Navalny, the film, was the subject of a program last week at the Wilson Center's Kennan Institute.
Other topics came up.
The Kennan's Izabella Tabarovsky moderated discussion of the "thriller," as she called it, with Leonid Volkov, Alexei Navalny's former chief of staff, and Maria Pevchikh, head of investigations for the Anti-Corruption Foundation.
Navalny established the Foundation in 2011 which the Moscow City Court extinguished last June.Ms. Pevchikh urged that sanctions on Russia remain: "Putin should not be able to get away with what he did."
"Keep pushing until the outcome is there."
Putin should be subjected to [a special] tribunal.
A former ambassador to/from (?) Moldova asked the panel how to avoid now the "illusion" experienced in the 1990s that the Soviet Union would become more democratic after the nation's 1989 upheaval.
Mr. Volkov said, "we do not know." It makes no sense to speculate until Putin is gone. When Stalin died, it took three years to figure out his successor. All his lieutenants started killing each other. Right now, none of Putin's lieutenants are strong enough to become a leader. They are all very weak, hating each other. It will take three years at least to sort things out. No one knows the lieutenants.
Ms. Pevchikh: No one knows either, the exact number of Russians who have died in the war. If you trust the government, the number is one to two thousand. Russia's evening news about Ukraine lasts about 58 minutes. As far as the Russian ship sinking in mid-April, "they" just said "it went down and there was a fire."
"A Russian soldier's life is worth nothing to Putin," Ms. Pevchikh said. He has made the Russians think their sons' lives are nothing since "a life is worth sacrificing."
Only the poorest get conscripted, and so far, Putin is quite successful...at home.
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