THE WALL STREET JOURNAL. Friday, August 9, 2019 |A
I
t’s been 20 years since Vladi-
mir Putin came to power. On
Aug. 9, 1999, an ailing Presi-
dent Boris Yeltsin anointed
his successor by appointing
the little-known former KGB agent
as Russia’s fourth prime minister in
17 months. Yeltsin declared that Mr.
Putin would guarantee reforms in
Russia if he won the presidential
election in 2000.
In his two decades as either pres-
ident or prime minister, Mr. Putin
has seen four U.S. presidents and
countless other world leaders come
and go. After his first years in office,
he stopped pursuing reforms and be-
came increasingly authoritarian. But
he has also effectively managed to
reassert Russia’s role on the world
stage despite his country’s shrinking
economic power—a gross domestic
product smaller than Italy’s, a de-
clining population, antiquated infra-
structure, dependence on fossil-fuel
exports for 60% of the country’s
budget, and widespread corruption.
Despite these inhibitors, Russia has
reclaimed a seat at the table of the
global board of directors and re-
emerged as a disrupter of Western
interests, both foreign and domestic.
How has Mr. Putin done it?
Americans tend to think of Rus-
Russia is weak, but its
leader makes the most
of the West’s disarray
and indecisiveness.
Putin Plays Judo, Not Chess
sians as skilled chess players. Yet Mr.
Putin’s sport is not chess, but judo.
The Russian president has admitted
that he was a “hooligan” as a child
but that martial arts got him off the
streets: “It was a tool to assert my-
self in the pack.” He credits judo with
teaching him discipline and a specific
outlook on life. In 1976 Leningrad’s
evening newspaper hailed the 23-
year-old “judoist Vladimir Putin,”
who had won a prestigious competi-
tion and been elevated to the rank of
champion. Though he was little-
known then, the article predicted
that would soon change.
In judo, a seemingly weaker prac-
titioner can rely on inner strength
and force of will to defeat a larger,
stronger foe. One basic technique in-
volves putting an opponent off bal-
ance and taking advantage of his
temporary disorientation to strike a
winning blow. Mr. Putin has proved
adept at seizing opportunities pre-
sented by the West’s disarray and its
leaders’ indecisiveness. He had a plan
to restore Russia as a great power
when he took over from Yeltsin; the
U.S. has had no comparable strategy
in the post-Cold War era, and Russia
has taken advantage against its much
stronger competitor.
Mr. Putin’s skills are on display in
the Middle East, where Russia has re-
turned as a key player for the first
time in three decades, engaging all
sides of the region’s multiple con-
flicts. The key moment came in Syria
in 2013. President Obama had warned
President Bashar Assad not to cross a
“red line” by using chemical weapons,
but government forces used Sarin gas
to attack a rebel stronghold. Russia
claimed the rebels had launched the
attack, and in the ensuing weeks Mr.
Putin planted enough doubts interna-
tionally about what had happened
that Mr. Obama, also facing strong
domestic resistance, abandoned any
plans to launch airstrikes to punish
the Assad regime. The red line was
erased. Mr. Putin then stepped in as
peacemaker and proposed that the
U.S. and Russia jointly oversee the
confiscation of Syria’s chemical-
weapons stockpile.
Mr. Putin has exacerbated tensions
within the North Atlantic Treaty Or-
ganization by befriending Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who
is angry with the U.S. over its refusal
to extradite cleric Fethullah Gulen
and its criticisms of Turkey’s domes-
tic crackdown. Last month Mr. Putin
scored a big victory when Turkey re-
ceived delivery of its first Russian-
made S-400 air-defense system, in
defiance of NATO’s explicit prohibi-
tion on doing so, which led the U.S.
to cut off delivery of F-35 jets. The
episode also raised the larger ques-
tion—one much to Mr. Putin’s lik-
ing—of whether strategically located
Turkey will remain in the alliance.
Russia also took advantage of the
estrangement between the Obama
administration and Saudi Arabia to
build a strong relationship with the
Saudis for the first time. Their coop-
eration extends beyond oil to invest-
ment and diplomatic coordination,
and was entrenched by an elaborate
state visit by King Salman to Moscow
in 2017.
