

By John Helmer, Moscow
@bears_with
Roman Abramovich — the oligarch whom President Vladimir Putin has publicly declared to be “trustworthy and honourable” and sent to Kiev last month to negotiate war terms — has what is known on police blotters as FORM.
That is a long list of previous offences; dishonesty, deception, bribery, and extortion as method; destruction of rivals and self-enrichment as goals. In short, Abramovich’s career is one of a familiar and predictable type. Artless and wordless in the way big guns and big sums of money talk.
Russian public opinion polls confirm this is how most Russians think of him and other Russian oligarchs. So does this blotter of Abramovich’s business methods stretching back to 2003.
When Abramovich faced the longest court trial he is ever likely to face – Berezovsky v Abramovich, [2012] EWHC 2463 (Comm) — the UK High Court judge ruled that as plaintiff Berezovsky was so unbelievable and dishonest, she didn’t have to judge whether defendant Abramovich matched him; the onus of proof being on the plaintiff, and his proofs having failed, the judgement of the court went to the defendant. That was not a vindication of Abramovich’s trustworthiness and honour.
His form at the negotiations he arranged between Putin and Zelensky in Istanbul in March-April of 2022, turned out to be failure for Putin and for himself, as this report indicates, and also this one. Abramovich’s form didn’t improve in last month’s negotiations in Kiev. Nicked again.
The second oligarch representative Putin runs as his negotiator for US guarantees of Russia’s security in Europe and an end to NATO’s permanent war is Kirill Dmitriev. He too enjoys what Putin calls trustworthiness and honourableness. These qualities, and Putin’s confidence in them, haven’t improved his form in the American negotiations. This is the blotter on Dmitriev.
Dmitriev was educated with high American university degrees; Abramovich was educated in the Russian school of hard knocks. But the latter has learned two special skills the former lacks – how to control vanity in decision-making and, when his mind is made up, how to keep his mouth shut. Trust and honour aside, Russian women prefer the reticent Abramovich face to the goggle eyes and fish lips of Dmitriev. So too, the Ukrainians: according to the Financial Times chief reporters for Russia and the Ukraine, Abramovich is “the only Russian [the Kiev regime] will tolerate. He gets along with everyone.”
In the present war what does this count for?
The failures of both Abramovich and Dmitriev at Putin’s direction have begun to trigger an intense debate in Moscow over what changes in strategy Putin should now make. This is the crisis in confidence which is explained in the new podcast with Nima Alkhorshid. This was aired on Tuesday afternoon, Moscow time. Click to view or listen: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SVN6F-3rZlM
How to restore escalation control for Russia and credibility for Putin is the singular problem to be solved now. “We must start with unmistakable signals from Putin that he is recovering both,” a Moscow source in a position to know responds. “Dmitry Peskov retires, [Yury] Ushakov also. [GRU chief Admiral Igor] Kostyukov should be promoted and tested in a public political role; [Central Bank Governor Elvira] Nabiullina must be removed by her announcement that she intends to retire ahead of next June, starting her succession now; and after September 21 [Duma election results announced] a new cabinet of national unity should be formed with confidence-building figures like Dmitry Rogozin and Mikhail Delyagin.”
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