THE HINDU Editorial Vocabulary - May 9, 2018 - Topic 1
Vladimir Putin, who has
maintained a tight grip on power in Russia for almost two decades, begins
his fourth term as President at a time when the country is going
through a difficult period, economically and diplomatically. Widely credited
with stabilising post-Soviet Russia during his first two terms after the chaos
of the Boris Yeltsin years, Mr. Putin presents himself as a strongman seeking
to restore Russia’s lost glory. This image has helped him bolster his
popularity. In the March presidential election he won 77% of the popular vote,
the largest margin for any post-Soviet leader.
That majority is a reminder of
the suffocating grip that Mr. Putin and his coterie have on the democratic
process. Russia’s most prominent opposition figure, Alexei Navalny, was
barred from contesting the election, which rendered the presidential race a
formality for the re-coronation of Mr. Putin. One of his biggest promises is
stability, both political and economic. The rising number of protests in Moscow
and elsewhere against Mr. Putin’s rule may not be difficult for him to overcome
— and he faces the daunting task of fixing the economy and reversing the course
of a confrontational foreign policy. In his inaugural speech, Mr. Putin said he
would stay focussed on domestic issues in his new term, particularly the
economy, which has just recovered from a painful recession.
Mr. Putin’s muscular foreign
policy is a more solid source of public support for him. He has always been
fierce in his defence of Russia’s influence in its historical backyard and has
not shied away from taking measures to assert that influence. In 2008 he sent
troops to Georgia, and in 2014 he annexed Crimea — actions that have
contributed to Russia’s deteriorating ties with the West. In 2015, Russia’s
intervention in Syria not only dragged the country deeper into a complex civil
war but also put ties with the U.S. under greater strain. The allegations that
Russia interfered in the 2016 U.S. presidential election have increased the
hostility between the one-time Cold War rivals. In the short term, Mr. Putin
succeeded in creating the impression that Russia is back on the global stage.
But it is not certain whether his confrontational foreign policy, which has
attracted sanctions from the West and hurt the already weak Russian economy,
will yield the desired strategic benefits. Mr. Putin has turned to China in recent years, signing a 30-year, $400-billion gas agreement, and
enhancing cooperation on contentious global issues such as Iran, Syria and
North Korea. This may not be enough of a balancing act, as it is not clear
whether Beijing, given its lack of appetite for picking fights with the West,
will back Moscow in this new Cold War beyond a point. As he begins another
term, Mr. Putin’s Russia looks increasingly like a managed dictatorship with a
troubled economy and dwindling influence. It is to be seen where he takes the
country in the next six years.
Vocabulary
Maintain: provide with
necessities for life or existence.
Example: The allowance covers the
basic costs of maintaining a child
Synonyms: support, provide
for, keep, sustain, nurture, feed, nourish
Difficult: needing much effort or
skill to accomplish, deal with, or understand.
Example: She had a difficult decision
to make
Synonyms: hard, strenuous, arduous, laborious, tough, onerous, burdensome
Restore: bring back a previous
right, practice, custom, or situation
Example: The government restored
confidence in the housing market
Synonyms: reinstate, bring
back, reinstitute, reimpose, reinstall, reestablish
Suffocate: die or cause to die
from lack of air or inability to breathe.
Example: Ten detainees suffocated in
an airless police cell
Prominent: projecting from
something
Example: A man with big, prominent
eyes like a lobster's
Synonyms: protuberant, protruding, projecting, jutting
out
Coronation: the ceremony of
crowning a sovereign or a sovereign's consort.
Example: It is here the kings of
Nepal have long been crowned and their coronations solemnized
Daunting: seeming difficult to
deal with in anticipation; intimidating.
Example: A daunting task
Synonyms: intimidating, formidable, disconcerting, unnerving, unsettling
Intervention: the action or process
of intervening.
Example: They are plants that grow
naturally without human intervention
Complex: consisting of many
different and connected parts.
Example: A complex network of water
channels
Synonyms: compound, composite, multiplex
Strategic: relating to the
identification of long-term or overall aims and interests and the means of
achieving them.
Example: The company should take
strategic actions to cope with fundamental changes in the environment
Synonyms: planned, calculated, tactical, politic, judicious, prudent
Dictatorship: government by a
dictator.
Example: Forty years of dictatorship
Synonyms: absolute
rule, undemocratic rule, despotism, tyranny, autocracy
Dwindle: diminish gradually in
size, amount, or strength.
Example: Traffic has dwindled to a
trickle
Synonyms: diminish, decrease, reduce, lessen, shrink, fall
off, tail off
