Much to the disapproval of the Soviet authorities, national awareness among Estonians slowly swelled in the 1970's and in efforts to quell it, Moscow turned to Karl Vaino to carry out a program of sweeping cultural repression and Russification. With his broken and heavily accented Estonia, unable to communicate with Estonians in their native language, Vaino was loathed as Brezhnev's Estonian repressor-in-chief.
Vaino's efforts to suppress Estonian culture in the late 1970's and early 1980's were broadly rejected by Estonians – even resulting in a violent clash between Estonian youth and authorities during a rock concert in May 1980. By the mid-80's Vaino's miserable reputation among Estonians was recognized by the Gorbachev regime and he was replaced by a pro-Estonian diplomat, Vaino Väljas, who was recalled from a posting in Latin America in hopes of calming tensions in Estonia. Vaino's Stalinist era methods threatened to further fuel Estonian desires to reclaim national sovereignty.
After his dismissal, Vaino retreated to Moscow with his family and never again returned to Estonia.
This week, the Kremlin announced that Karl Vaino's grandson, Anton Vaino, who was born in Tallinn in February 1972, is the new Russian presidential administration's chief-of-staff, replacing Putin's friend and former KGB colleague, Sergei Ivanov.
Speculation about why one of Putin's closest allies was removed from the top post is rampant but there can be little doubt that Vaino's pedigree, rooted deeply in Stalinist era nomenklatura, was a factor in Putin selecting him to replace Ivanov in the top echelons of Russia's power vertical.
In a recent New Yorker article, Masha Gessen lists possible reasons for the shake-up and reemergence of the Vaino clan in Moscow. Putin, she writes, “might be tired of the old guard. Putin might want to replace his old friends with men who owe their entire careers to him (a fine distinction). Putin might be planning to crack down in advance of the parliamentary election (of sorts) scheduled for September, or the 2018 Presidential election. Putin might be getting ready for an all-out war in Ukraine or elsewhere.”
Anton Vaino has served in the Putin administration for a number of years, including as a personal assistant to the Russian autocrat, for the past four years.
While having never studied politics, the younger Vaino has published two ‘academic' pieces. In 2012, a Russian journal published an article about a unique device Vaino patented, named the “Nooscope”. According to Masha Gessen, the twenty-nine page article on the “Nooscope” is difficult to comprehend and provides a description of the bizarre device, “which ‘consists of a network of space scanners,' and scopes out the noosphere. Or, as the article puts it, “The nooscope's sensor network gives clear readings of co-occurrences in time and space, beginning with latest-generation bank cards and ending with smartdust.”.”
Original article by Marcus Kolga: UPNORTH: A PEDIGREE OF REPRESSION: PUTIN'S NEW CHIEF-OF-STAFF