Bloated by excessive
drinking, kept alive through an infusion of foreign ‘assistance’, nurtured by a
mafia, sustained through false propaganda of ‘fitness’, surviving through
autocratic power.... such could be an apt description of either Yeltsin or the
Russian economy. Nearly a decade of ‘economic reforms’ — liberalisation,
privatisation, lumpenisation — has reduced a country to ruin, destroyed an
entire populace and paralysed a whole generation. Premature deaths, disease,
malnutrition, alcoholism and freezing to death in Russia’s terrifying winters
... are all gifts to the Russian people by the ‘reformers’ and their
international guardians. Murder, rape, loot and the law of the mafia are the
‘advantages’ of the present imperialist-style democracy. Unemployment,
unimaginable inflation, destruction of all savings, non-payment of wages is the
bourgeoisie’s new bequest to the people.
And amidst this muck
and filth has grown a handful of monsters — the ‘New Russian’ or the Oligarchy
of seven leading bankers, the handful of oil magnates and the politico-financial
mafia. It is this clique that is running the giant conglomerates worth billions
of dollars, egged on by international financial magnates, who have themselves
made windfall profits manipulating Russia’s bankruptcy and destroying its
currency. It is these robber barons, together with their accomplices in the top
echelons of the government, bureaucracy and army, who are primarily responsible
for the present state of collapse, the prevailing anarchy and the degradation of
the lives of the people.
Today’s continuing
crisis, which struck the Russian economy on August 17, ’98, is the combined
effect of the internal policies of the Russian rulers and the effect of the
present world economic crisis that first struck South Asia ... and then Russia.
Liberalisation and privatisation has given neither democracy nor freedom. The
Brezhnev-type dictatorship has merely been replaced by the Yeltsin-style
autocracy and law of the mafia; state monopoly capitalism has been replaced by
the monopoly capitalism of a handful of oligarchies; poverty and destitution
created by acute shortages, militarisation and agricultural stagnation of the
Brezhnev period has been replaced by acute poverty and hunger of the ‘free
market’; fake ‘marxism’ has been replaced by fake ‘freedom’; the dachas of the
party bureaucrats have been replaced by palaces of the new bourgeoisie ....
nothing has significantly changed, only, people’s conditions, which were bad,
have deteriorated enormously.
The line between
state capitalism and private enterprise is thin .... both representing different
forms of rule of the bourgeoisie. It was,in fact the severe crisis in the
economy during the latter part of the Brezhnev era coupled with the rising tide
of discontent of the people against dictatorial rule that resulted in the
collapse of state capitalism and its replacement with private enterprise. Due to
the lack of a genuine communist force to lead this mass upsurge; a section of
the bourgeoisie, backed by the West, diverted this revolt against the very
people themselves by introducing a most ruthless, mafia-style carpetbagger
capitalism.
In this article, we
shall try and understand Russian society as it exists today.... its internal
structures and its geo-political significance in the world.
(1) Collapse of the Russian Economy
In the past eight
years, since the collapse of the Soviet Union and the introduction of
Western-style ‘economic reforms’, the economy (GDP) has shrunk 60% and
industrial output has fallen about 70%.1 Capital investments
in the Russian economy in 1996 were less than 60% of those in 1991. Tens of
thousands of industrial enterprises have been closed down, those surviving are
primarily ones specialising in exports of raw materials and energy production.2
Even in the production of oil, which is Russia’s major industry, output has
fallen by half over the decade — from 11.5 million barrels per day in 1987 to
5.9 m b/d in 1997.3 In 1998 Russia’s GDP contracted a further
5% and inflation once again surged to 85%.
Today, the size of
the Russian economy is less than half what it was in 1990. The economy is
smaller than that of the Netherlands and is now on par with a country like
Spain.4 Its total banking capital was less than that of Finland’s.5
It imports/exports amount to a mere 0.5% of world trade6.... i.e.
equivalent to that of India. The fall in the Russian economy is steeper than
that of America during the Great Depression and the contraction of its
industrial production is double that what took place in Russia during the Second
World War. During these eight years of reforms industry and agriculture lie in
ruins, and the country survives chiefly on imports of food and consumer goods,
which it is able to pay for through exports of its enormous natural resources.
The economy has been
so badly devastated that large parts of it have reverted back to a barter
system. With inflation averaging about 1000% in the first five years of reforms
and touching a peak of 2,505% in 1992, the value of the rouble lost all meaning
and so possession of commodities was more valuable than currency. Not only did
most families resort to growing some food on family plots as they were unable to
pay for it, but industry too resorted to barter.
With most industries
facing a cash crunch and unable to pay either wages to their workers or taxes to
the government, many resorted to bartering off the products coming off their
production lines, in order to meet costs. It has been estimated that large
enterprises carryout 80% of their business in barter.7 The share of
barter in industrial sales increased from 5% in 1992 to 40% by end 1996.8
Regarding meeting
their food requirements, it is estimated that tiny family plots provide a large
part of Russia’s food and that roughly 56% of Russia’s working population grow
some of their own food.9 Recently, at a demonstration, a nuclear
scientist complained that he had no energy left for research, after working in
the fields. Besides, food imports account for 75% of aggregate consumption.10
Besides, the value of
the rouble, which was roughly equivalent to a dollar before the initiation of
‘reforms’, fell to 5,800 roubles to one dollar by end 1997.11 With no faith
in their rouble, even a large part of people’s savings were held in dollars. By
1997 Russians held about $20 to $30 billion of their savings in dollars – an
amount roughly equivalent to the total amount of cash roubles in the country.
