.

The British-based multi-millionaire's comments last week that he was plotting a revolution to bring down Putin triggered calls by Moscow for his extradition and earned him a warning from the British government not to abuse his asylum status.

In a new interview with the Russian edition of U.S. magazine Newsweek, published on Tuesday, an unrepentant Berezovsky predicted an anti-Putin upheaval could happen this year.

Asked when the revolution could take place, he said, "Well ... You know, I've got a feeling this will probably happen this year."

While he would not identify the forces he was financing in Russia, he said they did included people from Putin's inner circle.

Kremlin deputy spokesman Dmitry Peskov dismissed the tycoon's latest comments as self-promotion by someone out of touch with reality.

"He's doing whatever possible to make his impact as pumped up as possible. I don't think he has any contact with anyone in the presidential administration or those close to Putin," Peskov told the Kremlin-supported Russia Today television channel.

"I've no doubt he's in touch with think-tanks and movements closer to opposition," Peskov added.
Forcible seizure of power

Asked if he believed in the success of what he called "a forcible seizure of state power", Berezovsky said, "Yes! Absolutely!"

After similar comments to the British newspaper, the Guardian, last week, Berezovsky issued a statement of clarification in which he said he was not advocating a violent uprising.

Berezovsky enjoys political asylum in Britain and the Kremlin has long protested that the 61-year-old tycoon is being provided with a safe haven from which to conduct a campaign against Putin and his policies.

Prosecutor-General Yuri Chaika on Monday issued a fresh appeal to British authorities to hand over Berezovsky who faces corruption charges at home. A British government spokesman has said it deplored anyone using U.K. residence to call for an overthrow of a sovereign government and will look closely into the tycoon's statements.

But in the Newsweek interview he also said he was "absolutely not concerned" by the British government criticism and said he was sure he would never be extradited.

"I am acting within the framework of British law," he said. In Britain, it is the prerogative of the courts to decide whether Berezovsky qualifies for extradition.

"I am absolutely not concerned by the reaction of the government. I am interested only in the position of the judiciary," he said.

Berezovsky told the magazine he had spent $50 million in financing Ukraine's "Orange Revolution" in 2004 which brought pro-Western presidential candidate Viktor Yushchenko to power on the back of massive street protests.

"It means that here (in Russia) it is necessary to spend half a billion (dollars)," he said.

Despite Berezovsky's talk of fomenting revolution, Putin is widely popular in Russia, which is enjoying strong economic growth fueled by high world prices for the nation's vital oil exports.

A mathematician who became a powerful business mogul in the 1990s under Putin's predecessor Boris Yetsin, Berezovsky fled to Russia when he fell out with Putin.
 
Russia toughens penalties for extremism

If the "National Bolshevik Party", which is supposed to be akin to the Nazi Party, is a KGB concoction as I've been warning, then I'm curious as to where Russia is going with all this...

Russia toughens penalties for extremism
By VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV, Associated Press Writer
2 hours, 24 minutes ago

MOSCOW - Russian lawmakers on Wednesday endorsed new restrictions on political extremism that will toughen punishments and could make it easier for the Kremlin to apply the rules to its opponents.

As parliament's lower house voted, a court considered a request from authorities to label an increasingly vocal opposition group as extremist.

The moves follow police crackdowns on opposition demonstrations in Moscow and St. Petersburg and signaled President Vladimir Putin's determination to control dissent in the run-up to parliamentary elections in December and a presidential ballot next March.

The State Duma voted unanimously to allow up to three years' imprisonment for vandalism motivated by politics or ideology. The loose wording of the measure could allow authorities to punish any participants in an opposition protest if violence erupted.

Meanwhile, Moscow City Court started considering the chief prosecutor's request to declare the already-banned National Bolshevik Party an extremist organization — a move that would allow officials to increase punishment for its members and could discourage other Kremlin foes from joining it in protests.

The National Bolshevik Party, led by irreverent ultranationalist novelist Eduard Limonov, has played a key role in organizing "Dissenters' Marches," the latest of which were held in Moscow and St. Petersburg over the weekend.

Club-wielding police beat many participants and detained hundreds, drawing wide criticism from human rights groups and some Western governments and reinforcing opposition contentions that Putin's government is strangling democracy ahead of the elections.

"Our No. 1 goal is to end trampling on constitutional rights and create institutions that would allow public control over government," said Mikhail Kasyanov, Putin's former prime minister and now a Kremlin critic who took part in Saturday's protest in Moscow.

Kasyanov reaffirmed his intention to run for president next March while speaking to reporters Wednesday. Russia's fragmented opposition groups are yet to decide on whether to nominate a single opposition candidate.

Garry Kasparov, one of the organizers of the Other Russia coalition of liberal and leftist forces, to which Kasyanov's party belongs, expressed hope that the opposition could agree on fielding single candidate in the fall.

Kasparov, a former chess world champion who has become a fierce Kremlin critic, hinted that he was unlikely to seek that role. "I believe today this wouldn't help the coalition," he said on Ekho Moskvy radio, adding that he needed to concentrate on coordinating opposition efforts.

A group of opposition politicians and liberal economic experts on Wednesday presented a social program for a future opposition presidential candidate.

"It's an attempt to create a basis for a neo-liberal social course," said Irina Khakamada, a Kasyanov ally.

The program criticized the Kremlin for failing to turn the nation's soaring oil revenues toward improving health care, social insurance and education. "The state has received huge oil proceeds, but nothing has changed in the social sphere," Khakamada said.

As with most actions by the opposition, the presentation was ignored by state-controlled nationwide television stations that focus on lavish coverage of Kremlin activities.

http://www.yahoo.com/s/559726
 
Russia court outlaws radical political party
Reuters

MOSCOW — A Moscow court outlawed the National Bolshevik Party on Thursday, calling the small political organization which has irked authorities by staging a string of protests across Russia an "extremist" group.

"The court ... finds the inter-regional public organization National Bolshevik Party to be extremist and bans its activities," said the court judge, reading out the verdict.

The ruling allows Russian authorities to make it illegal to publicly support the National Bolshevik Party.

The party, which has staged sit-ins at government buildings and whose flag bears some resemblance to the Nazi swastika, was refused official registration last year.

Demonstrators holding flags of the radical National Bolshevik Party hold a protest rally in downtown Moscow, in this Dec.16, 2006 file photo. (Fyodor Savintsev/AP)

0419bolshevik_230.jpg


A lawyer for the National Bolsheviks said he would appeal the court decision.

"It's a shameful decision which has nothing to do with law," lawyer Sergey Belyak told reporters.

Supporters of the National Bolsheviks, along with members of the "Other Russia" opposition coalition, were detained in Moscow on Saturday when police used force to prevent them marching.

Pro-Kremlin youth movement Nashi said on Thursday it would campaign courts to outlaw members of "Other Russia" as "extremist".

President Vladimir Putin enjoys strong popularity after presiding over seven years of strong economic growth and relative political stability in Russia.

His popularity and government control over major media have kept opposition protests muted.

Opposition parties say they face concerted pressure from the Kremlin as Russia nears presidential polls in March 2008 in which a successor to Mr. Putin will be elected.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/serv...9.wrussiacourt0419/BNStory/International/home

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Note the flags.

Not something a ragtag bunch of nutty extremists would manufacture.

This group is some sort of KGB concoction....for what purpose remains to be seen.

What I do know is that this is the Right-Left/Red-Brown fascist extremism that gained popularity in Russia's intelligence services before the "Great Transformation" took place starting in the mid-80s. It is the real force behind Russian leadership at this time.
 
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