
Halo.
Amerikaner hier. Ich lebe hier in Wien, aber mein Deutsch ist immer noch ziemlich grauenhaft. Sorry, wechsle zu Englisch!
I just read the Economist article about Austria and Russia and I have a few questions. Link is below.
https://www.economist.com/europe/2023/05/11/once-russias-best-friend-in-the-west-austria-is-facing-trouble
For better or worse I live in a bubble here. My German is shit, and most of my friends are expats. I read the US news and have only a basic understanding of what’s happening here in Austrian politics.
I am curious if you feel this article is accurate or not. Of course it is a very Western take. I am also curious if people could recommend good news sources that focus on Austrian news and politics for someone in the middle / moderate / slightly left side of the political spectrum. I would have to translate it, but it would also serve as good practice.
Thanks.
(Here is the entire article)
Once Russia’s best friend in the West, Austria is facing trouble
When bear-hugging goes wrong
May 11th 2023
Take a wrong turn or two in the labyrinthine Austrian federal chancellery and you might end up in a small room sporadically used for press conferences. Only the plush carpet and glistening chandeliers betray the Kongresssaal’s past glories. From September 1814 to June 1815, assorted emperors, dukes and ambassadors crammed inside in a bid to restore continental order in the wake of Napoleon’s wars. The Congress of Vienna turned into a nine-month orgy of masked balls and lavish banquets with occasional interruptions for diplomatic chit-chat. By adroitly balancing power between rival nations, the agreement (mostly) kept the peace in Europe for just shy of a century.
Once the centre of an empire spanning from Italy to Ukraine, Vienna is now merely the capital of the eu’s 14th-biggest member state. Notwithstanding the loss of its empire, in recent decades Austria thought it had found itself a role: as a member of the West, but with a special relationship with the Soviet bloc, then with Russia. The strategy had a certain dubious rationale—at least until Vladimir Putin, Russia’s pound-shop Bonaparte, launched a failed full-scale invasion of Ukraine a year ago. But things in Austria have steadily got worse. A slew of corruption scandals has rumbled on nearly uninterrupted since 2019. Confidence in the country’s body politic has collapsed: the chancellorship has changed hands five times in the past six years, a rate not even Italy nor Britain has been able to match.
Austria’s domestic woes have links to Russia. In 2019 a leaked video showed the then vice-chancellor, Heinz-Christian Strache, chilling in Ibiza with what he thought was the niece of a pro-Kremlin businessman. In it, Mr Strache, then also the leader of the migrant-bashing Freedom Party, suggested that his new chums should take over Austria’s most popular tabloid and turn it into a hard-right mouthpiece; in return, they would be granted juicy government contracts. As if to prove his own point, Mr Strache added: “We have decadence in the West.”
Ensuing official investigations have revealed a veritable *matryoshka* doll of interlocking state misdeeds. Text messages sent by political grandees reportedly paint a picture of a clannish elite indulging in everything from dodgy party financing to placing pals in lucrative jobs, bribing journalists or steering tax authorities to their advantage. Dozens of top figures in the fields of politics, business and the media are being probed. The scandals have dragged in Sebastian Kurz, a political wunderkind, who stepped down as chancellor in October 2021, aged just 35 (he now works for a Silicon Valley firm, and denies any wrongdoing).
Mr Kurz had accumulated near-unchecked levels of power, and his departure from the political scene left Austria politically rudderless, says Marcus How of ve Insight, a consultancy in Vienna. This first became apparent during covid-19. The authorities imposed harsh measures such as compulsory vaccinations—and then failed to enforce them. But the war in Ukraine has proved a still greater challenge. Some consequences, such as voters left grouchy by high energy prices, can be found across Europe. But Austria’s links to Russia pose unique problems.
“There has long been a feeling in Austria that we could hug the Russian bear,” says Thomas Hofer, a political analyst in Vienna. Having narrowly dodged being on the wrong side of the Iron Curtain (like Germany, Austria was partitioned after the second world war, but Soviet troops moved out in 1955), it saw itself as a bridge between the rival blocs. Neutral Austria, a rare western European country to be outside nato, played the geopolitical field to its advantage. In 1968, it became the first Western country to import Soviet gas, inspiring Germany and others later on. An anti-American bent among the population helped justify business entanglements in the unfree world.
Politically, the links with Moscow could sometimes merely be eyebrow-raising, as in 2018, when the foreign minister joyfully waltzed away with Mr Putin at her own wedding, even as other Western countries had imposed sanctions on Russia. Occasionally it looked downright dodgy, such as when former chancellors took jobs with large Russian energy and rail concerns. Vienna is rumoured to be crawling with Russian spooks: at one point Austrian intelligence services were deemed to be so compromised that their European allies refused to share information with them.
