Russia can use command-and-control economics to create a Gazprom. It can never create a Google, an Apple, a BBC, a Siemens or even the Anglo-Saxon rock’n’roll culture. For that, it would need the rule of law and all the open democratic structures that support it.
Sir Robert
Owen’s languid upper-class vowels and baggy London clubland suit don’t capture
the indefatigable essence of the man.
He represents the best of the British
tradition of the rule of law. His report into the circumstances of the death of Alexander Litvinenko released last week is a classic of the genre – scrupulously
evidence-based, impartial and judicious. It is what a rule-of-law society
should produce.
Litvinenko, Owen
judged, was murdered in London by the Russian government because, as an ex-KGB
agent, and later of FSB (the KGB’s successor), he had become an influential,
vocal and effective opponent of a profoundly corrupt state security structure.
A book by Litvinenko – Lubyanka Criminal
Group – presented evidence that the Russian security
service is deeply entwined with organised crime, both in Russia and elsewhere
in Europe, including with the mafia. In a second, if less convincing, book he
claimed that the Russian services colluded in blowing up apartment blocks and
blamed Chechen terrorists.
After fleeing Russia in 2000, Litvinenko had gone on to help not just Britain’s MI6, but
the Spanish and Italian security services in unmasking FSB involvement in
criminal activity.
But it was only
after Russia’s passing of the 2006 Extremism Law, justifying extra-territorial
killings of Russians making allegedly libellous statements about the
government, that Vladimir Putin was able to hit back at a man who, days before
he was poisoned, had accused him of being both a paedophile and the man behind
the assassination
of the journalist Anna Politkovskya.
Owen is
judicious. The polonium-210 that poisoned Litvinenko could only come from a state nuclear reactor
and could only be given to the FSB with the go-ahead of Putin or his circle.So
strong is the back-covering culture within the FSB that the director would only
give the go-ahead for his arms-length operatives to kill Litvinenko with Putin’s
backing.
The need to get rid of Litvinenko was acute. But unable to interview
either of the two men who travelled to London allegedly to murder their quarry,
Owen can arrive at only a qualified conclusion: “The FSB operation to kill Mr
Litvinenko was probably approved by… President Putin.”
The events are
horrifying enough – any Londoner could have been harmed – but perhaps even more
telling is the window it provides into today’s Russia. This is a world of
routine contract killings, always deniable because they are delivered at arm’s
length, by a state security service intertwined with clandestine gangsters.
The KGB was the
security wing of the Soviet Communist party. The FSB is Putin’s personalised
security wing. Its job is to wreck the reputations – and even kill – all those
who challenge the regime.
Not even China mandates the killing of its nationals
anywhere in the world if they say something that President Xi Jinping considers
libellous. This is the law not even of a communist dictatorship, but of a tsar.
The reaction to Litvinenko’s death in Moscow was carelessly gleeful: a traitor
had received his just comeuppance.
Owen’s brief
biographies of the key actors in the drama are also telling; they are fierce
Russian nationalists passionate to avenge what they portray as cumulative
slights from the west.
Concepts such as the rule of law, checked and balanced
government, democracy and an autonomous, self-governing civil society are
western viruses that will only contaminate the homeland and its capacity to do
what it needs to extend Russia’s proper place in the world. In this climate,
the FSB works with any tool to hand.
The rule of law
– impartial judgments that can be referred to independent higher courts based
on the balance of evidence around clear jurisprudential principles and
deliberatively legislated democratic law – is the cornerstone not merely of
liberty, but of prosperity and our civilisation. Britain is blessed because it
is a rule-of-law society. Russia, for all its military power and abundant
resources, is damned because it is not.
The
growing evidence is that economies such as Russia’s or China’s can use
command-and-control mechanisms to grow into middle-income per head countries.
But to become high-income per capita countries is infinitely harder.
All the
energies of civil society and workforces have to be harnessed to create great
self-standing organisations. These, by developing their own purpose and
cultures, can marshal the immense amounts of information that are at the core
of the modern economy – and then produce at scale.
Russia can use command-and-control economics to create a Gazprom. It can
never create a Google, an Apple, a BBC, a Siemens or even the Anglo-Saxon
rock’n’roll culture. For that, it would need the rule of law and all the open
democratic structures that support it.
Yet,
we can’t be complacent: current British political culture is very feeble on the
rule of law. There was a Litvinenko inquiry only because the government lost a
high court case opposing it, fearing the international ramifications (giving
offence to Russia). Its response has been beneath feeble.
But then with
honourable exceptions – Michael Gove, Dominic Grieve, Ken Clarke – today’s
mainstream conservatism is more interested in entrenching permanent Tory
dominance of the House of Common than in acknowledging the crucial role of
checks and balances in upholding a rule-of-law society.
It will neuter the second chamber, write European courts out of any role
in the British legal system, gerrymander the number of seats in the Commons,
make Scottish MPs second class and emasculate the BBC. In its aims to Torify
Britain, it is more Putinesque that it cares to acknowledge – and British civil
society can be vulnerable just like Russia’s.
Meanwhile,
Labour has no firmer grip – New Labour flouted international law to invade Iraq
and its Corbynite successors share a Putinesque worldview that the pernicious
west is the source of all evil. For Corbyn, the rule of law is an ideological
concept, the handmaiden of capitalism, and liberation movements worldwide are
right to distrust it in their struggle against western imperialism or its
surrogates.
To possess military power capable of defending us and other rule-of
law societies is wrong as a matter of principle. Putin’s gangsters and contract
killers can be trusted never to threaten us; Trident is an expensive bauble.
Alexander Litvinenko, dying in agony, left a last letter cursing Putin
and declaring his pride in becoming a British citizen – because of what Britain
stands for. Sir Robert Owen has done more than uncover the truth. He has
offered a fierce reminder of the importance of the rule of law. Let’s hope it is heeded
across our political culture.
No comments:
Post a Comment