"Президент". Фильм Владимира Соловьева
-
0:22 - 0:26Do you imagine your life
without being a president? -
0:27 - 0:30By the way, it's quite frequent question.
-
0:34 - 0:38Actually, it's like a canary
in a coal mine, so to say. -
0:38 - 0:40That's what I think.
-
0:40 - 0:44If a person is able to go back
to live in a regular apartment -
0:45 - 0:49instead of enjoying palace interior
-
0:51 - 0:56in this case, I think that he didn't lose
connection with "external world”. -
0:56 - 1:01I can easily imagine my life
without being in this high position. -
1:14 - 1:15It has happened on August 7th, 1999... "
-
1:16 - 1:18In the heart of events."
-
1:22 - 1:25CAUCASUS NEWS.
-
1:28 - 1:30Basaev is commanding militants in Dagestan".
-
1:44 - 1:45
for keeping it short -
1:45 - 1:47I am not going to sit down
for keeping it short. -
1:47 - 1:49
-
1:53 - 1:56Situation is very serious now
in Dagestan and in Caucasus. -
1:56 - 1:58I just came back from there.
-
1:58 - 2:01It's really difficult situation.
-
2:09 - 2:10Real serious.
-
2:12 - 2:14Probably, we can really lose Dagestan...
-
2:20 - 2:23Coordination is very bad, so far.
-
2:24 - 2:27And for some reason everyone
is asking for political.. -
2:27 - 2:32I was forced to go there yesterday and
tell that I am taking full responsibility. -
2:34 - 2:36And now about the current events.
-
2:37 - 2:40I have met with the President this morning.
-
2:41 - 2:44He signed my resignation
-
2:44 - 2:46Thanked me for good work
-
2:46 - 2:48And dismissed me
-
2:48 - 2:53Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin
is appointed as interim -
2:53 - 2:56He is the Secretary of
Security Council and head of FSB. -
2:56 - 2:58Descent and honourable person I think.
-
2:59 - 3:01I would like to wish him luck.
-
3:02 - 3:03Luck only,
-
3:03 - 3:05cause all the rest he already has.
-
3:08 - 3:10August 9th, 1999
-
3:10 - 3:13The man, whom Boris Yeltsin has chosen
-
3:13 - 3:15to be the head of his obsolete government
-
3:15 - 3:18was practically unknown former spy
-
3:18 - 3:21and head of Security Council: Vladimir Putin
-
3:21 - 3:23Even more remarkable was Yeltsin's statement
-
3:23 - 3:26that it was Putin who ought
to become a president of Russia -
3:26 - 3:29after Yeltsin's retirement next year.
-
3:29 - 3:32People had absolutely no trust
to the government. -
3:32 - 3:35Caucasus war was going on.
-
3:35 - 3:40The war was not only in Caucasus
but everywhere in the country. -
3:40 - 3:42You might remember those
terrorist attacks etc. -
3:43 - 3:45It was not so long ago
-
3:45 - 3:47just 14-15 years ago.
-
3:48 - 3:50Caucasus war came to Moscow"
-
3:58 - 4:01Chechen trace?"
-
4:04 - 4:05August 14th, 1999
-
4:05 - 4:08This conflict became the first serious test
-
4:08 - 4:11for acting Prime Minister Vladimir Putin.
-
4:11 - 4:13Putin stated that Russia will be able
-
4:13 - 4:16to take situation in Dagestan
under control in less than 2 weeks. -
4:17 - 4:20I wasn't really able to make
decisions at that moment. -
4:20 - 4:23I was forced to deal with it,
-
4:23 - 4:26though I didn't have full powers.
-
4:26 - 4:28It was clearly a huge responsibility.
-
4:28 - 4:31It was a matter of course
-
4:31 - 4:35and I have had onl one question,
-
4:35 - 4:37I am not even going to talk
about it on camera now. -
4:37 - 4:40In case if I won't manage to finish this task,
-
4:40 - 4:46then what should I do
and how should I live further? -
4:46 - 4:49I have decided for myself
that it's the only option. -
4:49 - 4:51I should go till the end.
-
4:52 - 4:55I never heard of name Putin back then.
-
4:55 - 4:58It was in August-September of 1999.
-
4:58 - 5:04Experience of the previous 1$t
Chechen campaign was pretty hard. -
5:04 - 5:06There was a long line of misfortunes
-
5:06 - 5:09
-
5:09 - 5:10and often even betrayals.
-
5:14 - 5:19And in 1999 when Chaban Makhikov...
-
5:19 - 5:24during that Khattab's assault on Dagestan,
-
5:24 - 5:28that’s when I first heard
the name of our president. -
5:33 - 5:36Vladimir Ivanov, our
platoon commander, said. -
5:36 - 5:39We got a new one."
-
5:39 - 5:44He came into some general's tent
-
5:44 - 5:50and they raised a toast to future victory.
-
5:50 - 5:54I would really like, in
accordance with Russian tradition -
5:54 - 5:58and tradition of holy Dagestan land
where we are today, -
5:58 - 6:01to raise this glass
-
6:01 - 6:04and drink to the memory of those who died.
-
6:04 - 6:06A second, just a second
-
6:07 - 6:10I would like to raise a glass
-
6:10 - 6:13to the health of ones who are wounded
-
6:13 - 6:16and to wish happiness
to everyone present here. -
6:16 - 6:20But we have a lot of problems ahead of us
-
6:20 - 6:23and important tasks
you know that very well. -
6:23 - 6:26You do know what enemy
is planning to do. -
6:26 - 6:28All of us know that
-
6:28 - 6:32What provocations are to be
expected in the nearest future, -
6:32 - 6:35in what regions etc.
-
6:35 - 6:38We don't have a right
-
6:38 - 6:41to allow ourselves
a single moment of weakness. -
6:41 - 6:43Not a single moment.
-
6:43 - 6:44Because if we will,
-
6:44 - 6:48then those who died, did it for nothing.
-
6:48 - 6:52That's why I’d like to propose the following.
-
6:52 - 6:56we will absolutely raise our glasses to them,
-
6:56 - 6:58absolutely.
-
6:59 - 7:01But we will do it later.
-
7:01 - 7:03Later.
-
7:03 - 7:09When this task, the crucial task
you all know about, will be completed. -
7:09 - 7:12That's why I propose
to grab a bite of food now -
7:12 - 7:14and go back to work.
-
7:16 - 7:21He put glass on the table and I remember
surprise of our platoon commander -
7:21 - 7:23and his respect.
-
7:23 - 7:26He said that probably it will work differently
than during the previous campaign -
7:26 - 7:28cause this glass he put
back on the table, -
7:28 - 7:34in his man's view, it had
some good special meaning. -
7:34 - 7:37And after that couple of days later,
-
7:37 - 7:42when military jets flew to Khattab’s units and
started shelling them on territory of Chechnya, -
7:42 - 7:47it became clear then that
this glass returned on the table -
7:47 - 7:49had very obvious meaning
-
7:49 - 7:52It meant that everything
will be the right way. -
7:55 - 7:57We will be chasing terrorists everywhere.
-
7:58 - 8:00
-
8:00 - 8:02and if we find them
in the toilet, pardon me, -
8:02 - 8:04We will rub them out in the outhouse!
-
8:04 - 8:06The end, issue closed!
-
8:17 - 8:17What's going on in Chechnya,
-
8:22 - 8:27is caused by the fact that Russia is not willing
-
8:27 - 8:31to solve these issues in political way,
-
8:31 - 8:36by talking to the Chechen leaders.
-
8:37 - 8:42There are two categories of Russian soldiers
on the territory of Chechnya. -
8:42 - 8:46those who lie in coffins and
those who WILL lie in coffins. -
8:49 - 8:54There was no other solution
than suppressing this terrorism. -
8:54 - 8:56It was impossible
to come to an agreement -
8:56 - 9:00I remember very clearly and
I told about that before, I think, -
9:00 - 9:07that while I was head of FSB I was reading
different investigative documents -
9:07 - 9:11including ones of international terrorists,
what they were writing to each other. -
9:11 - 9:14It's a unique historic occasion today.
-
9:15 - 9:18We have a chance to tear
Caucasus away from Russia. -
9:18 - 9:20Today or never."
-
9:20 - 9:23But it was clear for us as well.
-
9:23 - 9:25either we'll hold it today
-
9:25 - 9:28or we'll never have another
chance to save the country. -
9:28 - 9:35Well, at that moment practically
everyone, except only us maybe, -
9:35 - 9:40cause an average citizen didn't go into details,
and wasn't much aware of what was happening, -
9:40 - 9:42but for anyone in the world,
-
9:42 - 9:47as many of my colleagues, presidents
and prime ministers, were telling me later, -
9:47 - 9:52it was a sure thing that Russia will
seize to exist in its current borders. -
9:53 - 9:57The only question was when it will happen
and what will be the consequences, -
9:57 - 9:59considering that it was a large nuclear power.
-
10:00 - 10:04On December 31st, 1999, at 10 am
-
10:04 - 10:07I got a phone call from Boris Yeltsin office.
-
10:09 - 10:14And I was told that I have to be
in his office in half an hour. -
10:14 - 10:16I was invited into his office.
-
10:16 - 10:21We were standing there,
witnessing the power transfer, -
10:21 - 10:26including the transfer of
nuclear suitcase too, by the way. -
10:26 - 10:28I remember this day very well.
-
10:28 - 10:34On December 31st we were invited
for breakfast with the President. -
10:34 - 10:36We were about 8 people.
-
10:36 - 10:39I saw that someone was carrying a TV.
-
10:39 - 10:45If you remember, TVs used to be
thick, chubby ones back then. -
10:45 - 10:47They placed the TV there.
-
10:47 - 10:50Boris Nikolaevich and Vladimir
Vladimirovich came over. -
10:50 - 10:53They sat down and turned on TV.
-
10:54 - 10:59I am... leaving
-
11:03 - 11:08Leaving before... the end of the term.
-
11:09 - 11:14I realized that it's what I have to do.
-
11:14 - 11:20Russia has to start a new Millennium
-
11:20 - 11:25with new politicians, new faces.
-
11:25 - 11:33With new clever, strong, energetic people.
-
11:35 - 11:40That's where we heard that
Boris Nikolayevich has left -
11:40 - 11:43and has passed his president duties
to Vladimir Vladimirovich. -
12:31 - 12:35After that Vladimir Vladimirovich
invited me to his office in Kremlin -
12:35 - 12:43and told me that it would be a good idea
to congratulate our Army Forces. -
12:43 - 12:49Spiritual welfare of the Army
Forces was quite bad. -
12:49 - 12:54It was necessary to bolster
morale of the servicemen, -
12:54 - 12:56make them believe in themselves.
-
12:59 - 13:03At the same time, we had to
ensure security of this event, -
13:03 - 13:06cause we were flying in the combat zone.
-
13:06 - 13:11It was worrisome of course, the president
is flying, weather is terrible, -
13:11 - 13:13by the helicopters.
-
13:16 - 13:18Our helicopter was shelled
-
13:18 - 13:21and we were forced
to go back to Makhachkala. -
13:21 - 13:25By this time we prepared the cars
-
13:25 - 13:27which we used to get to Gudermes.
-
13:27 - 13:28I was in Gudermes.
-
13:28 - 13:32My father knew that he is coming over
-
13:32 - 13:35don’t know where he knew this from.
-
13:35 - 13:37It was a secret.
-
13:37 - 13:39Nobody believed it even myself.
-
13:39 - 13:43Fighting is going on everywhere
but Putin will come, -
13:43 - 13:46in a civil car to Dagestan...
-
13:46 - 13:51We arrived to Gudermes
somewhat around 4:30 pm -
13:51 - 13:55and we met New Year's Eve
already with the servicemen. -
13:56 - 13:59Guys, our congratulations
on the New Year. -
13:59 - 14:02We wish you happiness and
all the best for the new year! -
14:02 - 14:05Good health to everyone
and happy family life! -
14:05 - 14:08I would like you to know
-
14:08 - 14:11that Russia highly
appreciates what you do. -
14:11 - 14:15And country really needs what you do.
Really needs it. -
14:15 - 14:19I am not only talking about restoring
of country's Honour and Dignity. -
14:19 - 14:24No I mean much more
serious things by that. -
14:24 - 14:29I am talking about putting an end
to the demise of Russia. -
14:29 - 14:31This is your main goal.
-
14:31 - 14:34Setting up a goal always meant for Putin
-
14:34 - 14:38having a concrete result
after a specified time. -
14:39 - 14:44And when Putin said that problem
has to be resolved in 2 weeks, -
14:44 - 14:46in 2 weeks it was resolved.
-
14:46 - 14:51A lot of hard work
was done with the locals. -
14:51 - 14:59As the result of it, enormous number
of local Dagestan residents -
14:59 - 15:03with weapon in their hands
took side of Federal Forces, -
15:03 - 15:07fought with the terrorists
and won over them eventually. -
15:07 - 15:11The same story was in Chechnya.
-
15:14 - 15:17We have to act very carefully,
-
15:17 - 15:22in a way that we wouldn't cause
damage to the civilians. -
15:23 - 15:26Because there are... there are...
-
15:26 - 15:30besides the armed militants and bandits
there are also women, children -
15:30 - 15:33elderly people are there too.
-
15:33 - 15:38There are veterans of the Great
Patriotic War there too by the way! -
15:39 - 15:44Whom all of us own
the victory over fascism, -
15:44 - 15:47they were taking part in it.
-
15:47 - 15:51And we treat them as family
-
15:52 - 15:54Sorry. I can't walk all the way through...
-
15:55 - 15:59The very same Akhmad Hadzhi Kadyrov,
-
15:59 - 16:04he actually believed Putin,
believed this work. -
16:04 - 16:06He followed Putin
-
16:06 - 16:11and hundreds and thousands of
other Chechens did too after him. -
16:14 - 16:16This was a surprise
-
16:16 - 16:20a feeling that a strange,
new person has appeared. -
16:23 - 16:26I met both his mother and father.
-
16:27 - 16:30The war for Vladimir Vladimirovich,
is the same as for me, probably. -
16:30 - 16:34It's not only the heroism of people,
-
16:34 - 16:37but also a personal tragedy
which will never die. -
16:37 - 16:41On Piskarevskoe cemetery,
in one of the mass graves, -
16:41 - 16:43his older brother is buried.
-
16:43 - 16:46He was practically a child
when he has died. -
16:46 - 16:51His father was heavily wounded in Nevsky
Pyatachok, it was a miracle he survived. -
16:51 - 16:54He came back home from the hospital
-
16:55 - 16:59right at the moment when our future President
mother was carried out of the apartment. -
16:59 - 17:03Medics were loading her
in a truck as a dead body. -
17:03 - 17:07He chased them away, using his crutches.
-
17:07 - 17:12She was washed out but
he nursed her back to life. -
17:12 - 17:17When he came to Moscow for work,
-
17:19 - 17:21his parents were already pretty old,
-
17:21 - 17:24they had to be looked after.
-
17:24 - 17:32And using every chance, Putin was
travelling there in order to see them, -
17:32 - 17:36to talk to them and to provide
with any help they needed. -
17:36 - 17:39We used to talk about different topics.
-
17:39 - 17:43When we were talking in a close circle,
-
17:43 - 17:47we were remembering
our mothers, childhood. -
17:47 - 17:49I was saying that it's really strange
-
17:49 - 17:54that we don't appreciate
our moms while they are still alive, -
17:54 - 17:57can't find time to come over
spend time with her, -
17:57 - 17:59listen to her give her a hug.
-
17:59 - 18:03And then he was also taking
a walk down memory lane. -
18:03 - 18:06I could feel that he was moved deeply.
-
18:17 - 18:19March 25th, 2000.
-
18:20 - 18:26Cold St Petersburg was founded
by the great Russian Tzar Peter I, -
18:26 - 18:30who built city on the sea
and made it the capital. -
18:30 - 18:33From these times it was representing
the best of the country, -
18:33 - 18:35but sometimes the worst of it too.
