Russian President Vladimir Putin gave and hour and half-long press conference which was attended by many members of the world media. The contents of that meeting--in which Putin answered all questions concerning nuclear proliferation,human rights, Kosovo,democracy and the present confrontation with U.S. over missle defense in Europe--have been completely censored.
::::::::
June 10, 2007
On Tuesday, Russian President Vladimir Putin gave an hour and a half-
long press conference which was attended by many members of the world
media. The contents of that meeting---in which Putin answered all
questions concerning nuclear proliferation, human rights, Kosovo,
democracy and the present confrontation with the United States over
missile defense in Europe---have been completely censored by the
press. Apart from one brief excerpt which appeared in a Washington
Post editorial, (and which was used to criticize Putin) the press
conference has been scrubbed from the public record. It never
happened. (Read the entire press conference archived here )
Putin's performance was a tour de force. He fielded all of the
questions however misleading or insulting. He was candid and
statesmanlike and demonstrated a good understanding of all the main
issues.
The meeting gave Putin a chance to give his side of the story in the
growing debate over missile defense in Eastern Europe. He offered a
brief account of the deteriorating state of US-Russian relations
since the end of the Cold War, and particularly from 9-11 to present.
Since September 11, the Bush administration has carried out an
aggressive strategy to surround Russia with military bases, install
missiles on its borders, topple allied regimes in Central Asia, and
incite political upheaval in Moscow through US-backed "pro-democracy"
groups. These openly hostile actions have convinced many Russian hard-
liners that the administration is going forward with the neocon plan
for "regime change" in Moscow and fragmentation of the Russian
Federation. Putin's testimony suggests that the hardliners are
probably right.
The Bush administration's belligerent foreign policy has backed the
Kremlin into a corner and forced Putin to take retaliatory measures.
He has no other choice.
If we want to understand why relations between Russia are quickly
reaching the boiling-point; we only need to review the main
developments since the end of the Cold War. Political analyst Pat
Buchanan gives a good rundown of these in his article "Doesn't Putin
Have a Point?"
Buchanan says:
"Though the Red Army had picked up and gone home from Eastern Europe
voluntarily, and Moscow felt it had an understanding we would not
move NATO eastward, we exploited our moment. Not only did we bring
Poland into NATO, we brought in Latvia, Lithuania, and Estonia, and
virtually the whole Warsaw Pact, planting NATO right on Mother
Russia's front porch. Now, there is a scheme afoot to bring in
Ukraine and Georgia in the Caucasus, the birthplace of Stalin.
Second, America backed a pipeline to deliver Caspian Sea oil from
Azerbaijan through Georgia to Turkey, to bypass Russia.
Third, though Putin gave us a green light to use bases in the old
Soviet republics for the liberation of Afghanistan, we now seem hell-
bent on making those bases in Central Asia permanent.
Fourth, though Bush sold missile defense as directed at rogue states
like North Korea, we now learn we are going to put anti-missile
systems into Eastern Europe. And against whom are they directed?
Fifth, through the National Endowment for Democracy, its GOP and
Democratic auxiliaries, and tax-exempt think tanks, foundations,
and "human rights" institutes such as Freedom House, headed by ex-CIA
director James Woolsey, we have been fomenting regime change in
Eastern Europe, the former Soviet republics, and Russia herself.
U.S.-backed revolutions have succeeded in Serbia, Ukraine, and
Georgia, but failed in Belarus. Moscow has now legislated
restrictions on the foreign agencies that it sees, not without
justification, as subversive of pro-Moscow regimes.
Sixth, America conducted 78 days of bombing of Serbia for the crime
of fighting to hold on to her rebellious province, Kosovo, and for
refusing to grant NATO marching rights through her territory to take
over that province. Mother Russia has always had a maternal interest
in the Orthodox states of the Balkans.
These are Putin's grievances. Does he not have a small point?"
Yes--as Buchanan opines---Putin does have a point, which is why his
press conference was suppressed. The media would rather demonize
Putin, than allow him to make his case to the public. (The same is
true of other world leaders who choose to use their vast resources to
improve the lives of their own citizens rather that hand them over to
the transnational oil giants; such as, Mahmud Ahmadinejad and Hugo
Chavez) Even so, NATO has not yet endorsed the neocon missile defense
plan and, according to recent surveys, public opinion in Poland and
the Czech Republic is overwhelmingly against it.
Unsurprisingly, the Bush administration is going ahead regardless of
the controversy.
