Arrest of Russian defense minister's deputy may be strike by rival
'clan'
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[April 26, 2024]
By Andrew Osborn
LONDON (Reuters) - Sergei Shoigu, Russia's defence minister, has tried
to send a "business as usual" message since his deputy was arrested on a
bribery charge. But the widening scandal looks bad for him too, and is
seen as a push by a rival clan to dilute his power.
On the surface, the timing of the detention on Tuesday of Timur Ivanov,
one of Shoigu's 12 deputy ministers, was unexpected, coming when Russia
is waging war in Ukraine and the authorities have made discrediting the
army a jailable offence.
Allegations of graft funding a lifestyle way beyond his means made
against 48-year-old Ivanov by the late opposition politician Alexei
Navalny's anti-corruption foundation had been in the public domain for
more than a year with no apparent fallout.
Yet this week state TV suddenly showed Russians a perplexed-looking
Ivanov - who denies wrongdoing - dressed in full military uniform,
standing in a clear plastic courtroom cage of the type that so many
Kremlin foes have occupied before him.
His arrest, say Russian political analysts including some former
insiders, shows how the war is shaping infighting between the "clans"
that jostle for wealth and influence in Russia's sharp-elbowed political
system.
The clans - alliances of like-minded officials or business people -
centre around the military, the intelligence and law enforcement
agencies, the military-industrial complex and also include a group of
people from President Vladimir Putin's native St Petersburg who have
known him personally for many years.
"Someone in the elite didn't like the fact that Shoigu had grown
stronger," Tatiana Stanovaya, a senior fellow at the Carnegie Russia
Eurasia Center, told Reuters.
"This doesn't comes from Putin, but from people who are close to Putin
who think that Shoigu has overplayed his hand. It's simply a battle
against someone and a ministry that has got too powerful and an attempt
to balance the situation."
Abbas Gallyamov, a former Kremlin speechwriter who is now designated as
a "foreign agent" by the authorities, said he too saw the arrest as an
attack on Shoigu that would weaken him.
"Ivanov is one of the closest people to Shoigu. His arrest on the eve of
the appointment of a new government suggests that the current minister's
chances of staying in his chair are sharply declining," he said.
Ivanov was arrested as a result of an investigation by the
counterintelligence arm of the FSB security service, according to
Russian state media.
LUCRATIVE MILITARY CONTRACTS
Ivanov's is the highest-profile corruption case since Putin sent troops
into Ukraine in 2022. State media have reported that Shoigu has removed
Ivanov from his post.
The scandal comes just two weeks before Putin is inaugurated for a fifth
presidential term and before a government reshuffle expected next month
at which Shoigu's job will, in theory, be up for grabs.
Ivanov was in charge of lucrative army construction and procurement
contracts and is accused of taking huge bribes in the form of services
worth, according to Russian media reports, at least 1 billion roubles
($10.8 million) in return for handing out defense ministry contracts to
certain companies.
While few are willing to bet Shoigu will lose his job because of the
scandal, given his loyalty to Putin, Ivanov's arrest is seen as a
reversal for his boss, who's influence and access to the Kremlin chief
has been elevated by his key role in the Ukraine war.
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Russian Deputy Defense Minister Timur Ivanov inspects the
construction of a water intake facility on the Belbek River in
Crimea, in this handout picture released January 21, 2021. Russian
Defense Ministry/Handout via REUTERS/File Photo
The Moscow Times cited a senior government official as calling the
arrest a serious blow to Shoigu's camp and cited a source close to
the defense ministry as saying that the arrest was more about
politics and "Sergei Shoigu's weakening position" than about Ivanov.
Shoigu and the top army brass have at times been the focus of
vicious criticism from Russian war bloggers and nationalists who
have accused him, particularly after a string of retreats in 2022,
of incompetence.
Shoigu survived an abortive coup led by Wagner mercenary leader
Yevgeny Prigozhin, since killed in a plane crash, who in June last
year orchestrated a march on Moscow to try to topple him, but his
authority was damaged. Putin said the events could have plunged
Russia into civil war.
'FEASTING IN A TIME OF PLAGUE'
Shoigu had since managed to win back Putin's trust, but the arrest
of his deputy is a renewed setback.
"It indirectly damages Shoigu. Questions arise. How is it that a
person who was close to him and who he brought on managed to steal
so much under Shoigu's own nose?" said Carnegie's Stanovaya.
Sergei Markov, a former Kremlin adviser, has forecast that Shoigu,
in post since 2012, will keep his job regardless.
"Everyone is wondering - could this be a signal to Shoigu that he
will not be in the next government after 7 May?" Markov wrote on his
official blog.
"Calm down. He will be. Shoigu has created a new army since the
disastrous year of 2022 which repelled the offensive of the
Ukrainian army in 2023. And in 2024, the army is already advancing."
There is much about the background to Ivanov's arrest that remains
unknown. Multiple theories are circulating in Moscow about whether
the bribery accusation is the whole story, with unconfirmed media
reports that he may also be accused of state treason, something his
lawyer has denied.
Some have suggested that it was perhaps his love of a Western
lifestyle at a time when Putin says Russia is engaged in an
existential struggle with the West that may have been his downfall.
Others believe his family's fondness for luxury European holidays,
yacht rentals, Rolls-Royce cars and opulent parties was fine before
the war but was now seen as "feasting at a time of plague", a
Russian literary reference.
Shoigu has remained silent on the scandal, inspecting a space launch
facility this week as if nothing had happened.
The Kremlin has told journalists to rely solely on official sources
and has said that the often vast construction projects which Ivanov
oversaw - such as the reconstruction of the Ukrainian port city of
Mariupol - will not be affected. ($1 = 92.2705 roubles)
(Reporting by Andrew Osborn; Editing by Alex Richardson)
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