More recently Mr. Putin has seized
on the opportunity presented by the
Trump administration’s escalating
trade war with China to expand the
burgeoning Sino-Russian partnership
and make Moscow more indispens-
able to Beijing by strengthening mili-
tary cooperation. Last September
Chinese troops for the first time par-
ticipated in joint maneuvers in the
Russian Far East. This July came the
first-ever joint Russian-Chinese long-
range nuclear-capable bomber patrol
over the Sea of Japan, which trig-
gered an angry South Korean re-
sponse. Undoubtedly Russia is the ju-
nior partner in this relationship,
given the asymmetry between their
respective economies. But Mr. Putin
has built a partnership with Xi Jin-
ping, a like-minded authoritarian
who never criticizes him or chal-
lenges his domestic policies, as China
is also increasingly at odds with the
U.S.
Finally, Mr. Putin has jabbed the
pressure points in the European
Union. The more Brussels criticizes
Hungary for its increasing illiberal-
ism, the closer Prime Minister Viktor
Orbán moves toward Moscow, which
praises him and presents economic
and political incentives. Italy’s popu-
list and Euroskeptic government is
similarly becoming an outspoken Pu-
tin supporter and critic of EU sanc-
tions against Russia. Mr. Putin knows
how to play the power game; he even
keeps the pope waiting for him, as in
one meeting at the Vatican last
month.
As he marks two decades in the
Kremlin, Vladimir Putin has proved
himself the champion judoist, profit-
ing from divisions in the West, alert
for the next opening to reinforce Rus-
sia’s international clout, and quick to
act. He knows the moves.
Ms. Stent is director of George-
town’s Center for Eurasian, Russian
and East European Studies and au-
thor of “Putin’s World: Russia
against the West and With the Rest”
(Twelve Books).
By Angela Stent
MIKHAIL KLIMENTYEV/TASS VIA GETTY IMAGES
Putin in February
OPINION
Modi’s Kashmir Gambit Puts Pakistan in a Tough Spot
One of Asia’s oldest
disputes reached an
inflection point this
week as India sud-
denly terminated au-
tonomy for Jammu
and Kashmir, the
Muslim-majority
province claimed by
both India and Paki-
stan. The long-term
implications are un-
clear, but one thing appears obvious
already: When it comes to the seven-
decade-old Kashmir conflict, Pakistan
has few cards left to play.
Newly re-elected Indian Prime
Minister Narendra Modi fulfilled a
longstanding campaign promise by
ending a constitutional provision that
gave Jammu and Kashmir extra au-
tonomy from the federal government.
India has divided the state into two—
Muslim majority Jammu and Kashmir
and Buddhist-majority Ladakh—both
of which will be ruled directly by an
official New Dehli appoints. At least
in theory, all Indians will now be al-
lowed to buy property and settle in
either state, as well as attend univer-
sities and fill public-sector jobs long
reserved for locals.
Critics predict an upsurge in vio-
lence as disaffected Kashmiri Mus-
lims, denied meaningful recourse at
the ballot box by the state’s down-
grade, take to the gun. They accuse
the government of violating the
rights of Kashmiris, flouting constitu-
tional safeguards, and besmirching
Indian democracy. “If we let democ-
racy die a silent death in Kashmir, it
will die a silent death in the rest of
India as well,” says Shehla Rashid
Shora, a Kashmiri activist, in a phone
interview from Delhi.
Fearing protests, India has locked
down the already heavily militarized
Kashmir Valley by pouring in thou-
sands of fresh troops, arresting lead-
ers of local political parties, and
shutting down phone services, cable
TV and the internet. In a nationally
televised address Thursday, Mr. Modi
vowed to bring prosperity and good
governance to the territories.
It’s too early to say whether the
prime minister’s audacious gamble,
wildly popular among his supporters
and welcomed by many other Indi-
ans, will pay off. India’s Supreme
Court may well declare the decision
unconstitutional. But Pakistan, which
has long made Kashmir a central
plank of its foreign policy, lacks the
wherewithal to force India’s hand. By
backing jihadist groups in India and
Afghanistan and neglecting its econ-
omy, Islamabad has ensured that it
lacks the stature to make India take
its views on board.