Putin cannot allow the United States to deploy its missile defense
system to Eastern Europe. The system poses a direct threat to
Russia's national security. If Putin planned to deploy a similar
system in Cuba or Mexico, the Bush administration would immediately
invoke the Monroe Doctrine and threaten to remove it by force. No one
doubts this. And no one should doubt that Putin is equally determined
to protect his own country's interests in the same way. We can expect
that Russia will now aim its missiles at European targets and rework
its foreign policy in a way that compels the US to abandon its
current plans.
The media has tried to minimize the dangers of the proposed system.
The Washington Post even characterized it as "a small missile defense
system" which has set off "waves of paranoia about domestic and
foreign opponents".
Nonsense. Nothing could be further from the truth.
As Putin said at the press conference, "Once the missile defense
system is put in place IT WILL WORK AUTOMATICALLY WITH THE ENTIRE
NUCLEAR CAPABILITY OF THE UNITED STATES. It will be an integral part
of the US nuclear capability.
"For the first time in history---and I want to emphasize this---there
are elements of the US nuclear capability on the European continent.
It simply changes the whole configuration of international
security.....Of course, we have to respond to that."
Putin is right. The "so-called" defense system is actually an
expansion (and integration) of America's existing nuclear weapons
system which will now function as one unit. The dangers of this
should be obvious.
The Bush administration is maneuvering in a way that will allow it to
achieve what Nuclear weapons specialist, Francis A. Boyle, calls
the "longstanding US policy of nuclear first-strike against Russia".
In Boyle's article "US Missiles in Europe: Beyond Deterrence to First
Strike Threat" he states:
"By means of a US first strike about 99%+ of Russian nuclear forces
would be taken out. Namely, the United States Government believes
that with the deployment of a facially successful first strike
capability, they can move beyond deterrence and into "compellence."...
This has been analyzed ad nauseam in the professional literature. But
especially by one of Harvard's premier warmongers in chief, Thomas
Schelling --winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics granted by the
Bank of Sweden-- who developed the term "compellence" and
distinguished it from "deterrence." ...The USG is breaking out of
a "deterrence" posture and moving into a "compellence" posture.
(Global Research 6-6-07)
That's right. The real goal is to force Moscow to conform to
Washington's "diktats" or face the prospect of "first-strike"
annihilation. That's why Putin has expressed growing concern over the
administration's dropping out of the ABM Treaty and the development
of a new regime of low yield, bunker-busting nuclear weapons.
The "hawks" who surround Bush have abandoned the "deterrence" policy
of the past, and now believe that a nuclear war can be "won" by the
United States. This is madness and it needs to be taken seriously.
The Bush administration sees itself as a main player in Central Asia
and the Middle East---controlling vital resources and pipeline
corridors throughout the region. That means Russia's influence will
have to be diminished. Boris Yeltsin was the perfect leader for the
neoconservative master-plan (which is why the right-wingers Praised
him when he died) Russia disintegrated under Yeltsin. He oversaw the
dismantling of the state, the plundering of its resources and state-
owned assets, and the restructuring of its economy according to the
tenets of neoliberalism.
No wonder the neocons loved him.
Under Putin, Russia has regained its economic footing, its regional
influence and its international prestige. The economy is booming, the
ruble has stabilized, the standard of living has risen, and Moscow
has strengthened alliances with its neighbors. This new-found Russian
prosperity poses a real challenge to Bush's plans.
Two actions in particular have changed the Russian-US relationship
from tepid to openly hostile. The first was when Putin announced that
Russia's four largest oil fields would not be open to foreign
development. (Russia has been consolidating its oil wealth under
state-run Gazprom) And, second, when the Russian Treasury began to
convert Russia's dollar reserves into gold and rubles. Both of these
are regarded as high-crimes by US corporate chieftains and western
elites. Their response was swift.
John Edwards and Jack Kemp were appointed to lead a Council on
Foreign Relations (CFR) task force which concocted the basic pretext
for an all-out assault on the Putin. This is where the idea that
Putin is "rolling back democracy" began; it's a feeble excuse for
political antagonism. In their article "Russia's Wrong Direction",
Edwards and Kemp state that a "strategic partnership" with Russia is
no longer possible. They note that the government has become
increasingly "authoritarian" and that the society is growing
less "open and pluralistic". Blah, blah, blah. No one in the
Washington really cares about democracy. (Just look at our "good
friends" in Saudi Arabia, Azerbaijan, Uzbekistan, and Kazakhstan)
What they're afraid of is Putin ditching the dollar and controlling
his own oil. That's what counts. Bush also wants Putin to support
sanctions against Iran and rubber stamp a Security Council resolution
to separate Kosovo form Serbia. (Since when does the UN have the
right to redraw national borders? Was the creation of Israel such a
stunning success that the Security Council wants to try its luck
again?)