-
18:35 - 18:38But along with its glamour
-
18:38 - 18:43we also met the hard realities
of Russia today. -
18:43 - 18:46Maria Semyonova,
who is 80 years old, -
18:46 - 18:50is forced to live in a communal apartment
together with 30 other people. -
18:50 - 18:54The fair people should be In power
-
18:54 - 19:01so that we could see at least
a bit of fair and honest life. -
19:01 - 19:05Putin is better, he is better!
-
19:05 - 19:06By what?
-
19:06 - 19:07By everything!
Everything! -
19:07 - 19:10He'll do everything in a fair way,
-
19:10 - 19:13unless they'll wipe him out.
-
19:13 - 19:16Maria was planning to give
her vote to the communists, -
19:16 - 19:19but like many others she trusts Putin.
-
19:19 - 19:22I couldn’t imagine in my worst nightmare
-
19:22 - 19:24that I'll be ever running for president
-
19:24 - 19:28Cause I think it's absolutely dishonest thing.
-
19:29 - 19:32Don’t faugh, It's all about making promises,
-
19:32 - 19:35better than the ones of your competitors.
-
19:35 - 19:37The way election campaign was run,
-
19:37 - 19:40the way I managed to structure it.
-
19:40 - 19:45relieved me from this necessity
to mislead large amounts of people. -
19:47 - 19:49And I am glad about it.
-
19:49 - 19:52That's why tomorrow
a normal working -
19:52 - 19:56We'll have a meeting tomorrow, at 10 am...
-
20:00 - 20:03He called me and asked to come to work.
-
20:03 - 20:11I was telling him honestly that
I won't manage, I am afraid... -
20:11 - 20:15Are you afraid so much that your will
is paralysed and you can't do anything? -
20:15 - 20:17I am afraid too!'' - he said.
-
20:18 - 20:20It's a huge responsibility,
I am afraid that I won't manage, -
20:20 - 20:25but someone has to take care of this
-
20:25 - 20:27We were given this opportunity,
-
20:27 - 20:32let's try to give a boost to this country"
-
20:34 - 20:38I think that the most important question
we started to ask ourselves -
20:40 - 20:41was "what are we going to do next?"
-
20:41 - 20:48This was a serious question with no answer.
-
20:48 - 20:51Nobody was fully understanding what to do.
-
20:57 - 21:00Very often
-
21:00 - 21:06from the most ordinary people
on the streets of our cities -
21:06 - 21:11I heard very simple words but
ones very important for me. -
21:14 - 21:17They were telling me.
We believe you, -
21:18 - 21:20we are counting on you.
-
21:21 - 21:24Just please don't betray us."
-
21:26 - 21:29I can assure you,
-
21:29 - 21:37that I will act solely
in country's best interests. -
21:39 - 21:43Probably I won't avoid mistakes
-
21:43 - 21:46but what I can really promise,
-
21:46 - 21:50that I'll be working openly and honestly!
-
21:54 - 21:56[President of Russian Federation
Vladimir Vladimirovich Putin] -
21:56 - 22:03We made the first attempt
to analyse the situation -
22:05 - 22:07in economy, finance, social services,
-
22:07 - 22:10judicial and legal system.
-
22:10 - 22:15I remember how we were gathering
sometimes in the evenings -
22:15 - 22:20and... and somebody said
-
22:20 - 22:24It seems that we have
Chechnya everywhere". -
22:24 - 22:26Chechnya wasn’t a geographical thing,
-
22:26 - 22:31in reality Chechnya was practically
in every field of work. -
22:31 - 22:33Weakness of the state and authorities in 90s
-
22:35 - 22:39was causing a fear that the new
authorities won't manage either -
22:39 - 22:44and will be easily manipulated,
by the oligarchs in particular. -
22:45 - 22:46When you became a president,
-
22:46 - 22:50Russia was ruled by
the powerful oligarchic clan. -
22:50 - 22:55They were looking at you
and thinking: "We'll eat him up". -
22:55 - 22:56Yes.
-
22:56 - 22:57We'll make a deal".
-
22:57 - 23:00And among all these wolves
-
23:00 - 23:02who used to define the authorities
-
23:02 - 23:05and everything happening
in the country in 90s, -
23:05 - 23:09they not only needed to be taken down
a notch but to be torn apart -
23:09 - 23:11all opportunities being
taken away from them. -
23:11 - 23:15Well some of them when I was
the Chairman of the Government, -
23:15 - 23:20and after Yeltsin declared
that I'll be running for president -
23:20 - 23:24couple of them came to my office
in the White House. -
23:24 - 23:27they sat down opposite of me and said.
-
23:27 - 23:31You should understand that
you'll NEVER be a president here". -
23:31 - 23:34I answered them: "Well, we'll see".
-
23:34 - 23:40That's the kind of scenes I was having
In this very White House. -
23:40 - 23:42And how did you manage
to take them down a notch? -
23:42 - 23:45In different ways,
using different means. -
23:49 - 23:54I remember very vividly
that summer meeting in 2000. -
23:54 - 23:58This was actually a first meeting
of president Putin -
23:58 - 24:01with business representatives
a large scale meeting. -
24:04 - 24:06It was very important for us to hear
-
24:06 - 24:09what kind of a country Putin is building.
-
24:09 - 24:11And for Putin is was crucial to explain
-
24:11 - 24:15what kind of behavior he was
expecting from us as businessmen. -
24:15 - 24:18He told us right away: "No guys,
it won't be possible to deny the heritage". -
24:21 - 24:25I just wanted to draw
your attention to the point -
24:25 - 24:29that it was you who
have been creating this state. -
24:29 - 24:35Mainly though political and para-political
structures under your control. -
24:35 - 24:41That’s why you should have
a better look in a mirror. -
24:41 - 24:44Putin didn't have any aggression
he was very calm. -
24:44 - 24:47But the system will be built
in a different way now. -
24:47 - 24:49And everyone has to
contribute to this system. -
24:49 - 24:51What kind of contribution?
-
24:51 - 24:54Your business has to be transparent,
-
24:54 - 24:56you have to pay taxes
-
24:56 - 25:01you shouldn't sweat your workers
-
25:01 - 25:04but you should pay them
reasonable salaries instead. -
25:04 - 25:06In different words,
-
25:06 - 25:09right to existence and right to respect
-
25:09 - 25:12you will have to earn
-
25:12 - 25:15considering the mess you created by now.
-
25:15 - 25:17The biggest part of economy at that time
-
25:18 - 25:20was not even in grey, but in black zone.
-
25:20 - 25:23Salary in the envelopes
-
25:23 - 25:26not paying taxes.
-
25:26 - 25:31criminal outrage.
-
25:31 - 25:34Average pension in 2000
-
25:34 - 25:35(many people forgot about it already)
-
25:37 - 25:40was bit more than 800 rubles.
-
25:40 - 25:44And people weren't paid even this
kind of pension for half a year. -
25:44 - 25:46They weren’t paid salaries for half a year.
-
25:46 - 25:49Lots of people, even
the majority of the country, -
25:49 - 25:51was busy just trying to survive
-
25:53 - 25:57By the beginning of the 2000s
many strategic enterprises -
25:57 - 25:59were taken from the state control.
-
25:59 - 26:03Unemployment was high,
there was large shady employment. -
26:03 - 26:08This was happening around year 2000.
-
26:08 - 26:12Country he took into his hands,
-
26:12 - 26:18it was in a state of melting ice
not even a ship -
26:18 - 26:21which was slowly falling into oblivion.
-
26:28 - 26:29Kursk" is in trouble.
-
26:29 - 26:32We are talking about lives
of 116 crew members... -
26:32 - 26:35It seems that 7th compartment is drowned.
-
26:35 - 26:37It makes evacuation more difficult.
-
26:45 - 26:49We were sitting in a hall
and waiting for Putin. -
26:49 - 26:51I was sitting in the 2nd row,
-
26:51 - 26:56together with mariner's wives.
-
26:57 - 27:00Frankly speaking, I thought
they will simply tear him to pieces. -
27:04 - 27:07I was wondering how
did he dare to come here? -
27:07 - 27:10Didn't he realize
what they will do to him? -
27:10 - 27:16They were expecting that "Kursk"
submarine will be recovered, saved. -
27:16 - 27:19And at the same time they were realizing
-
27:19 - 27:23that it was probably hopeless.
-
27:23 - 27:26There was such energy there...
-
27:26 - 27:32a bundle of hate...
and despair... and pain... -
27:32 - 27:38Never in my whole life
I felt anything like this. -
27:38 - 27:42Every question was
directed to this single man. -
27:42 - 27:45Let her speak don't stop her.
-
27:46 - 27:48The question is.
-
27:50 - 27:56that it was hard to imagine,
for me as well, I am frank with you, -
27:56 - 28:02we didn't know that our country is
in such a tough situation, -
28:02 - 28:04that our Army Forces
are in tough situation, -
28:04 - 28:07that our fleet is ...
-
28:08 - 28:13is in breakdown state or
in tough situation at least. -
28:13 - 28:17So, everything is in such a state,
that I could never imagine. -
28:17 - 28:20Everything is ruined!
Not a damn thing left! -
28:21 - 28:23A woman next to me fainted
-
28:23 - 28:26few minutes after this conversation started.
-
28:27 - 28:29She was yelling something,
-
28:29 - 28:32they were interrupting him
in the beginning. -
28:33 - 28:38Clearly they were more eager
to speak up than to listen to him. -
28:38 - 28:42And... at some point he even fell silent
-
28:42 - 28:45and was only listening to them talk.
-
28:45 - 28:48But then he started to respond after all.
-
28:48 - 28:52If I only could, you know,
I would get in there myself! -
28:52 - 28:54I was getting in there before.
as you already know. -
28:54 - 28:59None of our or foreign specialists
can reach 8th compartment. -
28:59 - 29:02In order to... for lifting it up...
-
29:02 - 29:04I am taking responsibility for my words,
-
29:04 - 29:07I could tell you lots of things and run away.
-
29:07 - 29:09I am telling you how things really are.
-
29:09 - 29:13This is the bitter truth but it's TRUTH.
-
29:13 - 29:14The way it really is.
-
29:14 - 29:16At some point I realized
-
29:16 - 29:20that together with him
all of them crossed the line -
29:20 - 29:26which was separating
their husbands lives from death. -
29:27 - 29:31Together with him they crossed it over
and moved on. -
29:34 - 29:37We mapped out plans then,
-
29:37 - 29:40which were aimed at...
I'd describe it with one word. -
29:40 - 29:43glueing the country.
-
29:43 - 29:47Because at that moment,
excuse my French, -
29:47 - 29:49country was scattering like porridge.
-
29:51 - 29:58It was in fashion then to disparage
Federal centre and central authorities. -
29:58 - 30:01Back then any governor
could take the liberty -
30:01 - 30:02to ignore president's invitation.
-
30:02 - 30:03Head of Sakha Republic announced
-
30:05 - 30:09that we should lease out
all our treasures to Japan, -
30:09 - 30:15just let them pay to every Yakut
some amount of dollars -
30:15 - 30:17and everything
is going to be all right. -
30:22 - 30:23At the time when every region
was governing itself -
30:23 - 30:28making its own laws and
controlling execution of its own laws, -
30:28 - 30:33these were the signs of losing the country,
-
30:33 - 30:35as a sovereign state.
-
30:47 - 30:49At that moment our Republic
-
30:50 - 30:55wasn't fully in legal framework
of the Russian Federation. -
30:56 - 31:01And Vladimir Vladimirovich said very calmly.
-
31:01 - 31:06Tatarstan has to be fully incorporated in
legal framework of Russian Federation". -
31:06 - 31:10Wash out Putin in Hague Tribunal!"
No Tatatarstan’s bread for empire's suckers!" -
31:10 - 31:14It would be fair to adopt a special program on
social and economic development of Tatarstan -
31:14 - 31:20under conditions of full incorporation into
legal framework of Russian Federation. -
31:20 - 31:23And he said: "This is correct
presentation of the problem". -
31:23 - 31:27I must say that it was done
in couple of months. -
31:36 - 31:39First winter, the first president's winter,
-
31:41 - 31:43in the Russian Far East.
-
31:43 - 31:46There were left without heating
-
31:46 - 31:50250 thousand, then 300, 400 thousand people,
-
31:50 - 31:52entire cities and villages.
-
31:52 - 31:56Hospitals weren't functioning because of cold,
-
31:56 - 31:58no heating at all.
-
31:59 - 32:02Complete chaos...
-
32:02 - 32:06vertical power structure,
putting it mildly, -
32:06 - 32:09is probably not restored yet
-
32:09 - 32:12the way Putin needed.
-
32:12 - 32:14Everything is working dreadfully.
-
32:14 - 32:17Mine workers are on the street.
-
32:17 - 32:19There is no work mines are closed.
-
32:19 - 32:23At the same time in Central Siberia
-
32:23 - 32:27large piles of coal are lying at the harbors.
-
32:27 - 32:31Coal which is already sold
and awaiting the shipment -
32:31 - 32:34to the buyers outside of Russia.
-
32:34 - 32:36And then president made the decision
-
32:36 - 32:39that it should be stopped immediately,
-
32:39 - 32:42coal should be sent to the boiler stations
on the territory of Russia. -
32:42 - 32:48Putin could solve this problem
by manual control only. -
32:48 - 32:51Radiators, iron radiators,
-
32:51 - 32:53were transported by airplanes
-
32:53 - 32:58This was absurd, indeed
in regard of effectivity and costs. -
32:58 - 33:01However, it was absolutely justified
-
33:01 - 33:04in regard of preventing people from freezing.
-
33:06 - 33:10Heads of 24 cities and regions were fired.
-
33:10 - 33:17By president's order they were
rousted from warm beds at night -
33:17 - 33:22and forced to write resignation
letters right at the doorstep. -
33:22 - 33:25Criminal charges were brought.
-
33:25 - 33:31One way or another,
they started to wake up somehow, -
33:31 - 33:36those who retained their job positions.
-
33:36 - 33:40This was an important and serious example
-
33:40 - 33:43and both authorities and the president showed
that there is power in the country, -
33:43 - 33:45strong power.
-
33:48 - 33:50January 20, 2001
-
34:09 - 34:13When George Bush became President
-
34:13 - 34:17he started making some strong statements
on human rights issues -
34:18 - 34:22favourite passages about democracy,
Chechnya, freedom of the media -
34:23 - 34:25a standard set of criticisms.
-
34:25 - 34:32And for a half year or so, there was
a sort of ping-pong of harsh statements. -
34:32 - 34:34Washington raised the temperature.
-
34:34 - 34:37Moscow raised the temperature too.
-
34:38 - 34:40For a long time Washington made it clear
-
34:40 - 34:43it was not prepared
to talk to Moscow face to face. -
34:43 - 34:45But now the situation has changed.
-
34:45 - 34:48Today George Bush and Vladimir Putin
shook hands for the first time -
34:48 - 34:51in the Brdo Castle
40 km from Slovenia's capital - Ljubljana. -
34:51 - 34:52The President listens carefully
to our arguments and hears them. -
34:55 - 34:59Can you trust Russia?
I'm not going to answer this question. -
35:00 - 35:04I'll ask you the same question.
-
35:05 - 35:08I'll answer this question.
I looked the man in the eye. -
35:09 - 35:13I found him to be very straightforward
and trustworthy. -
35:13 - 35:15
-
35:19 - 35:20I was able to get a sense of his soul
-
35:20 - 35:25a man deeply committed to his country
and the best interests of his country. -
35:26 - 35:30We can guess that this phrase
was not prepared in advance -
35:30 - 35:35but was his spontaneous
improvised reaction -
35:35 - 35:39to his first impression of talking
to the Russian President, -
35:39 - 35:46which is confirmed by the fact
that within 7 years they met 18 times! -
35:47 - 35:52In terms of personal relations,
Bush and Putin got on really well. -
35:52 - 35:56They joked and laughed a lot
-
35:56 - 36:01But by that time
the USA were already convinced -
36:01 - 36:07that Russia had entered a mode
of some colonial democracy, -
36:07 - 36:13that we were firmly on the IMF hook,
-
36:13 - 36:19that we should continue to get instructions
from foreign experts -
36:19 - 36:23on how to develop our economy
on where to pump our oil to... -
36:23 - 36:26But from the outside,
everything looked very correct -
36:26 - 36:31pats on the back words of encouragement
guys, you're on the right track, and so on. -
36:32 - 36:33At that time, we all had illusions.
