Vladislav Surkov

Vladislav Surkov
Vladislav Yuryevich Surkov, born Dudayev, is a Russian businessman and politician of Chechen descent. He was First Deputy Chief of the Russian Presidential Administration from 1999 to 2011, during which time he was widely seen as the main ideologist of the Kremlin who proposed and implemented the concept of sovereign democracy in Russia. His pen name is supposedly Nathan Dubovitsky...
believe expression people
I believe that renunciation of the Soviet Union was an expression of the free will of the Russian people.
afraid bit education foreign good graduates harvard institute invite technology university vital
I, for one, would not be afraid to invite more foreign professors. It is vital for us to modernize education so that our university graduates are every bit as good as Harvard or Massachusetts Institute of Technology alumni.
business community national unless
Unless the business community evolves into a national bourgeoisie, we will have no future.
against
Those who are not against us are for us.
russia republic grew
As someone who grew up there, I say: The Chechen Republic must remain part of Russia. Everything else is negotiable.
party kremlin
Parties can't be artificially assembled at the Kremlin.
party russia support
The main problem is that many support the United Russia Party without even agreeing with its ideology - or even having an ideology of their own.
country fall past
When the Soviet Union was dissolved, most of us didn't even have the feeling that the country was falling apart. We thought we would continue with our lives as in the past, but as good neighbors.
years payroll biased
I was on Khodorkovsky's payroll myself for ten years. I'm biased because I respect him.
art organization people
The West doesn't have to love us. In fact, we should ask ourselves more often why people are so suspicious of us. After all, the West isn't a charity organization. How have we been perceived for centuries? As a huge, warlike realm ruled by despots - first by the czars and then Bolsheviks. Why should anyone have loved us? If we want to be accepted, we have to do something in return. And it's an art that we have yet to master.
strong people support
Soviet-era nostalgia has strong support among the people. But not among the elite and, in my opinion, not with the president. We are not interested in keeping remnants of the communist era alive.