By Tai Adelaja
Russia Profile, 05/14/2012Despite the government's best efforts, Russian logistics services continue to be slow, bureaucratic and unpredictable, a new World Bank report has found. The quality of Russia's trade and transport related infrastructure is subpar even when compared to infrastructural facilities in other former Soviet states, according to the bank's Logistics Performance Index report published on Friday. Russia not only received declining scores in the survey's “ease of arranging competitively priced shipments to international markets” category, but also ranks low in the ability to track and trace such consignments or confirm whether shipments reach their destination.![]()
Editorial Comment by Russia Profile Staff
05/11/2012Russia Profile brings you some of the best analysis on top stories in Russia today. But there’s always more behind them. Each Friday, our writers provide their own take on the news, offering unique commentary to put events into a different perspective. This week, Dan Peleschuk probes the Russian opposition's changing tactics, and Tai Adelaja explains the Russian government's strategy to contain the Eurozone crisis.![]()
Introduced by Vladimir Frolov
Russia Profile, 05/11/2012Now that Dmitry Medvedev has handed over power to his friend Vladimir Putin and has taken his place at the helm of the Russian government as prime minister, it’s time to take stock of his one-term presidency and his historic legacy. Will he go down in history as a great visionary, or a weak and pretentious leader who provided liberal political cover to perpetuate the personal-cult regime of Vladimir Putin? Has Medvedev been a genuine modernizer or was he simply faking modernization to let the steam out? Was he ever president?![]()
By Tai Adelaja
Russia Profile, 05/10/2012While Russia's newly inaugurated President Vladimir Putin may be facing a myriad of complex issues, ranging from the brain drain to unfavorable demographics, he has, for the time being, zeroed in on fixing the country's broken immigration policy. In one of his sweeping executive orders issued on Monday, Putin said federal and regional authorities must introduce mandatory testing for migrant workers in subjects like the Russian language, Russian history and the basics of Russian legislation. Highly qualified foreign workers will be exempt from the tests, which Putin said must take off by November 2012 at the latest. Putin also instructed the Russian government to prepare draft laws that will toughen punishments for violating Russia’s immigration laws and submit them before December 2012.![]()
By Tai Adelaja
Russia Profile, 05/08/2012Hours after he took the oath of office on Monday, Russian President Vladimir Putin signed a raft of decrees sure to set him apart from his predecessor and project his image as an active, energetic and business-like leader. Putin, who has promised to continue the modernization and business-friendly policies of former President Dmitry Medvedev, spent the rest of his inauguration day approving an unwieldy list of economic and social policies. Part of the measures decreed by the once-again president would improve the country’s business climate, while others, like wage increases, could punch holes in the budget, analysts say.![]()
By Andrew Roth
Russia Profile, 05/08/2012In the span of one day, Moscow went from the brutality of violent, massive street clashes between young, mostly male protesters and riot police to the pomp and circumstance of Vladimir Putin’s inauguration, held in the gilded Kremlin State Palace.![]()
Vladimir Putin was sworn in as Russian president on Monday in a glittering Kremlin ceremony that took place less than 24 hours after protesters opposed to his rule had battled police in downtown Moscow.
“I swear on the power invested in me as president of the Russian Federation to respect and protect the rights and freedom of its citizens,” Putin said, his right hand placed on a red-bound copy of the Russian Constitution.