12
With the economy in
this state, it is quite natural that tax collections by the government have been
excessively low. This has been further aggravated by the fact that about 40%
of business is in the hands of the mafia and tax evasion is estimated at $10
billion yearly.13 This has resulted in the government being in a perpetual
state of bankruptcy. Tax collections barely reach 50% of the target. For
example, in 1997 Russia’s tax system generated revenues of just 8% of GDP....
which is one-third of what is collected in other developed countries.14
In spite of large
borrowings, upto 1997, each year’s budget has had huge deficits; it reached 20%
in 1992 and has hovered around 10% in the other years.15
With a high cost
of borrowing, servicing the state debt, which has been growing by 40% a year, is
itself swallowing up the bulk of government revenues. Its foreign debt stands at
$180 bn while its domestic debt was $ 161 billion.16
Disregarding of a
severe cash crunch the government has been defrauding the soldiers, public
sector workers, employees and the pensioners of their wages and siphoning off
this money to the big business houses. Rarely has a country witnessed such a
gigantic fraud perpetrated by the government on its own employees.
The acute crisis of
the Russian economic system appears total — on the food front, in industry and
finance and in the government’s fiscal policies. This has been further
compounded by the government’s unwillingness to rein in the black economy;
prevent the huge flight of capital by big business, and an unwillingness to
develop agriculture and industry, allowing a free reign to financial
speculation.
And amidst this
crisis-ridden economy came the crash of August 1998. Buoyed with a zero growth
rate in 1997 (after witnessing an average annual negative growth rate of 10% in
the 1990-96 period), Yeltsin and company began boasting that Russia had now
turned the corner. Immediate plans were made to restructure the rouble that had
been reduced to a scrap of paper... from 1-1-98 three zeros were dropped; i. e.
from 6000 roubles to the dollar it was pegged at 6 roubles to the dollar.
But instead of the
predicted growth and stabilisation what the people of Russia received was an even deeper crisis. This was triggered off by large withdrawals of portfolio
investment in November-December 1997. In the August ’98 crash17 the rouble
plunged to two thirds of its value from 6 to the dollar to 18 to the dollar (it
is now 23 to the $); in the Moscow stock market share prices fell by 80% since
the beginning of the year, consumer prices shot up 58% in just one month;
short-term interest rates soared to 150% ... and added to all these woes the
country faced the worst harvest in 30 years.
With this, Russia
faced collapse on two fronts : financial and food. For both, the rulers turned
to the West.
The financial crunch
was faced by them as the Kremlin defaulted on its treasury debt of $40 bn
(Treasury Bills are short-term borrowings of the government, sold to the highest
bidder) and foreign reserves dwindled from $20 billion at the beginning of the
year to a mere $8 bn by September ’98.18 So, with shrinking revenues, the
rulers were forced into the arms of the IMF octopus for a huge $22.6 billion
bail-out.
In the food front,
with winter fast approaching, the situation was even more desperate..... the
people of Russia were heading for mass starvation. Under these conditions,and
desperate for survival, Russia borrowed a hugh 3 million tonnes each from
America and Europe. So desperate was the situation, that Prime Minister Primakov,
during his visit to India, even requested New Delhi’s help in getting food to
tide over Russia’s terrible winter.
This is the pathetic
state to which the land of Lenin and Stalin has been reduced. Even at the height of World War II the people of Russia did not face such horrifying conditions of
existence. This is what thirty years of state monopoly capitalism and another
decade of private enterprise has given the Russian people.
(2) The Lumpen Bourgeoisie
By the 1980s the
Soviet economy has gone into a severe stagnation. Industry was in crisis,
agriculture declined while a huge military expenditure continued to swallow up
the bulk of the resources. Foreign trade which increased 4-fold in the 1970s
actually recorded an 8% decline between 1984 and ’87. The crisis in agriculture
resulted in food imports increasing from 9% of the total consumption in 1970 to
30% in 1985. The deepening crisis got reflected in a growing budget deficit
which in just two years, between 1985 and ’87, jumped from 2.9% of GNP to 11.5%
of GNP.... rising from 23 bn roubles in ’85 to 120 bn roubles in ’89
19.
To get over this
crisis Gorbachev sought to loosen the tight controls of the state capitalist
system and reduce military expenditures. His hesitant ‘reforms’, finally led to
the collapse of the Soviet Union, and the complete opening out of the Russian
economy, through the Yeltsin coup, heavily backedby the West.
Within just three
years 1,20,000 enterprises changed from state to private ownership.
Privatisation led to companies going into the hands of well-connected operators
who bought state properties for a song and stripped their assets, in the process
becoming notorious oligarchs who owned the big banks, newspapers, mines, TV,
etc. In another wave of privatisation in 1995 under the notorious
loans-for-shares scheme, undertaken by the newly appointed Deputy Prime
Minister, Anatoly Chubais, government’s stakes in some of Russia’s biggest and
most valuable firms were parceled out to a coterie of well-connected banks at
knocked-down prices.