-
36:33 - 36:37It seemed to us
that after the Soviet Union had collapsed -
36:38 - 36:41and after Russia had voluntarily agreed
I'd like to stress it -
36:41 - 36:46voluntarily and consciously agreed
to absolute historic limitations -
36:46 - 36:51the renunciation of its own territories,
production assets -
36:51 - 36:53and so on and so forth...
-
36:53 - 36:57It seemed to us that after the disappearance
of the ideological component -
36:57 - 37:02that used to separate the former USSR
from the rest of the civilized world, -
37:02 - 37:06The prison walls would crash... Content,
At door would freedom wait to meet us, -
37:06 - 37:09Our brothers, hastening to greet us,
To us the sword will glad present." [Pushkin] -
37:09 - 37:11By "brothers" we understood those abroad.
-
37:11 - 37:15But the "brothers" were not only in no haste
to present the sword to us, -
37:15 - 37:21but would have been glad to take
the remnants of the USSR military might. -
37:21 - 37:25There is a lot of disillusion
in your words. -
37:25 - 37:32Yes as I said, for almost 20 years
I worked for the KGB, in foreign intelligence. -
37:32 - 37:37And even I believed
that once the ideological barrier had fallen -
37:37 - 37:41and the Communist Party
no longer had a monopoly on power, -
37:41 - 37:43everything would change fundamentally.
-
37:43 - 37:47No. There hasn't been
any fundamental change. -
37:47 - 37:49Because, as it turns out
-
37:49 - 37:53such simple things
but they don't occur to you at once -
37:53 - 37:58there are also geopolitical interests,
that have nothing to do with any ideology. -
37:58 - 38:04And our partners should have realised
that such country as Russia -
38:04 - 38:07has - and cannot but have
its own geopolitical interests, -
38:07 - 38:10and that we should
treat each other with respect -
38:11 - 38:16and seek mutually beneficial solutions.
-
38:16 - 38:19But respect is based on strength
and fairness of your position. -
38:20 - 38:23Yes, yes...
One well-known person once said. -
38:23 - 38:28You can get much farther
with a kind word and a Smith & Wesson -
38:28 - 38:31than you can with a kind word alone.
-
38:31 - 38:33Unfortunately, he was right.
-
38:33 - 38:36You had the kind word,
but not the Smith & Wesson. -
38:36 - 38:39And you had to restore the army
to a large extent, -
38:39 - 38:41to revive the economy
to save the military-industrial complex... -
38:42 - 38:44Yes, it’s true...
-
38:44 - 38:48But we had to start with the economy,
of course. -
38:48 - 38:50We had large debts.
-
38:50 - 38:54I remember, the January of 2001
was the most difficult time. -
38:54 - 38:57We got together
in the first days of January -
38:57 - 39:04and discussed if we were able
to carry on servicing our external debt, -
39:04 - 39:06if we were up to it.
-
39:06 - 39:11The debt was 140% of GDP.
That was the worst-case scenario. -
39:11 - 39:16The interest on debt gobbled up
a third of the budget, roughly speaking. -
39:16 - 39:20So that was the debt that Putin got
in the situation the country was in -
39:20 - 39:23When got the picture, more or less,
-
39:23 - 39:27that we were entering
a completely new phase -
39:27 - 39:32we realised we didn't have
any new mechanisms, this is first, -
39:32 - 39:38and second, we unfortunately
didn't have enough people -
39:38 - 39:42who could come up with some suggestions
in the situation. -
39:42 - 39:46Putin was on very good terms with president
of the World Bank - James Wolfensohn. -
39:47 - 39:48We made an agreement with Wolfensohn
-
39:48 - 39:53that he would bring in
a number of world's leading specialists. -
39:53 - 39:58So we would meet with those outstanding
world's leading experts -
39:58 - 40:02and Vladimir Vladimirovich
would spend 3-4 hours talking to them. -
40:02 - 40:05He asked a lot of questions
-
40:05 - 40:08He was keen to learn
about other countries' experience, -
40:09 - 40:11about possibilities that we had.
-
40:13 - 40:17The first four years,
we didn't have the majority in Parliament. -
40:17 - 40:22We had to work hard with different fractions
to get one or another decision through. -
40:27 - 40:31We were making reforms
with massive support from Putin. -
40:31 - 40:34It was enough for us to feel
that he was behind us -
40:34 - 40:37and we knew that he would support us
if need be. -
40:37 - 40:41We adopted a 10-year development programme
for the country. -
40:42 - 40:47If we look at the facts,
before Putin, even in the new Russia, -
40:47 - 40:50there wasn't anything similar
to this 10-year programme. -
40:59 - 41:02I heard a loud bang,
the windows were smashed, -
41:02 - 41:05I saw people jumping out of the windows,
they tried to survive. -
41:05 - 41:08My God. it was so terrifying.
-
41:10 - 41:14September 11, 2001.
I remember it as if it were yesterday. -
41:14 - 41:17My assistant rushes in
and tells me to turn on the TV quickly. -
41:18 - 41:23I turn on the CNN
and see that terrible footage. -
41:23 - 41:27President Putin was the first
to call President Bush. -
41:27 - 41:30That call was the natural reaction
of the President -
41:30 - 41:34who totally understood
what the international terrorism is. -
41:37 - 41:41Russia has first-hand knowledge
of terrorism. -
41:44 - 41:45That's why we can best of all
-
41:45 - 41:50understand the feelings
of the American people. -
41:50 - 41:55Addressing the people of the USA
on behalf of Russia -
41:55 - 41:58I would like to say
that we are together with you. -
42:00 - 42:04I call the President and he asks me
What are your first suggestions? -
42:04 - 42:07I say, I've got one first suggestion
-
42:07 - 42:16Our nuclear forces are due to hold drills
on September 12, which was planned earlier. -
42:17 - 42:20So what do you suggest he asks.
-
42:20 - 42:25It's up to you to decide, I say.
But I think we should cancel these drills. -
42:26 - 42:30Good, he says. I support your suggestion.
-
42:30 - 42:34Let's not get on the nerves of Americans.
Why to get on their nerves at such a moment? -
42:34 - 42:42there was fighting going on in Chechnya
-
42:42 - 42:47and the terrorists
who were taking part in it -
42:47 - 42:51including foreigners
from many different countries -
42:51 - 42:55were referred to by Americans as
freedom fighters" or "insurgents" at best. -
42:57 - 43:02Once our special services documented
what were simply direct contacts -
43:02 - 43:05between militants from the North Caucasus
-
43:05 - 43:10and representatives of US special forces
-
43:10 - 43:12in Azerbaijan.
-
43:12 - 43:16They helped even with transport.
-
43:16 - 43:22And when I spoke about that
to the then President of the US, -
43:22 - 43:26he said - sorry, I will speak plainly
I'll kick their asses". -
43:26 - 43:34But 10 days later,
my subordinates, the FSB heads, -
43:34 - 43:37received a letter from their colleagues
in Washington. -
43:37 - 43:44We have had and will have relations
with all the opposition forces in Russia. -
43:44 - 43:48We consider we have the right to do this
and we will do this in future. -
43:48 - 43:54On no account, never and nowhere
must you even try to use terrorists -
43:54 - 44:01to solve your transitory political
and even geopolitical tasks. -
44:01 - 44:06Because if you support them in one place
they will raise their head in another. -
44:06 - 44:09And they will inevitably strike those
who supported them yesterday. -
44:09 - 44:12But you did warn the Western partners.
-
44:12 - 44:15You told them - why are you supporting
terrorists; it will come back to you. -
44:15 - 44:18Yes of course.
But some people thought -
44:18 - 44:22especially those in special forces
of Western countries -
44:22 - 44:29that if someone is working to destabilise
their main geopolitical opponent -
44:29 - 44:34which as we realise now
has always been Russia in their minds -
44:34 - 44:36then it is generally to their benefit.
-
44:36 - 44:38It turned out that's not the case
-
44:41 - 44:44We continue to live
in the old system of values. -
44:44 - 44:46we are talking about partnership,
-
44:46 - 44:50but in reality we have not yet learned
to trust each other. -
44:50 - 44:53In spite of a plethora of sweet words,
-
44:53 - 44:57we are still surreptitiously opposed
to each other. -
44:57 - 45:03Today we must say once and for all.
the Cold War is done with! -
45:03 - 45:08Today we must say that we renounce
our stereotypes and ambitions -
45:08 - 45:10and from now on will jointly work
-
45:11 - 45:15for the security of the people of Europe
and the world as a whole. -
45:15 - 45:19Today decisions are often taken,
without our participation -
45:19 - 45:22and we are only urged afterwards
to support such decisions. -
45:23 - 45:26After that they talk again
about loyalty to NATO. -
45:26 - 45:30They even say that such decisions
cannot be implemented without Russia. -
45:30 - 45:37Let us ask ourselves: is this normal?
Is this true partnership? -
46:04 - 46:11After 11th September, 2011, the USA began to
assert that their activities in the world... -
46:13 - 46:15is explained by the struggle with the international
terrorism. -
46:15 - 46:18This was illustrated most brightly by the situation
with Iraq. -
46:22 - 46:28Side by side, the Premier Minister and Russian
President look quite natural in Putin's country -
46:29 - 46:31Despite the cold weather, the meeting turned warm.
-
46:32 - 46:36to freeze. - I hope, no.
-
46:37 - 46:39This is a very beautiful place. Thank you.
-
46:40 - 46:44The friendliness of the two leaders didn't help to
remove the controversy on Iraq problem. -
46:44 - 46:48The President Putin rejected the document of the
Britain government on massive weapon... -
46:49 - 46:52which was named "propaganda" by the Russian
foreign minister. -
46:52 - 46:57The two leaders agreed on the necessity of check
out the weapon. -
46:59 - 47:02Maybe, there is another point of view concerning
the question... -
47:03 - 47:07to what extent we may be sure in existence of
massive weapon in Iraq. -
47:08 - 47:14There is one reliable way to learn this: to permit
observers to do their job. -
47:14 - 47:19The support of Russia, the permanent member of
the UN Security Council,... -
47:19 - 47:23of a new important UN resolution on Iraq will be
significant success. -
47:23 - 47:25But this advance is very slow.
-
47:26 - 47:29Russia intends to protect its interests in Iraq.
-
47:29 - 47:32Diplomats have a lot of work.
-
47:34 - 47:38Everybody understood the highest responsibility of
the moment... -
47:38 - 47:42for Iraq, for the region, and for the international
system as a whole. -
47:50 - 47:55The State Secretary of the USA again accused
Baghdad that it still had an arsenal... -
47:55 - 47:59of chemical and biological weapons and means of
their delivery. -
48:02 - 48:09To emphasize the threat from Iraq, Colin Powell
demonstrated a "real evidence". -
48:10 - 48:20One teaspoon of the dry-powder anthrax was
enough to close the US Senate in autumn of 2001. -
48:20 - 48:31We've received information from our American
colleagues that Iraq authorities are linked with al -
48:31 - 48:38Our American friends have recently announced this
at the UN Security Council. -
48:41 - 48:48I've been in politics not so long. Before, I worked in
secret service. -
48:49 - 48:51I believed I knew everything from "inside".
-
48:52 - 48:59When I came to politics, I understood that my
Russian colleagues and I,... -
48:59 - 49:05and French, and other colleagues from special
agencies are just children compared with -
49:09 - 49:13The route Moscow - Berlin - Paris is considered to
be symbolic. -
49:13 - 49:17The three countries still have a consolidated
approach to the solution of the Iraq problem. -
49:19 - 49:28Along with France, Germany, and overwhelming
majority of participants of the international -
49:28 - 49:32that the Iraq problem may be and should be
resolved diplomatically. -
49:39 - 49:47Despite active resistance of the international
community, the USA launched this war. -
49:49 - 49:54I was summoned by President Putin.
Bombardments had already begun. -
49:54 - 49:59At that time, there were 3,500 of our specialists
there. -
50:00 - 50:04They were not allowed to be evacuated.
-
50:05 - 50:16I addressed insistently to Saddam Hussein
referring to the errand of my President. -
50:17 - 50:21Saddam allowed doing that according to a special
time-table -
50:21 - 50:26Our specialists were evacuated, nobody suffered.
-
50:33 - 50:42President Putin had regular meetings with
President Chirac and Chancellor Schroeder. -
50:43 - 50:45They discussed global problems.
-
50:45 - 50:49It was absolutely clear that the configuration of the
world was changing. -
50:50 - 51:00If Europe was united and large, it could have its own
opinion, it would only won. -
51:01 - 51:11The concept of big Europe from Vladivostok to
Lisbon was aimed at serious interaction. -
51:11 - 51:14This responded to requirements of the XXI century.
-
51:14 - 51:19Unfortunately, this mechanism was not brought into
-
51:19 - 51:26after the retirement of President Chirac and
Chancellor Schroeder. -
51:27 - 51:29It seemed to have been very promising.
-
51:40 - 51:43I have not met such hard-working people.
-
51:45 - 51:52He goes to bed very late and may ring up early in
the morning. When does he sleep? -
51:53 - 52:01He can focus on one subject and, after a short time,
on another. -
52:06 - 52:11He has an important property, the ability to listen.
-
52:13 - 52:18He listens to everybody, he provides possibility for
everyone to speak out, sometimes more than -
52:20 - 52:25Due to this, conferences can test for many hours,
breaking a schedule very often. -
52:26 - 52:34He is often late. This problem actually exists, also
for journalists who write about Putin. -
52:34 - 52:36We have gone through much In this sense.
-
52:39 - 52:44I was a witness a couple of times why these delays
happen. -
52:45 - 52:55For example, I asked an additional question at a
meeting with journalists, already when leaving. -
52:55 - 52:57He says: "And you, Andrei, stay here."
-
52:58 - 53:02And I understood at once what happens with him in
real life. -
53:03 - 53:07He has infinite calls.
-
53:07 - 53:14I saw how he was diverted from the conversation
with me. -
53:14 - 53:18The Minister of Finances, Alexei Kudrin, rang up.
-
53:18 - 53:22And there was an intensive conversation with him for
about 20 minutes. -
53:22 - 53:25He surely had to be late somewhere else due to
-
53:26 - 53:32Kudrin believed that it was necessary to give 11
billion dollars to the Paris Club. -
53:33 - 53:38This was a difficult and a sort of historical solution.
-
53:39 - 53:41I asked: "What have you decided?" - "Maybe, we'll
give." -
53:45 - 53:48About a week later the news said.
-
53:49 - 53:51Russia returns debts to Paris Club."
-
53:53 - 54:05Putin's position was that debts of Russia had to
be as small as possible. -
54:06 - 54:11He believed it was necessary to reduce dependency
of Russia on IMF. -
54:12 - 54:15He understood that Russia had to be an
independent country. -
54:16 - 54:20It would be difficult to o and be in a critical
situation. -
54:26 - 54:31We were absolutely import-dependent country until
1998. -
54:32 - 54:40I remember how 2,000 people In Krasnoufimsk
stood and yelled: "Give us insulin!" -
54:41 - 54:43I think, it was necessary for someone.
-
54:44 - 54:49The new president gave me a hope and a message.
-
54:49 - 54:54it's time to stop buying-selling and to take up
production. -
54:54 - 55:03We decided: let's build a pharmaceutical European
standard plant. -
55:03 - 55:05Our goal was to achieve a very high level.
-
55:07 - 55:17It was a direct interference of Vladimir Vladimirovich
in a foreign lobby against its pressure. -
55:17 - 55:21Everybody told me: "Five teams have failed! What
do you want to do?" -
55:22 - 55:29I'm an ordinary man; Putin just helped me to
implement my idea. -
55:31 - 55:36We created 300 working places for young jobless
girls. -
55:36 - 55:42We understood that along with economical
problems, we resolved a greater problem. -
55:43 - 55:48Today, we have insulin much enough to assure the
drug safety of Russia. -
55:49 - 55:52There are supplies to other countries and supplies
to the EC are under preparation. -
55:53 - 55:54It is a victory, isn't it?