**Bridge to nowhere**
The war caused several European countries to rethink their ways. Finland and Sweden rushed to join nato; Germany has weaned itself from Russian gas and is bolstering its armed forces. Austria for its part has proved slow to pivot. True, it has signed up to wide-ranging eu sanctions, and promised to spend more on defence. But it remains wedded to the idea of neutrality, making it look ambivalent during a conflict its neighbours think poses an existential threat. It is still importing oodles of Russian gas, citing “contractual obligations”. Its second-biggest bank, Raiffeisen, generated over half its profits from Russia last year. In April last year the current chancellor, Karl Nehammer, became the first Western leader to visit Mr Putin since the start of the war, unsuccessfully playing the card of a bridge-builder between Russia and its foes.
Austrians like to paint themselves as mini-Germans living in a well-run Alpine type of place. The way things are going, the more apt analogy may soon be Hungary, its erstwhile partner-in-empire, which under Viktor Orban has also grown queasily close to Russia. The hard-right Freedom Party—the very one that prompted the Ibiza imbroglio, and which retains close links to Russia—has surged to a wide poll lead ahead of elections due next year. Its members of parliament showily walked out of a recent video address by Ukraine’s Volodymyr Zelensky. That hardly bodes well. Vienna was once where diplomats gathered to assuage continental tensions. It may soon contribute to them instead.
6 comments
Depends on what your definition of left is?
Probably [https://www.derstandard.at](https://www.derstandard.at) which is a daily newspaper
Or [https://www.profil.at](https://www.profil.at) which is weekly
There’s also [https://www.falter.at](https://www.falter.at) but the majority of their stuff you have to pay a subscription for.
​
Or just use [https://news.orf.at](https://news.orf.at) the news page of our public broadcasting company (basically our BBC).
​
There’s also [https://www.wienerzeitung.at](https://www.wienerzeitung.at) but its future is unclear.
Well, in principle there is nothing wrong here, but the article mentions and mixes up a wide variety of things. I read through it carefully and honestly don’t know what the core message is supposed to be. Are we collaborators of the Russian regime? That would be a gross exaggeration. We support the Ukrainians financially and the majority of the population is also in solidarity. Our politicians, whether left, right or centre, took money from Russians, but they would take it just as much from Americans, sheikhs from Arabia or the Chinese. It’s not about ideology, but about their own fat wallets.
The article is on point!
Yes we are bitches for anyone with money and power. We either suck up to Germany, the EU, the US, Russia, if needs be we also suck up to Turkey and Iran, and surely if they ever ask us we’ll also suck up to China.
It’s a successful model to adapt for an Eastern nation trying to look Western and it seems to have served us well.
While everything in this article seems to be correct it mixes and matches stories over the span of a very long time. The article gives me the impression that nothing else happened and everything is bad here without a real focus on the message they want to give.
While most things are true I wouldn’t go so far as to call the article balanced. Much is taken out of context or just not mentioned. First of all, about the FPÖ:
Heinz Christian Strache (FPÖ), who would have allowed himself to be corrupted in Ibiza, did not (to my knowledge) assume that she was the niece of a “pro cremlin businessman”. He thought she was the niece of a rich Russian (Igor Makarov) who was not known for political involvement.
Shortly after the video, he was kicked out of his party. What is not mentioned is that the foreign minister who kneels before Putin at her wedding was also appointed by the FPÖ, was not part of the political establishment and is now ostracized. She has left the country and claims to be persecuted in Austria. When the intelligence services in Europe stopped sharing sensitive information with Austrian intelligence services, it was also the FPÖ in government in charge of the Interior Ministry.
What we can see from these examples is that the FPÖ in particular is close to Russia. Almost all incidents happened in the short period of coalition. However, this lasted only one and a half years. The influence of the FPÖ in Austria should not be overestimated.
While I agree with the verdict that Kurz’s departure left the country and the party leaderless for a while, using compulsory vaccination of all things as an argument for this seems far-fetched to me. Compulsory vaccination failed because there was no need for it when it was introduced (spring 2022), resistance was huge and it would have been difficult to justify it. I also find it somewhat exaggerated how it is insinuated that there is greater political chaos in Austria than in the UK and Italy because there were many chancellors. This is incorrect insofar as the Övp was always in power, interrupted by a short period of expert government, which is probably a very quiet phase in the country. Hartwig Löger and Alexander Schallenberg were brief placeholders, but they did not change much. They drive up the statistics.
As for the Raiffeisen Bank Again, not everything was said. Raiffeisenbank is not the second largest bank but Raiffeisen Bank International. And she is 60% (?) owned by the regional Raiffeisen banks. It remains unmentioned that the profits of Raiffeisenbank International cannot be deducted due to the sanctions and that the Raisffeisenbank cannot easily sell its business areas in Russia.