Fradkov The New Spy Chief
October 9, 2007
Just a few words on the fact that Mikhail Fradkov, who was forced to resign as prime minister in the last government shake-up, was appointment head of the Foreign Intelligence Service (SVR), replacing Sergei Lebedev (in turn made Secretary-General of the Commonwealth of Independent States, the organisational heir to the Soviet Union). This should serve as proof that Fradkov was not relieved of his duties as prime minister because of any incompetence. Incompetent people seldom end up as intelligence bosses. Let us not forget that President Putin himself started his career within the then KGB foreign intelligence directorate.
Since obviously Putin still has trust in Fradkov, the question arises why he was kicked out of his White House office. (If you don’t know your way around Moscow; the White House is most famous for being shot at with tanks in 1993 on the orders of then President Yeltsin, when it was the home of Parliament; it is now the house of the federal government). It could be because attempting to breed Fradkov as a potential presidential candidate for next spring was a no-brainer. Without any charisma and seen as a political nobody, the up-hill battle might have been considered too great. Also, his government were responsible for trying to reform the system of social benefits for pensioners, veterans and the like; this was something that brought huge crowds out on the streets to protest (a rare view of Russian democracy!) and did hurt the regime. These memories could prove to become a severe liability.
Fradkov’s successor, Viktor Zubkov, on the other hand has taken a rather colourful stand on several issues, yelling at cabinet members for not completing the tasks awarded by the president and even sending a senior government official off to remote Sakhalin to speed up the distribution of relief funds after an earthquake there. This last thing was widely recognised as merely nothing but a populist measure to show strength, but it is still quite hands-on. It might be, and I know I’m about to contradict myself here with regards to an earlier article, that the Kremlin is trying to create a positive image of Zubkov, so that he could run for president when Putin steps down. At 66, he would probably not last long, and with Putin as his prime minister he could quickly make him acting president again by resigning due to, say, health reasons. Or, it could all be a smoke-screen and someone else, previously known or not, might pop up and make a run for it. Russian politics are, as we all know by now, nothing but an endless row of complete surprises. There is never a dull moment.