RUSSIAN FEDERATION SITREP 8 December 2011
RUSSIAN FEDERATION SITREP 8 December
2011ELECTION RESULTS. The
almost
final results give a Duma with 238 seats for United Russia (down 77);
92 Communists (up 35); 64 Just Russia (up 26) and 56 Zhirinovskiy’s party
(up 16). (Interactive map
by regions). United Russia will dominate, but no longer be able to
bully. Which is a step in the right
direction.ELECTION FRAUD.
There is a lot from the usual media outlets about widespread, even
game-changing, fakery. I would suggest that those who believe this reflect on
what might be termed the Prime Law of Election Fixing: Don’t fix it so
that your party loses votes and seats. Especially when they have been saying
that every previous Russian election was fraudulent. This should be obvious to
anyone. Secondly the results accord well (as previous elections have) with
opinion polling (indeed United Russia did a bit worse). This
piece shows that the results are consistent with numerous polls
(here’s a reasonably perceptive
forecast from two months earlier and another,
based on polls, from the day before). To persist in assertions of
game-changing fraud in the face of these facts is just ridiculous. By the way,
if you go by the English-speaking media you would think that foreign observers
thought the elections were frightful: not so, here
are a number
of foreign observers
saying
that they were
good enough. The OSCE
report does not suggest big-scale fixing either; indeed it reads like
other OSCE reports: administrative resources, lack of competition, some bad
behaviour.LOGIC. There is
a simple point of logic here, I think. Opinion polls told us that United Russia
was sinking and that even Putin’s ratings had declined. This is the
factual basis for pieces like this
one. So far so good. But to then to claim that the election was so
fraudulent that – that what? the Communists actually won? United Russia
gave itself 10-20-30 points? Enough to get a majority? – contradicts the
very opinion polls that were the basis for the first observation. (Was
there cheating? Of course there was, and not just by United Russia.
There’s cheating
in all elections
everywhere.
Enough to be a game-changer? I doubt
it.)IMPLICATIONS. Half the
vote is hardly a repudiation of United Russia but such a reduction is hardly an
endorsement either. For some months opinion polls have been showing a weariness
with this assemblage of power-worshippers. It is a wake-up call. I would
expect more “retirements”
of officials: not because they failed to cook the results but because
they have been repudiated by the electorate. I do not believe that it will
affect the presidential vote greatly (opinion polls again: The
Team’s ratings are still pretty high) but it might/might result
in Putin having to go to a second round of voting. On the other hand, given that
the number two candidate will probably be Zyuganov of the Communists, it might
not. However tired Russians may be of Putin, they must be even more tired of
Zyuganov who ran for President in 1996, 2000 and 2008. To say nothing of
Yavlinskiy (1996 and 2000) and Zhirinovskiy (1991, 1996, 2000 and 2008). Of
these, Putin is certainly the least stale. But
I still think he should have retired. At any rate both Medvedev and
Putin are taking it pretty calmly; but, given the polls, they must have seen it
coming. And, once again, the “liberals”, so beloved of the West,
failed. Here, as a change from “Putin stole
it”, is a piece
saying the Communists are
back.CHECHNYA.
Chechnya, again, produced a 99%+ turnout with 99%+ voting for United Russia. I
actually believe this result is correct (plus or minus). Kadyrov’s father
once said Chechens had been fighting for independence for decades without
success and it was time to try some other method than war. I believe Chechens
still want independence but understand that it would come at a terrible cost and
then be followed by invasion by jihadists. This is, after all, what happened
after the first war in 1994. It is therefore necessary never to let Moscow
suspect that independence is what you are after (sovereignty is an acceptable
public aim) but to move gradually in that direction. In this respect it is
useful to be able to cover your moves by showing outstanding
“loyalty” to Moscow. Chechnya is the sort of society in which the
word can be put out through the tayps and families that it
is in everyone’s best interest to turn out and vote for Moscow’s
party. And something similar can be seen elsewhere in the North Caucasus where
United Russia always gets big
numbers.DEMONSTRATIONS. We
shall see what Saturday’s
demonstrations
bring.MAGNITSKIY. The case
was re-opened, we are
told, so that his relatives can have his name
cleared.NAVY. A task
force, led by the aircraft carrier Admiral
Kuznetsov, has left
Severomorsk for the Atlantic and Mediterranean. Not, we were told last
week, bound for
Syria. ©
Patrick Armstrong Analysis, Ottawa, Canada (see http://www.russiaotherpointsofview.com/)
Posted: Thu - December
8, 2011 at 06:59
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Published On: Dec 08, 2011 07:03
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