http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=424


Putin Versus <http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=424>  the Kremlin on the
Potomac


by Srdja Trifkovic

 Srdja Trifkovic
<http://temp.macdock.com/chroniclesmagazine/wp-content/uploads/2007/05/strif
kovic.thumbnail.jpg> Vladimir Putins United Russia party scored an
overwhelming victory <http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=40362>  in the
countrys parliamentary elections last Sunday, winning almost two-thirds of
the vote and 315 of the 450 seats in the Duma. The election was widely seen
as a referendum on the past seven years of Putins leadership, and he scored
a resounding victory. He will step down as Russias president next spring
confident that he will continue to be the key player in the countryin
whatever formal guisefor many years to come. Barring an act of God, four
years from now hell be back for two more terms as president.

Putin is the most popular leader in Russian history, with a personal
approval rating in excess
<http://www.usnews.com/articles/news/world/2007/12/06/the-great-and-powerful
-putin.html>  of 80 percent. He can afford to mock the orchestrated
Russophobic hate-fest that is raging in the Western media and the political
class. He ridiculed George W. Bush for trying to cast doubt on the
regularity of Russias elections while failing to take note of far worse
abuses by the pro-Western, reformist Mikhail Saakashvili in Georgia.

The State Department bureaucracy
<http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5icfAeChE5PpXJ_it0mzyzwm2GE5QD8TCTNIO0>
s impotent sneers notwithstanding, Putin was justified in limiting the
number of foreign observers of the election. How many Russian monitors are
on hand to check pregnant chards in Florida and dead souls on electoral
rolls in Chicago? Russia is neither a banana republic nor a Western colonyto
the everlasting chagrin of Messrs Soros, Brzezinski and their ilkand the
very notion of monitors was presumptuous. In any event, the presence of
Western observers guarantees nothing: they were curiously loath to take note
of rampant irregularities under Boris Yeltsin. Washington did not mind the
pliant drunkards illegal dissolution of the Congress of Peoples Deputies
in 1993 and his use of tanks
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_constitutional_crisis_of_1993>  and
artillery against legally elected representatives.

Putin is hated by the Western, and especially American
<http://www.usnews.com/articles/opinion/mzuckerman/2007/12/06/has-russia-lef
t-the-west.html> , elite class. He is not loathed because he is not a
Western-style democrat: far more obvious failures of such American
friends and allies as General Musharraf, President Mubarak, or Prime
Minister Erdogan (let alone King Abdullah), are tolerated and politely
glossed over. Putin is hated, in general, because he does not subscribe to
the Weltanschauung of the Western elite class, and in particular because,
under his guidance, Russia has ceased to be up for grabs . . . like it was
in the dreadful decade of the 1990s. As Mike
<http://www.speroforum.com/site/article.asp?idarticle=12778>  Whitney notes,
Freud might call it petroleum envy, but its deeper than that:

Putin has charted a course for social change that conflicts with basic
tenets of neo-liberalism, which are the principles which govern US foreign
policy. He is not a member of the corporate-banking brotherhood which
believes the wealth of the world should be divided among themselves
regardless of the suffering or destruction it may cause. Putins primary
focus is Russia; Russias welfare, Russias sovereignty and Russias place
in the world. He is not a globalist. That is why the Bush administration has
encircled Russia with military bases, toppled neighboring regimes with its
color-coded revolutions . . . organized by US NGOs and intelligence
services, intervened in Russian elections, and threatened to deploy an
(allegedly defensive) nuclear weapons system in Eastern Europe.

Since Russia is seen as a potential rival to American imperial ambitions,
she must be contained or subverted. And the mainstream media,
unsurprisingly, performed on cue: Putin is easily the most popular leader of
a major country in todays world, but the MSM treat him like a tyrannical
dictator. At the same time the media lovingly devote endless column-inches
and air time to a former chess player, Gary Kasparov, who is as
representative of the Russian people today as Angela Davis had been of the
American people during the late Cold War.

Viewed in light of U.S.-Russian relations over the past decade and a half,
the U.S. posture on such issues as Kosovo, antiballistic missiles, oil
pipelines and drilling rights, further NATO expansion, the breakaway
enclaves, Central Asia, the Ukraine, Georgia, human-rights violations and
backtracking on democracy, etc. reveals a stunning reversal of the two
countries geopolitical and ideological roles.

The Soviet Union came into being as a revolutionary state that challenged
any given status quo in principle, starting with the Comintern and ending
three generations later with Afghanistan. Some of its aggressive actions and
hostile impulses could be explained in light of traditional Russian
motives, such as the need for security; at root, however, there was always
an ideology unlimited in ambition and global in scope.

