Andrey_Piontkovsky

Andrey Piontkovsky

Andrey Piontkovsky

Russian scientist, political writer and analyst (born 1940)


Andrey Andreyevich Piontkovsky (Russian: Андре́й Андре́евич Пионтко́вский, born June 30, 1940) is a Russian scientist and political writer and analyst,[1][2] a member of International PEN Club.[3] He is a former member of the Russian Opposition Coordination Council.[4]

Quick Facts Born, Alma mater ...

Biography

He graduated from the Mathematics Department of Moscow State University and has published more than a hundred scientific papers on applied mathematics.

Andrey Piontkovsky, in his article published on 11 January 2000 in Sovetskaya Rossiya[5] and placed on the Yabloko website[6] on the same day, was the first[7] to use the term "putinism" which he had defined as "the highest and final stage of bandit capitalism in Russia, the stage where, as one half-forgotten classic said, the bourgeoisie throws the flag of the democratic freedoms and the human rights overboard; and also as a war, "consolidation" of the nation on the ground of hatred against some ethnic group, attack on freedom of speech and information brainwashing, isolation from the outside world and further economic degradation". In the same article, Piontkovsky stated that the putinism is the terminal shot to the head of Russia, and also he compared Yeltsin to Hindenburg who gave Hitler the power.

He was an executive director of the Strategic Studies Center (Moscow) think tank that has been closed since 2006. He contributes regularly to Novaya Gazeta, The Moscow Times, The Russia Journal and the online journals Grani.ru[8] and Transitions Online.[9] He is also a regular political commentator for the BBC World Service and Radio Liberty in Moscow. He has been an outspoken critic of Putin's "managed" democracy in Russia and, as such, has described Russia as a "soft totalitarian regime"[10] and "hybrid fascism."[11]

Piontkovsky is a member of the American Mathematical Society. Piontkovsky is the author of several books on the Putin presidency in Russia, including his most recent book, Another Look Into Putin's Soul.[12][13]

Piontkovsky is one of the 34 first signatories of the online anti-Putin manifesto "Putin Must Go", published on 10 March 2010. In his subsequent articles he has repeatedly stressed its importance and urged citizens to sign it.[14]

On 26 June 2013, Piontkovsky commented the case of Edward Snowden by saying, "If Pushkov dares to draw a parallel between Snowden and Soviet dissidents, I must respond that none of them had anything to do with Soviet special services and none of them pledged not to betray state and departmental secrets."[15]

Piontkovsky compared the Crimean speech of Vladimir Putin in 2014 to Hitler's speech on Sudetenland in 1939. He described Putin as using "the same arguments and vision of history" and beyond that, that this speech played a key role in starting the war in Donbas.[16]

In 2016 he published an article "Бомба, готовая взорваться" ("A bomb that is ready to explode") about Russian-Chechen ethnic conflict.[17] When the General Prosecutor Office found his article "extremist" and started criminal prosecution [18] Piontkovsky at last left Russia on 19 February 2016.[19][20][21]

Condemnation of fascism

Piontkovsky adduces Igor Girkin's name among those of like-minded persons and says, "The authentic high-principled Hitlerites, true Aryans Dugin, Prokhanov, Prosvirnin [ru], Kholmogorov, Girkin, Prilepin are a marginalized minority in Russia."[22][23] Piontkovsky adds, "Putin has stolen the ideology of the Russian Reich from the domestic Hitlerites, he has preventively burned them down, using their help to do so, hundreds of their most active supporters in the furnace of the Ukrainian Vendée."[22][23] In his interview with Radio Liberty, Piontkovsky says that maybe the meaning of the operation conducted by Putin is to reveal all these potential passionate leaders of social revolt, send them to Ukraine and burn them in the furnace of the Ukrainian Vendée.[24] In the interviews Andrey also argues that the ideology of Rashism is in many ways similar to German fascism (Nazism), while in speeches and policies of the President Putin it's similar to the ideas of Hitler.[25][26]

