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OpEdNews Op Eds    H3'ed 12/22/14

The Liberal Idiocy on Russia/Ukraine

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Krugman, who is quickly jettisoning his reputation for thoughtfulness, published a second column on this topic in a row, showing that he has fully bought into all the propaganda "themes" emanating from the U.S. State Department and the compliant U.S. mainstream news media.

In Krugman's mind, it was Putin who instigated the crisis with the goal of plundering Ukraine. Operating from that false hypothesis, Krugman then spins off this question:

"...why did Mr. Putin do something so stupid? ... The answer ... is obvious if you think about Mr. Putin's background. Remember, he's an ex-K.G.B. man -- which is to say, he spent his formative years as a professional thug. Violence and threats of violence, supplemented with bribery and corruption, are what he knows.

"And for years he had no incentive to learn anything else: High oil prices made Russia rich, and like everyone who presides over a bubble, he surely convinced himself that he was responsible for his own success. At a guess, he didn't realize until a few days ago that he has no idea how to function in the 21st century."

But Krugman is not only operating from a false hypothesis -- the reality was that the Ukraine crisis was forced on Putin, not that he went seeking it -- Krugman also has a simplistic view of the KGB, which, like the American CIA, certainly had its share of thugs but also had a significant number of smart analysts. Some of those KGB analysts were in the forefront of recognizing the need for the Soviet Union to reform its economy and to reach out to the West.

Putin was generally allied with the KGB faction which favored "convergence" with the West, a Russian attitude that dates back to Peter the Great, seeking Russia's acceptance as part of Europe rather than being shunned by Europe as part of Asia.

Putin himself pined for the day when Russia would be accepted as a part of the First World with G-8 status and other big-power accoutrements. I'm told he took great pride in his success helping President Obama in 2013 resolve crises with Syria over the mysterious sarin-gas attack and with Iran over its nuclear program.

As Kissinger noted, Putin's hunger for Western acceptance was the reason he obsessed so much over the Sochi Olympics -- and even neglected the festering political crisis in neighboring Ukraine.

In other words, Paul Krugman doesn't know what he's talking about regarding Ukraine. His stab at offering a geopolitical analysis suffers from what an economist should recognize as "garbage in, garbage out." [See also Consortiumnews.com's "Krugman Joins the Anti-Putin Pack."]

A Spreading Idiocy

Still, this liberal mindlessness appears to be catching. On Sunday, the New York Times' star columnist Thomas L. Friedman weighed in with his own upside-down analysis, smirking about the economic suffering now being felt by average Russians because of the U.S.-led sanctions and the Saudi-spurred collapse of oil prices.

Friedman wrote:

"In March, the House Intelligence Committee chairman, Mike Rogers, was asked on 'Fox News Sunday' how he thought President Obama was handling relations with Russia versus how President Vladimir Putin had been handling relations with the United States. Rogers responded: 'Well, I think Putin is playing chess, and I think we're playing marbles. And I don't think it's even close.'

"Hmmm. Marbles. That's an interesting metaphor. Actually, it turns out that Obama was the one playing chess and Putin was the one playing marbles, and it wouldn't be wrong to say today that Putin's lost most of his -- in both senses of the word."

Ha-ha-ha. Putin has lost his marbles! So clever! Perhaps it also wouldn't be wrong to say that Tom Friedman has lost any credibility that he ever had by getting pretty much every international crises wrong, most notably the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003 when he was just as smarmy in paving the way for that bloody catastrophe.

Washington Post liberal columnist E.J. Dionne Jr. also joined in the "group think" on Monday, writing "even ... some of [Obama's] older bets were paying off. The Russian economy is reeling from sanctions imposed in response to its invasion of Ukraine (and from low oil prices). An approach seen by its critics as not tough enough is beginning to show its teeth."

Beyond the propagandistic quality of these columns -- refusing to recognize the complex reality of what actually happened in Ukraine, including the overwhelming referendum by the voters of Crimea to secede from Ukraine and rejoin Russia -- there is this disturbingly smug pleasure at how the U.S. actions are hurting the people of Russia.

Whatever you think of Putin, a key reason why he has remained so popular is that he brought some stability to the Russian economy after the "shock therapy" days of plunder under Boris Yeltsin when many Russians were pushed to the brink of starvation. Putin pushed back against some of the corrupt oligarchs who had amassed vast power under Yeltsin (while also striking alliances with others).

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Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories in the 1980s for the Associated Press and Newsweek. His latest book, Secrecy & Privilege: Rise of the Bush Dynasty from Watergate to Iraq, can be ordered at secrecyandprivilege.com. It's also available at
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