(A) The Oligarchy
State monopoly
capitalism, on breaking up, resulted, not in a laissez faire economy, but
private monopoly capital with the bulk of the wealth cornered by a handful of
oligarchs.... called ‘clans’. These ‘clans’ are loose-knit groupings of
industrial and financial interests, each with a clique of politicians at its
head, a mass media outlet under its control and armed formations (state or
private) at their disposal. These ‘clans’ are closely linked to the powerful
mafias and also are intimately interlinked with international finance capital.
They acquired state assets cheaply through rigged privatisations ... their banks
grew fat on free floats of state money... they received big tax concessions from
their political accomplices ... and they have ties with regional groups that
operate along similar lines. Seldom in the history of contemporary capitalism
have such a tiny number of rapaciously concentrated financial parasites risen so
glaringly.
They comprise
primarily the Group of seven bankers, a couple of oil magnates and a few
politico-mafia conglomerates. To take a look at some examples of each. In
the first category come individuals like Boris Berezorsky and Vladimir Potonin.
Berezorsky, one of the most powerful political wheeler-dealers is the chairman
of the Logoraz group. His economic reach extends into every nook and cranny of
the Russian economy : all sectors of the media, real estate, petroleum and
natural gas, banking and financial services, insurance, automobile
manufacturing, food importing, whole-saling and retailing, construction, etc.
Estimates on the size of his foreign investment holdings in West Europe and the
US run into billions. Potanin, a leading politician himself, heads the
Oneximbank group that controls 24 industries; it comprises one of the largest
banks and has a group turnover of $10 billion. In the second category come
people like the longest lasting prime minister of the reform period,
Chernomyrdin. He is closely tied to Russia’s biggest conglomerate, Gazprom.
After heading Gazprom as its chief from 1989 to 1992, he was instrumental in the
privatisation of 60% of its capital. Gazprom, the only Russian industry listed
on the Fortune 500 (1997), accounts for 6% of Russia’s GDP and supplies 25% of
West Europe’s natural gas. Recently, it struck a strategic alliance with Shell.
And in the last category comes Russia’s top candidate for the next presidential
elections — Yuri Luzkhov, the Mayor of Moscow who has holdings in real estate,
fast foods, oil, telecommunications, automobiles, etc in the Moscow area. He
runs Moscow as his fiefdom utilising both a $8 billion official budget and a $4
billion ‘unofficial’ budget to run Moscow and build his empire.
(B) The Mafia
Linked to these
oligarchs/clans are the powerful mafias. As of January ’97 there were an
estimated 4,000 mafia groups, employing roughly 6 lakh armed gangsters. The
mafias control about 40% of Russia’s economy. Roughly half the Russian banks are
linked to the Mafia and an estimated 80% of all enterprises pay an average of 10
to 20% of their profits as protection money. The mafia, in fact, grew and
entrenched itself in the earlier Soviet period under Brezhnev’s rule. Its
financial clout, acquired through embezzlement, black marketeering and trade in
illegal commodities during the Brezhnev period, allowed the mafia to acquire an
important position in the economy during privatisation. Now, the Russian mafia
have become so powerful that they operate internationally, particularly in West
Europe.
(C) Western Capital
And finally,
interwoven with these business houses and politicians, are the finance
capitalists of the West... particularly the USA and Germany. In the
crisis-ridden state of the world economy these imperialists are scrambling for a
potential market, with an eye also on the vast natural resources of Russia. It
was they who, in the first place, bank-rolled Russia’s transformation from state
capitalism by pumping in heavy doses of capital. ... the bulk of which has come
from Germany and the US. Besides, at times of severe crisis, the IMF has twice
intervened with huge loans.
Next, Russia is
importing from the West, not only the bulk of its consumer goods, but also vast
quantities of food.
Third, the West has
an eye on Russia’s vast oil and gas reserves, on which they expect to invest upto $60 billion. From the early period of privatisation the huge oil reserves
on the Sakhalin Island have been tapped by foreign consortia. In November ’97
Yeltsin abolished the 15% ceiling on foreign ownership of Russian oil firms....
Promptly, the two most lucrative oil firms, Lukoil and Rosneft, were opened up
for discernment.20
Finally, Western
capital is also seeking investment in the automobile and other consumer sectors.
With the cost of labour under half that of Poland’s and Mexico’s and
one-twentieth of Germany’s21 ... the West sees a big scope for making
large profits in Russia. So far, this oligarchy and their chief political
mentor, Yeltsin have been the most pliant accomplices of Western capital. This
was most crudely brought out during the 1996 presidential election campaign. Not
only did the Group of 7 oligarchs pump in $3 million into Yeltsin’s coffers and
undertake a publicity blitzkrieg in his favour (for which they were rewarded
with tax favours of $3.2 billion) — but the West too, backed Yeltsin to the
hilt. In order to facilitate Yeltsin’s victory France and Germany lent Russia
$400 million and $2.7 billion respectively and the IMF granted Russia a massive
$10 billion loan — This was the second largest loan ever granted by the IMF, at
that time.... and throughout the period prior to the election the IMF kept
praising Yeltsin’s efforts in stabilising the economy.