-
55:54 - 55:58What moments do you have in memory as the
most tragic and difficult? -
55:59 - 56:02Of course, these were the terrible terrorist acts.
-
56:02 - 56:06The terror attacks on the school in Beslan
on the Dubrovka Theatre in Moscow. -
56:07 - 56:12Those were perhaps the most tragic moments
-
56:12 - 56:16which all our people had to go through.
-
56:21 - 56:24Do you remember the Nord-Ost?
That was not an ordinary terror attack. -
56:24 - 56:30The seizure of the building
the seizure of hostages. -
56:32 - 56:36I kept Putin informed on a non-stop basis,
day and night. -
56:36 - 56:40At that time he didn’t leave his workplace.
-
56:43 - 56:48A lot of people thought that the main task
was to destroy the terrorists. -
56:48 - 56:51No, the main task was to save the people.
-
56:51 - 56:54It was night already.
-
56:54 - 56:58I was cut off from my security guards
and let in there. -
56:58 - 57:03I met the leader of those terrorists
ovsar arayev. -
57:03 - 57:09He was without a mask,
but there were masked gunmen around. -
57:09 - 57:13I tell him, let the women and children go
-
57:13 - 57:18Nowhere in the Koran does it say
that you can fight with women and children. -
57:21 - 57:28And he replies, if there is no order
to pull the troops out of Chechnya -
57:28 - 57:31he meant the Russian troops
-
57:31 - 57:35from 10 o'clock in the morning
-
57:35 - 57:38every half an hour,
-
57:38 - 57:41I will shoot one person.
-
57:49 - 57:54after that I went to Vladimir Vladimirovich.
-
57:54 - 57:59Of course he was worried
and you could see his jaw muscles move. -
57:59 - 58:02Of course...
-
58:02 - 58:08He didn't tell me
that there would be a raid at 4 o'clock. -
58:13 - 58:17Careful! Don't touch the wires
-
58:22 - 58:24It was a severe test.
-
58:28 - 58:31He's had too many of them
during his time in office. -
58:32 - 58:37No President in no country
have met with so many adversities. -
58:37 - 58:39Not a one
-
58:42 - 58:46And every of them, naturally,
-
58:46 - 58:51is a heavy burden on his shoulders,
on his mind, on his heart. -
58:58 - 59:02It was the most terrible day for me.
-
59:02 - 59:05I couldn't imagine myself
without Akhmad Kadyrov. -
59:10 - 59:16After Akhmad-Khaji died,
he invited me to his office. -
59:16 - 59:23The President of Chechnya
Akhmad-Khaji Kadyrov -
59:23 - 59:29served his people with dignity and courage.
-
59:29 - 59:33Throughout all these years, he covered
Chechnya and the Chechens with his own body -
59:33 - 59:37and he firmly led his republic
to peaceful life. -
59:37 - 59:41Akhmad-Khaji Kadyrov departed this life
on the 9th of May, -
59:41 - 59:46on the day when all our nation
celebrate Victory Day. -
59:46 - 59:50And he left undefeated.
-
59:53 - 59:57In the first Chechen campaign, I fought
against the federal centre, it's no secret. -
59:58 - 60:01We remember how we took Grozny.
-
60:01 - 60:04Then we left Grozny.
-
60:04 - 60:07We remember what was the position
of the federal centre. -
60:07 - 60:10That's why there was mistrust
towards the federal centre. -
60:11 - 60:16And the majority of young people
went to the woods to the mountains... -
60:20 - 60:23I was 17 I was young.
-
60:23 - 60:27Everyone was called to war.
So I went too. -
60:27 - 60:29There were different people there
-
60:30 - 60:33Arabs, people from Jordan,
from Africa too. -
60:34 - 60:37Well, mercenaries.
They came to fight for money. -
60:37 - 60:39We were not paid.
-
60:39 - 60:43We thought we were fighting
for our people for freedom. -
60:44 - 60:47In 1999 the second campaign began.
-
60:47 - 60:50The federals had me on their wanted list.
-
60:50 - 60:54So I couldn't stay at home
I went to the woods again. -
60:54 - 60:57There were guys
who had been granted an amnesty. -
60:57 - 61:00As soon as Akhmad-Khaji died
the gossip was spread -
61:00 - 61:02that they would be persecuted.
-
61:02 - 61:06There was panic in the republic.
-
61:06 - 61:12When I was on a visit in Moscow,
I went to President. -
61:12 - 61:14I told him about our situation
-
61:14 - 61:18and said that we need an opportunity
to legalize them somehow. -
61:18 - 61:21They were ready to fight for Russia
for our people. -
61:21 - 61:26I remember how difficult it was
to make that decision. -
61:26 - 61:33In the end, we granted an amnesty
to over 7 000 people. -
61:33 - 61:38President Putin, we are with you
and with the people. -
61:47 - 61:53That way not 7 000
but 70 000 lives were saved. -
61:54 - 62:00The Chechen Republic of today
is a peaceful and flourishing land. -
62:00 - 62:03The people live differently,
they see life differently. -
62:06 - 62:10I'd like to say something
which might be a bit unexpected -
62:10 - 62:15The Orthodox Christians, Muslims,
Jews, Buddhists -
62:15 - 62:19people belonging to traditional religions,
-
62:19 - 62:24that is to those religions that have always
existed on the territory of Russia -
62:24 - 62:27they all belong to one civilization.
-
62:27 - 62:29One distinctive feature of this civilization
-
62:30 - 62:34is the ability to see people
of a different religious tradition -
62:34 - 62:36as one of theirs.
-
62:36 - 62:42And the President - an orthodox Christian
who goes to Orthodox church -
62:42 - 62:49treats people of other religions
as his brothers. -
62:52 - 62:54He wishes them happy holidays.
-
62:54 - 63:00He gives them cooperation and support
for the issues they raise. -
63:04 - 63:09When Kazan turned 1000 years
we gathered in the theatre to celebrate it. -
63:09 - 63:14Vladimir Vladimirovich went on stage
to congratulate us. -
63:15 - 63:17Suddenly he started speaking in Tatar.
-
63:21 - 63:26If you'd heard the roar of applause he got!
-
63:26 - 63:30People were smiling.
-
63:30 - 63:33They just didn't let him
continue his speech. -
63:34 - 63:37But he came up with a quick answer
-
63:37 - 63:39He said, hold on it's not all yet.
-
63:42 - 63:44This is not all I can.
-
63:45 - 63:50And he went on speaking in Tatar
and people applauded even louder. -
63:50 - 63:52For those...
-
63:54 - 63:58For those who are only beginning
to learn the Tatar language -
63:58 - 64:01and haven't understood everything I said,
-
64:02 - 64:07I'd like to point out one thing
-
64:07 - 64:11Kazan has really played
a unique historic role -
64:12 - 64:14in building a united nation of Russia
-
64:14 - 64:19in creating a united and solid people
of Russia. -
64:19 - 64:24The ability to find understanding
-
64:24 - 64:26a common language with the public,
-
64:26 - 64:33for a leader of any rank
and especially for a leader of a country, -
64:33 - 64:38I must say, this is a gift,
it is not simple at all. -
64:38 - 64:41I don't think we can talk
about one particular achievement. -
64:42 - 64:45He's achieved the most important thing.
-
64:46 - 64:49He came and started running the country...
-
64:49 - 64:56I remember the regions
which may not be leaders but live well now, -
64:56 - 65:02for example, Kursk, Tambovsk Regions,
Voronezh Region... -
65:02 - 65:04They used to be on the brink of ruin.
-
65:04 - 65:10In the 2000s, wherever you went,
to whatever regional capital... -
65:10 - 65:15There was darkness... Egyptian,
puddles, mud, smashed roads... -
65:15 - 65:17And look how things are today.
-
65:17 - 65:21People live in the country
and earn good money, very good money. -
65:21 - 65:23They can provide for themselves.
-
65:24 - 65:26Besides they provide for Moscow
and half of the country -
65:26 - 65:28at least half of the country.
-
65:29 - 65:34After the institute I wanted to try myself,
to work in my profession exactly. -
65:34 - 65:36When I saw everything here
for the first time -
65:36 - 65:39I was both amazed and excited.
-
65:39 - 65:41We love all these cows very much.
-
65:41 - 65:45In these conditions, they ought
to live long and happily and to give us milk. -
65:46 - 65:48I came here two years ago.
-
65:48 - 65:51I've got a flat,
a regular job and a regular income. -
65:51 - 65:55If everyone does the job
they like and can do, -
65:55 - 66:00the country as a whole will grow
it all depends on us. -
66:01 - 66:05This is very important.
This is the food security of the state. -
66:07 - 66:08We are surrounded by countries
with developed economies. -
66:09 - 66:15We must frankly tell: they press us out from the
perspective markets where it is possible. -
66:15 - 66:21Their visible economical advantages give a reason
for a rise of geopolitical ambitions. -
66:21 - 66:27All our decisions, all our deeds must become
subject of the idea that in the nearest future -
66:28 - 66:36Russia would secure a place among really strong,
economically advanced and influential countries of -
66:36 - 66:43In a decade we must at least double GDP.
-
66:43 - 66:46Many people doubted that it was possible
-
66:46 - 66:53Somebody even laughed at it, said: Well, it is not
difficult to double it from zero. -
66:58 - 67:05First of all, we set a clear and understandable
system of taxes for minerals extraction. -
67:05 - 67:08The state started to receive income from gas and
-
67:08 - 67:15And before this it was not significantly less, it was
not clear, extremely not clear, not fair. -
67:15 - 67:20In 2003 a problem with Yukos appears.
-
67:20 - 67:24As for Khodorkovskiy, he was our colleague.
-
67:24 - 67:31How did it happen that such story took place is now
hard to explain -
67:32 - 67:36And frankly speaking, besides a purely humane
commiseration for Khodorkovskiy -
67:36 - 67:42who 10 years, maybe best 10 years of his life spent
where he spent (prison)... -
67:42 - 67:45It is like in a family when children are explained that
something is forbidden -
67:45 - 67:49they start to check whether it is really forbidden or
is allowed a little. -
67:50 - 67:57It was not only Yukos who went the way of
reducing taxes, tax avoidance. -
67:57 - 68:00Other companies also. Yukos more.
-
68:00 - 68:05And after tax police finished investigating Yukos
case, -
68:05 - 68:09many companies also paid significant money to the
budget -
68:09 - 68:13as a result of extra charges after court decisions.
-
68:19 - 68:22All your friends say that the main problem with
Putin -
68:22 - 68:25is that he finished faculty of Law and likes it very
much. -
68:25 - 68:27He always acts within the boundaries of the law.
-
68:27 - 68:30It is impossible to make Putin breach the law.
-
68:31 - 68:36It is right. I had very good teachers, very good, I'm
very thankful to them. -
68:37 - 68:44They hammered some principles, some
fundamental things into our heads, -
68:46 - 68:51which I consider not only correct from book's point
of view, but correct and necessary by life. -
68:52 - 68:54I don't remember if I told already or not.
-
68:54 - 68:59When I came to work in Leningrad department of
KGB, and we planned some... -
68:59 - 69:01I don't remember a small operation
-
69:01 - 69:08and one of our veterans proposed to do something.
-
69:09 - 69:15And he said that we needed to do this and this.
There were quite many people there. -
69:15 - 69:18I told him: "Listen, I think it is illegal."
-
69:18 - 69:20Next is an interesting thing.
-
69:21 - 69:25He looked at me with a surprise and said: "What?
-
69:25 - 69:29We have a certain instruction and said the number
of this instruction of KGB USSR." -
69:30 - 69:32I said: "If it exists, then it must be cancelled,
-
69:32 - 69:37because it contradicts to this law, that law,
contradicts the Constitution." -
69:37 - 69:44This is not a joke, I didn't make it up. It was in
reality. I was young, I just came from the university. -
69:46 - 69:51They just laughed at me, thank, God, it was already
1976, -
69:51 - 70:01it was far from the time of repressions there were
completely different times. -
70:06 - 70:10This place is called Russian Calvary - Butovskiy
training area, area of death. -
70:10 - 70:14Here the authorities killed its own people without
charge or trial. -
70:15 - 70:20The brotherhood grave with length of more than 1
km, dead bodies are set in several layers. -
70:20 - 70:24Most of the killed are simple people, arrested for
being late for the work, -
70:24 - 70:30accident damage of factory equipment or non
execution of the workday norm. -
70:32 - 70:34I was shocked by the story of Butovskiy training
area. -
70:34 - 70:42I went the whole way together with him
and understood what was going on with him. -
70:44 - 70:48And I could hear him saying: "God, what did they
-
70:50 - 70:57Honestly speaking, I haven’t written till the present
moment about all what he said then. -
70:57 - 71:02Because at a certain moment it seemed to me that
it was a too personal of a story. -
71:02 - 71:06He saw the lists of the killed, the gravestone, and
the most important, -
71:06 - 71:17he walked on this ground in which these people lied,
where they were shot down. -
71:18 - 71:22At this moment it seemed to me that the ground
was burning under his feet. -
71:22 - 71:25And this was not an exaggeration.
-
71:32 - 71:38President Putin, after meeting him, after talking
with him, I realized, -
71:38 - 71:43that he may look like extremely cold cool-headed
and cold-blooded. -
71:43 - 71:45And he behaves correspondingly.
-
71:45 - 71:49But I thought that inside of him, in his heart there is
a warm blood -
72:02 - 72:06A person who doesn't like to live skilfully, handily.
-
72:28 - 72:38So, such a person, that if he will need to make
some actions for getting some profit, money, some -
72:38 - 72:44and these actions are not acceptable for him, he will
never make such actions. -
72:46 - 72:48He had such a great teacher as Rakhlin.
-
72:52 - 72:53And when he taught judo to the President, he didn't
in a ou e uca ion o a rest en . -
72:54 - 72:57He wanted to make one more man by means of
judo. -
72:57 - 73:00A person who firmly stands on his feet.
-
73:04 - 73:06I always say, you know: there are two origins in
every person -
73:06 - 73:15There is a personal energy, a personal origin,
emotional, intellectual, and so on. -
73:15 - 73:19And there is an energy of the place energy of the
chair. -
73:20 - 73:27And they always collide. If the energy of the chair is
stronger, the person is significantly distorted. -
73:28 - 73:35If the human origin is stronger than the energy of the
chair energy of money -
73:35 - 73:38the person remains the same.
-
73:38 - 73:49Putin has such powerful human energy that it
overcomes stages of his career, -
73:50 - 73:53He invited us to Zavidovo. I remember it was
August. -
73:53 - 73:59We sat down in a small pavilion several people, and
he presented the idea of national projects. -
74:00 - 74:05National projects concerning the project of
education, medicine, -
74:05 - 74:08agriculture and housing projects.
-
74:10 - 74:15When perinatal centers started to work in Russia
the perinatal center in Yaroslavl, -
74:18 - 74:19we felt it. Birthrate has increased significantly here.
-
74:22 - 74:25Andrey and Aleksandr. This is the second delivery
-
74:25 - 74:27The elder is a girl, 3 years.
-
74:28 - 74:30He smiles, look, take photo.
-
74:32 - 74:35Every year the number of births in the perinatal
center increases. -
74:36 - 74:40And this year this number was 500 more than last
year. -
74:43 - 74:47Take the matter of mother capital.