The Kashmir dispute dates back to
the 1947 partition of British India
into Muslim-majority Pakistan and
Hindu-majority but officially secular
India. Under the terms of Britain’s
departure, native princes who ruled
hundreds of nominally independent
kingdoms had to choose between In-
dia and Pakistan. For the most part,
these choices broke along religious
lines. But in Jammu and Kashmir the
Hindu ruler of a Muslim-majority
kingdom, faced with an invasion by
Pakistan-backed irregulars, acceded
to India. In return, New Delhi prom-
ised to respect the state’s right to
make its own laws in most matters.
Now it has voided that agreement.
India controls 55% of the disputed
territory, including the populous Kash-
mir Valley. Pakistan holds 30% percent
and China 15%, including a part ceded
to it by Pakistan. Generations of Paki-
stanis have grown up regarding Kash-
mir as “the unfinished business of
Partition.” The word Pakistan, which
means “land of the pure,” is an acro-
nym in which the K stands for Kash-
mir. India and Pakistan have fought
three wars over the territory.
Pakistan reacted angrily to India’s
latest actions. It downgraded diplo-
matic relations, ended bilateral trade,
banned Indian movies, and sus-
pended a train service between the
two countries. Prime Minister Imran
Khan has promised to take his case to
the United Nations and appealed Sun-
day to President Trump to mediate.
Last month, in a press appearance
with the visiting Mr. Khan, Mr.
Trump claimed Mr. Modi had asked
him to mediate the dispute, which
New Delhi promptly denied as con-
trary to its policy of treating Kashmir
as a bilateral dispute with Pakistan.
So far Pakistan has little to show
for its efforts. The U.S., mindful of In-
dian sensitivities about mediation,
urged “all parties to maintain peace
and stability along the line of con-
trol,” the de factor border in Kashmir.
China made a tepid statement about
India’s act being “unacceptable” after
Home Minister Amit Shah reiterated
Indian claims to Chinese-controlled
territory. The U.N. expressed concern
about “the human rights situation in
the region.”
Pakistanis who find this response
underwhelming ought to blame their
army. Its support for jihadist proxies
has made Kashmiri separatism syn-
onymous with Islamist extremism.
Pakistan could step up that support,
but at the risk of both international
censure and Indian military retalia-
tion. With its economy in the midst
of an International Monetary Fund
bailout—the 13th in three decades—
Islamabad has limited ability to le-
verage its role as a facilitator for the
U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan.
Meanwhile, India’s $2.7 trillion
economy, more than eight times as
large as Pakistan’s, gives it interna-
tional heft. The Pakistan army’s own
shabby treatment of journalists, op-
position leaders and ethnic move-
ments representing the minority Bal-
uch and Pashtuns, makes it hard for
Islamabad to argue that Kashmiris
will be better off in Pakistan.
In the long term, Mr. Modi’s Kash-
mir gamble may flounder. If it does, it
will be because India foolishly forces
its diversity into a Hindu nationalist
straitjacket, not because of anything
Pakistan does.
Islamabad has little clout,
what with its support for
terrorism and an economy
one-eighth India’s size.
EAST IS
EAST
By Sadanand
Dhume
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A Minuscule Mob Shuts Down a Debate on Reparations
I
t doesn’t take a lot of people to
form a mob. When universities
cancel speeches, it’s almost al-
ways in response to the demands of a
tiny but loud minority. And last
month New York’s Comedy Cellar can-
celed a debate on slavery reparations
in response to a puny protest.
Owner Noam Dworman and his pal
Stephen Calabria have been organiz-
ing debates at the club since 2015,
discussing hot topics from the Iran
nuclear deal to America’s decline.
About a week after tickets for the
July 22 reparations debate went on
sale, they started “receiving ominous,
threatening phone calls and emails
that we should not go forward with
the debate,” Mr. Calabria said.
They reluctantly called off the
event. “There’s no upside to doing
this debate, and the risks were pretty
serious,” Mr. Dworman said. “If there
had been a disturbance there, even if
a security guy properly intervenes, it
could be ugly. You could have some-
one hurt, you could have unfair viral
videos. Who knows what the hell
could happen?” Mr. Calabria disputes
the suggestion that they chickened
out: “It’s very easy for people on the
sidelines to make that sort of judg-
ment call when it’s not their liveli-
hood on the line, not their business
on the line, not their debate series on
the line.”
Still, it seems like an overreaction.
Mr. Dworman estimates the Comedy
Cellar received 10 angry phone calls
or emails. A few dozen more com-
plained about the event on Twitter.
