Core Russia Articles

Here are Core Articles from outside Sublime Oblivion that hi-light some key points you need to assimilate to understand Russia today.

First, an objective list on must-read books to better understand Russia:

  • Putin’s Russia (Dale Herspring) – a series of essays from non-ideological Russia experts on its economy, politics, demography, society and military reform: an excellent foundational grounding in the subject.
  • First Person (Vladimir Putin) -
  • The Return (Daniel Treisman) -
  • Russia and the Russians (Geoffrey Hoskings) – the past is now, perhaps especially so in Russia; just as Putin’s Russia is a good foundation for understanding today’s Russia, Russia and the Russians is an objective and exhaustive sweep of its history.
  • Godfather of the Kremlin (Paul Khlebnikov) – an uncompromising look at the dirt and darkness of Yeltsin’s Russia, focusing on the life story of robber baron (and possibly worse), Boris Berezovsky. The 1990′s were very, very far from being a liberal democratic panacea. [original Forbes article]
  • Virtual Politics (Andrew Wilson) – argues that Russia’s recent history cannot be characterized as a golden transition to democracy now being thwarted by silovik / chekist forces of darkness (the dominant Western narrative). Instead the story is of a corrupt, semi-authoritarian elite using postmodernist methods like media manipulation, electoral engineering and other forms of “political technology” to sustain a simulacrum of democratic politics and hang on to power. [Virtual Politics in the ex-Soviet bloc | eXile review]
  • The Prodigal Superpower (Steven Rosefielde) - emphasizes the “structural militarization” of the late Soviet economy and its continuing implications on the Russian economy and politics today. [my review]
  • The New Cold War (Ed Lucas) – poorly written, approaches complex issues in a simplistic way and exhibits little understanding of the cultural differences between Russia and the West. The language is Manichean and sensationalist. Not recommended except as a portal into the Russophobe mind (please borrow from a library). [eXile review]
  • Russophobia: Anti-Russian Lobby and American Foreign Policy (Andrei Tsygankov) – an antidote to the above. [note: haven't read this myself yet]
  • The Brothers Karamazov (Fedor Dostoevsky) – though divorced from modern Russia, getting an appreciation for Dostoevsky’s work is indispensable for a deeper understanding of the mythical “Russian soul”.

Now for some key articles which I find to be objective interpretations, because these are often lacking in the Western media. Make sure to read the ones in bold

General “Russophile” Articles

The Russian Economy

  • Russia’s booming economy – this article illustrates the bankruptcy of several conceptions about Russia’s economy, including a) its hydrocarbons dependence and b) supposed stagnation in investment and manufacturing. In a similar vein, see Russia’s Surging Economy. Though now outdated due to the 2009 economic crisis – no nation can be said to have a booming economy at this time – their analyses nonetheless stand historically valid.
  • Diagnosing Dutch Disease: Does Russia Have the Symptoms? (Nienke Oomes & Katerina Kalcheva, IMF, 2007) – no firm evidence of that since manufacturing growth remains buoyant.
  • How to sustain growth in a resource based economy? (Rudiger Ahrend, OECD, 2006) – used wisely Russia’s resource windfall is no barrier to sustained industrial growth.
  • The Medvedev Economy (Josh Wilson) – an analysis of likely economic development trends in the next decade, which will focus on areas like agriculture and forestry that were relatively neglected during the transition period.
  • Dreaming with BRICs is the seminal paper in which Goldman Sachs predicted that Brazil, Russia, India and China will come to dominate the world’s economy as their average incomes converge to Western levels, as was the case in pre-industrial times. Note, though, that Russia is the only member who’s GDP per capita is expected to catch up to the leading countries’ in the foreseeable future. How Solid are the BRICs? expounds on this, evaluating each country’s ability to sustain growth by constructing a Growth Environment Index.
  • Russia’s Development Path (Chris Weafer) – “One of the criticisms levied at Russia is that it remains far too dependent on and, therefore, vulnerable to earnings from commodities… But the evidence is that, even from the early days of Vladimir Putin’s presidency, there existed at least a broad outline of a long-term development plan (see below for description) to transform the economy from its dependency on natural resources to one with a better range of drivers, where the risk of the sort of boom-to-bust cycle experienced recently is substantially reduced. In critical areas, the development plan for Russia differs very little from those of other nations, which have successfully transformed their economies”. [source]
  • RUSSIA 2010: Slow build over first half to boom in 2011 (Ben Aris) – calls to throw Russia out of the BRIC’s are “rubbish” according Jim O’Neill, the inventor of the concept. A detailed analysis of the Russian economy at the dawn of 2011.
  • Rerating Russia (Ben Aris) – why investors are under-appreciating Russia’s promise.
  • The Russians Are Coming (Chrystia Freeland)