-
74:47 - 74:55This is not just a propaganda of family values,
not just a propaganda that a big family is good. -
74:56 - 75:02This is real state policy directed to support the birth
of children. -
75:02 - 75:07This is a world view approach, and this is the most
important. -
75:07 - 75:12You know, presidents must solve many-sided
tasks. -
75:12 - 75:17And economy, and politics, and medicine, and
education -
75:17 - 75:22and infrastructure, and oil, and gas, whatever,
international relations. -
75:22 - 75:26But no one teaches you to be like this, you become
-
75:27 - 75:32He has an exceptional capability to grasp the
subject -
75:33 - 75:38Himself... he has such an expression: ''I will get
inside it, and then we will talk." -
75:41 - 75:44He wants to master something new all the time,
and he masters it. -
75:45 - 75:50Invisibly for everybody, he mastered English - bang!
and Putin speaks English -
75:57 - 76:01Don't forget that he doesn't have neither days-off
nor vacations. -
76:03 - 76:10He does it from 1 till 2 at night, or from 7 till 8 in the
morning. He doesn't have another option. -
76:11 - 76:12And he does it anyway.
-
76:13 - 76:15He had never skated.
-
76:17 - 76:18Now he plays hockey.
-
76:23 - 76:27He doesn't speak loud, doesn't yell at anyone. And
thus hides his inner character. -
76:28 - 76:34In the beginning skiing for Putin was an intensive
practice -
76:34 - 76:38That's why when you see him on a mountain, for
hours uphill and downhill... -
76:39 - 76:39He comes for 2.5-3 hours,
-
76:42 - 76:49and during this period neither a cup of tea nor break
for talking, just uphill and downhill. -
76:50 - 76:55I don't know where and how he learnt to play
piano. -
76:56 - 76:59I know only that he did it consistently.
-
77:01 - 77:09In the beginning, we witnessed how he started to
play with one finger, one hand. -
77:13 - 77:19Then, in several days the second hand was added.
-
78:13 - 78:15He is in fact from a usual working family.
-
78:17 - 78:19The same way like millions of others.
-
78:20 - 78:23Millions of his compatriots, like me, like you.
-
78:23 - 78:27- Vladimir Vladimirovych, I need your help. - I listen
to you. - My son is under arrest. -
78:28 - 78:30please, help, take care of it.
-
78:30 - 78:33He was brought up in a multifamily flat.
-
78:34 - 78:37And indeed this influence was serious.
-
78:37 - 78:42a crack, water was flooding in in winter.
-
78:44 - 78:52Look, in principle, no matter how paradoxically it
is, 80% of people can hear him and understand -
78:52 - 78:56than 20 % of officials and the intellectuals.
-
78:58 - 79:04It seems to me, he feels his role, first of all, as a
defender of simple people. -
79:04 - 79:09People pass him some notes all the time, some
pieces of paper, -
79:09 - 79:11something is written by pencils with uneven
handwriting. -
79:14 - 79:20He take it by himself, or when he has full hands, he
passes to someone of assistants. -
79:23 - 79:28And the most awful for assistants is when in two
hours he asks: Where are these pieces of papers? -
79:29 - 79:34I say: Which? He says: An old woman gave me, we
stopped in the street. -
79:35 - 79:42The telephone rings, he says: During some trip, an
old woman approached me... -
79:42 - 79:44a certain family applied to me.
-
79:44 - 79:46In my trip there was a corresponding manager,
-
79:50 - 79:56he has all original information how to find this
person, call him and solve the question. -
79:57 - 80:03The winter started. - Yes. Welcome. - Thanks.
-
80:03 - 80:10We decided to look, with Yevgeniy Stepanovych,
how your medicine, culture works... -
80:10 - 80:12You are interested in what people tell you.
-
80:13 - 80:16You look at people with whom you talk and want
to listen. -
80:16 - 80:22Why? Because you want to find another source of
information? A tuning fork? -
80:23 - 80:31No. In general I don't try to find some extra
sources, tuning forks... -
80:31 - 80:33I don't need to search for it, I have it all.
-
80:34 - 80:37I don’t even know why. It is even hard for me to tell,
you understand? -
80:37 - 80:42I say that not to make myself look good I just feel
myself as a part. -
80:43 - 80:48A part of our country, our people. Certainly
it is important for me, when we meet with people... -
80:50 - 80:55These signals come to me immediately, when I feel
that people are not satisfied with something, -
80:55 - 80:57anxious about something, worried about something.
-
80:58 - 81:03Certainly, such feedback is necessary, but it can be
like hitting a wall. -
81:03 - 81:14But can reach.. Thank God, this feeling is not lost
yet, and I manage to feel it at once. -
81:14 - 81:25It is precisely that... I have never been in so called
elites. This is really good indeed because... -
81:26 - 81:31when people live in another stratum... are born
there, -
81:31 - 81:36it is also not bad thank God, there are own big
advantages there too. -
81:36 - 81:42when people are born, live, brought up in a certain
elite society, there are also advantages. -
81:43 - 81:46But I have been watching for a long time...
-
81:48 - 81:54I highly respect such people, and envy a little,
because initially, -
81:54 - 82:00from first steps of life they manage to absorb many
important useful things, -
82:00 - 82:06which help to achieve big results in various fields.
-
82:07 - 82:12But for the person who deals with work which I do
now and the previous years, -
82:12 - 82:24this link and feeling of fellowship with people,
usual people are highly important and helps in work. -
82:25 - 82:28My mother told me: Be afraid of those for whom
the power is a dream. -
82:29 - 82:31Go to those for whom the power is a cross.
-
82:32 - 82:37I came to Vladimir Vladimirovych and said: Vladimir
Vladimirovych, we must rebury lllyin. -
82:37 - 82:43Illyin is a genius Russian philosopher, this is a
person who -
82:44 - 82:52all his life tried to explain himself and others and
to understand what is going on, why it takes place -
82:53 - 82:56Illyin died abroad, in Switzerland.
-
82:56 - 83:02In short, the lease of the land for IIlyin's grave came
to the end. -
83:03 - 83:10And according to Swiss laws another person could
be buried there if this grave is not looked after, -
83:10 - 83:14if there are no relatives.
-
83:14 - 83:21And then Vladimir Vladimirovych heard that and
took closely to his heart and personally. -
83:22 - 83:29And the decision was made to rebury Illyin on the
cemetary of Donskoy Monastery. -
83:31 - 83:42Brothers and sisters! Today we are participants of
a historical even -
83:45 - 83:53Co-memorable sons of Russia come back to the
native land. -
83:54 - 84:07general Anton Ivanovych Denikin and philosopher
Ivan Aleksandrovych lllyin together with their wives. -
84:08 - 84:16This is not just a physical transfer of remains of
two great persons to our land. -
84:17 - 84:22I hope this is the beginning of the end of the dreadful
civil war. -
84:22 - 84:30Reburial of lllyin, reburial of Denikin, and before that
reburial of Shmelyov, our brilliant author, -
84:31 - 84:42these all are fragments directed at consolidation, at
stopping of the civil war in heads. -
84:43 - 84:47The motion to gather that spiritual strength
-
84:47 - 84:53earned by these great Russian people throughout all
their lives -
84:53 - 84:58devoted to thoughts and deeds concerned with
Russia. -
85:01 - 85:06If you see the scale of a country and try to make
this atmosphere common, -
85:07 - 85:12only In this case 80% can tell you: Yes, we are
together with you. -
85:12 - 85:17At the same time, people who not just live, live not
well, -
85:17 - 85:24who have problems, who have big claims to local
authorities and to supreme power -
85:24 - 85:31but when they understand that there is a person
above them for whom the power is a cross and he -
85:32 - 85:39and he consolidates the society, and only national
interests become his personal interests -
85:40 - 85:45when he bears responsibility for everyone, including
the whole country, -
85:46 - 85:51only in this case people who not just live, can say.
Yes, we are together with you, we will be patient. -
85:53 - 86:01At that moment young Russia had no large-scale
projects and large-scale victories, -
86:02 - 86:06which would allow to show the whole world that
-
86:06 - 86:10we are not a shatter of a great empire, but we are
an independent, -
86:10 - 86:15big, serious state with our own achievements,
ambitions. -
86:16 - 86:20And in 2005 the application for winter Olympic
games was made. -
86:20 - 86:24Frankly speaking, I'm a sinner.
-
86:24 - 86:28I didn't believe that we would be given the right to
organize winter Olympic games. -
86:29 - 86:33On the eve of a session of International Olympic
committee in Guatemala, -
86:33 - 86:39where the question was whether Putin should go to
Guatemala or not, -
86:39 - 86:42what if we suddenly lose, I told him: "Vladimir
Vladimirovych, -
86:42 - 86:46if you don't go, I guarantee that we will lose.
-
86:46 - 86:50But if you do go, then there is a risk that we will
lose anyway." -
86:50 - 86:53But without you going we stand no chance.
-
86:55 - 87:03When Vladimir Vladimirovych arrived to
Guatemala within 2 days -
87:03 - 87:09there were 30-40 meetings with key members of the
International Olympic committee. -
87:09 - 87:11It lasted non-stop day and night.
-
87:12 - 87:14And there was a rehearsal at which he arrived.
-
87:14 - 87:19And we rehearsed the entrance, he participated in it
ry disciplinarily. -
87:19 - 87:22But for us the most important thing was to
determine the chronometry. -
87:23 - 87:27And he took out his precious papers and I was full
ears. -
87:27 - 87:29He says: Are you ready? I say: Yes.
-
87:30 - 87:31He says: Let’s go. I turned on.
-
87:32 - 87:35And nothing happens. He reads to himself.
-
87:37 - 87:39He says: That's all. Stop.
-
87:40 - 87:45Dear President! Members of the International
Olympic committee! Ladies and Gentlemen! -
87:46 - 87:54I ask you to support Olympic dream of millions f
Russians who are waiting for our decision with a -
87:54 - 87:55Thank you.
-
87:55 - 87:59It was like an explosion, like a bomb We needed
to show, -
87:59 - 88:03like they say now, respect to the International
Olympic committee. -
88:03 - 88:08So that they would understand that they were given
a gesture of real respect. -
88:09 - 88:14These two phrases in French - bang! And it
happened. -
88:14 - 88:16Olympic games are ours, that's it.
-
88:29 - 88:32The question of the country is perhaps the major
value -
88:34 - 88:41Then perhaps, a question of family, personal
relations and friendship, maybe. -
88:41 - 88:46He always shows devotion of such friendly relations.
-
88:49 - 88:57I know how hard he suffers personal betrayal.
-
88:57 - 89:02I know people with whom he had good relationships.
-
89:02 - 89:09After they made some deeds which didn't comply
with his idea of peace and decency, -
89:09 - 89:13he just cut them out and never met with them again.
-
89:15 - 89:20Personal contacts, personal contacts exist
exactly to be kept in private. -
89:21 - 89:23But I can tell several things.
-
89:23 - 89:28Some time ago a CD was made... in 1999, I
guess... -
89:29 - 89:31The CD is called "Songs of the country which
doesn't exist any more". -
89:32 - 89:39Very good songs, good singers and words, and
music. -
89:43 - 89:44Sometimes we sing.
-
89:45 - 89:50They say: We choose our enemies and friends by
ourselves, but neighbours are God given. -
89:51 - 89:54We are neighbours given by God.
-
89:54 - 90:00I think that there are no more such close neighbour
-
90:00 - 90:05allied relations like between Russia and
Kazakhstan. -
90:05 - 90:10It is objective, let no one get offended, we are the
closest countries. -
90:10 - 90:14Now we are talking about Eurasian Economic
Union. -
90:15 - 90:21This project is proposed by me. Now they say that
Russia is making a new Soviet Union. -
90:21 - 90:29Everybody is called... I proposed it because if
European Union is made, it is normal, right? -
90:29 - 90:32And if we start to say something it is bad.
-
90:33 - 90:35This is a usual approach to such questions.
-
90:37 - 90:51Desperate attempts of some countries to save their
role of the only development center, -
90:51 - 90:54the only center of the world control
-
90:55 - 91:05have resulted in erosion of the international law, the
notion of the international security, -
91:06 - 91:10European security. The erosion of Yalta system has
started -
91:17 - 91:21of the unipolar conditions,
-
91:21 - 91:25and tendency to the world supremacy.
-
91:26 - 91:28Whatever has happened in the history of the
mankind. -
91:31 - 91:34However, what is the unipolar world?
-
91:35 - 91:43However this term is decorated, it finally means in
practice only one thing. -
91:44 - 91:51this is one center of power, one center of force, one
center of decision making. -
91:53 - 91:55This is the world of one master of one sovereign.
-
91:56 - 92:01I was surprised by the reaction of German and
other foreign journalists. -
92:01 - 92:03They forgot that they were journalists.
-
92:04 - 92:07They stopped taking notes, they were sitting with
their mouths open -
92:07 - 92:12watching and listening what he was saying
-
92:13 - 92:18One-sided, often illegitimate actions haven’t solved
any single problem. -
92:18 - 92:24Moreover, they have become the generator of new
human tragedies and trouble spots. -
92:24 - 92:31From one side - shock, from another - hidden
dissatisfaction They came to me: Why so sharp? -
92:31 - 92:32I say: What was sharp?
-
92:35 - 92:37Speaking about this issues as an old soldier of the
Cold War, I would like to draw your attention -
92:38 - 92:44that one of the speeches almost caused a nostalgia
about those less complicated times. -
92:45 - 92:45Almost.
-
92:46 - 92:50Many of you have big experience in diplomacy or
politics. -
92:51 - 92:58I, like one more speaker, have completely different
experience - experience of intelligence activities. -
92:58 - 93:03I suppose that old spies have a habit of blunt
speaking. -
93:05 - 93:10Fine, I will then answer on that I can read by
myself. -
93:11 - 93:13And if I don't answer, you will remind me your
questions. -
93:15 - 93:18What would be with Kosovo and Serbia?
-
93:18 - 93:21Only Kosovans and Serbians can know it.
-
93:22 - 93:24And let's not decide for them
-
93:25 - 93:26how they should make their life.
-
93:27 - 93:31One should not make himself a God and solve all
problems for all peoples. -
93:33 - 93:38We can only create conditions and help people to
solve their problems. -
93:42 - 93:47We got acquainted with Putin in one very small
department of one very big organization. -
93:48 - 93:51Big organization is certainly KGB of USSR,
-
93:51 - 93:56and small department, it's really a small
department, of foreign intelligence. -
93:58 - 94:03We served as young officers, senior lieutenants,
captains. -
94:04 - 94:07At that time there were illegals in our department
-
94:08 - 94:15Those who came back to the motherland after... 20
years of illegal work in the West. -
94:16 - 94:20We recall them with Vladimir Vladimirovych, when
we have some free time to reminisce. -
94:20 - 94:24People served, you understand by yourself, not for
money. -
94:26 - 94:27They risked hugely.
-
94:30 - 94:33And whatever happened to them - these are illegals.
-
94:36 - 94:38They were a live example.
-
94:39 - 94:41They worked for the country, for the motherland
-
94:42 - 94:44This is the essence.
-
94:45 - 94:48Without any political colour, ideology and so on
-
94:48 - 94:56After serving in KGB and intelligence, his entrance
in democratic life, -
94:56 - 95:04meeting new rules of life, possibilities took place
precisely during the work with Sobchak. -
95:05 - 95:09It was Sobchak being a bright character and
one of the leading activists, -
95:09 - 95:12accelerated his understanding of all events.
-
95:13 - 95:18We all went out of the country, we considered
that the country had to prevail over everything. -
95:18 - 95:23And, to my mind, Sobchak taught us all how we
can keep balance, -
95:23 - 95:29where we can see new possibilities of democratic
country democratic order -
95:29 - 95:34freedom of opinion discussion defense of opinion
political competence. -
95:35 - 95:46in 2008, after serving two terms of presidency,
Putin had an incredibly high rating. -
95:47 - 95:50The question arose and it was the main question.
-
95:50 - 95:54would Putin stay for the third term or finally
according to the Constitution -
95:54 - 96:01would leave this position, the most important for the
country which didn’t get strong yet -
96:02 - 96:05to another leader. This question bothered everybody.
-
96:06 - 96:07Thoughts and talks were only about it.
-
96:07 - 96:10Vladimir Vladimirovych, during last 2-3 years
appeals to you -
96:10 - 96:13to stay for the third term sounded more and more
often. -
96:13 - 96:18More likely, a part of your team also tried to
influence you in this matter. -
96:19 - 96:23How big was the temptation to consent to these
suasions and to stay for the third term? Thanks. -
96:23 - 96:27I had no temptation to stay for the third term.
