
Why the Council
On Foreign
Relations Hates Putin
Why
Murdoch's Journal Loves Kasparov
By Mike Whitney
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12-9-7
http://www.rense.com/general79/why.htm
- On Sunday, Putin's
party, United Russia, stormed to victory in the country's
parliamentary elections with 63 per cent of the vote. It was
a romp. United Russia now controls 306 of the 450 seats in
the Duma, an overwhelming majority. The balloting was a
referendum on Putin's leadership and it passed in a
landslide. Now it's certain, that even if Putin steps down
as president next year as expected, he will be the dominant
player in Russian politics for the foreseeable future.
-
- Vladamir Putin is
arguably the most popular leader in Russian history,
although you'd never know it by reading the western media.
According to a recent survey conducted by the Wall Street
Journal, Putin's personal approval rating in November 2007
was 85 per cent, making him the most popular head of state
in the world today. Putin's popularity derives from many
factors. He is personally clever and charismatic. He is
fiercely nationalistic and has worked tirelessly to improve
the lives of ordinary Russians and restore the country to
its former greatness. He has raised over 20 million Russians
out of grinding poverty, improved education, health care and
the pension system, (partially) nationalized critical
industries, lowered unemployment, increased manufacturing
and exports, invigorated Russian markets, strengthened the
ruble, raised the overall standard of living, reduced
government corruption, jailed or exiled the venal oligarchs,
and amassed capital reserves of $450 billion.
-
- Russia is no longer
up for grabs like it was after the fall of the Soviet Union.
Putin put an end to all of that. He reasserted control over
the country's vast resources and he's using them to improve
the lives of his own people. This is a real departure from
the 1990s, when the drunken Yeltsin steered Russia into
economic disaster by following Washington's neoliberal
edicts and by selling Russia's Crown Jewels to the vulturous
oligarchs. Putin put Russia's house back in order;
stabilized the ruble, strengthened economic/military
alliances in the region, and removed the corporate gangsters
who had stolen Russia's national assets for pennies on the
dollar. The oligarchs are now all either in jail or have
fled the country. Russia is no longer for sale.
-
- Russia is, once
again, a major world power and a vital source of
hydrocarbons. It's star is steadily rising just as America's
has begun to wane. This may explain why Putin is loathed by
the West. Freud might call it petroleum envy, but it's
deeper than that. Putin has charted a course for social
change that conflicts with basic tenets of neoliberalism,
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. Putin's primary focus is Russia; Russia's welfare,
Russia's sovereignty and Russia's 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, (which were organized by US NGOs and
intelligence services) intervened in Russian elections, and
threatened to deploy an (allegedly defensive) nuclear
weapons system in Eastern Europe. Russia is seen as a
potential rival to US imperial ambitions and must be
contained or subverted.
-
- In the early years
of his presidency, it was believed that Putin would comply
with western demands and accept a subordinate role in the
US-EU-Israel centric system. But that hasn't happened. Putin
has stubbornly defended Russian independence and resisted
integration into the prevailing system. .
-
- The triumphalism
which swept through Washington after the fall of the Berlin
Wall has been replaced with a palpable fear that Russia's
power will grow as oil prices continue to soar. The tectonic
plates of geopolitical power are gradually shifting
eastward. That's why the US has joined in The Great Game and
is trying to put down roots in Eurasia. Still, it's easy to
imagine a scenario in which America's access to the last
great oil and natural gas reserves on the planet--the three
trillion barrels of oil and natural gas located in the
Caspian Basin---could be completely blocked by a resurgent
Russian superpower.
-
- The most powerful
of the Washington think tanks, the Council on Foreign
Relations, recognized this problem early on and decided that
US policy towards Russia had to be reworked entirely.
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- * * *
-
-
- John Edwards and
Jack Kemp were appointed to lead a CFR task force which
concocted the pretext for an all-out assault on the Putin.
This is where the idea that Putin is "rolling back
democracy" began. In their article "Russia's Wrong
Direction", Edwards and Kemp state that a "strategic
partnership" with Russia is no longer possible. They claim
that the government has become increasingly authoritarian
and that the society is growing less "open and pluralistic".
-
- Kemp and Edwards
provided the ideological foundation upon which the entire
public relations campaign against Putin has been built. And
it is quite an impressive campaign. A Google News search
shows roughly 1,400 articles from the various news services
on Putin. Virtually all of them contain exactly the same
rhetoric, the same buzzwords, the same spurious claims, the
same slanders. It is impossible to find even one article out
of 1,400 that diverges the slightest bit from the talking
points which originated at the Council on foreign Relations.
-
- It's interesting to
see to what extent the media has become a propaganda
bullhorn for the national security state. Putin's personal
approval ratings confirm his enormous popularity, and yet,
the media continues to treat him like he's a tyrant. It is
utterly incongruous.
