Final Word from Monday, March 31, 2008



Václav Klaus was the proper host when he met yesterday in Hluboká with retired chess champion Garry Kasparov. Although their views on Putin's Russia are as far apart as Moscow and Kamchatka, Klaus was polite and merely said he's not sure Kasparov's way to change in Russia is the right one. Kasparov is an outspoken critic of Putin who pulls no punches. "Russia is a police state," he told CNN. "It's some sort of soft version of one-party dictatorship." Klaus, in contrast, is almost a Putin apologist who wants the West to give Moscow the benefit of the doubt. Both Kasparov and Klaus exaggerate the situation, and that's what makes them so alike. In their own milieux, they're each contrarians on Russia. It's telling that Putin praises Klaus for speaking Russian (when they meet) and criticizes Kasparov for speaking English (when arrested for attending a banned anti-Kremlin rally). Klaus and Kasparov are opposite sides of the same publicity-seeking coin.[Czech Republic Vladimir Wall Street Journal Siberia]

Glossary of difficult words

Kamchatka - a peninsula on the northeast coast of Siberia;

outspoken - frank in stating one's opinions;

to pull no punches - to deal with something in a forceful or severe way;

apologist - a person who offers an argument in defense of something controversial;

to give the benefit of the doubt - to believe something good, rather than bad, about someone when the possibility of doing both exists;

milieu, milieux - a person's social environment;

contrarian - a person who opposes of rejects popular opinion.

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