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Viewing cable 07MOSCOW4598, Samara Oblast: New Sheriff in Town

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Reference ID Created Released Classification Origin
07MOSCOW4598 2007-09-18 17:01 2011-08-24 01:00 UNCLASSIFIED//FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Embassy Moscow
VZCZCXRO0776
RR RUEHDBU RUEHLN RUEHPOD RUEHVK RUEHYG
DE RUEHMO #4598/01 2611701
ZNR UUUUU ZZH
R 181701Z SEP 07
FM AMEMBASSY MOSCOW
TO RUEHC/SECSTATE WASHDC 3967
RUCNCIS/CIS COLLECTIVE
RUEHXD/MOSCOW POLITICAL COLLECTIVE
UNCLAS SECTION 01 OF 02 MOSCOW 004598 
 
SIPDIS 
 
SIPDIS 
SENSITIVE 
 
E.O. 12958:  N/A 
TAGS: PGOV SOCI PINR RS
SUBJECT:  Samara Oblast:  New Sheriff in Town 
 
Ref: 2006 Moscow 12812 
 
1. (SBU) SUMMARY: The shocking speed in which Yeltsin-era Governor 
Konstantin Titov was replaced after 16 years in power has fostered 
an atmosphere of nervous expectation among the political elite in 
Samara. In a whirlwind of events this August, Titov announced his 
resignation; Putin nominated Artyakov; the regional Duma approved 
him; and the then president of Avtovaz Vladimir Artyakov was 
inaugurated as the new governor.  Despite his tenure as the head of 
the region's largest employer and his election to the regional Duma, 
Artyakov remains an enigma for many in Samara who share concerns 
that his arrival could mark the end of Samara's comparatively 
pluralistic political environment. Others, likely including 
Artyakov's supporters in Moscow, have a different take, and see the 
new governor as a "new broom" to sweep clean the corruption of local 
"oligarchs" and re-assert order in the region. End summary. 
 
--------------------------------------------- - 
Titov Failed to Deliver for United Russia 
--------------------------------------------- - 
 
2. (SBU) During discussions in Samara on September 10 and 11, most 
interlocutors viewed Titov "the man" with a certain respect, seeing 
him as a leader who had been capable in managing the competing 
interests of a number of political and economic groups within the 
region. However, in recent years, his performance had declined and 
he was seen by many as being too deeply ensnared in corruption and 
his own business interests -- leading to what Sergey Kurt-Adzhiev, 
the chief editor of the local edition of Novaya Gazeta, 
characterized as a period of stagnation. People had grown frustrated 
with the lack of progress and blamed the regional administration. 
(One common complaint by all interlocutors, including taxi drivers 
and the hotel staff, was the poor conditions of the roads in Samara 
oblast. They blamed former Mayor Limanskiy particularly for failing 
to maintain the Samara city infrastructure.)  Sociologist Vladimir 
Zvonovskiy linked the decline in Titov's effectiveness to Putin's 
2005 decision to have governors appointed by Moscow rather elected; 
with the implication that the change meant that Titov was no longer 
responsible to the citizenry of the region. 
 
3. (SBU) Titov's removal, according to pundits in Moscow and Samara, 
resulted primarily because the Kremlin no longer had faith that 
Titov could manage regional political conflict or handle relations 
with the center. Titov appeared unable to help the fortunes of the 
Kremlin-backed United Russia (UR) party; during elections to the 
oblast Duma in March, UR candidates won just over 30 percent of the 
vote -- far below the hopes and expectations of the party's Moscow 
leadership. In public statements in August, just before he resigned, 
the former governor said that he would not serve as the "locomotive" 
to push support for UR, a position that suggested his reluctance to 
use administrative resources to promote the party's candidates in 
upcoming State Duma and Presidential elections. Further complicating 
Titov's efforts, conflicts between regional elites had escalated as 
powerful local business interests supported their own candidates in 
the oblast Duma and mayoral elections. Those local "oligarchs" last 
year provided financial backing to help Viktor Tarkhov win the 
mayoral election in Samara on a Just Russia (SR) ticket, defeating 
the incumbent UR candidate Georgiy Limanskiy.  (See REFTEL) Given 
the increasing stakes in the run-up to national elections, it seems 
likely that the Kremlin brought in Artyakov to reassert some balance 
in regional politics. 
 