(3) A Weak Imperialist Power
The new Russian big
bourgeoisie who are organised into chaebol-style conglomerates have the capacity
to compete on the international arena if they put their house in order. After
all Russia has one of the richest natural resources in the world — with 40% of
the world’s natural gas reserves, 6% of the oil, 25% of its coal, diamonds, gold
and nickel and 30% of its Aluminum and timber.22 Greater protectionism
against the onslaught of foreign goods through a new set of policies and
devaluation of the rouble could help revive a collapsed manufacturing sector. In
January ’98 with the merger of the two oil companies, Yukos and Sibneft, the new
conglomerate has become the world’s third largest producer of oil. Also in the
sphere of finance, with the collapse of 450 of the 1700 banks in Russia, a
handful of them are emerging as powerful monopolies. Today the 100 biggest
Russian companies produce 40 to 50% of its total GDP.23
Yet today the Russian
monopolies are relatively small by international standards. Besides, most are
still in a state of stagnation and crisis. For example, overdue debts of
enterprises continued to build up, and by end 1997 reached the huge figure of
$127 billion .... i.e. more than twice the money in circulation.24 In
addition, due to the present crisis in the economy and the crashingstock
market, the drop in market capitalisation of the top ten companies in just one
year has been as high as 80% of their value, dropping from about $100 billion in
October ’97 to just $11 billion in October 1998. Their total earnings were as
low as $7.6 billion.25 In Russia, some manufacturing sectors are
virtually non-existent. Electrical goods production, with the exception of TV
sets and refrigerators has folded up. The only quality national producer of
washing machines, Vesta, went bankrupt two years ago. Most textile factories
have shut down. Besides, the Russian business houses have a robber-baron
mentality stocking away huge amounts abroad. It is estimated that in the first
five years of reform, total capital flight has been $350 billion.26
Besides, the Russian Oligarchy have been registering companies in free-tax
havens. For example, 16,000 have been registered in Cyprus alone.... and in 1995
$20 billion from Russia passed through the Bank of Cyprus — i.e. three times
Cyprus’s own GDP.27 Besides, in Russia itself, with government’s interest
rates soaring higher and higher, little incentive is left for investment in
industry and manufacturing. Finally, in today’s ‘globalisation’ atmosphere with
its ruthless cut-throat competition, the Russian bourgeoisie will find it very
difficult to compete with their counterparts in America and Europe. Of
course,like many of the other lesser imperialist powers they could develop in
conjunction with one or the other major imperialist powers.
(4) The Russian State
Like its economy the
Russian state has been enormously weakened compared to the days of the Soviet
Union. The decline has taken place on two major fronts –– (i) in the Central
Authority of the Federal structure and (ii) in its military power. Let us look
at both these aspects:
(A) Federal Authority
In the Brezhnev era,
not only was the freedom and autonomy of the nationalities that comprised the
Soviet Union ruthlessly suppressed, but even those that comprised the Russian
Federation, were crushed under the iron boot of Great Russian chauvinism. Thus a
highly centralised, dictatorial authority developed at Moscow. With the
weakening of the economy and state in the Gorbachev period the people of the
various nationalities (of the Soviet Union and within Russia) broke into revolt
and the Soviet Union collapsed. Russia itself, sought to maintain itself as an
entity, by diffusing these struggles and striking a compromise through the
Federation Treaty of 1992. In spite of this, Chechenya waged an armed struggle
against Russian authority and has defacto separated from the Russian Federation.
With the Federation
Treaty the homogeneous Russian state has been enormously weakened. Russia, with
a vast land mass covering 11 time zones, has now been divided into 89 separate
areas. These areas, as per the new Treaty comprise :
* 21 Republics
(including Chechenya)
* 52 Regions,
including the Jewish Autonomous Region
* 6 Territories
* 10 Autonomous
districts
The Republics are
titular ‘homelands’ of non-Russian minorities, who, as per the 1992 Treaty, have
been given a high degree of independence. They have their own constitution and
elect their own president. In practice many have drafted constitutions that go
well beyond the bounds set in the 1992 Treaty. Besides, nearly half of these
Republics have signed bilateral treaties with Moscow, modeled on the 1994 treaty
won by Tatarstan in which it extracted a special tax arrangement and the right
to conduct its own "foreign economic policy". The writ of Moscow is exceedingly
weak in these Republics.
The Regions and
Territories were run by Governors appointed by the President of Russia. However,
even here, since 1997 Governors are no longer appointed, but are elected by the
local populace.
Today, so thinly is
central policy spread that, save in defence and foreign policy, the Federal
Centre has little power. Besides, the threat of more Chechenyas looms large over
the Kremlin.
(B) The Military
The mainstay of
Soviet imperialism was Moscow’s mighty armed force and its deadly nuclear
weaponry. Today, though it continues to have a large stockpile of 22,000
tactical nuclear weapons scattered all over the country, it is a much weakened
force. Both in military hardware and in the fighting ability of its forces there
has been a significant decline. Here, we shall consider both these aspects. The
following chart28 gives a rough picture of this decline :
|
1987
(USSR)
|
1996
(Russia)
|
Tanks
|
53,300
|
16,800
|
Strategic Bombers
|
165
|
86
|
Submarines
|
360
|
183
|
Major Ships
|
274
|
152
|
ICBMs
|
1,418
|
800
|
Total Active Troops
|
5
million
|
1 million
|
We see that the
collapse of the Russian economy has also badly hit its armed forces. This can be
seen both in the realm of hardware and of personnel.
