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Flight from Russia.


WHEN Alexander Litvinenko was asked on his deathbed who was behind his poisoning, he fingered Vladimir Putin. While the dots linking Putin to the polonium polonium (pəlō`nēəm), radioactive chemical element; symbol Po; at. no. 84; mass no. of most stable isotope 209; m.p. 254°C;; b.p. 962°C;; sp. gr. about 9.4; valence +2 or +4.  poisoning will probably never be connected, Litvinenko's death is part of a pattern. Political opponents of Putin have had a terrible sequence of unfortunate events.

While Russia liberalized effectively under Boris Yeltsin, it began to head south in earnest on July 2, 2003, when Moscow police arrested Platon Lebedev, a principal shareholder in a holding company that was the majority owner of oil giant Yukos. On October 25 of that same year, Russian security agents arrested Mikhail Khodorkovsky and placed him in prison. Khodorkovsky, who was outspoken politically, was ultimately put in a Siberian prison with a nine-year sentence. Yukos is now controlled by a Putin crony.

Lebedev and Khodorkovsky were hardly the only opponents of Putin to have a run of bad luck. Heroic journalist Anna Politkovskaya was shot before she could get to the bottom of what appears to be a terrible scandal involving the Russian handling of Chechnya. Pro-Western Ukrainian leader Viktor Yushchenko was poisoned with dioxin dioxin

Aromatic compound, any of a group of contaminants produced in making herbicides (e.g., Agent Orange), disinfectants, and other agents. Their basic chemical structure consists of two benzene rings connected by a pair of oxygen atoms; when substituents on the rings are
 (and survived). Litvinenko's compatriot com·pa·tri·ot  
n.
1. A person from one's own country.

2. A colleague.



[French compatriote, from Late Latin compatri
 Dmitri Kovtun now also seems to have been poisoned.

While these human tragedies have played out, Russia has also behaved poorly toward Western multinationals. My colleague Leon Aron reported recently that "the Kremlin halted or threatened to halt operations" by a series of companies including Royal Dutch Shell Royal Dutch Shell plc is a multinational oil company of British and Dutch origins. It is one of the largest private sector energy corporations in the world, and one of the six "supermajors" (vertically integrated private sector oil exploration, natural gas, and petroleum product , ExxonMobil, and Total. Aron adds that "it is an open secret in Moscow that the government's prime motive is to pressure the companies into either surrendering a share of production to the state or handing back their development licenses."

Russia is woefully woe·ful also wo·ful  
adj.
1. Affected by or full of woe; mournful.

2. Causing or involving woe.

3. Deplorably bad or wretched:
 underdeveloped given its human and natural resources. Its GDP GDP (guanosine diphosphate): see guanine.  per capita [Latin, By the heads or polls.] A term used in the Descent and Distribution of the estate of one who dies without a will. It means to share and share alike according to the number of individuals.  in 2005 was less than a third of Slovenia's, less than half that of Hungary, and only a smidgen above that of impoverished Romania. Russia is in desperate need of foreign resources to finance its development.

But the economic literature has shown that foreign capital flows to places that have a high level of economic freedom. Capital markets are a far more efficient deliverer of justice than any court. They punish dictators, and reward stability. Putin's actions should, the literature suggests, do enormous harm to the Russian economy.

While recent high oil prices may have given Russia some time, the nearby chart indicates that foreign capitalists have indeed taken note of Russian turmoil and headed for the exits. Foreign direct investment as a share of GDP, while remaining far below levels seen by other former Soviet-bloc countries, climbed steadily until 2003. Since 2003, it has plummeted. The turning point in the chart begins almost exactly when the Yukos affair began.

[GRAPHIC OMITTED]

This means that Russia is paying an enormous economic cost for Putin's thuggishness. Given the latest publicity, one should expect this trend to accelerate sharply. Without foreign capital flows, the Russian economy will stagnate stag·nate  
intr.v. stag·nat·ed, stag·nat·ing, stag·nates
To be or become stagnant.



[Latin st
, and Russians will fall farther and farther behind their neighbors. Russians are about to find out that corruption and cronyism Cronyism
Tammany Hall

Manhattan Democratic political circle notorious for spoils system approach. [Am. Hist.: Jameson, 492]
 look a lot like Communism.
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Article Details
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Title Annotation:Russian petroleum industry
Author:Hassett, Kevin A.
Publication:National Review
Geographic Code:4EXRU
Date:Dec 31, 2006
Words:511
Previous Article:The week.(Mitt Romney, John Bolton, Jimmy Carter)
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