Past imperfect
Even his selective reading of Russian history has not enabled Vladimir Putin to create a palatable national idea

According to a story of which Kremlin insiders are fond, upon learning he had been chosen as Boris Yeltsin’s successor in 1999, Vladimir Putin blurted out in surprise that he had thought he’d be getting Gazprom. What more could a working-class Leningrad native have dreamt of, after all?
So, Putin plunged into the past, each time emerging from the sea of historical facts with a tendentious interpretation to meet the political needs of the moment.
Ahead of next year's presidential election, Putin has set himself another “intellectual” task. Despite a constitutional ban on state ideology, he is eager to imbue his rule with greater meaning.











