Srdja Trifkovic interview with RT International on Putin’s foreign affairs 
speech


 


Broadcast live on October 24, 2014, 19:06 GMT


 

Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5f9yuzoWzpQ 
<https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5f9yuzoWzpQ&feature=youtu.be> 
&feature=youtu.be 

 

Transcript: http://rt.com/op-edge/199160-putin-valdai-coherent-policy 

 

RT: Apart from the very strong rhetoric, Putin said that Russia does not really 
see a strong menace on the part of the US. Do you think Washington might stop 
seeing Moscow as a threat?

 

Srdja Trifkovic: No, I think that U.S. policy is guided by geopolitical 
intentions, by a strategic design to surround and squeeze Russia at every 
point, and if possible – in the fullness of time – to engineer regime change in 
Moscow. So the U.S. policy, and Western policy in general – which is really the 
result of what U.S. dictates to the Europeans – are not the result of a general 
perception of a Russian threat. Rather, they are guided by a long term 
geopolitical game which hasn’t changed since the Cold War.

 

RT: Why do you think it has not changed towards Russia?

 

ST: Because in essence the Washingtonian policy-makers do not see any 
difference in terms of the geopolitical enemy, whether it is the USSR or 
whether it is Russia. Effectively they look upon Russia as the “other,” not 
only in political but also in cultural and emotional terms. That is why you 
have such strong, stridently anti-Russian rhetoric at all levels of the Western 
establishment, whether it is politics or the media.

 

RT: Do you think if the Western leadership acted differently towards Russia, 
then we would see a different stance from Putin?

 

ST: Absolutely, because all along Russia has been responding to different 
signals from the West in an appropriate manner. When the rhetoric of the 
“reset” was all the rage, we saw a clearly reconciliatory response from the 
Russians.

 

Even now the Russian response to the sanctions hasn’t been strong enough. In 
fact it should be so strong as to prompt the unions, the employers and the 
shareholders of the Western companies to lobby with their own governments to 
change policies towards Russia – because it is beginning to hurt. But I think 
that Putin has correctly diagnosed the nature of the international system as 
increasingly anarchic, as the one in which the U.S. is trying to impose the 
rules. But they are not real rules, because they are applied on an entirely ad 
hoc basis from one situation to the other. Kosovo can be independent, but 
Crimea cannot re-join Russia… and so on.

 

I think it is a very important speech because it reflects the clarity on the 
Russian side. So far we have seen different circles surrounding President Putin 
advising different things. Some of the captains of the Russian industry have 
been advocating a more conciliatory line; then you have people like Rogozin or 
Shoigu who are advocating a more firm line, and foreign minister Lavrov acting 
somewhere in-between. Now I think we have a welcome development: we have 
strategic clarity of thought, which should result in a coherent policy, a long 
term policy of resistance to American monopolar unilateralism.

 

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