--------------------------------------------- ---- 
Titov: A Victim of Inter-regional Power Struggle? 
--------------------------------------------- ---- 
 
4. (SBU) Many of our contacts in Samara related the quick 
replacement of Titov with a perceived Kremlin strategy to break the 
power of regional elites. The chief editor of the local branch of 
the independent radio station Ekho Moskvy, Tatyana Prokopavichene, 
saw the replacement of Titov as another step in a program to remove 
the Yeltsin-era regional elite. (She excepted Mintimer Shaymiyev of 
Tatarstan, however, noting that he has a special place among the 
Muslim population "like President Nazarbayev in Kazakhstan.") 
 
5. (SBU) Titov's decision to resign may also have been connected to 
concerns that information about his business interests and corrupt 
past relations were about to be revealed. Ludmila Kuzmina of the NGO 
"Golos" related the arrest of Togliatti Mayor Utkhin in early May to 
Titov's ultimate decision to offer his resignation.  Utkhin had been 
the chairman of the oblast Duma Committee on Budget, Finance, and 
Economic and Financial Policy for the past three convocations and 
Embassy interlocutors surmised that he knew enough about regional 
financing and flows to Titov's business interests to compromise the 
governor. They speculated that Utkhin might have been willing "to 
make a deal" with investigators in order to bring down Titov. 
 
--------------- 
The New Sheriff 
--------------- 
 
 
MOSCOW 00004598  002 OF 002 
 
 
6. (SBU) Embassy interlocutors were mixed in their assessments of 
what the Artyakov administration would look like. Mikhail Sychev, 
the head of the Just Russia (SR) party apparatus in Samara, said 
that people had lost faith in Titov because he no longer was able to 
fulfill his political promises.  Sychev predicted the appointment of 
Artyakov would usher in an age of increased discipline and improved 
government for the region. He expected no broad scale change of 
cadres, but suggested that those who had grown comfortable under 
Titov would have to prove their efficiency to a new boss. 
 
7. (SBU) The chairman of the Samara regional Yabloko party, Igor 
Ermolenko, expressed his concern that Artyakov's role in Samara was 
to "do what Putin had done" on the national level: clean out the 
oligarchs and assert the prominence of the government-controlled 
holding companies.  Golos' Kuzmina said that she expected Artyakov 
to remain in power for only a year, once he had stabilized the 
region's "cadres," he would be moved to other tasks. Kuzmina 
gleefully predicted that there would be greater political infighting 
as regional businessmen defended their interests against the 
"bureaucrats from Moscow" that were descending on the oblast. 
 
8. (SBU) Ekho Moskvy's Prokopavichene took a different point of 
view, suggesting that the regional elite would compromise with the 
new Artyakov regime rather than face a long battle with a foe that 
had vast political and economic resources behind it. She further 
predicted that Samara Mayor Tarkhov would also trim his sails to 
adjust to the new environment, bringing an end to Samara's period of 
"pluralist" politics. Indeed, on September 17 Tarkhov announced at 
the regional SR conference that he would not head the party's 
election ticket for the State Duma elections, according to 
Gazeta.ru, because the party organization ignored his 
recommendations for setting the candidate lists. (SR is running two 
tickets in Samara, one centered in Togliatti, the other in Samara 
city.) His decision provoked a scandal and could be a crippling blow 
for SR election plans, since he was perhaps the most well known and 
influential politician in the region. 
 
9. (SBU) COMMENT: Samara is a wealthy oblast, with a host of 
competing oligarchic business interests; politically akin to Ohio in 
U.S. politics.  One measure of whether the center has "tamed" the 
province with the removal of Titov will be the success or failure of 
Artyakov to deliver the votes for United Russia in the December Duma 
elections. To do so, he will need to rein in members of the wily 
party elite who have felt free to break ranks in the past, and who 
have felt isolated enough from the "vertical of power" to get away 
with it. 
BURNS