(i) Hardware
Due to the severe
cash crunch, procurement of all military weapon-systems has fallen almost to
zero, and the services are getting 15% to 20% of what they need just to replace
that which has been lost or taken out of service. In 1995 the air force asked
for 40 fighter planes, but got only six. For the next two years the army has not
purchased a single new tank or aircraft. Even the mainstay of the arsenal, the
800 land-based ICBMs, carrying ten warheads each, are aging and are kept on a
low-level peacetime alert. Only about 6,000 of the 11,000 warheads operational
in 1990, are functioning today.
Besides, in
conventional military warfare, upgradation of technology is a key factor for
superiority in battle. At one time the Soviet Union had a nearly ten-year lead
over the West in metallurgy, petroleum engineering, super conductivity, laser
research, astrophysics and space engineering. But today, military research
and development has suffered the same kind of cutbacks and lags behind the
leading NATO countries by a decade. Thousands of nuclear and other
scientists have sought employment in the West and even in the oppressed
countries. Many are eking out a living as taxi-drivers, hawkers, etc. In October
’98 the US, in order to prevent them from selling their know-how to the
oppressed countries, announced a $30 million programme to ‘rehabilitate’ jobless
scientists in Russia’s nuclear cities. The Council of Europe’s Education
Commission estimates that Russia loses $50 to $60 billion every year through
brain drain. The government is planning to further cut 45,000 jobs in the
nuclear sector.
Russia has been
trying to upgrade its technology but lacks the funds to do so. In end 1998 it
released photos of the most advanced MFI jet-fighter — equivalent to the US’s
latest F-22 Raptor — on which it has been doing research since 1980. It is yet
to conduct its maiden flight as there are no funds to develop it. More
important, in early 1999, Russia announced the development of its latest and
most advanced missile. The Topol-M ICBM is relatively light and can be moved
around on vehicles and carries a single warhead (legal under START-2). Russia
plans to build 40 such missiles by end 2000, but is, as yet, unsure from where
it will get the necessary funds.
(ii) Personnel
In addition to the
main military of over one million, Russia has concentrated on developing an
elite force of the Interior Ministry. This is a crack force comprising of 2a
lakh troops and 3 lakh armed police. Also, it is upgrading its Strategic Rocket
Force into a ‘Missile Special Force’ which will develop as its major deterrence
factor in case of full-fledged war. While the army goes without pay for months,
these special forces are always paid in time.
The army itself is in
a total state of demoralisation, as was highlighted by its humiliating defeat in
Chechenya. Throughout the two-year conflict, the General Staff had problems
finding combat-ready units to fight in the region. Major sections of the army
do not get paid for months.... food is scarce even for Moscow-based divisions,
let alone for those in far-off regions.... under-financing has reached such
proportions that soldiers are going hungry and survive by pawning wares on the
streets.... one-third of the soldiers are ‘underweight’... morale of the army is
low and indiscipline rife.... every year about 5000 conscripts get killed or
commit suicide as a result of widespread hazing26 (i.e. harassment with
overwork and bullying) and a large number of officers have fled to the private
sector.
Due to the big cuts
in the defence budget.... the army’s 186 divisions of a decade ago are down to
30.... the number of officers have been reduced from 3863 in 1992 to 2632 in
1998.... even training levels have been lowered due to a lack of resources...
today pilots are flying only 25 hours per year, compared to 200 hours in the
West. In spite of these severe cuts, there are plans to further slash the
defence budget. In 1998 Yeltsin suggested that the defence budget be further
reduced from 5% of GDP to 3% of GDP by the end of the century.
With conventional
forces in decay, military options will become increasingly limited and Russia
will be forced to depend even more on its Internal Troop Units that fared so
badly in Chechenya. Russia will lack strategic options between low intensity
operations by its crack troops of the interior ministry and full nuclear
response by its missile special force. The Nuclear threshold is thereby lowered.
With the focus being on the well-paid forces of the Interior Ministry, the
Government’s emphasis appears to be on preparing for disturbances within the
country and in neighbouring regions while sustaining their nuclear umbrella as a
low-cost defence mechanism. Russia’s drop in expenditure on military research,
has much weakened its military power in an age where most developed countries
rely more on high-technology striking capacity rather than bulky forces.
(5) Geo-political Significance of
Russia
From a mighty
superpower during the Brezhnev era, Russia today is reduced to a crippled power
desperately attempting to at least, keep within its fold some countries of the
erstwhile Soviet Union. It has lost most of East Europe and other countries of
the world to the West. It has thus been considerably weakened as an imperialist
power with reduced spheres of influence now confined to some of the CIS
countries, what remains of Yugoslavia, and to some extent, in India, Iraq, and a
few other countries. Both in the number of troops stationed abroad and in arms
exports, Russia has significantly declined vis-a-vis the other major imperialist
powers.
