Russia's Putin to stay in power past 2024, sources say
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[November 06, 2023]
By Guy Faulconbridge
MOSCOW (Reuters) - Vladimir Putin has decided to run in the March
presidential election, a move that will keep him in power until least
2030, as the Kremlin chief feels he must steer Russia through the most
perilous period in decades, six sources told Reuters.
Putin, who was handed the presidency by Boris Yeltsin on the last day of
1999, has already served as president for longer than any other Russian
ruler since Josef Stalin, beating even Leonid Brezhnev's 18-year tenure.
Putin turned 71 on Oct. 7.
The sources, who spoke to Reuters on condition of anonymity due to the
sensitivity of Kremlin politics, said that news of Putin's decision had
trickled down and that advisers were now preparing for the campaign and
a Putin election.
For Putin, who opinion polls show enjoys approval ratings of 80% inside
Russia, the election is a formality if he runs: with the support of the
state, the state media and almost no mainstream public dissent, he is
certain to win.
"The decision has been made - he will run," said one of the sources who
has knowledge of planning. A choreographed hint is due to come within a
few weeks, another source said, confirming a Kommersant newspaper report
last month.
Another source, also acquainted with the Kremlin's thinking, confirmed
that a decision had been made and that Putin's advisers were preparing
for Putin's participation. Three other sources said the decision had
been made: Putin will run.
"The world we look out upon is very dangerous," said one of the sources.
A foreign diplomatic source, who also requested anonymity, said Putin
made the decision recently and that the announcement would come soon.
While many foreign diplomats, spies and officials say they expect Putin
to stay in power for life, there has until now been no specific
confirmation of his plans to run in the March 2024 presidential
election.
Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov declined to comment. Peskov said in
September that if Putin decided to run, then no one would be able to
compete with him.
The Kremlin has dismissed reports that Putin was unwell as
disinformation spread by the West.
RUSSIA AT WAR
While Putin may face no real competition in the election, the former KGB
spy faces the most serious set of challenges any Kremlin chief has faced
since Mikhail Gorbachev grappled with the crumbling Soviet Union more
than three decades ago.
The war in Ukraine has triggered the biggest confrontation with the West
since the 1962 Cuban Missile Crisis; Western sanctions have delivered
the biggest external shock to the Russian economy in decades; and Putin
faced a failed mutiny by Russia's most powerful mercenary, Yevgeny
Prigozhin, in June.
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Russian President Vladimir Putin speaks with members of public
associations, youth and volunteer organizations during a
flower-laying ceremony at the monument to Kuzma Minin and Dmitry
Pozharsky while marking Russia's Day of National Unity in Red Square
in central Moscow, Russia November 4, 2023. Sputnik/Mikhail Metzel/Pool
via REUTERS/File Photo
Prigozhin was killed in a plane crash two months to the day after
the mutiny.
The West casts Putin as a war criminal and a dictator who has led
Russia into an imperial-style land grab that has weakened Russia and
forged Ukrainian statehood while uniting the West and handing NATO a
mission.
Putin, though, presents the war as part of a much broader struggle
with the United States which the Kremlin elite says aims to cleave
Russia apart, grab its vast natural resources and then turn to
settling scores with China.
"Russia is facing the combined might of the West so major change
would not be expedient," one of the sources said.
Russian weapons production is soaring. Russia forecasts its $2.1
trillion economy will grow faster this year than the European Union.
The price of Urals crude oil, the lifeblood of Russia's economy,
averaged $81.52 per barrel in October.
TIGHTENING SCREWS
For some Russians, though, the war has shown the faultlines of
post-Soviet Russia.
Jailed Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny says Putin has
led Russia down a strategic dead end towards ruin, building a
brittle system of corrupt sycophants that will ultimately bequeath
chaos rather than stability.
"Russia is going backwards," Oleg Orlov, one of Russia's most
respected human rights campaigners, told Reuters in July. "We left
Communist totalitarianism but now have returned to a different kind
of totalitarianism."
Several hundred thousand Russian and Ukrainian soldiers are
estimated to have been killed or wounded in just over a year and
half of war, far more than the Soviet official casualties in the
entire 1979-1989 war in Afghanistan.
Before his mutiny, Prigozhin castigated Putin's generals for the war
and what he cast as its incompetent execution and warned that Russia
could face revolution unless the elite got serious.
"This divide can end as in 1917 with a revolution," Prigozhin said
one month before his mutiny.
(Reporting by Guy Faulconbridge)
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