Friends,  while we Americans get one type of media coverage regarding the 
sanctions being leveled at Russia, other nations are seeing the situation from 
different vantage points.  Below is an example from India––but before that a 
few words about what Russian entrepreneurs (our alumni) and other younger 
Russian men and women said this past two weeks about their country and the 
sanctions. 

 

SANCTIONS/QUIET CONFIDENCE:  The general outlook of Russians I spoke with is 
one of quiet confidence …. saying that sanctions will turn out good for Russia 
in the long run––that Russia must become self sufficient––remarking that Russia 
became infatuated with foreign products in the 1990s.  At that time they felt 
Russia didn't need to manufacture high-end products, that they could purchase 
them from other countries.  However, the situation has changed.  Today 
production has become the "in" discussion wherever one goes.  The sanctions 
have helped bring this about. Several Russians remarked that they hoped the 
sanctions lasted for three years or more, since that would give Russians 
sufficient time to learn to manufacture formerly imported items themselves. The 
Russian government is offering financial support to entrepreneurs who are ready 
to move into consumer production.  

 

MANUFACTURING:  During a Petersburg newspaper interview a couple of days ago, I 
mentioned a proposal I'd developed to bring the sewing industry back to 
America's shores.  Immediately I was asked if I would speak with StPetersburg 
authorities about restarting Russia's apparel industry.  The appointment was 
quickly made, and I found myself talking with Russians who have the connections 
to make these types of possibilities happen.  Who knows where it will go?  In 
the short time between the interview and our appointment, they had checked out 
my history and opened discussions telling me what they knew about the apparel 
manufacturing business I started in 1974 in Texas (and is still in existence). 
The information is online.  They were aware of our CCI apparel incubator in 
St.Petersburg which operated and trained many young clothing designers for 13 
years––they had known of it since inception. 

 

PRIDE: For the first time I can remember, Russians have a strong sense of pride 
in their country––perhaps due to their daily surrounds.  Russian cities gleam 
today compared to any time these Russians can remember.  City centers sport 
elegantly refurbished 19th century buildings and classy new multi-story 
business structures. Millions of drab Khrushchev apartments have been leveled 
and replaced with attractive new 20-story "residential buildings". There are 
literally hundreds of them in the suburbs. New metro lines and 21st century 
bridges have appeared. It's a mystery to me how any nation could have 
constructed so much living and business space and infrastructure so quickly, as 
has Russia.  None of this existed 14 years ago.  

 

WAR: As for the possibility of an all-out war with NATO over Ukraine, Russians 
I spoke with say it's impossible. The logic given is that U.S. money is 
invested in one-third of StPetersburg's industry and residential buildings, 
which I'm told is true all over Russia––and such a war would be a financial 
disaster for Americans.  Whether this  is accurate, I don't know.  Russians 
have a visceral fear of war––it is obvious anytime the subject is discussed.  
WWII is still recalled with horror.  Members of their families were killed or 
badly damaged for life.  They don't celebrate or "hero-ize" their military or 
war making.  War is memorialized with deeply moving art work and statues in 
every Russian city––the eternal flames still burn in these memorials.  I 
remembered this contrast as I passed through American Airlines' new terminal at 
JFK on Sept 16.  We travelers walked under huge flag-banners, the first was to 
the US Infantry. About 100 feet down the corridor was the US Navy banner, 
another 100 feet down the Air Force, followed by the Marines, and half a dozen 
other banners celebrating our military.  The side walls were decorated with 
photos and stories of battles and war heroes. I wondered what we Americans 
would think if major Russian airports had such displays in their main areas.

 

AIRPORTS:  The huge new Sheremetyvo Airport in Moscow is stunning and organized 
so English-speaking persons can easily read the signs and get immediately to 
their appropriate destinations. Roaming attendants speak fluent English. The 
huge motifs of the airport are about upward mobile, happy young people and 
Russian families moving forward -- sometimes flying in the air as in the last 
act of the Sochi Olympics.  If Moscow's Sheremetyvo could be outdone, the 
architects and artists who put together the design of the new StPetersburg 
airport is even more next century looking, but somewhat smaller.  For those of 
you who have suffered through the old Pulkova StPetersburg facility, you are in 
for a treat the next time you travel there.  I was awestruck––literally I stood 
and gawked!  The decorative images are upbeat and pictorial of the societal 
values ordinary Russians are aspiring to these days.  

 

Onto the Indian article for another point of view (not necessarily mine).   

 

Sharon

 


 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=896910&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2FHow%2520sanctions%2520are%2520hastening%2520the%2520world%2520without%2520the%2520West%2520September%252013%2C%25202014%2520Rakesh%2520Krishnan%2520Simha>
 How sanctions are hastening the world without the West 


September 13, 2014  
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=896910&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fin.rbth.com%2Fauthor%2FRakesh%2BKrishnan%2BSimha>
 Rakesh Krishnan Simha 

 

 

 

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