Today, the bulk of
its forces stationed abroad are in the CIS countries. Till a year back Russia
had 63,000 troops stationed in the CIS countries and only 2,400 in the rest of
the world (Vietnam, Cuba, Mongolia, Syria, Africa). It has provided 1,500 troops
to the UN ‘peace-keeping’ Forces. So, it appears, its main focus is today on the
CIS.
As far as arms
exports is concerned, today the bulk is monopolised by the US and Europe. In
1996, of the total global arms exports, the US accounted for 43% and the EU had
41%.30 From being the largest exporter of arms in the world in 1987,
Russia accounted for barely 10% of the total in 1995. The following table31
will give a picture of the relative changes in arms exports of the major
countries :-
Total Arms Exports
31
Country
|
1987
|
1995
|
$ billion
|
%of Total
|
$ billion
|
%of Total
|
USSR (’87)/Russia (’95)
|
29
|
37
|
3
|
10
|
USA
|
21
|
27
|
14
|
46
|
Britain
|
6.5
|
|
6
|
|
France
|
4
|
16
|
4
|
40
|
Germany
|
2
|
|
2
|
China
|
2.5
|
3
|
1
|
3
|
That too, a part of
Russia’s arms exports comprises of equipment to be disposed off, in return for
desperately needed cash /foreign exchange. In fact the bulk of its arms exports
goes to India, whose defence purchases from Russia are equivalent to that of the
rest of the world taken together. Much of the balance is sold to China, with
which it is seeking a closer alliance.
Today, the major
focus of its contention with the West, is focussed on the ex-Soviet countries,
against the NATO’s expansion eastwards, and to some extent over Iraq and the
middle east. On most contentious issues with the USA, outside of those
concerning NATO and the ex-Soviet bloc, it rarely goes much beyond the stand
taken by Europe, or, particularly France. So let us now focus more on Russia’s
relations with the ex-Soviet bloc and its problems with NATO :
(A) Russia and the ex-Soviet Bloc
Due to three decades
of domination Russia still has strong interests in these ex-Soviet countries. In
spite of huge investment by the West in this area, Russia still accounts for 50%
of the overall trade turnover of the 11-member CIS whereas for Ukraine,
Kazakhstan and Belarus the share of Russia exceeds 70% of their foreign trade.32
Russia, besides
stationing 63,000 troops in the area, has sought to tie up the area in a network
of agreements and treaties. On the other hand the West has poured in vast
amounts of funds to tie up the area in a web of economic and trade relations.
The battle with other imperialists, for the area, is intense specifically since
vast deposits of oil and natural gas have been discovered in the Central Asian
region.
Soon after the
collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia initiated the Commonwealth of independent
states in order to tie these countries to the chariot wheels of Russian
imperialism. This was followed, in May 1992, by the Tashkent Security Pact,
which was initially signed by Russia, Uzbekistan, Tajikistan, Kyrghyzstan,
Kazakhstan and Armenia and later joined by Azerbaijan, Georgia and Belarus.
(Earlier this year Uzbekistan left this pact). Then it tried to tie up the
oil-producing countries of the region in an OPEC-type agreement. It also
attempted to hold a summit of five nations (Belarus, Kazakhastan, Kyrgyzstan,
Tajikistan) to build a free trade zone amongst them. In Georgia it is suspected
that Russia was behind the two assassination attempts of the pro-US president
and was said to have supported the Abkhazia armed conflict. Also, while acting
as a mediator in the armed conflict between Azerbaijan an Armenia, Russia
secretly supplied $1 billion worth of arms to Armenia.
These attempts have
not achieved much success since Russia’s crumbling economy has been no match for
the West’s capital offensive in the region. In the past few years Russian
investment in the CIS accounted for just about 1% of all foreign investment.33
Trade with CIS has declined from 63% of Russia’s foreign commodity turnover in
1990 to just 21% in 1997. The present collapse of the Russian economy
leading to crises in many of the ex-Soviet countries, has made the latter look
even more towards the West. Besides, the Western imperialists have already taken
control over much of the oil and natural gas deposits found in the Caspian Sea
area. Utilising the conflict over gas exports between Russia and Turkmenistan,
the MNC, Shell, struck a deal with Turkmenistan to build a pipeline to Turkey
through Iran. While Russia has desperately been seeking to strike agreements
with the Caspian Sea area countries that oil be piped to Europe through Russia,
the US is pushing the Georgian route. One important objective of the US in the
region is to drag Georgia away from the CIS and put under Washington’s full
control the Azerbaijan-Georgia pipeline.
In this desperate
tug-of-war Russia only seems to have won out with Belarus, as the two countries
have agreed to merge into a single entity by mid-1999. While the Baltic
countries, Georgia, Azerbaijan and Uzbekistan, appear to have swung more towards
the West, the battle for Ukraine, the largest country of the ex-Soviet bloc, has
intensified. While, on the one hand it, in 1997 established close ties with
NATO, on the other, in 1998 it signed three treaties with Russia.
It is clear that
Russia will not easily give up its backyard to the western imperialists. Yet,
maintaining it, is proving to be an uphill task.