Russia’s nuclear suitcase was handed over to Putin immediately after his inauguration.![]()
Dmitry Medvedev has outlined the future government\s action program at the State Duma
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Introduced by Vladimir Frolov
Russia Profile
05/11/2012Now that Dmitry Medvedev has handed over power to his friend Vladimir Putin and has taken his place at the helm of the Russian government as prime minister, it’s time to take stock of his one-term presidency and his historic legacy. Will he go down in history as a great visionary, or a weak and pretentious leader who provided liberal political cover to perpetuate the personal-cult regime of Vladimir Putin? Has Medvedev been a genuine modernizer or was he simply faking modernization to let the steam out? Was he ever president?![]()
Introduced by Vladimir Frolov
Russia Profile
05/04/2012As Vladimir Putin and Dmitry Mevedev prepare to trade places as they announced last September, they have agreed on another so-called “castling” right after Putin's inauguration on May 7. This time around they will trade places at the helm of the United Russia Party. Will United Russia swap revive the tandem? Why has Medvedev agreed to lead an unpopular political party he has never called home before? What does he need to do as a party leader to turn things around at United Russia?![]()
Introduced by Vladimir Frolov
Russia Profile
04/27/2012In mid-March, Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev appointed his special envoys for three breakaway states: Transdnestr (Deputy Prime Minister Dmitry Rogozin), South Ossetia (North Ossetia’s President Teimuraz Mamsurov) and Abkhazia (Krasnodar Region Governor Alexander Tkachev). No special envoy was appointed for Nagorno-Karabakh, though.What does the appointment of presidential envoys, particularly that of Rogozin, imply about the strategy deliberations in Moscow? Is Russia laying the groundwork for the recognition of Transdnestr as an independent state, were Moldova to reintegrate with Romania? And what would be the geopolitical ramifications of such a move?![]()
Introduced by Vladimir Frolov
Russia Profile
04/20/2012The Russian Orthodox Church, or more precisely its conservative top leadership, including Patriarch Kirill, is facing increasing public criticism and pressure over its close relationship with the state, extending unabashed political support to Prime Minister Vladimir Putin during the recent presidential election, repression against critics, conspicuous consumption and flashy lifestyles by some of the church’s prominent leaders. Is the church leadership’s cultural conservatism at odds with a more culturally diverse society in Russia’s major metropolitan centers? What should the right relationship between the church, the state and society be in a modern, post-industrial country that Russia is striving to become?![]()
Introduced by Vladimir Frolov
Russia Profile
04/13/2012U.S. Ambassador to Russia Michael McFaul has turned himself into a public figure in Moscow, which is, perhaps, turning him into a problem for U.S.-Russian relations. Ever since the former NSC director for Russia and the architect of Barack Obama's “reset” policy arrived in Moscow on the first diplomatic mission of his career, hardly a day goes by without a public snafu over some action by Obama's envoy. What is the problem with McFaul? Why is the Kremlin singling him out for highly personal attacks and harassment? Will Obama have to replace his ambassador to Moscow?![]()
Introduced by Vladimir Frolov
Russia Profile
04/06/2012U.S. Republican presidential contender Mitt Romney seized upon President Barack Obama’s open-mic gaffe at the nuclear security summit in Seoul, where Obama was overheard asking his Russian counterpart, President Dmitry Medvedev, to give him more space during the difficult election year and indicating he might have more flexibility on the thorny issue of missile defense during his second term. Do Republicans really think Russia is the United States' number one geopolitical rival and foe? How will Romney’s attack on Obama’s Russia policy and his management of foreign affairs help the Republicans at the polls in November?![]()
Introduced by Vladimir Frolov
Russia Profile
03/30/2012Speaking at the Euro-Atlantic Security Conference in Moscow last Friday, outgoing President Dmitry Medvedev said Russia and NATO could still reach an agreement on missile defense, but time is running out and opportunities for compromise are becoming fewer as the U.S. missile defense plans near implementation. Can Putin and Obama make a deal on missile defense? Would Obama go for a written statement of guarantees sought by Russia? Would Putin accept this as a compromise?![]()
Introduced by Vladimir Frolov
Russia Profile
03/23/2012The United States Senate Finance Committee began hearings last week on abolishing controversial trade restrictions against Russia under the Soviet-era Jackson-Vanik Amendment. American lawmakers will debate granting Permanent Normal Trade Relations (PNTR) status to Moscow. Will Russia finally be graduated from the Jackson-Vanik Amendment imposed in 1974 on the now non-existent country? Will the congressional opposition succeed in imposing new trade restrictions on Russia linked to the human rights situation? What will this mean for the U.S.-Russian “reset?”![]()
Introduced by Vladimir Frolov
Russia Profile
03/16/2012As was widely expected, Vladimir Putin won Russia’s presidential election in the first round, scoring nearly 64 percent of the vote. Although independent Russian and international observers questioned the fairness of the vote, even they don’t dispute Putin’s first round victory, albeit with a much lower actual result (50.7 percent, according to Golos and 53 percent, according to the League of Voters). How will Putin 2.0 govern Russia? How will he respond to the rising unrest of the urban middle class, particularly in Moscow? Will he become a president of reform and open up the political system as his supporters claim he should, or will he crack down on the unrest as a populist autocrat?![]()
© Russia Profile, 2011