At first, the United States tried to appease and accommodate the Soviets
(1943-1946), then moved to containment in 1947, and spent the next four
decades building and maintaining essentially defensive mechanismssuch as
NATOdesigned to prevent any major change in the global balance. By the late
70s, the system appeared to be faltering, especially in the Third World.
And, as we know from his Diaries, only three years before the fall of the
Berlin Wall, Ronald Reagan was far from certain that Moscows expansionist
days were over.

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia has been trying to
articulate her goals and define her policies in terms of national interests:
peace and prosperity at home, stable domestic institutions, secure borders,
friendly neighbors. The old Soviet dual-track policy of having normal
relations with America, on the one hand, while seeking to subvert her, on
the other, gave way to naive attempts by Boris Yeltsins foreign minister
Andrei Kozyrev to forge a partnership with the United States.

By contrast, the early 1990s witnessed the beginning of Americas strident
attempt to assert her status as the only global hyperpower. This ambition
was inherently inimical to post-Soviet stabilization and kept Washington
from entertaining the suggestion that Russia might, in fact, have legitimate
interests in her own post-Soviet backyard. The justification for the project
was as ideological, and the implications were as revolutionary, as anything
concocted by Zinoviev or Trotsky in their heyday.

In essence, the United States adopted her own dual-track approach. When
Mikhail Gorbachevs agreement was needed for German reunification, President
George H.W. Bush gave a firm and public promise that NATO wound not move
eastward. Within years, however, Bill Clinton expanded NATO to include all
the former Warsaw Pact countries of Central Europe. In The Russia Hand,
Strobe Talbott chillingly summarized how Washington took advantage of
Russias weakness. On a visit to Moscow in 1996, Clinton even wondered if he
had gone too far, confiding to Talbot, We keep telling Ol Boris, Okay,
now heres what youve got to do nextheres some more [sh-t] for your
face. Another round of NATO expansion came under Bush II, when three
former Soviet Baltic republics were admitted. The process is far from over:
last April Mr. Bush signed the Orwellian-sounding NATO Freedom Consolidation
Act of 2007, which extends U.S. military assistance to such aspiring NATO
members as Georgia and the Ukraine.

The rationale for NATOs continued existence after the disappearance of the
Warsaw Pact and the collapse of the Soviet Union was found in the
revolutionary concept of humanitarian intervention used against the Serbs
in 1999 and in the self-awarded mandate to conduct out-of-area operations.
In practice this means that NATO is the means of tightening a hostile noose
around Russia. Further expansion, according to Zbigniew Brzezinskian
atavistic Russophobe par excellenceis mandatory, historically mandatory,
geopolitically desirable.

In the wake of September 11, President Bush talked Russia into sanctioning
the U.S. militarys presence in Central Asia and the Caucasus, but then, in
the name of the War on Terror, tried to make that presence permanent. The
following year, President Bush unilaterally abrogated the ABM Treaty. His
goal was to push forward elements of the U.S. antiballistic missile system
closer to Russias borders. His claim that radar stations in Poland or
Bohemia will help save the West from ICBMs coming from Iran is ludicrous.

The collapse of Russias state institutions and social infrastructure under
Yeltsin, accompanied by a hyperinflation that reduced the middle class and
pensioners to penury, was a trauma of incomparably greater magnitude than
the Great Depression. Yet its architectsAnatoly Chubais, Yegor Gaidar, Boris
Nemtsov, Vladimir Ryzhkovwere hailed in Washington as pro-Western
reformers, and their political factions and media outlets were duly
supported by the U.S. taxpayers, by way of a network of quasi-NGOs, just as
the terminally unpopular Kasparov is supported by the same cabal today.

The wholesale robbery of Russian resources by the Moscow oligarchs and the
fire sale of drilling concessions to the oligarchs Western cohorts became a
contentious issue in U.S.-Russian relations only a decade later, with the
arrest of Mikhail Khodorkovsky. Those spewing furious allegations of
Putins revenge and heavy-handedness against the Yukos boss disregarded
the fact that, quite apart from his political ambitions, Khodorkovsky was
guilty of fraud and tax evasion on a massive scale.

Although there was not an iota of evidence that Anna Politkovskaya, a
little-known and largely irrelevant pro-Western journalist, was killed on
Putins orders, the U.S. media immediately jumped to that conclusion when
she was shot in November 2006. By contrast, when a nationalist opposition
leader was gunned down last May in pro-Western NATO candidate Georgiathe
fiefdom of Mr. Bushs good friend Mikhail Saakashvilithe event was ignored
here and barely mentioned in Europe. When Mr. Saakashvili subsequently
deployed baton-wielding riot police against his detractors, the ugly
spectacle was glossed over or ignored.

