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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Vladimir Putin, CBS News Loyalist
2005-02-28
George Bush knew Vladimir Putin would be defensive when Bush brought up the pace of democratic reform in Russia in their private meeting at the end of Bush's four-day, three-city tour of Europe. But when Bush talked about the Kremlin's crackdown on the media and explained that democracies require a free press, the Russian leader gave a rebuttal that left the President nonplussed. If the press was so free in the U.S., Putin asked, then why had those reporters at CBS lost their jobs? Bush was openmouthed. "Putin thought we'd fired Dan Rather," says a senior Administration official. "It was like something out of 1984."

The Russians did not let the matter drop. Later, during the leaders' joint press conference, one of the questioners Putin called on asked Bush about the very same firings, a coincidence the White House assumed had been orchestrated. The odd episode reinforced the Administration's view that Putin's impressions of America are often based on urban myths fed to him by ill-informed aides. (At a past summit, according to Administration aides, Putin asked Bush whether it was true that chicken producers split their production into plants that serve the U.S. and lower-quality ones that process substandard chicken for Russia.) U.S. aides say that to help fight against this kind of misinformation, they are struggling to build relationships that go beyond Putin. "We need to go deeper into the well into other levels of government," explains an aide.
Posted by:tipper

#7  I'm sure the guys in the KGB have the goods on Bush and are unlikely to be using any contemporary Microsoft Word. Does Cyrillic on a manual superscript?
Posted by: Dan   2005-02-28 11:41:21 PM  

#6  "Dan, what's with all these long-distance calls to Moscow?"
Posted by: Pappy   2005-02-28 9:48:31 PM  

#5  I'm thinking that Rather, Heyward and Moonves have been insulted.
Posted by: Dishman   2005-02-28 5:57:22 PM  

#4  Thanks, for the try, Vlad. Much appreciated.
Courage.
Posted by: Dan Rather   2005-02-28 2:45:23 PM  

#3  To prove his sincerity, maybe Putin should offer Rather political asylum and a retirement dacha.
Posted by: Tom   2005-02-28 1:42:55 PM  

#2  Well, there's nothing gettin' past this guy. If he knows about the chicken plot, he knows it all.
Posted by: shellback   2005-02-28 1:38:06 PM  

#1  I do not think Putin really thinks we did that.

It does provide cover for when he essentially does what he's accusing us of, under the guise of "fighting the oligarchs."

Misinformation isn't what Putin's government suffers from, it's what they _do_.
Posted by: Abdominal_Snowman   2005-02-28 7:46:13 AM  

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