-
96:28 - 96:29Never.
-
96:30 - 96:34From the first day of work as the President of
Russian Federation, I decided at once -
96:35 - 96:38that I would not breach the working Constitution.
-
96:39 - 96:41I got this vaccination during the work with Anatoliy
Aleksandrovych Sobchak. -
96:44 - 96:48And I think it is an important signal to the society in
general. -
96:49 - 96:54Everyone must obey the working law, starting with
the head of the state. -
96:55 - 97:02To your mind, what was your main success,
main achievement at the position of the state head? -
97:02 - 97:08And what has gone wrong? What do you consider
as your main failure during these years? Thanks. -
97:12 - 97:17I don't see any serious failures. All set goals were
achieved, tasks - completed -
97:18 - 97:23I'm not ashamed in front of people who chose me
twice for the position of the President of Russian -
97:23 - 97:28All these 8 years I worked hard like a slave
galley, from the morning till night. -
97:30 - 97:33And did it with full force.
-
97:36 - 97:38I'm satisfied with results of my work
-
97:44 - 97:47Hundreds of thousands of tourists and heads of 40
countries of the world are guests. -
97:47 - 97:49All at 300th anniversary of Saint Petersburg.
-
97:51 - 97:57Veteran of the war, Mayerbeck Dzgoyev was one of
the first to get a course at the multifaceted medical -
97:57 - 98:00Unique equipment is installed here.
-
98:02 - 98:04A tanker of ice class is commissioned.
-
98:07 - 98:09Prayer towers can be seen from any point of
Groznyy, even at night. -
98:09 - 98:14The heart of Chechnya already claims for the title of
the biggest mosque in Europe. -
98:15 - 98:16The North pole is ours.
-
98:16 - 98:21We have it, friends. - It goes, it goes...
-
98:37 - 98:40Hello, Russia Hello, Moscow.
-
98:41 - 98:46We have a chance to develop like we did it last
years. -
98:47 - 98:52And I am sure we have to choose this way. We have
all chances for this. -
98:53 - 98:56Did you get cold? - No.
-
98:57 - 99:00Can you give me one minute? - Yes.
-
99:02 - 99:06Elections of the President of Russian Federation
took place. -
99:07 - 99:15In 2008 when Putin started to work as the Prime
Minister -
99:16 - 99:25It seemed that it would be... the time of resting on
your laurels. -
99:26 - 99:29I.e. he was the head of the state, he saved the
country from collapse. -
99:30 - 99:33He set it on trajectory of stable development.
-
99:33 - 99:35He paid all debts.
-
99:36 - 99:37With external, with internal.
-
99:38 - 99:42He raised the living standards of the population
-
99:42 - 99:45and he raised it not for the future generations, but
for the present. -
99:46 - 99:48This never happened in the history of our country
-
99:50 - 99:53And in theory, he had to enter the this wonderful
white house at Krasnopresnenskaya quay, -
99:53 - 99:56sit down in the cabinet and say: Thanks God.
-
99:57 - 99:59And the world crisis broke out
-
100:02 - 100:10In fact, it was 45 Everybody was scared nobody
lived in such a strong stress of the world scale. -
100:10 - 100:12And again, what has Putin done?
-
100:13 - 100:20He went to the public and said: I bear responsibility
that 1998 would not repeat. -
100:21 - 100:24I bear personal responsibility
-
100:24 - 100:29Turn up his sleeves, and kept on rowing his galley
from dusk till dawn. -
100:30 - 100:32The fate of tens of thousands of people was at
stake. -
100:32 - 100:38If the state didn't help they would just go to streets
and became unemployed. -
100:39 - 100:40How many people worked here?
-
100:41 - 100:46Around 3 000 people worked here before the crisis.
-
100:46 - 100:50At this enterprise? - Yes. Now 2 345.
-
100:50 - 100:55Are listed? - Right. Among them 2 thirds are in
down time. -
100:55 - 100:58At one working site there were three joint stock
companies. -
100:59 - 101:02And at a certain point we got messed
-
101:02 - 101:06so that we couldn't find a solution which would allow
the work of the company. -
101:07 - 101:09I don't see your signature. Come here and sign.
-
101:09 - 101:10Come to me.
-
101:15 - 101:16Here is the agreement.
-
101:25 - 101:28Give me the pen back.
-
101:30 - 101:36I consider that you made thousands of people as
hostages of your ambitions, -
101:36 - 101:43on-professionalism or maybe obvious greed.
-
101:47 - 101:48It is absolutely unacceptable.
-
101:51 - 101:55And where is that social responsibility of business?
-
101:57 - 101:58Where is it?
-
101:59 - 102:01Here, you know, the matter is not in offence.
-
102:02 - 102:03You can discuss it for a long time.
-
102:04 - 102:08You can remain in stupor, let's say.
-
102:08 - 102:14Not solving some problems. He understands that
he is the last person who has to make this -
102:14 - 102:18So that these matters would not be discussed but
some actions started. -
102:19 - 102:21Now as for administration.
-
102:22 - 102:27Nobody will persuade me that the management of
the region and other levels -
102:27 - 102:31as done all what depended on them in order to
help people. -
102:35 - 102:39When I said that was going to come here, what did
they replied? -
102:39 - 102:42No need, let's go I will show you another company
which is recently built. -
102:43 - 102:47Certainly, well done that you built a new enterprise.
-
102:47 - 102:50Why did you start to run about like cockroaches
just before my arrival? -
102:51 - 102:54were there no people earlier who were able to
make decisions? -
102:54 - 102:57All salary debts must be paid.
-
102:59 - 103:04This is 41 242 000 RUB. The deadline is today.
-
103:07 - 103:09Thanks. Good luck.
-
103:13 - 103:16During the crisis, when job cuts started,
-
103:16 - 103:21the complex launched such a huge project as 5000
rolling mill. -
103:22 - 103:25It saved people from absence of work.
-
103:27 - 103:34Now, tubes which we produce, are used for
complicated pipelines like North Stream. -
103:34 - 103:38Now for the Power of Siberia for production of
submarines -
103:38 - 103:48This naturally results on salary, i.e. lately the level
of life risen significantly. -
103:49 - 103:53We can see real changes. What is used in
Russia? -
103:53 - 103:57To believe people in practice but not in words.
-
103:59 - 104:06On August 8th 2008, if you remember, it was the
opening day of Beijing Olympic games. -
104:07 - 104:09We appeared in the same residency.
-
104:09 - 104:13And in one room we were sitting and talking, at that
time his telephone rang, -
104:13 - 104:16I said: I will go. He said: No. stay here.
-
104:17 - 104:22At that moment he was informed what events took
place in North Ossetia -
104:22 - 104:26And he listened, listened, put down the receiver, and
was very upset. -
104:26 - 104:29I asked: What happened? I thought something
happened at his home, -
104:29 - 104:32something special. I have never seen him like that.
-
104:32 - 104:36And he says: Can you imagine? Our peacekeepers
were attacked, -
104:36 - 104:41and several soldiers were killed. What did they do?
What did they do? -
104:45 - 104:48The situation developed dramatically for 17 years.
-
104:50 - 104:54Russian Federation performed peacekeeping
functions for 17 years. -
104:54 - 104:58It helped to keep peace and calm there
-
104:58 - 105:02It prevented murders which took place from 90s.
-
105:03 - 105:09And tried to keep the unity of Georgian state.
-
105:11 - 105:16Nonetheless after the aggression and genocide
which was started by the regime of Saakashvilli -
105:16 - 105:22the situation changed and our main task was to
prevent humanitarian catastrophe, -
105:22 - 105:26to save lives of people for whom we bear
responsibility. -
105:29 - 105:38He made decision at once to fly from Beijing to
Ossetia. -
105:39 - 105:43And he goes straight to people, certainly. This is
typical. -
105:44 - 105:50I.e. all what is concerned with military actions,
he was informed during the flight, and he goes at -
105:50 - 105:55Camps of refugees hospitals where the wounded
stay. -
105:55 - 105:59It is a genocide. - A real genocide. They kill the
wounded. -
106:00 - 106:07My child of 5 months who wasn’t even born, left,
he didn't even see his father, why... I don't know. -
106:08 - 106:11He was accompanied his personal photographers,
his personal cameraman. -
106:12 - 106:17I don't know how my father-in-law is, who left in the
village, old man, ill old man. -
106:17 - 106:29And then he quite toughly gave command
to stop recording because these ladies really had a -
106:30 - 106:39And it was utter darkness, cameraman just lit the
way with this light so that no one would stumble. -
106:41 - 106:47You have like Presidency of trials. You overcome
something, another thing falls on you. -
106:48 - 106:53Chechnya campaign, terror acts, the crisis,
Ossetia. -
106:54 - 107:00It goes in a long line, it seems that you solved, and
there is again and again. -
107:00 - 107:05As a manager, at what moment do you feel more
comfortable. -
107:05 - 107:11when there is a war or when it is peace and
everyday routine? -
107:14 - 107:15I worked as the chairman of the government.
-
107:16 - 107:17I like this job very much.
-
107:18 - 107:25It is definite, clear... not clear, but anyway it is...
-
107:26 - 107:30more concentrated at certain questions.
-
107:30 - 107:33And one can see the result at once.
-
107:33 - 107:36what you did right, what wrong, where you made a
mistake. -
107:37 - 107:41When the task has a more global character,
-
107:41 - 107:50then the result can not be understood
at once what it would be in certain time. -
107:51 - 107:57However, indeed, I have never thought about it. I
always start from what I have, -
107:58 - 108:01and I solve those tasks which are set for me.
-
108:05 - 108:10In the beginning of 2009 I was at the meeting with
Putin in Sochi, -
108:10 - 108:13when the fate of Olympic infrastructure was
discussed. -
108:13 - 108:20In the course of the meeting Putin called many
times so that the budget money would be saved. -
108:20 - 108:23Because on the one hand we needed to build
beautifully, awesome, -
108:24 - 108:26and on the other hand, there is the crisis,
-
108:26 - 108:28there is little money in the budget and we should
save. -
108:28 - 108:34At certain moment after reminding about saving
again, he said: Money is people's. -
108:34 - 108:37And he said it so quietly, without pathos.
-
108:37 - 108:42But the voice quaked and it was seen that he was
worried personally about it. -
108:42 - 108:49He really considers that the money is people's, i.e.
earned by the whole country. -
108:49 - 108:51And thus it must be spent assiduously.
-
108:54 - 109:03Such quantity of trips like at that time to
enterprises, factories, Rosselmash, Avtovaz, he has -
109:03 - 109:09Besides that this was the summer when awful fires
took place. -
109:10 - 109:18And we went right the other day to this burning
villages, met with people -
109:18 - 109:25who sometimes were ready to tear apart
any representative of the authority who would . -
109:28 - 109:32we are dying, help us, Vladimir Vladimirovych,
help us... -
109:41 - 109:44Why did no one do it? Why did you refuse from
everything? -
109:44 - 109:47We stood for you... - Who stood for us?
-
109:50 - 109:52We will restore nothing from these firebrands.
-
109:52 - 109:54We will build new houses.
-
110:00 - 110:04Why did he allow it? - Now, now, wait a second.
-
110:10 - 110:12I want everyone to hear this, can everyone hear me
well? -
110:14 - 110:16Until winter all houses will be built.
-
110:16 - 110:21Our village will be restored, do you promise us?
Yes, I promise, your village will be restored. -
110:27 - 110:36These trips covered with smoke and flame of that
Premier-Minister time come to mind first. -
110:39 - 110:48Then it was a real toil: everyday, getting deep into
the soil. -
110:49 - 110:50It was a work on a field.
-
110:52 - 110:59Then I remember how we went to the same places,
but with new houses built -
111:00 - 111:05I invited you for house warming. Let's go inside.
-
111:05 - 111:07The heating is at the minimum.
-
111:07 - 111:10As for the gas, the governor told me: We will not
finish in time. -
111:11 - 111:12Finished in time. - In time.
-
111:15 - 111:19Considering the proposal to put
my name at the top of the party list, -
111:19 - 111:21to get involved in party activities
-
111:21 - 111:25and in case of successful elections,
-
111:25 - 111:28my readiness to take over
practical work in the government -
111:28 - 111:31I think that it would be fair
-
111:31 - 111:35if Congress would support nomination
of Vladimir Putin, Chairman of the party, -
111:35 - 111:38as a president of the country!
-
111:59 - 112:03When Medvedev proposed Putin
and Putin proposed Medvedev, -
112:03 - 112:09it did seem to everyone
quite arrogant so to say -
112:09 - 112:12
towards their voters. -
112:12 - 112:16that there weren't actually
any real elections. -
112:18 - 112:22And those who didn't make
their choice in Putin's favor -
112:22 - 112:25during the presidents elections
-
112:25 - 112:28those were the ones who came over.
-
112:28 - 112:30They came to Bolotnaya Square
-
112:30 - 112:33to say that they had different opinion.
-
112:33 - 112:36I came to Bolotnaya to see all this.
-
112:36 - 112:38But they occupied the podium
-
112:38 - 112:41and immediately took the charge of
who is allowed to stand on it or not. -
112:41 - 112:43Later I was sitting in the bar
in the neighborhood -
112:43 - 112:46and listening to their ridiculous talks
-
112:46 - 112:48that they will overthrow
Russian government, -
112:48 - 112:51that they won, they spoke up.
I found it extremely funny. -
112:55 - 112:58I had very thorough
conversation with Putin. -
112:58 - 113:01I told him that probably
I will go to Sakharov Avenue -
113:01 - 113:04I’m not going to say what he told me,
-
113:04 - 113:06but there weren't
any restrictions at least. -
113:06 - 113:09I simply thought that
-
113:09 - 113:11for the first time on Sakharova Ave
-
113:11 - 113:17will be those representatives of middle class
who were never out on protests. -
113:17 - 113:19We have to organize platform for a dialog!
-
113:19 - 113:22Otherwise there will be a revolution!
-
113:22 - 113:27Otherwise we'll lose the chance
we are having today. -
113:27 - 113:30I tried to give authorities
and Putin a push -
113:30 - 113:34and to find the grounds
for such dialog with people -
113:34 - 113:38who sincerely care about
situation in the country. -
113:38 - 113:45But since these people
got very much mixed up -
113:45 - 113:48with more radical groups
and with nationalists. -
113:48 - 113:52that's why I noticed later
-
113:52 - 113:58that Putin doesn't see any
representatives for a dialog there. -
114:06 - 114:10In Putin's opinion, they
have crossed the red line then. -
114:15 - 114:18They started to beat up policemen.
-
114:18 - 114:20He's killed!
-
114:22 - 114:26It was decided that investigation
will take place -
114:26 - 114:28and if information will be confirmed,
-
114:28 - 114:32that this man hit the policeman,
he'll be put in jail then -
114:32 - 114:35And it did happen.
-
114:37 - 114:39Most important is that
-
114:39 - 114:43it was not only in accordance with
the laws of Russian Federation -
114:43 - 114:46but also with internal morals of Putin.
-
114:49 - 114:51They are out flying the hang-glider.
-
114:51 - 114:56Out flying it and falling to
the right, the left of the wing. -
114:56 - 114:57Good birds!
-
114:58 - 115:01Beautiful guys, cute ones.
-
115:01 - 115:04Kseniya Sobchak,
your consistent opposer, -
115:04 - 115:08projected this whole situation
-
115:08 - 115:11on election statistics.
-
115:11 - 115:14I don't know if you heard about it.
-
115:14 - 115:18So, 63% of the cranes followed Putin,
-
115:18 - 115:22the rest have chosen to fly to the South
-
115:22 - 115:28and only a small group stayed to make
nests on squares and boulevards. -
115:28 - 115:31Thus, not all cranes flew after Putin.
-
115:31 - 115:34Why don’t I hear applause?
-
115:38 - 115:40That's true.
-
115:40 - 115:42Not all cranes flew... right away.
-
115:42 - 115:45Only the weak cranes didn't fly.
