Nemtsov's Red Square Murder A Compelling Mystery
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS - Ever since Russian opposition figure Boris Nemtsov was gunned down
while walking with a girlfriend near Moscow's Red Square last week, there has
been rampant international speculation about who's responsible for the murder.
Why is everyone in such a hurry to log onto social media, voice an opinion on
Nemtsov's killing, huddle with the like-minded and gang up on those with
opposing views? Why do so many Westerners care, let alone so passionately?
Partly, it's a real-life mystery and no one yet knows the ending. It's also a
Rorschach test for people's worldview: In the absence of evidence, there's a
tendency to fill in the blanks with preconceived ideas and wishful thinking.
Nature hates a vacuum.
Nemtsov was a deputy prime minister under former President Boris Yeltsin in the
1990s, when Russia's assets were divvied up and gifted to oligarchs. When
Yeltsin resigned in 1999, he chose Vladimir Putin as his successor over Nemtsov.
In 2013, Nemtsov issued a report claiming that officials and businessmen
embezzled billions of dollars from the Sochi Olympics. Before his death, he was
working on a report that was supposedly going to detail Russia's role in the
Ukrainian crisis.
Nemtsov, 55, was gunned down while walking with a female companion, a
23-year-old model, near the Kremlin. Despite a slew of security cameras mounted
in the high-security area where Nemtsov was killed, apparently none of them
captured the killing. And so this mysterious slaying has turned into a parlor
game.
There are a few interesting theories on the Nemtsov murder. He may have been
killed by a domestic intelligence entity. He could have been murdered by a
foreign intelligence entity. Or, he was targeted by someone completely unrelated
to any government.
Depending on the viewpoint of a given theory's proponent, Vladimir Putin and
Russian intelligence and security services may either be very fond of or totally
against having people gunned down. According to other theories on the murder,
Western intelligence agencies may or may not be trying to plant a false flag in
an attempt to spark a revolution.
An intelligence agency could orchestrate an assassination in a way that makes it
appear to have been executed by a hostile intelligence agency. So we can
probably dismiss the idea that a murder might have the hallmarks of a certain
agency's modus operandi.
Depending on whom you ask, Nemtsov was either: a washed-up has-been, a powerful
opposition figure, a threat to Putin, or someone with no popular support. The
only thing that we know for certain about Nemtsov's murder so far is the Russian
political climate in which this crime occurred.
The Levada Center, a Russian polling and analytical organization widely
considered to be independent, conducted a survey at the end of February in which
Putin received an 86 percent approval rating. Respondents were also widely
supportive of the Secret Service, with 56 percent saying the Secret Service has
an important role and that its powers fulfill that role. Only 27 percent believe
the Secret Service has "too much uncontrolled power." By contrast, only half of
the respondents approved of the actions of the Duma (Russian parliament).
Respondents were asked to "name 5-6 politicians or public figures whom you trust
the most," and those listed most frequently after Putin (listed by 59 percent of
those polled), were Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu (24 percent), Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov (20 percent) and Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev (19
percent). And guess who's next on the list? Nope, not a liberal democrat. A good
old-fashioned Communist, Gennady Zyuganov, the first secretary of the Russian
Communist Party.
The next in line to power behind Putin and United Russia aren't lovers of
freedom and democracy -- they're old-guard communists. We in the West
erroneously like to think that if given the chance, everyone would vote like us.
Hopefully, whoever is responsible for Nemtsov's murder will be brought to
justice. In the meantime, both Russia and Western nations have a lot to lose by
trying to leverage this incident in the absence of discernible facts. The last
thing Russia needs is further destabilization, given the conflicts in its own
backyard.
COPYRIGHT 2015 RACHEL MARSDEN