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  • When people think of Putin, they think of Power. (Quick images of Putin with sound effect)

  • Vladimir Putin Has been ruling Russia since 1999. There hasn't been such a powerful leader

  • in Russia since Stalin. He invaded neighbouring countries, interfered in US elections, And

  • even changed the constitution to stay in power until 2036.

  • But that hasn't always been the case. Back in the 1990s, Russia was ruled by Oligarchs,

  • a group of people who amassed massive fortunate during the collapse of the soviet union. They

  • controlled the media, had most of the politicians on their payroll, and even brought Putin to

  • power. But when Putin refused to return the favor, the Oligarchs waged a war against him!

  • Why Soviet Union Collapsed

  • The Soviet Union sent the first man to space, developed the first-ever satellite, and was

  • the second-largest economy. But by the 1980s, the union began to weaken, especially after

  • the war in Afghanistan. The war drained the soviet budget and sent it into a recession.

  • The Soviet leadership tried to modernize the economy, but it was too late already. People

  • began to protest, asking for independence.

  • When the Berlin wall fell, countries began breaking out of the soviet union one by one.

  • The soviet economy was huge but deeply ineffective. Despite its massive size, ownership was illegal,

  • everything belonged to the state, and the state belonged to the people. At least that's

  • how the communist party wanted you to think. The country was filled with factories that

  • produced everything from steel to tanks to aluminum, but it was deeply centralized.

  • At the end of the year, whatever profit the factories made, they had to send it to Moscow,

  • and Moscow would redistribute the funds back to the factories according to their needs.

  • So if the factory spent 800K dollars instead of a million they had received, the Kremlin

  • would cut their budget next year to 800k since it will assume that's how much they need.

  • That's why factory managers would always overspend in order to receive more funds next

  • year. That led to the creation of hundreds if not thousands of ineffective factories

  • all across the country, which pushed the country into a lot of debt and a recession, which

  • eventually led to the collapse of the union.

  • How Russia went from Socialism to Capitalism overnight - Vouchers

  • Russia had to move from Communism into socialism overnight. The Russian government knew that

  • they had to privatize all the factories across the country since they were a huge burden

  • on the government's budget. But at the same time, it wanted the average Russians to benefit

  • from this transition. One-third of the companies will be owned by the people, the second third

  • will be owned by the government, and the last third will be sold to investors.

  • So it distributed the so-called vouchers that the average Russians could exchange for shares

  • in these companies. It sounded great in theory, but it could easily be abused in practice.

  • For most Russians, the concept of ownership was something unheard of. They didn't really

  • know how it could benefit them, so they sold the vouchers to factory managers for a fraction

  • of a price, especially when most Russians back then hadn't received their wages for

  • months and needed cash to put food on the table

  • Instead of the average people benefitting out of this transition, a few individuals

  • took advantage out of this system and became Russia's new elite.

  • But the concept of oligarchs became popular a bit later when Russia's first president

  • run for re-election in 1996. Boris Yeltsin's popularity was falling quickly

  • since the country was in chaos, and many blamed the president for mismanaging the crisis.

  • Everyone knew that he would lose the election, especially when the parliament was mainly

  • controlled by the communist, who were confident that they would take over the presidency in

  • the next election. So Boris Yeltsin turned to the country's

  • richest bankers for help. But the oligarchs weren't ready to risk their fortune for

  • nothing. They wanted something in return, a bigger pie of the economy

  • But to sell the rest of the companies that were owned by the government, the parliament

  • had to approve it, and it was pretty impossible since it was mostly controlled by the communist.

  • So they became creative and came up with a brilliant strategy, and robbed the entire

  • Russian government. You see, Russia's financial system was still immature back then, so government

  • funds were deposited in commercial banks and mostly managed by them.

  • Since the country was in chaos and Yeltsin desperately wanted to be re-elected, Russia's

  • top bankers offered him a deal. The oligarchs will lend him 500 million dollars with an

  • annual interest rate of 150 percent and will take the government's shares in the biggest

  • companies as collateral. If the government would not be able to pay back its loans, the

  • banks would be able to keep these shares. Eventually, Boris Yeltsin won the election

  • in 1996, but the government, as expected, wasn't able to pay back the debt. That's

  • how a few individuals literally became the owners of Russia's largest companies.

  • Vladimir Potanin, who was the mastermind behind this scheme, received the controlling stake

  • in Norilsk Nickel, one of the world's largest nickel and palladium mining and smelting companies

  • It's cost him 170 million dollars, but today the company is worth almost 50 billion dollars.

  • And Potanin's net worth is 27 billion dollars, making him the second wealthiest man in Russia

  • Mikhail Khodorkovsky received a 45 percent majority stake in Yukos, Russia's largest

  • oil and gas company back then, for an estimated 159 million dollars, which by 2003 was worth

  • dozens of billions of dollars. Making Khodorkovsky Russia's richest man with an estimated net

  • worth of 17 billion dollars. But the most notable example is Berezovsky.

