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...state's main ideological arm and a vital foreign policy instrument. In February press conference, Putin equated Russia's "traditional confessions" to its nuclear shield, both, he said, being "components that strengthen Russian statehood and create necessary preconditions for internal and external security of the country." Professor Sergei Filatov, a top authority on Russian religious affairs notes that "traditional confessions" is the state's shorthand for the Russian Orthodox Church...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Putin's Reunited Russian Church | 5/17/2007 | See Source »

...ROCOR's American clergy insist that they retain administrative independence over their churches even as they recognize the Moscow Patriarch as their Head. Filatov says that the ROCOR has "about as much [independence] as Eastern Europe's 'people's democracies' had in the Soviet bloc." One of the first tests of the new union will be in the Holy Land, where the ROCOR maintains religious properties - and has had run-ins with representatives of the Moscow patriarchate in the past. In 1997, for example, Yasser Arafat forcibly turned over the only Christian church in Hebron, run by the ROCOR...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Putin's Reunited Russian Church | 5/17/2007 | See Source »

...Yeltsin's death, his erstwhile Chief of Staff Sergei Filatov told a Russian web site that Yeltsin had confided his unhappiness with Putin dismantling everything he had created and stood for. Putin's policies, said Filatov, chagrined Yeltsin to the point of expediting his demise. This week, Komsomolskaya Pravda, a Gazprom-owned, heavily pro-Kremlin Moscow daily, ran its list of Yeltsin's top mistakes and top achievements, "built on our audiences' opinions." It held that his biggest mistake was dissolving the Soviet Union. And that his last great achievement was handing over power to Putin. If Russians are thinking...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: A Glimpse of Free Speech in Yeltsin Farewell | 4/25/2007 | See Source »

...port of Trabzon and taking 30 Russians hostage in their capital, Grozny, even as hostage-takers under withering Russian assault in Pervomayskaya, Dagestan, vowed to fight to the death. Chechens escalated the conflict as Russian President Boris Yeltsin shook up his cabinet, replacing Presidential Chief of Staff Sergei Filatov, one of the last remaining liberals in his administration, with hawk Nikolai Yegorov. The developments limn the increasingly desperate straits of both the Chechen separatists and Russian president Boris Yeltsin. For Yeltsin, says TIME's J.F.O. McAllister, "Chechnya has been a disaster since it began. With the recent victories...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Up Against The Wall | 1/16/1996 | See Source »

Backpedaling on a pledge, Boris Yeltsin told a group of Russian newspaper editors that he opposed holding early presidential elections in June 1994. A senior Yeltsin aide, Sergei Filatov, argued that the promise was void because it had been made under duress during a showdown with hard-liners. Earlier in the week Yeltsin rewarded the Russian army for its support by, among other things, removing a limit on the number of its troops...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: The Week October 31-November 6 | 11/15/1993 | See Source »

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