While never missing an opportunity to hector Russia on democracy and
criticize her human-rights record, the United States has been notably silent
on the discriminatory treatment of large Russian minorities in the former
Soviet republics. In Latvia and Estonia, the Russians are subjected to
arguably the worst treatment of any minority group by a member of the
European Union or (with the exception of Turkey) of NATO. The demonstrations
in Estonia against the governments provocative removal of a Russian World
War II memorial from Tallinn were but a symptom of a deeper malaise. Latvia
and Estonia have been allowed by the West flagrantly to break promises made
to their Russian citizens before independence.

Absurdly yet persistently Washington continues to view Russia as a temporary
state with limited sovereignty even within her post-Soviet borders. Chechnya
is the obvious example: The White House routinely condemned Russian
violations while demanding dialogue and studiously refrained from
designating the Chechen child-slayers as terrorists; but no other aspect
of Russias domestic policies, from education (ethnocentric) and
immigration (restrictive) to homosexual rights (appalling) and
jurisprudence (corrupt), has escaped scathing criticism. On the eve of his
G-8 meeting with Putin last May, Mr. Bush declared that reforms that were
once promised to empower citizens have been derailed, with troubling
implications for democratic development. The theme was subsequently
developed into a veritable Agitprop ritual that starts on NPR in the morning
and ends on Fox News in the evening.

Both sides of the American duopoly agree that a democratic Russia is by
definition the one completely subservient, domestically as well as
externally, to U.S. demands. George Soros warns that a strong central
government in Russia cannot be democratic by definition and further says
that Russias general public must accept the ideology of an open society.
The neocons agree. Of course, democracy thus defined has more to do with
ones status in the ideological pecking order than with the expressed will
of ones electoratewhich meshes nicely with the Leninist dictum that the
moral value of any action is determined by its contribution to the march of
history. To wit, Putins approval rating of 80 percent is the proof of his
populist demagoguery.

On current form things will remain the same, or become worse, whoever comes
to the White House in January 2009. All leading candidates advocate
firmness of some kind or another with Moscow. Theres nothing to choose
between Rudy Giuliani
<http://www.outsidethebeltway.com/archives/2007/08/rudy_giulianis_dangerousl
y_stupid_foreign_policy_vision/>  and the insane John McCain
<http://www.ontheissues.org/International/John_McCain_Foreign_Policy.htm> ,
whod try to force Putin to surrender to Chechen jihadists by threatening
U.S. sanctions. Richard Holbrooke, the Democrats perennial Secretary of
State-designate, wants a firm response to a series of Russian challenges to
the stability of Europe, such as the refusal to accept Kosovos
independence. He decries Putins increasingly authoritarian, often brutal,
policies and cautions that, until President Bush weighs in strongly with
Putin (as President Bill Clinton did a decade ago with Boris Yeltsin), there
is a serious risk Moscow will not get the message.

Moscow does get the message all right. It has countered American scheming in
the Caspian region with the summit in Tehran last October that drastically
<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=363>  reduced Bushs ability to wage a
new war. Russia is developing a new gas alliance with Central Asian
producers. It has successfully tested a new nuclear missile. It will veto
Kosovos illegal and illegitimate independence, today and alwaysand the
responsibility for any violent fallout will be with those who had promised
the Albanians that which is not theirs to give.

On current form Russia will be developing gigantic new oil fields in the
Arctic when Americans start paying ten dollarsthe equivalent of three or
four Eurosper gallon at the pump. And, in the end, Russia will survive, says
Anthony T. Salvia, a former senior official in the Reagan administration.
This former proud Cold Warrior now sees that Russia has no choice but to
stand up to America:

Sooner or later, U.S. foreign policy will collide with realityit may already
have done so in Iraqand Washington, shorn of its ideological blinkers, will
finally embrace the foreign policy imperative of the 21st century:
Solidarity and strategic cooperation between the United States, Europe and
Russia on the basis of their shared Christian moral, intellectual and
cultural traditions. This is the way forward in the face of profound
challenges from a rising China and resurgent Islam.

Or, as Ive been saying ever since September 11, its time for a true
Northern Alliance that can defeat the menace of global jihad once and for
all. But before that becomes possible well need a revolution to sweep away
the Comrades from the Kremlin on the Potomac.



Dr. S. Trifkovic, Foreign Affairs Editor
CHRONICLES: A Magazine of American Culture
http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?cat=4

www.trifkovic.mysite.com

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