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Report from Russia: Kennan Institute Report
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June 4, 2006
Dear CCI friends,
Amid sensationalized and politicized reporting on
Russia and US-Russia relations today, it's a
breath of fresh air to read the Kennan Institute
report below where four scholars, including Jack
Matlock, former Ambassador to the USSR-Russia,
provide their seasoned insights.
Unfortunately, this kind of balanced assessment
doesn't make front-page headlines. Please
forward it to colleagues you feel might be
interested - it may help dilute some of the
hyperbole being printed by those with personal
agendas who have ready access to the media.
I'm leaving Dubna today and on way to Yaroslavl
via auto to meet with alumni, then Rpinsk for a
Rotary meeting with alumni and discussions about
YMCA, then Petersburg and surrounding areas.
My best to you,

Sharon Tennison
President
Putin and the Russian Tradition: Illiberal but Democratic?
Kennan Institute
MAY 9, 2006
At a recent Kennan Institute talk, Hugh Ragsdale,
independent scholar; Paul Stephan, Lewis F.
Powell, Jr. Professor of Law, University of
Virginia; Allen Lynch, Professor, Department of
Politics, University of Virginia; and Jack
Matlock, Sol Linowitz Professor of International
Relations, Hamilton College, and former U.S.
Ambassador to the USSR, discussed recent U.S.
characterization of Russia as an undemocratic
country. While the speakers acknowledged that
President Vladimir Putin had instituted a number
of illiberal policies, they argued that he is a
democratically elected leader and that his
policies reflect the real wishes of the majority
of the Russian people. Criticizing Putin hurts
U.S. national interest and is unlikely to
influence Russia, they contended.
Hugh Ragsdale argued that Russia has a viable
tradition of democracy, but no tradition of
liberalism. RussiaŐs current government
corresponds to the preferences of many Russians
for authoritarianism and populism over
liberalism. PutinŐs government does not conform
to the American ideal of liberal democracy, but,
according to Ragsdale, PutinŐs policies do not
threaten U.S. interests. Instead, in his view,
Putin is a potential U.S. ally who has been
alienated by aggressive American policies, such
as support for the colored revolutions in three
post-Soviet states and NATO expansion, and by
harsh criticism of Russian domestic and foreign
policy. The United States, Ragsdale contended,
has replaced the Soviet Union as the supporter of
worldwide ideological revolutions, and is hurting
its own interests by doing so.
Allen Lynch noted that, historically, good
U.S.-Russian and U.S.-Soviet relations have not
been predicated on RussiaŐs democratic
credentials. Relations between the two states
tend to be strong when neither attempts to be
intimately involved in the policies of the other
and both focus on pragmatic, shared interests. He
gave WWII as an example of successful cooperation
based on a shared goal. Relations between the
U.S. and Russia have broken down, according to
Lynch, when they become excessively intimate. In
the early 1990s, he said, the United States
became too closely involved in the process of
political and economic reform in Russia, and by
doing so engendered a major wave of anti-American
sentiment and the strained U.S.-Russian relations
that exist today.
Paul Stephan elaborated on the legacy of U.S.
involvement in Russia during the early 1990s. He
argued that the U.S. sided with Boris Yeltsin
rather than with the Russian people, and
developed programs based on false assumptions
about the RussiaŐs political and economic
systems. Because of this ill-fated intervention,
many Russians came to believe that American
intentions toward Russia are malevolent and that
the goal of U.S. democracy-promotion efforts is
to weaken Russia. In this hostile environment,
Stephan said, the U.S. has little ability to
exert any influence on Russia.
Jack Matlock argued that the United States tends
to hold Russia to idealistic standards of
democracy and liberalism that no other country is
expected to meet. The political and economic
systems of the USSR were deeply flawed, he said,
and it is unrealistic to expect Russia to have
become a mature, liberal democracy in 15 years.
Also problematic, according to Matlock, is the
fact that U.S. leaders have recently been
criticizing Russia for its lack of democracy and
respect for human rights, while ignoring similar
situations in other countries such as China.
Because of this double standard, Matlock
contended, it is not surprising that many
Russians see U.S. criticism as hypocritical and
self-serving. A more productive approach, he
argued, would be for U.S. officials to bring up
concerns about democracy and human rights in
private meetings with Russian officials.
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