Some works

In English
  • "Modern-day Rasputin". The Moscow Times. 12 November 1997.
  • Piontkovsky, Andrei; Tsygichko, Vitali (August 1998). "Russia and NATO after Paris and Madrid: a perspective from Moscow". Contemporary Security Policy. 19 (2): 121–125. doi:10.1080/13523269808404196.
  • Piontkovsky, Andrei (17–23 January 2000). "Stasi for president" (PDF). The Russia Journal. 3 (1): 5. Archived from the original (PDF) on 13 October 2015. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
  • "Obseqiousness toward Putin". The Washington Times. 29 September 2005.
  • Another look into Putin's soul. Washington, DC: Hudson Institute. 2006. ISBN 1558131515.
  • East or West? Russia's identity crisis in foreign policy (PDF). London: Foreign Policy Centre. 2006. ISBN 1903558786. Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 September 2006. Retrieved 13 October 2015.
  • Russian Identity. Washington, DC: Hudson Institute. 2008. ISBN 978-1558131620.
  • Andrei Piontkovsky (April 2009). "The dying mutant". Journal of Democracy. 20 (2): 52–55. doi:10.1353/jod.0.0074. S2CID 153474174.
  • "Putinism may be fading". The Moscow Times. 7 April 2010.
  • "The Caucasus dark circle". The Moscow Times. 1 June 2011.
  • "The Russian spring has begun. The Putin regime will never recover legitimacy, but financial interests mean it will hang on as long as it can". The Wall Street Journal. 14 December 2011.
  • "From protest to nausea". The Moscow Times. 2 February 2012.
  • "The 4 stages of putinism". The Moscow Times. 6 March 2013.
  • "Putin fears democracy in Ukraine". The Moscow Times. 1 June 2014.
In Russian

Video


References

  1. Klimina, Anna (2011). "The futility of the neoliberal policy of deliberate market construction and the promise of an institutionalist alternative: the case of Russia's authoritarian transition". Journal of Economic Issues. 45 (2): 411–420. doi:10.2753/JEI0021-3624450218. S2CID 154346707.
  2. AREA 17 (13 May 2014). "Hudson Institute > About Hudson > Andrei A. Piontkovsky". Hudson.org. Archived from the original on 26 October 2013. Retrieved 17 May 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  3. "Andrey Piontkovsky | Free Russia Foundation". 11 July 2017. Retrieved 24 February 2022.
  4. Piontkovsky, Andrey (11 January 2000). "Путинизм как высшая и заключительная стадия бандитского капитализма в России" [Putinism as highest and final stage of bandit capitalism in Russia]. Советская Россия [Sovetskaya Rossiya] (in Russian). No. 3. Moscow.
  5. Fedorov, Valeriy; Baskakova, Yuliya; Byzov, Leontiy; Chernozub, Oleg; Mamonov, Mikhail; Gavrilov, Igor; Vyadro, Mikhail (2018). ""Путинизм" как социальный феномен и его ракурсы" ["Putinism" as a social phenomenon and its aspects]. In Fedorov, Valeriy (ed.). Выборы на фоне Крыма: электоральный цикл 2016–2018 гг. и перспективы политического транзита [Elections against the backdrop of Crimea: election cycle 2016–2018 and perspectives of political transit] (in Russian). Moscow: ВЦИОМ. pp. 587–602. ISBN 978-5041523244.
  6. Ehl, Martin. "tol.cz". tol.cz. Retrieved 17 May 2014.
  7. AREA 17 (13 May 2014). "Hudson Institute > Review of Andrei's Pionkovsky's Another Look Into Putin's Soul". Hudson.org. Archived from the original on 27 September 2007. Retrieved 17 May 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  8. AREA 17 (13 May 2014). "Hudson Institute > Review of Andrei's Pionkovsky's Another Look Into Putin's Soul". Hudson.org. Archived from the original on 5 February 2012. Retrieved 17 May 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  9. "Трон тронулся". Grani.ru. 15 March 2010.
  10. Andrey Piontkovskiy (18 February 2015). ""Путин сделал ставку на ядерный шантаж" – Андрей Пионтковский". ARU.tv. Archived from the original on 27 February 2015. Retrieved 1 March 2015.
  11. Андрей Пионтковский (26 October 2014). Военная доктрина "Русского Мира" (in Russian). Kasparov.ru.
  12. Михаил Соколов (9 July 2014). Крах проекта "Новороссия"?. Радио Свобода (in Russian). Radio Liberty.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Andrey_Piontkovsky, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.