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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Kremlin chief 'sacked to pave way for Putin'
2007-07-10
It was, as has become customary in Vladimir Putin's Russia, a supremely Soviet-style sacking. A brief and uninformative item posted by the Interfax news agency yesterday morning tersely reported that Igor Ivanov, the secretary of the Kremlin's potentially extremely powerful security council, had "resigned" a fortnight ago to pursue academic interests.

Few Kremlin watchers were surprised. A carefully controlled media campaign in the past week indicated that Mr Ivanov, for all his slavish loyalty to the president, was heading for a fall.

One television station called for an investigation into his financial dealings in the 1970s.
How could anyone in Soviet Union in 1970s have 'financial dealings'?
A newspaper claimed that he harboured presidential ambitions while some websites suggested he had "pro-Georgian sympathies" - both deeply damaging accusations in the country's febrile political climate.

Given the state's heavy influence on an increasingly cowed media, most analysts agree that such stories can only have been placed. But if such methods seem redolent of Russia's communist past, the speculation that followed immediately after the announcement - which drew no comment from the Kremlin itself - was even more so.

Some political scientists suggested that the Kremlin was preparing to strengthen the security council's power, preparing the way for Mr Putin to take over the body and retain sweeping powers.
Some political scientists suggested that the Kremlin was preparing to strengthen the security council's power, preparing the way for Mr Putin to take over the body and retain sweeping powers when he steps down as president after elections next March. Others pointed to long persisting rumours that Russia was preparing to authorise the use of military force against political demonstrators and to once again name the United States as one of the country's main enemies.

Under Mr Ivanov the security council was largely sidelined. But its potential remit is enormous, ranging from defence to internal and foreign affairs, including intelligence.
Under Mr Ivanov, who was foreign minister from 1998 to 2003, the security council was largely sidelined. But its potential remit is enormous, ranging from defence to internal and foreign affairs, including intelligence. Equally likely, the analysts say, Mr Ivanov's departure is a sign of the factional warfare that secretly rages within the Kremlin.

Several said that the campaign against Mr Ivanov, not regarded as one of the president's inner circle, was led by Viktor Cherkesov, a close friend of Mr Putin and the powerful head of the antinarcotics agency. He is said to represent a faction led by the former chief of staff, Alexander Voloshin, and the oligarch Roman Abramovich, who owns Chelsea football club. "Ivanov's departure is either a sign that a reform is in the making to elevate the role of the security council or that some influential figure wants to take it under his control," said Andrei Ryabov, a leading political analyst.
Posted by:lotp

#3  Ivanov was seen a few weeks ago as one of two possible replacements for Putin,

That's Defence Minister (now First Deputy PM) Sergei Ivanov. Igor was always the odd man out.
Posted by: ed   2007-07-10 17:52  

#2  Traditionally, Soviet politics were such that their balance of power was divided between the KGB, the military and the communist party. If one branch got too powerful, the other two would gang up against it.

Ivanov was seen a few weeks ago as one of two possible replacements for Putin, and he was seen as the FSB (KGB) candidate. But curiously, the other candidate was neither FSB, a political or a military candidate. He is the head of their government petroleum concern. A businessman?

While he is still an insider, he would be a radical choice, probably representing a major shift in leadership dynamics.
Posted by: Anonymoose   2007-07-10 16:30  

#1  How could anyone in Soviet Union in 1970s have 'financial dealings'?

You'd be surprised. Members of nomenclatura were always more equal than others. For instance, it was illegal to hold any foreign currency for the common Ivan, but not so for a member of higher echelons of CP.

Swiss accounts were a norm. Intended for the most part to finance spiedom and subversions, accounts managers were free to speculate provided that they showed consistently a net gain. Some, though, did not limit their initiative for the common good and used these instruments for their own gain. Of course, it was working as long as some higher ups did not get envious. Then the poor party animal was as good as cooked.

Seems that the old style is coming back into fashion, in Russia.
Posted by: twobyfour   2007-07-10 02:00  

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