
This
week Novaya Gazeta published transcripts of telephone conversations
between the commander of the airborne troops (Vozdushno Desantnye
Voyska or VDV) two star General Vladimir Shamanov, his son Yuri, VDV
Colonel Vadim Pankov and others. The Prosecutors Investigative
Committee (SKP), investigating General Shamanov's son-in-law Aleksei
Khramyshin for allegedly organizing an attempted murder of a
businessman in 2006, recorded the tapes on August 18. In the Russian
criminal world, Khramyshin is reportedly known as "Block" (Gliba).
There is an international arrest warrant on Khramyshin, who remains at
large (Novaya Gazeta, September 21).
The SKP declassified the
telephone tapes on August 26, and consequently their publication by
Novaya Gazeta is legal. The full audio files of the communications were
subsequently posted on its website (www.novayagazeta.ru, September 21).
On
August 18, special investigator of the SKP Moscow regional directorate
Oleg Tselepotkin was searching (with a warrant) the office of the
factory Sporttek in Moscow. Khramyshin is the owner of Sporttek, which
was Soviet-built and has ceased production, while the massive building
is leased out to different commercial entities for retail and as office
space (Komsomolskaya Pravda, September 23). Yuri Shamanov is a member
of the board of Sporttek. General Shamanov's daughter Svetlana claims
half of Sporttek, while her spouse Khramyshin continues to evade arrest
(www.lenta.ru, September 23).
On August 18, General Shamanov was
traveling from Ivanovo to Moscow and knew that Tselepotkin was
searching the Sporttek office. Shamanov telephoned Pankov and using
highly obscene language (according to the audio files), and ordered
Pankov to telephone Kubinka (45 kilometers west of Moscow), which is
the base of the VDV Spetsnaz 45th separate regiment, and order two
detachments of VDV Special Forces to be immediately dispatched to
Moscow. Shamanov ordered the Special Forces to block the Sporttek
office, not to allow anyone to enter or leave and to "intern"
Tselepotkin. Interspersed with expletives, he barked: "This Tselepotkin
must be standing before you, when I arrive. Forward!" Shamanov told
Pankov to contact his son Yuri to get the exact address of Sporttek
(Novaya Gazeta, September 21).
Pankov did not seem to fully
understand why Special Forces were being ordered to Moscow, but they
were moved in any case. While the Special Forces, Pankov and Shamanov
were moving into Moscow from different directions, Khramyshin's lawyer
Leonid Proshkin telephoned Tselepotkin to say that paratroopers were
closing in on him. Tselepotkin reported the situation to his superiors
and a decision was made to cut short the search and leave. The
paratroopers were redirected to the VDV headquarters in Moscow and
later were safely withdrawn back to Kubinka (Kommersant, September 23).
The situation was defused, until the Novaya Gazeta article was
published.
In Russia, publications disclosing rampant high-level
corruption or links between the ruling bureaucracy and the criminal
underworld are in most cases useless. Russia does not have an
independent judiciary or parliament that could investigate such leads
provided by journalists. The authorities in most cases simply ignore
such publications. However, Shamanov's case was handled differently.
The
Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov promptly ordered a special
investigation of Shamanov's actions (RIA Novosti, September 22). Deputy
Defense Minister Nikolai Pankov told journalists, "The investigation is
continuing and if the media publication is true, decisions will be
made" (RIA Novosti, September 23). Shamanov admitted that the recorded
conversations had occurred, but his words were taken out of context.
Shamanov complained that his telephone was tapped, that there is a
conspiracy to smear him, "organized by people from Moscow and Chechnya"
to oust him from the armed forces (Komsomolskaya Pravda, September 23).
A
decorated Chechen campaign veteran accused by human rights
organizations of war crimes Shamanov, as chief of the Defense Ministry
Main Directorate of Military Training from November 2007 to May 2009,
ruthlessly implemented a radical military reform disbanding old-time
divisions and forming new-style brigades. In May 2009, Shamanov was
appointed commander of the VDV (EDM, June 11). Shamanov does have many
enemies, but disgruntled officers, human rights activists or Chechens
cannot order Serdyukov to begin an official investigation. In fact,
Serdyukov would not have moved without an order from the Prime Minister
Vladimir Putin.
The fact that paratroopers were ordered into
Moscow and actually moved in without the consent of the Kremlin or
government has revealed a serious lack of political control. Russia is
an authoritarian state with no serious civil control over its military.
If Putin and the Putin-appointed President Dmitry Medvedev also cannot
control military movements even within Moscow, a coup in Russia is
possible.
Of course, Shamanov on August 18 was not contemplating
launching a coup, but apparently using paratroopers to defend his
family business interests. However, if such things are allowed,
Shamanov or another general (colonel) might in the future use Special
Forces to arrest Putin, or Medvedev, or both. Within Moscow a
relatively small troop of determined, well trained and armed soldiers
could do it. The radical military reform in Russia is aimed at creating
a more modern, mobile standing armed force and its men are increasingly
dependent on their commanders for their well being. Some officers are
today paid special bonuses that increase their income 3 to 4 times and
their commanders choose the lucky ones at will (Ekho Moskvy, September
19).
The Novaya publication apparently alerted Putin to the
danger. Shamanov may be ousted or severely reprimanded in order to
teach others a lesson. Officials that failed to stop or report the
unauthorized movement of paratroopers into Moscow may also be punished.
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