(B) Russia and NATO
No sooner had the
Warsaw Pact collapsed than NATO sought to fill the vacuum. In January ’94 the
partnership for peace (PFP) was launched by NATO which offered all the former
Warsaw Pact countries much closer military links, but no guarantee of eventual
membership. This was followed by the North Atlantic Cooperation Council (NACC)
and a large number of joint military exercises. In June ’96 plans were made for
the expansion of NATO giving membership to Poland, Hungary and the Czech
Republic by 1999 and then to ten other countries of Eastern and central Europe
in the following decade.
This decision which
totally bypassed Russia, and in fact sought to isolate it within its own
periphery came as a shock. The Russian ruling elite, after kowtowing to the
West, expected cooperation from NATO or at least consultation before entering
their ‘sphere of influence.’ Russia reacted with much threatening noise, but
little action. Dependent heavily on Western money, Yeltsin and the ruling gang,
were easily quitened by a Western package deal. In order to appease Russia, the
West offered more financial assistance (and promptly released a $697 million
installment of the $10 billion IMF credit)34; a review of the CFE Treaty
in favour of Russia, granting Russia special consultative status in NATO; and,
admission into the G-7. In return for such sops Russia accepted the expansion
and on May 27, ’97 quietly signed the charter setting up the NATO-Russia Joint
Permanent Council.
In return for this
council, with no real power, Yeltsin not only pledged not to target its nuclear
weapons at Europe, but also went so far as to withdraw the bulk of his forces
based near Europe (adjoining Poland) in the Kaliningrad Military District.
But a major sphere of
conflict in East Europe continues to be in the Balkans where the Russians back
the Serb nationalists in what remains of Yugoslavia, while the West has
aggressively pushed its interests in the other countries of that region. But
here too, Russia had quietly acquiesed to the November ’95 Dayton Accord and
also to the dispatch to Bosnia of a huge 30,000 NATO ‘peace-keeping’ force soon
after the Accord. But of course, the Slav nation continues to remain as the main
pocket of Russian influence in East Europe.... and with NATO’s military threats
to it over Kosovo, Yugoslavia has infact sought membership to the Russia-Belarus
union.
The tensions with
NATO continue, but Russia has, as yet, been too weak to aggressively assert
itself in the face of blatant provocation and open military threats to
Yugoslavia by US and NATO forces. Though, with the rise of Primakov and a
greater say of the Duma revisionists in the administration, contention with
other imperialists has somewhat sharpened (as over Iraq) and Russia is focussing
on strengthening its relations with its old ‘allies’, it is, as yet, not able to
significantly challenge the US, even in a place of outright aggression, like
Iraq. At the international plane it is seeking closer alliances with China and
some oppressed countries, but its distressing economic plight gives little
confidence to those countries with whom it seeks ‘strategic alliances’. Besides,
its goods are uncompetitive in world markets.
No doubt, Russia’s
contention with the US is bound to grow in future as part of the intensifying
inter-imperialist contradictions in the contemporary world. Today, the world is
going through a process of realignment among the various imperialist powers.
Things are still in a state of flux and clear-cut blocs are yet to be formed.
But in any future bloc that may emerge, Russia’s nuclear strength will give that
blocgreater military teeth in its contention with its rivals.
Having seen Russia’s
status in the world and its changes in its internal economic and political
structures, let us now turn to the plight of its people, the social conflicts
developing and the potential for revolutionary change.
(6) Destitution and Growing
Inequalities
Russia is today a
land of unpaid wages, poverty, hunger, starvation, disease, alcoholism and
premature death.
Today, the wage
arrears of $13 billion effect 65 million people. A survey in November ’96 found
that 62% of the people have not been paid on time. In just one year, the wage
arrears as a percentage of monthly GDP rose from 14% in 1996 to 26% in 1997.35
According to the official Russian Centre of the Standard of Living, 79 million
Russians (53%) live in poverty. The average salary today buys only two-thirds as
much meat as in the pre-reform days and about one-third as much milk. The
president of the Russian Medical Academy, Dr. Valentine Petrovsky, said that in
1996 Russians ate 30 to 60% less than 5 years earlier.... and in terms of
nourishment Russia ranked 36th in the world. Russia’s death rate has soared and
is now 1.6 times higher than the birth rate - - - the highest ratio in the
world. Life expectancy for men, in the five years since 1991, has declined form
65 years to 58 years, that places Russia on par with Kenya.36
In Russia today TB
and alcoholism are ravaging the population. There are 3 million TB cases with 1a
lakh new ones each year. Roughly 10% of the entire population are alcoholics,
and 80,000 die every year of excess drinking.
While the majority of
the workers, middle class, professionals, etc, have been pushed into extreme
poverty, a handful of elite have accumulated enormous wealth. Not only have big
business and the mafia stacked away billions abroad, but the politicians and
bureaucrats continue their Brezhnev-era style privileges. An example of these
inequalities is best portrayed by the fact that the once first Deputy Prime
Minister, A. Chubais, got an annual income equivalent to $4 lakhs.... and, of
course, this does not include the vast sums received for favours bestowed on
business, as was revealed in the press later. 2% of the top income earners
gobble up 57% of the nation’s assets. The poorest 10% of the population
accounted for just 2.6% of money income.37
With these terrible
conditions of life and the increasing inequalities a rising tide of protest is
growing throughout the country.
(7) Reform or Revolution ?