-
115:52 - 115:55And only on the first try.
On the 2nd try everyone flew! -
116:01 - 116:04Even though.
-
116:04 - 116:09I have to admit,
I have to tell you honestly, -
116:09 - 116:12a reason that not all cranes flew right away,
-
116:12 - 116:17it was also their leader's.
-
116:17 - 116:19Cause in certain moments,
-
116:19 - 116:22I mean bad weather and strong side wind,
-
116:22 - 116:25pilot is forced to gain
height and speed quickly. -
116:25 - 116:27Otherwise the system
can turn over -
116:30 - 116:32What else can I add?
-
116:32 - 116:35There are little birds indeed,
-
116:35 - 116:37who don't fly in a flock at all,
-
116:37 - 116:40they prefer to make their nests separately.
-
116:40 - 116:42Well, what can we do?
-
116:42 - 116:45This is a different kind of problem.
-
116:46 - 116:48Even if they aren't part of the flock,
-
116:48 - 116:50they are still part of our population
-
116:50 - 116:53and we should treat them nicely.
-
116:59 - 117:01There were people,
-
117:03 - 117:06Khodorkovsky and Berezovsky, for instance
-
117:07 - 117:12who took absolutely intransigent
aggressive stand against him. -
117:15 - 117:16Vladimir Vladimirovich,
-
117:16 - 117:19one year ago you pardoned Khodorkovsky.
-
117:19 - 117:22He promised you to stay away from politics.
-
117:22 - 117:26But now he is even announcing
his presidential ambitions! -
117:26 - 117:28I have a question in this regard.
don't you regret... -
117:28 - 117:30And where is he going to run for president?
-
117:31 - 117:34Mr Khodorkovsky appealed to me for a pardon,
-
117:34 - 117:37he has sent a relevant paper at least.
-
117:37 - 117:39And it seemed that he wasn't
planning to go in politics. -
117:39 - 117:43But when I was making
a decision about pardon -
117:43 - 117:47I wasn't considering
whether he will do it or not, -
117:47 - 117:49whether he'll go into politics or not.
-
117:49 - 117:51It's his choice.
-
117:51 - 117:53I was considering
humanitarian grounds instead. -
117:53 - 117:56He was writing me then
that his mom was seriously ill, -
117:56 - 117:59mom is a holy cause you know!
-
117:59 - 118:01am saying this without any sarcasm.
-
118:01 - 118:06And he served most part of his
punishment in places of imprisonment. -
118:06 - 118:10What would be the point
of keeping him there, -
118:10 - 118:15considering that he could
miss saying goodbye to his mom? -
118:17 - 118:20Mother played a part there of course
-
118:20 - 118:24because humanity is very important.
-
118:24 - 118:27Berezovsky wanted
to return to the country. -
118:27 - 118:31And Berezovsky was talking about
his love to the country etc. -
118:31 - 118:33That's right.
-
118:33 - 118:36He was writing that he has
made many mistakes, -
118:36 - 118:38caused damage.
-
118:38 - 118:41He was asking to forgive him and
allow him to come back to Motherland. -
118:41 - 118:45He was ready to allow him
to come back to the country. -
118:45 - 118:47He is a strong enough person
-
118:49 - 118:54to forgive those who are
unforgiving to himself. -
118:57 - 118:59September 5th, 2013
-
118:59 - 119:02Last night Barak Obama
flew across the Atlantic -
119:02 - 119:05in order to launch a diplomatic offensive.
-
119:06 - 119:11And I also look forward
to discuss situation in Syria. -
119:11 - 119:15I think that we should take seriously
-
119:15 - 119:19our joint recognition that
chemical weapon use in Syria -
119:19 - 119:21is not only a tragedy,
-
119:21 - 119:24but also a breach of international law.
-
119:25 - 119:29Barak Obama flew from Stockholm
to G-20 Summit in St Petersburg, -
119:29 - 119:33though one-on-one with Vladimir
Putin was not in his schedule. -
119:44 - 119:46Earlier they were ready
-
119:46 - 119:49though in Syria regard
there were preferences only. -
119:49 - 119:53If M Obama is not able
to persuade world leaders -
119:53 - 119:56that military response is the only option
-
119:56 - 119:58then convincing Congress and Americans
-
119:58 - 120:01on primary voting held next week
-
120:01 - 120:03will be even more complicated.
-
120:03 - 120:07Couple of days prior to making a decision
-
120:07 - 120:09in regard to begin to bomb Damascus
-
120:09 - 120:12in order to overthrow the regime
-
120:12 - 120:17under the pretence that Syrian
government used chemical weapon, -
120:17 - 120:20though no evidence was ever presented.
-
120:20 - 120:26On G-20 Summit in St Petersburg
Putin made a proposal. -
120:26 - 120:30He simply said: "Since you are so
worried about chemical weapon -
120:30 - 120:32let's work on convincing Syria
-
120:32 - 120:35to sign convention on the
prohibition of chemical weapon -
120:35 - 120:36and promise to destroy them.
-
120:36 - 120:38There is no need to bomb.
-
120:38 - 120:42if it's all about the chemical
weapon and nothing else. -
120:42 - 120:45In this case we are ready
to use our influence -
120:45 - 120:47to convince Syria to join convention
-
120:47 - 120:49on the prohibition of chemical weapon
-
120:49 - 120:52and would sign with a relevant organization
-
120:52 - 120:54agreement on its destruction.
-
120:54 - 120:57I would like to remind you, that
using force against a sovereign state -
120:57 - 121:03is solely allowed in case
of the self-defence, -
121:03 - 121:06and as we know,
Syria isn't attacking USA, -
121:06 - 121:07and secondly,
-
121:07 - 121:11by the decision of UN Security Council.
-
121:11 - 121:14As one of the summit
participants said yesterday, -
121:14 - 121:18Those who act otherwise,
put themselves outside of the law." -
121:20 - 121:23In the beginning there wasn't any dialog.
-
121:23 - 121:26There was a handshake
on the meeting ceremony. -
121:26 - 121:28Some people said it was cold,
-
121:28 - 121:30others that it was timid or aggressive
-
121:30 - 121:35Next morning totally unplanned
contact took place. -
121:35 - 121:38Every participant of G-20 was witnessing
-
121:38 - 121:41that they started to talk.
-
121:41 - 121:43Putin and Obama.
-
121:44 - 121:48They started this conversation on foot
-
121:48 - 121:53and then sat down in
a corner of a small hall. -
121:54 - 121:57It was continuing
for few minutes at first. -
121:57 - 121:59All country leaders were
standing there and waiting. -
121:59 - 122:02Five, ten minutes have passed.
-
122:02 - 122:07They weren't paying attention of course
to what was happening around. -
122:07 - 122:10I guess that in terms of the protocol
-
122:10 - 122:13there was an awkward pause.
-
122:13 - 122:15But it didn't really hang in the air,
-
122:15 - 122:18cause all leaders of the countries
-
122:18 - 122:23were glancing into the corner
where two presidents were sitting -
122:23 - 122:26and we could feel the
complete understanding -
122:26 - 122:32of how important this talk
was for the whole world. -
122:36 - 122:39Of course Putin and
Obama didn't succeed -
122:39 - 122:41in solving Syria’s problem.
-
122:41 - 122:43However...
-
122:43 - 122:46disposal of the chemical weapon stocks
-
122:47 - 122:49which Syria had back then
-
122:49 - 122:52did take place and it is completed.
-
122:52 - 122:53And who knows,
-
122:53 - 122:58if they wouldn't reach an agreement then
on disposal of the chemical weapon -
122:58 - 123:01what could have happened today
-
123:01 - 123:04if it would get into the hands of ISIS?
-
123:04 - 123:07Into the hands of people who
are cutting off heads -
123:07 - 123:09burning people alive etc.
-
123:16 - 123:20He was urging his partners
to make agreements -
123:20 - 123:25not for a half-step ahead,
not for a period of 2-3 years -
123:25 - 123:28when on the next elections
-
123:28 - 123:33they'll need to impress the voters
with a new glamorous victory, -
123:33 - 123:35no it should be a bit further
-
123:35 - 123:37Looking beyond the horizon.
-
123:37 - 123:40You see that's the thing
-
123:40 - 123:44which really differs our
Western partners from Putin. -
123:49 - 123:55So, you are proposing this
concept of the fair world order, -
123:55 - 123:57but you suddenly find out that the world
isn't willing to listen to you. -
123:57 - 124:00They are calling black white
and vice versa. -
124:00 - 124:05Do they fear the role Russia
began to play in the world? -
124:05 - 124:08When from practically failing state
-
124:08 - 124:12it suddenly became a
powerful political player? -
124:12 - 124:15When you became if I may say so
-
124:15 - 124:17the leader of the conservative part
-
124:17 - 124:19of both European and American society?
-
124:19 - 124:21Well, you are digging too deep.
-
124:21 - 124:23Sometimes I get a feeling
-
124:23 - 124:26that they like us only when we
need humanitarian aid from them. -
124:26 - 124:29Everything is good then,
they are sending potatoes, -
124:29 - 124:31and I'm very thankful for that
no kidding, -
124:31 - 124:34many people were doing this sincerely,
-
124:34 - 124:36ordinary people in particular
-
124:36 - 124:39However so-called establishment,
-
124:39 - 124:43political and economic elites
of these countries -
124:43 - 124:47they only like us when we are poor
and standing with a begging bowl. -
124:47 - 124:50As soon as we start talking
about our interests -
124:50 - 124:53and they start feeling sort of
geopolitical competition, -
124:53 - 124:55they don't like that.
-
124:55 - 124:57Well, would you like if a new guy
comes to your TV channel, -
124:57 - 124:59strong, powerful and young,
-
124:59 - 125:04with good manners
and encyclopedic education -
125:04 - 125:06and will be slowly pushing you out?
-
125:06 - 125:08You'd be struggling too
and start fighting him. -
125:08 - 125:11You know that's the human nature.
-
125:11 - 125:13Same story for international relations.
-
125:14 - 125:17I am strongly convinced
-
125:17 - 125:21that we aren't breaching
any game rules. -
125:21 - 125:22By the game rules
-
125:22 - 125:26I mean primarily
public international law, -
125:26 - 125:29UN Charter and everything
associated with it. -
125:29 - 125:32It concerns our relations with Ukraine
-
125:32 - 125:34it concerns situation in Crimea,
-
125:34 - 125:38it concerns how we position ourselves
-
125:38 - 125:40in other regions of the world,
-
125:40 - 125:42in regard to fighting
international terrorism. -
125:42 - 125:47It concerns our problems
in the field of global security. -
125:47 - 125:50By that I mean for instance
-
125:50 - 125:55our position on USA withdrawal
from the crucial treaty -
125:55 - 125:59on the limitation of
Anti-Ballistic Missile Systems. -
125:59 - 126:03When we start bringing this up,
-
126:03 - 126:07when we mention for instance
that there is a threat -
126:07 - 126:09of NATO expanding to the East
-
126:09 - 126:12and military infrastructure
approaching our borders -
126:12 - 126:19That's how you go out for confrontation.
-
126:20 - 126:25And at this moment
-
126:25 - 126:30as we can see, it took the form
of so-called sanctions. -
126:30 - 126:33I was mentioning it
in my address already, -
126:33 - 126:36that it's no more than the attempt
-
126:36 - 126:38to restrain Russia's development.
-
126:38 - 126:42We see such attempts
during all Russian history, -
126:42 - 126:44from the tzar's times.
-
126:44 - 126:47This attempt of restraining Russia
-
126:47 - 126:53it's a policy known for centuries.
-
126:53 - 126:55There is nothing new.
-
126:55 - 126:59However, we shouldn't be too worried.
-
127:25 - 127:28was hoisted and
I was singing really loud. -
127:28 - 127:29Almost shouting.
-
127:32 - 127:36Because country under this flag won
-
127:36 - 127:42and I just wanted to sing
very loud and to shout -
127:46 - 127:51During Olympics and all
these events in Kiev and Ukraine, -
127:51 - 127:54when anti-Putin propaganda
(or even hysteria) started in Kiev, -
127:54 - 127:57Putin is here, he is killing Maidan,
-
127:57 - 127:58Putin is shooting our children."
-
127:58 - 128:00That's what was happening
-
128:00 - 128:04and from a private matter it became
public and even national one, -
128:04 - 128:06and disability to control the situation
-
128:06 - 128:08and the way Western
partners were acting. -
128:08 - 128:13And when I saw Putin gritting his teeth
-
128:13 - 128:17I suddenly realized that some new
strategy will be launched now. -
128:18 - 128:21Cause there wasn't anything said,
-
128:21 - 128:24no glass was returned
on the table this time -
128:24 - 128:26everything was very peaceful and quiet.
-
128:26 - 128:30It was clear though that he saw
himself as representative of Russia, -
128:30 - 128:34which was not respected and they
tried to push away and insult. -
128:34 - 128:38It's a feeling of adequacy to the country,
-
128:38 - 128:43to the history of this country,
-
128:43 - 128:45it's a feeling of a certain mission.
-
128:45 - 128:48You start understanding that this is history.
-
128:48 - 128:51The most important for us
was to understand -
128:51 - 128:53what do people living in Crimea want.
-
128:53 - 128:56Do they want to stay in Ukraine
or to be with Russia? -
128:56 - 128:59And if people do want to return to Russia
-
128:59 - 129:02and don't want to be
under the rule of neo-Nazi, -
129:02 - 129:05extreme nationalists and banderovites,
-
129:05 - 129:08we don't have a right to desert them then.
-
129:08 - 129:11And this is absolutely a matter of principle.
-
129:11 - 129:15That's what I was telling
to my partners back then. -
129:15 - 129:17I was telling them
-
129:17 - 129:21that this was a crucial issue for us.
people. -
129:21 - 129:25I don't know what kind of interests
you will be defending, -
129:25 - 129:27but we'll go till the end defending ours.
-
129:27 - 129:30And this is extremely important.
-
129:30 - 129:34Not because we want
to get a piece of the pie. -
129:34 - 129:38And not even because Crimea's
strategic importance in Black Sea region. -
129:38 - 129:42But because it's an element
of historical justice. -
129:44 - 129:46I believe that we did the right thing.
-
129:46 - 129:48And I don't regret anything.
-
129:50 - 129:53We flew to Crimea for referendum.
-
129:53 - 129:55It’s incredible feeling!
-
129:55 - 129:59We saw families going out with balloons,
-
129:59 - 130:03kids with flags of Russian Federation.
-
130:03 - 130:05And all of them are going to elections
-
130:05 - 130:07with happy faces.
-
130:07 - 130:10I saw sober guys crying
on the square in Simferopol -
130:10 - 130:12Not drunk!
-
130:13 - 130:16Crying from the feeling of
incredible happiness, -
130:16 - 130:19that finally they have returned home
-
130:20 - 130:25There was a performance
on the fly and we sang. -
130:26 - 130:27Russia,
-
130:27 - 130:35from Crimea to Yenisei."
-
130:36 - 130:38From Crimea to Yenisei...
-
130:38 - 130:41They were so incredibly happy!
-
130:41 - 130:42Everybody I have seen.
-
130:47 - 130:53After a long hard and exhausting voyage
-
130:53 - 130:56Crimea and Sevastopol
-
130:56 - 130:59are returning to the home harbor
-
130:59 - 131:00to the home shores
-
131:00 - 131:04to the permanent registration harbor.
to Russia! -
131:07 - 131:10RUSSIA! RUSSIA! RUSSIA!
-
131:13 - 131:16Great! He is simple, cool. I like him.
-
131:16 - 131:22I think he is tough enough, but... I think if you are a
president of a big strong country -
131:22 - 131:28you must be big and strong the same way as the
country. -
131:29 - 131:30How many pull-ups do you do?
-
131:30 - 131:3250. - Really?
-
131:33 - 131:36preparing the same way. - These are our people.
-
131:39 - 131:45That generation which grew up during Putin times
is the majority of our society -
131:46 - 131:51which will lead Russia further next 50 years.