Russian Politics and Society

Russia’s Liberals & Western Kremlinologists

International Relations

  • The Specter that haunts the Death of Litvinenko (Edward Jay Epstein) – see #42 in my Russophobe Myths for an alternative look at this supposed FSB assassination. Contrary to popular opinion, a) polonium is not that rare or specific to Russia, b) there is evidence Litvinenko was contiminated with polonium well before the fatal ingestion or his meeting with Lugovoi and c) Russian requests for actual evidence as to the guilt of Lugovoi were stonewalled by the British, who nonetheless arrogantly insisted on extradition in contravention of the Russian Constitution.
  • The Alexander Litvinenko Story Revisited (David Habakkuk) – delves further into the unpleasant murk.
  • Would the real Ukraine please stand up? (Graham Stack) – demolishes the myth that Ukrainians hate Russia – more of them want to join a Eurasian union than the EU.

Geopolitics & Security

Other Points of View on the Baltics

  • Russian rights and Estonian wrongs (Nicolai Petro) – Western double standards on human rights in Russia and Estonia: even as SS veterans proudly march through the streets of Riga and anti-fascist conferences and protests are brutally broken up, Western HR organizations whine about how Russian police disperse unsanctioned protests clogging up major city thoroughfares.
  • Linguistic minorities in Estonia: Discrimination must end (Amnesty International, Dec 2006) – the respected HR organization AI comprehensively documents Estonia’s pervasive anti-Russophone discrimination in language law, employment and democratic participation.
  • Discrimination against the Russophone Minority in Estonia and Latvia (London School of Economics, Feb 2005) – characterizes the two Baltic states as “ethnic democracies” which place “extensive policy regimes of discrimination” based on restrictions on Russophones under three policy pillars – citizenship, language, and participation. This is despite the fact that the vast majority of Baltic Russians (perhaps naively in terms of their own interests) supported the independence of their newly-adopted nation, not knowing that it would refuse to reciprocate the favor.
  • Discrimination of ethnic Russians in Latvia and Estonia (Carl Thomson) – another good summary.
  • Polity IV Country Report 2007: Estonia – the Polity IV project considers Estonia to be a marginal democracy because of its restrictions on political participation by Russophones.
  • Latvia’s economic boom turns sour (BBC) – Latvia prosecutes economists who dare suggest it will have to devalue its currency for “sabotage”.

Other Points of View on Georgia & Caucasus

Other Articles

“Russophobe” Articles

  • On Russophobia (Craig Pirrong) – “It is this fundamental philosophical and moral divide between the classical liberal views I espouse, and the anti-liberal views of the Putinists, that explains my intense antipathy for the current Russian government and state, and which is the wellspring of my trenchant criticism. It is not a divide that can be bridged, as these are antithetical conceptions of the roles of the individual and the state.”
  • Poles with Megalomania (Craig Pirrong) – Russians are…well, Poles with megalomania.
  • Neurosis (Craig Pirrong) – you guessed it.
  • Comment on George Handlery’s comment (Craig Pirrong) – characterization of Russia’s state-driven development as ““limited” resources become bundled by dictatorship to achieve maximal effect at a chosen point” and its problems.
  • DR (or is it S-O?) on Russian Demographics (Craig Pirrong) – he attempts to “refute” my article on Russian demography (Rite of Spring) and fails miserably.
  • The Slave Soul of Russia (Craig Pirrong) – Russia as a Romantic country defined by its holy suffering.
  • It’s so Romantic (Craig Pirrong) – argues Russia is afflicted by latter-day German Romanticism.
  • Russophobe Translations (La Russophobe) – say what you will about “her”, this is a useful service; unfortunately no such organization exists to translate Russophile thinking into English.
  • Nemtsov White Papers – yawn… see Sean Guillory’s response.

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