-
- In most articles,
Putin is disparaged as "anti democratic"; a charge that is
never leveled at the Saudi Royal family even though women
are forbidden to drive, they must be fully-covered at all
times, and can be stoned to death if they are found to be
unfaithful. Also, in Saudi Arabia, beheading is still the
punishment of choice for capital crimes.
-
- When Saudi King
Abdullah visits the US, he is not heaped with scorn for his
regimes' repressive treatment of his people. Instead he's
rewarded with flattering photos of he and George Bush
strolling arm-n-arm through the Crawford sage.
-
- Why is Putin
blasted for "rolling back democracy" when American client,
Mikhail Saakashvili, arbitrarily declares martial law and
deploys his truncheon-wielding Robo-cops to beat protesters
senseless before dragging them off to the Georgia gulag? The
pictures of Saakashvili's bloody crackdown appeared in the
foreign press, but not in the US. Rather, the media had all
its cameras focused on Garry Kasparov (contributing editor
to the Wall Street Journal and right-wing loony) as he was
led off to the Moscow hoosegow in handcuffs for protesting
without a permit.
-
- * * *
-
- Putin's real crime
is that he serves Russia's national interests rather than
the interests of global Capital. He also rejects
Washington's "unipolar" world model. As he said in Munich:
-
- "The unipolar world
refers to a world in which there is one master, one
sovereign; one center of authority, one center of force, one
center of decision-making. At the end of the day this is
pernicious not only for all those within this system, but
also for the sovereign itself because it destroys itself
from within.
-
- "What is even more
important is that the model itself is flawed because at its
basis there is and can be no moral foundations for modern
civilization."
-
- He added:
-
- "We are seeing a
greater and greater disdain for the basic principles of
international law....We are witnessing an almost uncontained
hyper use of force -- military force -- in international
relations, force that is plunging the world into an abyss of
permanent conflicts. I am convinced that we have reached
that decisive moment when we must seriously think about the
architecture of global security."
-
- Well said,
Vladimir.
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- Putin's no saint,
but he doesn't deserve the thrashing he gets from the
western media.
-
- And a final word on
Garry Kasparov
-
- On Sunday, while
Putin's party "United Russia" was screeching to a landslide
victory, Reuters News was busy taking mug-shots of the
stony-faced Kasparov holding up Florida-style ballots
claiming the voting was rigged. "They are not just rigging
the vote," Kasparov moaned, "They are raping the whole
electoral system. These elections are a reminder of Soviet
elections when there was no choice.....Putin is going to
have a hard time trying to rule like Stalin."
-
- Stalin? So now
Putin is Stalin? First of all, when did Reuters begin to
take such a keen interest in voting irregularities? It must
be a recent development, becuase they were nowhere to be
found in the 2000 presidential election. And when did they
start to pay attention to "political dissent"? They
certainly never wasted any video-footage on the antiwar
rallies in the US. Are we to believe that they are more
interested in democracy in Russia than America?
-
- And why is Reuters
so eager to provide valuable column-space to a washed-up
chessmaster who's only interested in making a nuisance of
himself by bellyaching about voter fraud? That's not news;
it's propaganda.
-
- As for Kasparov and
his silly accusations; he should be glad that he lives in
Putin's Russia rather than Stalin's or he'd be in leg-irons
right now boarding a northbound train to the Siberian
outback.
-
- What is Kasparov
doing in Moscow anyway? And why is this little man --with
virtually no political base -- such a big part of the
western media narrative? Is he only there to discredit the
election and throw a little more muck on Putin or is there
more to it than that?
-
- Garry Kasparov
should give up politics and do what he does best; stand-up
comedy. Watching Kasparov traipse around Moscow with his
basket of sour grapes and his entourage of western
media-stooges is like watching "Mr. Bean's Excellent Kremlin
Adventure", a particularly lame performance in a dismal
B-rated burlesque. It's painful to watch.
-
- Kasparov's party,
the "Other Russia" couldn't manage even a 2 per cent rating
in the polls. The party is a complete dud. In fact, Reuters
even (reluctantly) admits as much in its article.
-
- Here's the clip.
Reuters: "Kasparov and his "Other Russia" dissident movement
are not standing in Sunday's parliamentary election because
they could not get registered as a party. THEY ENJOY LITTLE
PUBLIC SUPPORT AMONG RUSSIANS BUT HAVE A BIG FOLLOWING IN
THE WEST." (Reuters) "Big following in the West"? Why
doesn't that surprise me?
-
- So, in other words,
Kasparov has no base of support in Russia, and yet he gets
his own camera crew and media team to follow him around
recording every silly he says. That's just great. Who do
they think he is; Nelson Mandela?
