Chapter 83: Chapter 83

it was slowly dawning on politicians and economists that the crisis, which had

commenced with a mainly US based sub-prime problem, was much, much,

deeper, than had been at first thought. There would be no easy solution. Francis

feared there were few if any courageous and foresighted leaders at hand, as the

dark clouds gathered on the horizon, and he feared not only the West would suffer

I

when the storm broke.

Was it a portent of things to come when, a car carrying Prince Charles and the

Duchess of Cornwall was attacked in the centre of London? The royal car had been

caught in a student demonstration that had turned violent. Luckily for the heir to

Britain’s throne the damage was minimal: a cracked window and a pot of paint on

the car’s costly body work, the royal couple getting off with the scare of their lives.

It was not a rerun of the French Revolution, but a warning, when angry students

clashed with the police after a Parliamentary vote to raise university tuition fees to

as much as nine thousand pounds a year.

The Home Secretary said: ‘What we are seeing in London tonight, the wanton

vandalism, smashing of windows, has nothing to do with peaceful protest.’

Pompous politicians naturally wanted Britons to take the brunt of their persistently

bad decisions lying down.

Sergei Tarasov did not feel unduly worried as the US and the Eurozone were

rocked by their respective internal crises. Russia had recovered from the

destabilising collapse of oil in 2008, after its dangerous military foray into Georgia,

formally part of the USSR. It was again pumping oil and natural gas, and at a never

before seen rate, rivalling Saudi Arabia as the world’s leading exporter of energy.

Its foreign currency reserves were once again looking impressive when Vladimir

Vladimirovich Putin, now Tarasov’s close friend, announced to his inner circle he

would run for the Russian presidency in 2012 election. It was of course no surprise

― no one, but no one, could have imagined it being otherwise.

Putin publicly boasted of his fitness, ready to display his muscles, or his skills in

martial arts, projecting the image of a man of action, if not Actionman, sometimes

astride a Harley-Davidson, others scuba-diving in the Red Sea, and even saving a

TV crew from a Siberian tiger.

There was little or no chance the large majority held in the Duma by his United

Russia Party would be changed by the coming elections. Unlike Western leaders,

Putin was assured of an enviable landslide victory, and not-withstanding the

negative opinion of those same leaders, the German speaking former KGB agent

was a highly popular figure at home.

After his surprise nomination as prime minister by Boris Yeltsin, Putin had gone

on to restore Russia’s national pride and rebuild its economy. After the tragic￾comic interlude under Yeltsin, the first president post-Soviet leader, Putin was

perceived by most Russians as the saviour of the nation. His arrival as head of the

Kremlin was a new departure following the uncertain years that followed the

implosion of Communism, which, knowingly or unknowingly, had been

engineered by Mikhail Gorbachev, and the disintegration of the Soviet Union.

Fitzwilliams warmly congratulated Tarasov on his intuition, though it took little

effort for him to realize there had never been any other alternative. Dimitry

Medvedev and Vladimir Putin were a tandem with the latter in firm control. As for

President Medvedev, a former corporate lawyer, the chances were he would step

back into his former role, that of prime minister, faithfully executing his mentor’s

orders.

Had Fitzwilliams had invited himself to the devil’s table? Perhaps, but it was no

Faustian tryst. Thanks to the City he held the devil by the tail, and in his mind

that’s the way it would remain as long as London was the epicentre of the

international financial world.