“They never directly threatened vio-
lence” or even disruption, Mr. Ca-
labria acknowledged. “There was in-
timidation and there were veiled
threats.”
The two grew especially alarmed
after a Twitter user posting as
@lionorder19 posted a photo of the
Comedy Cellar’s general manager and
claimed she was “responsible for the
reparations debate.” He urged follow-
ers: “Please do your part. Put an end
to this.” In a separate tweet, the
same user said he planned to call, de-
mand the event’s cancellation, “and if
they refuse, imma hit my contacts
and let some heavy hitters know
[what] is going on.”
@Lionorder19, whose real name is
Larry Boone, said the topic of repara-
tions “as a whole is definitely not up
for debate. It’s not.” Don’t call it de-
bating, but Mr. Boone spent nearly an
hour on the phone thoughtfully re-
sponding to my skeptical questions.
For centuries, he said, blacks in
America have been enslaved, brutal-
ized, raped and otherwise deprived
of basic rights—and that’s undebat-
able since it’s a matter of fact, not
opinion. American descendants of
slavery are citizens who have a con-
stitutional right to hold their govern-
ment accountable. He views repara-
tions as damages due from the
government, not contemporary
Americans, so he sees their opinions
as irrelevant here. Mr. Boone said he
also took offense at the idea of dis-
cussing his ancestors’ suffering at a
comedy club, especially if it’s a for-
profit event.
Mr. Boone said canceling the de-
bate was the right thing to do, but “we
live in a free society. So do what
you’ve got to do. And we’ll do what we
have to do.” But he disclaimed any vi-
olent or disruptive intent. “My ‘heavy
hitters’ are businessmen and -women
as well as those who have strong po-
litical connections,” he said. He said
he advised friends that “no one should
spend their energy to go protest this
thing,” because “we don’t want to get
into a yelling match.” He likened his
tweet of the manager's photo to a pic-
ture in a newspaper: “No one threat-
ened her.” He was dismayed that
Messrs. Dworman and Calabria saw
the tweets as menacing.
It’s possible that others would
have tried to disrupt the debate. But
the Comedy Cellar isn’t usually afraid
of controversy. Last August it was the
site of Louis C.K.’s first set after his
public acknowledgment of lewd con-
duct in front of female comedians.
That’s different, Mr. Dworman said. It
“touched on our core business, which
is presenting comedians....Iwas
ready to take a stronger stand be-
cause if I didn’t, I’d be jeopardizing
the whole way I do business. With
this debate thing, I had to remind
myself I’m just doing this for fun.”
But a comedy club’s business de-
pends on freedom of speech, and an
unwillingness to take risks com-
pounds the danger—a point Mr.
Dworman conceded: “I think it’s very
easy to make the case that when
someone like me buckles—and I did
buckle—there is blood in the water,
and it encourages people to do this
kind of thing.”
Ms. Melchior is a Journal editorial
page writer.
By Jillian Kay Melchior
‘When someone like me
buckles,’ admits the owner
of the Comedy Cellar,
‘there is blood in the water.’
Celine Sui writing for the South
China Morning Post, Aug. 5:
Shanghai’s waste sorting system
adds yet another level to surveillance
in China. In 2018, the city rolled out
smart recycling bins—receptacles
which come complete with video
cameras and scanners, and which are
able to distinguish between catego-
ries of garbage and collect waste dis-
posal data.
To use these bins, residents swipe
smart cards. Those who sort their
waste regularly earn cashable points,
and those who do not might receive
a visit from the neighbourhood com-
mittee.
The next stage—transferring gar-
bage from bin to treatment centre—
also involves high-definition cameras
and AI tools. In March, Shanghai
launched an information platform
that tracks the entire process of
waste disposal. Cameras are installed
on garbage trucks and in transfer sta-
tions, where 2,000 to 3,000 photos of
the trash are taken, then analysed us-
ing AI to detect garbage that has
been misclassified—for example, a
plastic bottle that has been chuck in
with wet waste.
“We know which truck entered
which district when and collected
how much garbage,” Zhang Zhigang,
an executive of the system developer,
told Xinhua.
Setting up a data gathering system
for waste sorting is...aprime ex-
ample of how integrated and multi-
faceted China’s data system will
eventually become.
Notable& Quotable: Recycling