Continuing strike
activity has become a common feature of the Russian landscape. The most militant
of which have been those of the coal miners. In 1998 strike activity reached
such a pitch that the Kremlin threatened to use force. Bypassing the revisionist
leadership, wild-cat strikes to protest wage arrears were on the rise since May
’98 when hundreds of coal miners blockaded three railroads, cutting off supplies
to several large regions. In early August ’98 striking miners caused an acute
nuclear safety threat in the southern Urals region when they blockaded a local
power plant that supplies electricity to Mayak - Russia’s only nuclear-waste
processing plant. Strikes also spread to the municipal workers of Vladivostok,
Russian air-traffic controllers, etc.... In Sakhalin, protesters said they were
owed $16 million in arrears; in a rally in a city near Vladivostok, nearly the
entire adult population turned out in support. For over two weeks 200 miners of
Sakhalin picketed the Moscow headquarters. Loss in man hours due to strike
activity in Russia increased from 2 lakh man hours in 1992 to 5.7 million man
hours in 1997.38
Strikes of miners and
workers of the oil industry, the agricultural workers, the teachers, doctors,
scientists... have spread to a growing unrest in the armed forces. In fact the
entire country is ripe for an explosion ... what is lacking is the forces to
lead it.
The majority of the
so-called communists in Russia are seaped in revisionism. Four decades of
anti-Mao propaganda, by the successive rulers, has made it all the more
difficult for genuine communists to develop in Russia. While the official Duma-dominated
‘communists’ seek a market ‘socialism’, a number of other ‘communist’ groupings
are merely for restoring the earlier Brezhnev-type state capitalist rule. Both
only seek to resurrect the glory of the old super power status of the Soviet
Union. None of them is for revolution. The West’s dislike for the Duma-based
‘communists’ is not because they are communists but because they may not be as
pliable to Western interests and may seek more competition and contention in the
international arena. But, as these revisionists betray the masses in their
struggles, their support is fast dwindling. This was reflected in the October
’98 rallies in which one million people participated, compared to 1.8 million a
year earlier.
Without militant
leadership the masses are turning to individual acts of violence and registering
their protest in varied ways. This trend has particularly grown in1998. In a
survey conducted by the Russian Independent Institute of Social and National
Problems, 8% of the respondents said that they were prepared to take up arms.43
Without a genuine communist leadership, people are turning to spontaneous forms
of protest, without a definite direction.
But the writing on
the wall is clear. People will soon realise the futility of individual acts of
violence: these are bound to develop into more organised forms. In Stavropol, in
South Russia, anonymous leaflets announced the establishment of a ‘Union of the
Desperate - an underground association of citizens’, which vowed to wage "a
guerilla war against directors, managers and financial directors, of enterprises
who owe salaries and wages .... setting on fire apartments, cars, dachas and
cottages...". Also wildcat mass strikes are growing all over the country. In
addition, there is severe unrest in the armed forces. Obviously, the objective
conditions are ripe for great revolutionary advances in Russia, what is lacking
are the subjective forces to lead it. But, given Russia, great history ... as
the first country to lead a successful revolution, and as the birthplace of
great revolutionaries like Lenin and Stalin, it will not be long before such a
force stands at the vanguard of the Russian proletariat.
Notes
(1) Percentages compiled from 1997 data
taken from ‘The Economist’, July 12, ’97 and a paper of the All Union Communist
Party of Bolsheviks (AVCP of B) presented at the Brussels seminar, together with
the decline of 1998 added on.
(2) AVCP of B papers presented at
Brussels – 1997
(3) The Economist; November, 15, 1997
(4) The Economist; September, 5, 1998
(5) The Economist; July 12, 1997
(6) As reported on BBC
(7) EPW, July 17, 1998
(8) Russian European Centre for Economic
Policy
(9) The Economist; July, 12, 1997;
Newsweek, October 26, 1998
(10) EPW, December 12, 1998
(11) EPW, December 20, 1997
(12) Ibid.
(13) EPW, July 17, 1998
(14) The Economist; November, 22, 1997
(15) Source : EBRD, quoted in The
Economist; November, 22, 1997
(16) EPW, December 12, 1998
(17) EPW, July 11, 1998
(18) EPW, December 12, 1998
(19) Economic Reforms of Three Giants;
1990-Editors : Valeriana Kallab and Richard Feinberd; Transaction Books
(20) The Economist; November, 15, 1997
(21) The Economist; July, 12, 1997
(22) Ibid.
(23) Ibid.
(24) Times of India, January 21, 1998
(25) Forbes Global Business & finance :
November 16, 1998
(26) AVCP of B Paper
(27) The Economist; July, 12, 1997
(28) Arms Control Association, II SS
(29) "No stand-at-Ease for the Russian
Army" by Vladimir Radyuhin as quoted in `The Hindu’.
(30) The Economist; November, 22, 1997
(31) International Institute of Strategic
Studies; Quoted in The Economist; June, 14, 1997
(32) The Hindu; September 15, 1998
(33) CIS Inter-state Economic Committee,
April, 1998
(34) Times of India, May 28, 1997
(35) The Economist; July, 12, 1997
(36) Ibid.
(37) EPW; December 20, 1998
(38) The Hindu; February 19, 1996
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