-
131:52 - 131:58This is the generation which step by step have
learnt to say the word 'patriotism', -
131:58 - 132:05This is the generation which have learnt to wear
dresses with Russian flag, and be proud of it. -
132:06 - 132:14This is the generation which knows that this, this
and this in our country -
132:14 - 132:16is much better than anywhere else in the world.
-
132:21 - 132:25What was 15 years ago? Disbelief and ruins in
heads -
132:26 - 132:33Then a hope, and today unlimited trust that we are
building the state correctly -
132:34 - 132:37For these 15 years not simply many things have
changed. -
132:38 - 132:39We have changed completely.
-
132:40 - 132:41Our society has become different.
-
132:42 - 132:49We can see a new, powerful, independent Russia
able to protect itself. -
133:02 - 133:08I went to Vladimir and to Suzdal to see the sights.
-
133:09 - 133:16And in one of Suzdal monasteries I wrote a note for
health. -
133:17 - 133:18I was recognized.
-
133:21 - 133:23Mother Superior of the monastery came up to me,
-
133:24 - 133:31and says: Aleksey Borisovych, do you know that for
the last year -
133:32 - 133:40a number of notes for health of President of Russian
Federation Putin increased drastically? -
133:48 - 133:54She says: They write like this in notes for health
President of Russian Federation. -
134:09 - 134:13Vladimir Vladimirovych Putin visited our monastery
on September 9th 2005. -
134:13 - 134:19It was the first visit of head of Russian state in the
history of Athos. -
134:21 - 134:25After the ceremonial welcome in the capital city of
Athos, Karyes, -
134:25 - 134:28Vladimir Vladimirovych took the driver’s seat
-
134:29 - 134:31and drove to Iveron monastery.
-
134:32 - 134:36And just at the exit there was a mule of Athos
standing -
134:38 - 134:46First there was a police car. then I drove on my car,
and after me President drove -
134:46 - 134:56And just before him this mule, for some reason, ran
out to the road and ran strictly in the middle of the -
134:56 - 135:00He tried to take to the left, and the mule took to the
left, to the right - and that to the right, such -
135:01 - 135:05So, the President understood that something was
wrong, and he followed the mule. -
135:06 - 135:08I must tell you: there was nothing like this in Athos.
-
135:09 - 135:15So that a mule or a donkey, as we call it, ran in
front of any car and didn't allow to bypass... -
135:15 - 135:19there was no such case, never.
-
135:19 - 135:26But when on the way back we were driving, a car of
police passed by, then I drove by, -
135:26 - 135:32we saw that the mule stayed at the same place and
watched us, as if waiting for us. -
135:32 - 135:36It passed us by without problems, like nothing
happened. -
135:37 - 135:39We stopped and looked back what would be next
-
135:40 - 135:43As soon as the car of Vladimir Vladimirovych
appeared from the turn, -
135:44 - 135:48this mule, as if was waiting, ran out to the road at
once, turned around -
135:48 - 135:51police car and my car were watching it,
-
135:52 - 135:55and it started to run uphill which is harder.
-
135:56 - 136:00Again the same way, in the middle of the road
ahead of the President's car. -
136:00 - 136:05When going uphill, the mule, maybe because of
fatigue, slacked down -
136:05 - 136:10Vladimir Vladimirovych slacked down, he didn't
bypass it. But the mule broke in pace. -
136:10 - 136:15And it could be seen that it ran out, Vladimir
Vladimirovych took a little to the left. -
136:15 - 136:20started to bypass it, reached it and stopped near it,
it was recorded from the car. -
136:20 - 136:23And the mule also stopped stone-still at once.
-
136:23 - 136:29And several minutes, I can’t tell you exactly, I didn't
count... we saw that they were standing. -
136:30 - 136:32Honestly saying, I can’t explain it.
-
136:33 - 136:40Certainly, I want to notice one thing: if it happened
it is a certain sign of Holy Mother, patroness of -
136:41 - 136:45It was a certain sign to the President. But I think it
is easier for him to understand it. -
136:52 - 136:56He never comes unprepared for any events.
-
136:58 - 137:03When he comes to such events like a press
conference or live stream, -
137:03 - 137:07he prepares for many many days.
-
137:10 - 137:18He has 100% concentration, 100%. Every time...
tension.. -
137:18 - 137:22maybe it has to do with inner concentration
-
137:24 - 137:30Because Presidents come to speak such
Presidents like Putin, -
137:30 - 137:32the price of his words is too high.
-
137:45 - 137:48Vladimir Vladimirovych, things that happen to our
economy now is a payback for the Crimea, -
137:48 - 137:50maybe it's time to tell frankly about it?
-
137:51 - 137:54No, it is not a payback for the Crimea.
-
137:55 - 138:01This is a payback... or to be precise, it is a
payment for our natural wish -
138:01 - 138:07to save ourselves like a nation, like a civilization,
like a state. -
138:07 - 138:17I made an example at so called Valdai club and
recalled our most recognized symbol -
138:17 - 138:21a bear, who guards its taiga.
-
138:21 - 138:29You know what if I continue such analogues... the
idea comes to my head as well. -
138:29 - 138:35maybe our teddy-bear must sit calmly, not run pigs
and gilts around taiga -
138:36 - 138:42and eat berries, honey, maybe it will be left alone.
They will not leave it alone. -
138:42 - 138:45Because they will always try to enchain it.
-
138:46 - 138:52And as soon as they enchain it, they will tear away
both teeth and claws. -
138:52 - 138:58And then, after this, as soon as tear away teeth and
claws, the teddy-bear is not required at all. -
138:59 - 139:01They will make a stuffed animal, that's it. That's why
the matter is not in the Crimea. -
139:01 - 139:08The matter is that we protect our independence, our
sovereignty and the right for existence. -
139:08 - 139:10This is what we all must understand.
-
139:10 - 139:14When the Crimea started and when the spirit of
patriotism appeared -
139:14 - 139:17it suddenly turned out that we have an army.
-
139:18 - 139:21It suddenly turned out that we have a military
industrial complex. -
139:21 - 139:27It suddenly turned out that despite all statements,
including liberal members of your team, -
139:27 - 139:31that we shouldn't spend money for defense, it was
unexpectedly, unnoticeably -
139:32 - 139:35that the military industrial complex was formed
again to be proud of? -
139:36 - 139:39If we didn't have the military industrial complex and
army -
139:39 - 139:44we couldn't overcome all problems concerning fight
with international terrorism. -
139:45 - 139:49Even at the most difficult times from the point of
view of economy in the beginning of 2000s, -
139:49 - 139:55we did not simply gather an army, and then, I have
already told about it, -
139:55 - 140:01with total number of 1 million 300 thousand people I
hardly gathered 50 000... -
140:02 - 140:11I took troops from the Far East, marines from the
Northern fleet, we made up 50 000 ready for fight. -
140:12 - 140:13Now it is a completely different story.
-
140:14 - 140:22Material conditions of the armed forces until present
was just poor, both moral, and material. -
140:23 - 140:28You know, concerning this, I would like to use this
opportunity, as they say in such cases, -
140:29 - 140:35again to say thanks to all our soldiers who at that
time difficult for the country -
140:36 - 140:40saved the country on their shoulders, with empty
pockets, -
140:40 - 140:47and I would say in miserable conditions of the
armed forces. I highly appreciate it! -
140:51 - 140:56the famous 6th squadron of 76th air assault
division... -
140:56 - 141:02in 2000 around our 100 troopers against 1000-1200
-
141:04 - 141:06At that time there were such gangs in Chechnya.
-
141:09 - 141:10The fight was completely unequal.
-
141:16 - 141:24My son was a commander and guys told that they
heard all messages. -
141:24 - 141:33His last words were: Drawing the fire on me.
Farewell, pals. -
141:37 - 141:55Their fight lasted around one day and ended with 6
alive from 90 guys, and 84 were lost. -
142:00 - 142:04We made the decision, President made the
decision to visit this place. -
142:04 - 142:07We didn’t control this area at that time.
-
142:07 - 142:10When the President flew away, it was still calm.
-
142:10 - 142:17But when special forces were leaving this altitude,
fighters moved towards this attitude. -
142:18 - 142:25It was not your fault that the country appeared in
such conditions that it is now. -
142:27 - 142:37But we are happy that there are such people whom
you raised, with whom you lived. -
142:39 - 142:42Who stood on the way of further collapse of the
country. -
142:49 - 142:51And anyway somebody had to do it.
-
142:52 - 142:58After the 10th anniversary I phoned everybody,
found all addresses. -
143:00 - 143:07Found out all problems, of all, what and who had,
what and who needed. -
143:08 - 143:11It was a set of papers this thick.
-
143:12 - 143:18In ten days I received a phone call: this set of
papers got to Vladimir Vladimirovych. -
143:19 - 143:21He wants to meet you.
-
143:21 - 143:30And every governor visited personally in each family,
found out all problems, everything was solved, -
143:30 - 143:39so that everything was made before this meeting
which was appointed with the President in Moscow. -
143:40 - 143:48Here, you know, the attitude to those parents who
are left without their children. -
143:49 - 143:54Our children, they all gave the oath, that's why they
knew how it could end. -
143:54 - 143:56This famous fight.
-
143:58 - 144:03To my mind, it was already crucial in many aspects
The the course of Chechen campaign. -
144:04 - 144:12Because fighters, terrorists, who fought against us, I
think, after this fight, understood -
144:13 - 144:18that they would fail to break the fighting spirit and
the will of our army. -
144:23 - 144:30Today army is certainly far from what it was 15
years ago. -
144:31 - 144:36The President announces and gives command to
make a spot check, for example, Far Eastern -
144:39 - 144:45And we raise 156 000 soldiers within hours.
-
144:46 - 144:51This is thousands of armored vehicles, hundreds of
air crafts and ships. -
144:53 - 144:55Number of exercises increased manyfold
-
144:58 - 145:00In one word: the shell took off.
-
145:03 - 145:08The army felt itself like army. Officers started to
respect themselves. -
145:11 - 145:14The contract service has become attractive and
prestigious. -
145:15 - 145:20If there is no army, strong army, all the rest may not
be required. -
145:20 - 145:22And this will be not our country.
-
145:23 - 145:24Moments of absolute happiness?
-
145:25 - 145:29Oh, it’s hard to tell you.
-
145:30 - 145:35I can tell that in general we managed..., and
everything together. -
145:36 - 145:41All together it may cause some satisfaction
-
145:42 - 145:45when you understand where we were and what we
have done. -
145:46 - 145:48Well, let’s start with the country: we saved the
country. -
145:49 - 145:51Raised GDP 2 fold.
-
145:51 - 145:59In comparison with 1999, the expenses of the
Federal budget have risen 22 times, -
145:59 - 146:02if we look at 2014.
-
146:02 - 146:06Real income of the population risen 3 fold.
-
146:07 - 146:14The number of our people who lives behind the
poverty line was almost 42 mln people. -
146:14 - 146:21And now we have almost in 3 times, 2,8 times less
of people living behind the poverty line. -
146:21 - 146:28All this together allowed us to solve one more very
complicated task. -
146:28 - 146:42Look, in 1999 and in 2000 the natural decrease of
the population was 929 000 people, to my mind. -
146:42 - 146:44I.e. almost 1 million.
-
146:45 - 146:48The difference between deaths and births was 1
million in favour of the first. -
146:49 - 146:54If we lost 1 million every year, i.e. Russia, it is a
catastrophe. -
146:55 - 146:57Russia would slowly stop to exist.
-
146:57 - 147:01We did not only stabilize and break this situation,
-
147:01 - 147:04and two years in a row we have the natural
increase. -
147:05 - 147:06Nobody believed in it.
-
147:07 - 147:13This is not due to mother capital and other systems
of maternity and childhood support. -
147:14 - 147:18This is due to the general situation. I repeat it gives
more confidence to people -
147:18 - 147:21in that they can have more children, raise and
educate them, and so on. -
147:24 - 147:29This is some kind of a multiplier indeed of what has
been done. -
147:30 - 147:40Maybe, all this together, when thinking about, when
analysing it, this can't but bring satisfaction. -
147:43 - 147:46For citizens of Nagin in Northern Ossetia
-
147:46 - 147:49the commissioning of a new sports complex became
a real holiday. -
147:50 - 147:55The platform is 130 m above the sea level. This is
like two Spasskiy towers. -
147:55 - 147:58The area is just a bit bigger than of a standard
football field -
147:59 - 148:04Specialists say: There is no such center with such
equipment in Europe -
148:05 - 148:09The new hydro-electric power station on the Angara
has become the most up-to-date hydro-energy of -
148:09 - 148:11Besides, all equipment is produced by national
companies. -
148:12 - 148:18From today the Russky island is called student's
capital of the Far East. -
148:20 - 148:26The Northern stream starts from here. The big road
of Russian gas to the West starts from here. -
148:27 - 148:32Russia, in Olympic Sochi, at Olympic level, meets
Formula 1. -
148:32 - 148:35The legendary auto race took place for the first time
in Russia. -
148:35 - 148:38Today here there are the best pilots of the world.
-
148:40 - 148:46- The church has its understanding of what authority
must be. -
148:48 - 148:53At the same time, this understanding is expressed
not by my close predecessors, not by me. -
148:54 - 148:57It exists during the whole history of the church.
-
148:59 - 149:04The church associates the authority, especially
the top representatives of the authority, -
149:04 - 149:07with the must-have requirement.
-
149:07 - 149:13full devotion of themselves to that service which they
are are called for. -
149:14 - 149:17You can't say that this person is working as a
President. -
149:18 - 149:24He serves in his country as a President. I think it
speaks for itself. -
149:30 - 149:33Vladimir Vladimirovych, 15 years of Presidency,
-
149:33 - 149:37what does a person who decides to be a President
have to give up? -
149:42 - 149:47Some normal everyday life.
-
149:48 - 149:54It is inevitable. It is impossible to live like a normal
person. -
149:54 - 149:59You can’t go to the cinema, can’t go just like this to
the theatre, can't go shopping -
149:59 - 150:03which is also not deprived of certain sense and
satisfaction. -
150:03 - 150:07But these are not big losses in comparison with...
-
150:13 - 150:19what the fate and the people give to those persons
who appear in my place. -
150:20 - 150:25And this is to make maximum contribution,
everything what depends on me or on us -
150:25 - 150:31or those who work at such positions for one’s own
country, people. -
150:31 - 150:32It compensates everything.
- Title:
- "Президент". Фильм Владимира Соловьева
- Description:
-
"Президент". Фильм Владимира Соловьева
Эфир от 26 апреля 2015
Режиссёр: Саида Медведева
Авторы сценария: Михаил Черваков, Татьяна СаломадинаФильм-интервью приурочен к 15-летию пребывания у власти Владимира Путина.
Картина охватывает период с августа 1999 года до сегодняшних дней и повествует о пути, который страна вместе с Президентом прошла за последние 15 лет.
Владимир Путин вспоминает о самых драматических моментах современной российской истории – войне в Чечне, гибели экипажа подводной лодки "Курск", теракте на Дубровке, Крыме…
Рассказ самого Президента, интервью с представителями политических и бизнес-элит страны, документальная хроника, уникальная съемка личных операторов Владимира Путина воссоздают и раскрывают подробности минувшего времени, повествуя о том, как менялось отношение к России и ее лидеру в стране и мире.
Экономические кризисы 2008 и 2014 года, Олимпиада в Сочи, формирование оппозиции, Болотная площадь и проспект Сахарова, Майдан…
Отвечая на вопросы Владимира Соловьева, Владимир Путин рассказывает о поворотных моментах большой политики, которые решали судьбу мира, и о том, куда Президент ведет Россию сегодня.Будьте в курсе самых актуальных новостей!
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HyNcbVuDJyA - Video Language:
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- Captions Requested
Retired user edited English, British subtitles for "Президент". Фильм Владимира Соловьева | ||
Retired user edited English, British subtitles for "Президент". Фильм Владимира Соловьева | ||
Retired user edited English, British subtitles for "Президент". Фильм Владимира Соловьева | ||
Retired user edited English, British subtitles for "Президент". Фильм Владимира Соловьева |