DAVOS, Switzerland -- A Russian doctor
told the ambulance driver to take his patient directly
to the morgue. "Why?" cried the patient. "I'm not dead
yet." "Shut up," said the doctor. "We're not there yet."
That lugubrious joke is being told about
Vladimir Putin, chosen by the Kremlin clique to succeed
Boris Yeltsin. In eight weeks, riding a wave of war hysteria,
this K.G.B. apparatchik is likely to be elected president
-- to take his patient, Russia, to the cooler of repression
and autocratic rule.
President Clinton refuses to see this.
In his whirlwind junket to the annual Davos gathering
of politicians, executives and scientists, his lame-duck
army of aides passed the word that Putin could well be
a closet democratic reformer.
Americans here were already embarrassed
by their president's royal arrival. The day before, Britain's
Tony Blair came with a modest party of 15 to deliver his
speech.
But when hundreds of junketeering Clintonites
descended on Davos, meeting participants were ordered
out of the hall to make room for the huge entourage. When
the offended audience resisted, the Clinton traveling
claque had to relent.
More dismaying was the Clinton refusal
to see that its Russia policy -- by failing to tie economic
aid to democratic reform and property rights -- has been
a flop. The result has been the takeover of the government
by a combination of corrupt oligarchs, the internal police
and the army.
Yeltsin's extended "family" put a K.G.B.
man in place, took advantage of lawlessness in Chechnya
to launch a popular war and called a snap election to
capitalize on the war fever. By so doing, they avert prosecution
for corruption and silence the beginnings of a free press.
It's working for them. An instant cult
of personality has been created for Putin -- tough-minded
and lean-bodied, in contrast to the staggering Yeltsin
-- and he rides high astride his Chechen warhorse. The
army is with him: he pays the troops, and has raised spending
on armaments by 50 percent.
He is a man whose basic principle is to
have no inconvenient principles. His first major political
act was to double-cross the fake reformers close to the
Kremlin by making a deal with the Communist Party. Now
Putin controls the Kremlin while his new Communist allies
-- along with the wildman Vladimir Zhirinovsky -- dominate
the parliament.
He is now counting on his generals to
crush the Chechens before March 26, election day, or at
least to provide the illusion of low-casualty victory
until then. His surprise enemy at home is the Committee
of Soldiers' Mothers, a hard-to-harass group that provides
casualty figures 10 times greater than Kremlin disinformation.
He has been suppressing the truth by
arresting journalists who dare to report from the front
lines and silencing independent TV commentators. Media
controlled by Boris Berezovsky, the Putin sponsor reportedly
denied entry to Davos by Swiss authorities, tout the new
Napoleon to the skies and besmear opponents.
That opposition is on the run. Names
like Primakov and Luzhkov -- seemingly sure things for
power six months ago -- have faded fast. The Communist
boss Zyuganov exists only as a foil with no future.
The only real reformer left standing
is Grigory Yavlinsky, who suffered losses for daring to
denounce the switch in goals from anti-terrorism to all-out
war. He is gutsily running again, but his time won't come
until Russians tire of stagnation, weary of war and are
no longer bamboozled by the Kremlin-controlled media.
Until then, Putin is the oligarch-K.G.B.-army
choice. But his quick popularity in polls rests on war
fever; when that dissipates, so may he. If he does not
win a majority in the first round, the fickle Russian
public could drop him overnight.
The irony is that a "Putin era" would
mean an uncompetitive, economically weakened Russia --
no threat to the West. A "Yavlinsky era" would marry a
literate work force to a free-market system under law
-- and Russia would soon compete as a world power.
Those fearful of resurgence of Russian
power prefer the surly stagnation of what would come to
be called Putinism. The more hopeful of us wish the Russians
a better life, but should be careful what we wish for.