  • First, he took control over Avtovaz, Russia's largest automobile manufacturer, then sneaked

  • into Aeroflot, Russia's largest airline, and somehow managed to control it. And finally,

  • in 1996, through this scheme, he received Sibneft together with Abramovich, the second-largest

  • oil company which today is known as Gazprom. In a matter of a year, 7 people accumulated

  • so much fortune that they started buying politicians, tv stations and tried to take full control

  • of the government.

  • The rise of Putin vs. Oligarchs When Yeltsin wanted to resign, Berezovsky

  • convinced him to make this young KGB officer named Putin as his successor. Putin acted

  • like a perfect puppet. He guaranteed Yeltsin and his family the security he wanted and

  • the oligarchs the favors they asked for. But something went wrong. Putin kept his promise

  • to Yeltsin, but he began to consolidate power when he sat on the throne. Now that he is

  • the one who is wearing the crown, the rules of the game have changed. It was the time

  • to show the oligarchs who is the Tsar!

  • But oligarchs weren't ready to simply give up power. They controlled the media. They

  • had billions of dollars and multiple politicians on their payroll. They wanted to let Putin

  • know that it's them who put him on the throne, and they can take it away if he is not going

  • to return the favor.

  • Gusinsky was one of the oligarchs who controlled NTV, the biggest tv channel in Russia back

  • then, the newspaper Segodnya, the radio station Echo of Moscow, and a number of magazines.

  • He was the man who controlled public opinion in Russia. Everyone knew that he was not someone

  • to mess with. His media empire aggressively began attacking

  • Putin and mocking him. His popularity began to decline as the media kept spreading bad

  • news about him. Putin knew that if he wanted to rule Russia with an iron grip, he must

  • first control the pressHe launched an investigation against Gusinsky

  • with the goal of putting NTV under the government's control and effectively silencing the opposition.

  • Gusinsky was charged with misappropriation of funds and large-scale fraud and was arrested.

  • Shortly after his arrest, representatives of the Kremlin proposed to Gusinsky to sell

  • "Media Most," his media Empire worth a few billion dollars at least, to Gazprom-Media

  • at a price that Gazprom-Media sets, which was just 300 million US Dollars, in return

  • for his freedom. Under immense pressure, Gusinsky has signed

  • the deal and immediately left Russia after being released.

  • But Putin didn't stop there. He wanted to make Gusinsky an example for other oligarchs.

  • Shortly after he left Russia, he launched a new investigation against Gusinsky and asked

  • Interpol's head office in France to issue an international arrest warrant for Gusinsky's

  • detention and extradition. Fortunately for him, Interpol's head office declined the Russian

  • request, but the Russian government kept pressuring until the Spanish government arrested him

  • and placed him under house arrest in Gusinsky's home in southern Spain.

  • Other oligarchs took note and decided not to mess with the new King and changed sides.

  • Abramovich, Potanin, Deripaska, Fridman all surrendered to Putin in exchange for keeping

  • their fortunes and freedoms.

  • But not Berezovsky, the main person who was behind Putin's presidency. He controlled

  • the second-largest tv channel in the country (first channel). He was expecting huge favors

  • from Putin since he was the main person who made him the president, but in return, the

  • government launched an investigation into his business deals with Aeroflot. Then the

  • government literally took over his media empire. He was forced to exile in the united kingdom

  • and lost all of his businesses in Russia. His last hope was to win a court case against

  • Abramovich, his former partner but now Putin's puppet, for 5.5 billion dollars. However,

  • he lost, so his life ended tragically in 2013. Now that Putin took control of the media,

  • no one could challenge his authority, except Russia's richest man back then, Mikhail

  • Khodorkovsky. With a net worth of 17 billion dollars, Khodorkovsky

  • was confident that he could buy anything and make himself the man who would run the country

  • behind closed curtness. In February 2003, at a televised meeting at

  • the Kremlin, Khodorkovsky publicly argued with Putin accusing government officials of

  • corruption, accepting millions of rubles in bribes. The two-man had completely different

  • visions for the country's future but only one will prevail.

  • In early July 2003, Khodorkovsky's most important partner was arrested. The arrest

  • was followed by an investigation into tax evasion by his oil and gas company Yukos.

  • On the morning of 25th of October 2003, Khodorkovsky was arrested at Novosibirsk airport. He was

  • taken to Moscow and charged with fraud, tax evasion, and other economic crimes. His company

  • was entirely eliminated, and he was imprisoned for the next 10 years.

  • Not a single oligarch ever challenged Putin again. His power grew so much that it became

  • impossible to imagine Russia without Putin.

When people think of Putin, they think of Power. (Quick images of Putin with sound effect)

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