-
- Kasparov is a
contributing editor of Murdoch's Wall Street Journal; so he
already has a regular platform for launching his tirades on
the "tyrannical" Mr. Putin. Normally, one doesn't get a spot
on the op-ed page of the WSJ unless their politics are
somewhere to the right of Augusto Pinochet. That's probably
the case with Kasparov, too. In Saturday's edition of the
WSJ, Kasparov delivered his latest absurd soliloquy
disparaging Putin and recounting his agonizing 5 day ordeal
in the Moscow poky.
-
- Although Kasparov
has garnered little public support in Russia, he appears to
have a loyal following among the Washington elite. According
to Wikipedia: "In 1991, Kasparov received the Keeper of the
Flame award from the Center for Security Policy (a US think
tank), for anti-Communist resistance and the propagation of
democracy. Kasparov was an exceptional recipient since the
award is given to "individuals for devoting their public
careers to the defense of the United States and American
values around the world". Hmmmm...."For devoting their
public careers to the defense of the United States and
American values around the world"? Isn't that a definition
of an American agent?
-
- Again, according to
Wikipedia: In April, 2007 it was asserted that Kasparov was
a board member of the National Security Advisory Council of
the Center for Security Policy, a non-profit, non-partisan
national security organization that specializes in
identifying policies, actions, and resource needs that are
vital to American security". Kasparov confirmed this and
added that he was removed shortly after he became aware of
it. He noted that HE DIDN'T KNOW ABOUT THE MEMBERSHIP and
suggested he was included in the board by an accident
because he received the 1991 Keeper of the Flame award from
this organization. But Kasparov maintained his association
with the neoconservative leadership by giving speeches at
think tanks such as the Hoover Institute."
-
- Here's a list of
some of the other fellow travelers who've been given the
"Keeper of the Flame Award": 2007-Senator Joe Lieberman.
2004-General Peter Pace. 2003- Paul Wolfowitz. 2002- General
Richard Meyers. 1998-Donald Rumsfeld. 1996-Newt Gingrich.
1995-Ronald Reagan. 1990-Casper Weinberger.
-
- Is Kasparov an
anomaly or does he fit right in with this coven of far-right
loonies? And who are some of the prominent members of the
Center for Security Policy? Richard Perle, Douglas Feith,
Frank Gaffney, James Roche and Laura Ingraham. Oh, boy. The
whole front office of the neocon's cuckoo's nest. Now tell
me, dear reader, with friends like that; what should we
really think about Kasparov's performance in Moscow? Is he
really interested in "democracy promotion" as he claims or
is their acting out a script that was prepared in
Washington?
-
- In the US, Kasparov
has become the focal point of the Russian elections - the
primary source of "unbiased" analysis. NPR reiterates his
spurious claims every half hour. The other news agencies are
no better. He has become the distorted lens through which
Americans view Russian democracy. This says a lot more about
the choke-hold the neocons still have on the media rather
than anything objective about Russia. The Kasparov fiasco
gives us a chance to see the inner-workings of the
establishment media. It's nothing more than a propaganda
bullhorn for far-right organizations executing their bloody
imperial strategy. Fidel Castro summed it up best just days
ago when he said: "It is the most sophisticated media ever
developed by technology, employed to kill human beings and
to subjugate or exterminate peoples".
-
- Amen to that,
Fidel.
-
- Mike Whitney lives
in Washington state. He can be reached at: <mailto:fergiewhitney@msn.com>fergiewhitney@msn.com
-
- <http://www.counterpunch.org/whitney12052007.html>
http://www.counterpunch.org/whitney12052007.html
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Commentary
-
-
Russian Elections And The
Remaining Oligarchs
-
- By Israel
Shamir
-
- 12-9-7
-
-
- Mike Whitney is an
inspired writer we usually agree with and share his
admiration of Russia's progress. Recently, he enthused over
election victory of Putin's party in Russia's parliamentary
elections. He is right up to a point. Indeed, the Council of
Foreign Relations, the leading think tank of the American
establishment, hates Putin because he does not submit to
Washington's will. Indeed, Putin is popular, and he did many
good things for the Russian people. Indeed, the liberal
opposition led by Kasparov, Kasyanov et al is tiny and much
disliked.
-
- Still, our readers
deserve a better assessment, not a Disney-style Tom and
Jerry comics. Propaganda is useful to mobilise soldiers, but
it interferes with generals' judgment. Let us begin with
something simple. Mike writes: "Putin removed the corporate
gangsters who had stolen Russia's national assets the
oligarchs are now all either in jail or have fled the
country."
