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http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml?xml=/news/2002/04/19/wput19.xml&sSheet=/news/2002/04/19/ixworld.html

The Daily Telegraph
April 19, 2002

Hardliners turn against Putin the reformer
By Marcus Warren in Moscow

-"He is carrying out Gorbachev's policy: saying one
thing and doing another," the Communist leader
complained recently. "He talks of strengthening our
influence in the world and Nato bases appear in
Central Asia and American colonels in Georgia."



PRESIDENT Putin issued a clarion call for bolder
reforms yesterday, widening the gap between Russia's
leader and his erstwhile supporters among the
hardliners.

In his annual "state of the nation" address, Mr Putin
said that now political stability had been restored
after a turbulent decade of change, improving living
standards was the next big challenge.

"I have already said that Russia needs more ambitious
policies, a higher rate of economic growth," he told a
special session of both houses of parliament. State
institutions should work together to achieve this, he
said.

For Russia's communists and nationalists it was a
further sign of how the president has fallen from
favour. Like spurned lovers, they have swung from
rapturous delight to wary approval to outright
hostility.

Where once they praised him for his backing of the
military and championing of the old Soviet national
anthem, now they heap abuse on him.

His pro-Western stance and pursuit of economic
liberalisation have even earned him sneering
comparisons with two hate figures for the hardliners,
Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin.

"It was directed at the Americans and the Europeans
rather than his own country," Gennady Zyuganov, the
Communist Party leader, said of yesterday's speech in
the Kremlin. "It was cheerless and uninteresting."

At its most extravagant, the criticism portrays the
former KGB officer as a helpless nonentity, the puppet
of Russian tycoons, the Yeltsin-era ancien regime and
the West.

Highlighting the trend is a new novel by a nationalist
guru, Alexander Prokhanov, a satire on Mr Putin's rise
to power. Its title, Mr Hexogen, refers to the
explosives used in bombs which destroyed several
blocks of flats in 1999.

The author, editor of the influential weekly Zavtra,
joins some of the president's liberal enemies in
blaming the blasts not on Chechen terrorists, the
official culprits, but on those grooming Mr Putin to
succeed Mr Yeltsin.

"The Kremlin planned it all," he said recently. "There
are various dots in a row. They needed a Chechen war
for Putin to become president. But there is one
mysterious dot in this line and that is the
explosions."

The end of the Yeltsin era is depicted in his book as
a diabolic orgy of evil, peopled by half-man,
half-beast reformers and grotesque oligarchs, all of
them manipulated by KGB veterans.

The vitriolic attack on Mr Putin is also noteworthy
because its author, admittedly a maverick, was once an
enthusiastic admirer of the then newly elected
president.

Emerging from a private audience with Mr Putin in the
Kremlin two years ago, Mr Prokhanov described his host
as "masterful".

Now, he dismisses the president as "a zero, a
hologram, one minute it's there, the next it isn't, a
play of the light."

He recalled: "Then, I didn't have the chance to
stretch out my hand and prod him. If I had, I am sure
that my hand would have passed straight through this
cloud and come out the other side."

Until now, Mr Zyuganov has been careful to condemn the
Kremlin's policies or Mr Putin's entourage rather than
the man himself.

"He is carrying out Gorbachev's policy: saying one
thing and doing another," the Communist leader
complained recently. "He talks of strengthening our
influence in the world and Nato bases appear in
Central Asia and American colonels in Georgia."

Halfway through his four-year term, a squeeze on
living standards caused by cuts in housing subsidies
and resurgent anti-American sentiment could, in
theory, erode Mr Putin's astonishing popularity.

And yet, despite their rhetoric and support among the
victims of reform, the communists seem as ill prepared
as any other political force to exploit discontent.


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