インターネットデパート - 取扱い商品数1000万点以上の通販サイト。送料無料商品も多数あります。

Mr. Putin: Operative in the Kremlin (Brookings FOCUS Book)

価格: ¥0
カテゴリ: Kindle版
ブランド: Brookings Institution Press
Amazon.co.jpで確認

Who is Vladimir Putin? Observers have described him as a "man from nowhere"—someone without a face, substance, or soul. Russia experts Fiona Hill and Clifford Gaddy argue that Putin is in fact a man of many and complex identities. Drawing on a range of sources, including their own personal encounters, they describe six that are most essential: the Statist, the History Man, the Survivalist, the Outsider, the Free Marketeer, and the Case Officer. Understanding Putin's multiple dimensions is crucial for policymakers trying to decide how best to deal with Russia.

Hill and Gaddy trace the identities back to formative experiences in Putin's past,
including his early life in Soviet Leningrad, his KGB training and responsibilities, his years
as deputy mayor in the crime and corruptionridden city of St. Petersburg, his first role in
Moscow as the "operative" brought in from the outside by liberal reformers in the Kremlin
to help control Russia's oligarchs, and his time at the helm of a resurgent Russian state.
The authors then examine the nature of the political system Putin has built, explaining it
as a logical result of these six identities.

Vladimir Putin has his own idealized view of himself as CEO of "Russia, Inc." But rather
than leading a transparent public corporation, he runs a closed boardroom, not
answerable to its stakeholders. Now that his corporation seems to be in crisis, with
political protests marking Mr. Putin's return to the presidency in 2012, will the CEO be held accountable for its failings?

"For more than a dozen years—the equivalent of three American presidential terms—
Vladimir Putin has presided over the largest nation on the planet, the second most
powerful nuclear arsenal, and massive natural resources. Yet there is still debate
about who he really is. Fiona Hill and Clifford Gaddy have gone a long way in
answering that question, starting with the title, which makes a crucial point: even
though 'Mr. Putin' was, in his upbringing and early career, a prototype of the Soviet man,
he's no longer 'Comrade Putin.' His aim is not the restoration of communism. He has
made a deal with the capitalists who have thrived in Russia over the past two decades:
they support him in the exercise of his political power, and he supports them in
amassing their fortunes."—from the foreword by Strobe Talbott