-
- It would be a great
achievement, if it were happening. While two oligarchs,
Berezovsky and Gusinsky, indeed fled Russia in very early
days of Putin's rule, and one, Khodorkovsky, who tried to
unseat Putin by using his wealth, is in jail and his
acolytes are in running, the oligarchs' demise is rather
overstated. From Norilsk Nickel to oil and gas resources,
these very wealthy individuals Roman Abramovich, Oleg
Deribaska, Michael Friedman still own the bulk of Russian
assets and wealth. Their writ does not run far beyond
business matters, they can't interfere with the state
politics. However, Putin had a mandate to get rid of them
all; but he never did it.
-
- More important,
Edinaya Rossia (ER, the ruling party) has no coherent
ideology or attitude. A loose federation of regional blocks,
its members want to be in power, they allegedly paid
millions of dollars for a safe place on the party list; and
they can betray Putin as fast as anybody. Yes, Putin led
them to victory over 60% of vote, but what now? Does it
imply they will continue to follow Putin's course? We
learned that Putin decided not to take a seat in the
Parliament. He is adamant in his refusal to run for
presidency third term. And the Duma (Russian Parliament) is
anyway quite powerless according to the 1994 constitution.
So the immediate future is far from clear.
-
- Even more
important: reading Mike (or reading Western media), you get
an impression that ER competes for power with the liberals,
that Putin is the alternative to pro-American and
pro-Zionist SPS. ER is opposed (in the Parliament) not by
Kasparov and liberals, but by Communists and Nationalists.
Liberals never succeeded to win any sizeable share of vote,
while the Communists won the presidential elections in 1996
and allowed the victory to be squandered as they were
afraid of civil war and repetition of 1993 bloodbath. Putin
fought the Communists by means fair or foul: he blocked
their access to TV, he tried to split them and organised a
few parties to draw away the voters from the Communists.
After the elections, the splinter party leaders expressed
desire to rejoin the mother party, CPRF.
-
- The Western media
promote worthless and unpopular liberals of Kasparov etc,
who would not even be heard of in Russia otherwise. Who
cares what the view of Kasparov is? However, this fight
against Kasparov and Yavlinsky is a troublesome sign. I was
in St Petersburg at the time of their demonstration; the
demo counted at best about two hundred participants of
orderly behaviour, but the great city was awash with riot
troops and armoured vehicles like Ramallah. A friend of
mine, a University teacher, who just passed by, was
arrested; and so were many other bystanders. Why was it
necessary? Is it usual Russian heavy-handedness, or
something more sinister: an attempt to attach importance and
promote the liberal opposition at the expense of the
Communists?
-
- In conditions of
perfect democracy, the Communists would soar to majority or
plurality they are quite patriotic, and they do approve of
positive steps by president Putin. But even in the present
setup, the Communists have much to do: they can support the
line associated with Putin and force the government to
implement its declarations.
-
- President Putin is
a very good and successful manager, and he has made many
valuable contributions to Russia's well-being. He needs some
critical support from the left; not an automatic yes-saying,
in order to withstand the pressure from the right.
-
- Small Print
-
- There was much talk
of irregularities in the elections. The ruling party made
full use of Putin's name and reputation in its campaign.
Their huge posters linking ER and Putin were placed in every
city and town of Russia. But it was not worse than in Israel
before 1977, or indeed Sweden in the 60s, when the
predominance of social democrats was nearly total. As for
counting, it appears that it was relatively fair, with
exclusion of national republics at the Southern rim of
Russia, where they went as far as they could to ensure their
representatives' place in the Parliament. The Western
complaints misfired, because the same bodies, who objected
to irregularities, fully approved of the rigged elections of
1996 and even of shelling of the Parliament in 1993.
Russians had lost their virgin beliefs in the western
fairness.
-
- It is interesting
to compare successes of Putin who run a flawless election
with errors of Chavez and his failed referendum on the same
day - both against the US wishes. While Chavez antagonized
the church, Putin had the church on his side. Chavez entered
the campaigning while media was in the hands of his enemies;
Putin took over media and banks first. Lenin spoke of taking
over "banks, telegraph, railway stations" in case of
revolution, nowadays TV has to be the first to go. Putin, as
opposed to Chavez, did not antagonise the Jews either.
Though he ships anti-aircraft weapons to Syria and meets
with Hamas, the Rabbis still adore him and treasure a
meeting with him much above that with president Bush.
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- Israel Shamir
Article Reproduced from
www.Rense.com
|
The Cold Hard Facts
about the Georgia-Russia War!
“Russia has invaded a sovereign neighboring state
and threatens a democratic government elected
by its people. Such an action is unacceptable
in the 21st century.”
President Bush Condemns Russia - AP August 10, 2008
The usual suspects who control the media and politics
of the United States are once more lying
to the American people and to the world.
Here are the facts that can be easily verified
within the mainstream media,
but are buried beneath the rhetoric of anti-Russianism.
— David Duke
|