Putin does not accept the "unipolar" world model. As he said in
Munich, the unipolar world refers to "a world in which there is one
master, one sovereign---- one centre of authority, one centre of
force, one centre 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:
"Unilateral and frequently illegitimate actions have not resolved any
problems. Moreover, they have caused new human tragedies and created
new centers of tension. Judge for yourselves---wars as well as local
and regional conflicts have not diminished. More are dying than
before. Significantly more, significantly more!
Today 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.
We are seeing a greater and greater disdain for the basic principles
of international law. And independent legal norms are, as a matter of
fact, coming increasingly closer to one state's legal system. One
state and, of course, first and foremost the United States, has
overstepped its national borders in every way. This is visible in the
economic, political, cultural and educational policies it imposes on
other nations. Well, who likes this? Who is happy about this?
In international relations we increasingly see the desire to resolve
a given question according to so-called issues of political
expediency, based on the current political climate. And of course
this is extremely dangerous. It results in the fact that no one feels
safe. I want to emphasise this – no one feels safe! Because no one
can feel that international law is like a stone wall that will
protect them. Of course such a policy stimulates an arms race.
I am convinced that we have reached that decisive moment when we must
seriously think about the architecture of global security."
How can anyone dispute Putin's analysis?
"Unilateral and illegitimate military actions", the "uncontained
hyper-use of force", the "disdain for the basic principles of
international law", and most importantly; "No one feels safe!"
These are the irrefutable facts. Putin has simply summarized the Bush
Doctrine better than anyone else.
The Bush administration has increased its frontline American bases to
five thousand men on Russia's perimeter. Is this conduct of
a "trustworthy ally"?
Also, NATO has deployed forces on Russia's borders even while Putin
has continued to fulfill his treaty obligations and move troops and
military equipment hundreds of miles away.
As Putin said on Tuesday: "We have removed all of our heavy weapons
from the European part of Russia and put them behind the Urals"
and "reduced our Armed Forces by 300,000. We have taken several other
steps required by the Adapted Conventional Armed Forces Treaty in
Europe (ACAF). But what have we seen in response? Eastern Europe is
receiving new weapons, two new military bases are being set up in
Romania and in Bulgaria, and there are two new missile launch areas --
a radar in Czech republic and missile systems in Poland. And we are
asking ourselves the question: what is going on? Russia is disarming
unilaterally. But if we disarm unilaterally then we would like to see
our partners be willing to do the same thing in Europe. On the
contrary, Europe is being pumped full of new weapons systems. And of
course we cannot help but be concerned."
(This is why Putin's comments did not appear in the western media!
They would have been too damaging to the Bush administration and
their expansionist plans)
Who Destroyed the ABM?
Putin said:
"We did not initiate the withdrawal from the Anti-Ballistic Missile
Treaty. But what response did we give when we discussed this issue
with our American partners? We said that we do not have the resources
and desire to establish such a system. But as professionals we both
understand that a missile defense system for one side and no such a
system for the other creates an illusion of security and increases
the possibility of a nuclear conflict. The defense system WILL
DESTROY THE STRATEGIC EQUILIBRIUM IN THE WORLD. In order to restore
that balance without setting up a missile defense system we will have
to create a system to overcome missile defense, which is what we are
doing now."
Putin: "AN ARMS RACE IS UNFOLDING. Was it we who withdrew from the
ABM Treaty? We must react to what our partners do. We already told
them two years ago, "don't do this, you don't need to do this. What
are you doing? YOU ARE DESTROYING THE SYSTEM OF INTERNATIONAL
SECURITY. You must understand that you are forcing us to take
retaliatory steps." ...we warned them. No, they did not listen to us.
Then we heard about them developing low-yield nuclear weapons and
they are continuing to develop these weapons." We told them that "it
would be better to look for other ways to fight terrorism than create
low-yield nuclear weapons and lower the threshold for using nuclear
weapons, and thereby put humankind on the brink of nuclear
catastrophe. But they don't listen to us. They are not looking for
compromise. Their entire point of view can be summed-up in one
sentence: 'Whoever is not with us is against us.'"
Putin asks, "So what should we do?" The present predicament has
brought us "the brink of disaster".
Putin: "Some people have the illusion that you can do everything just
as you want, regardless of the interests of other people. Of course
it is for precisely this reason that the international situation gets
worse and eventually results in an arms race as you pointed out. But
we are not the instigators. We do not want it. Why would we want to
divert resources to this? And we are not jeopardizing our relations
with anyone. But we must respond.
Name even one step that we have taken or one action of ours designed
to worsen the situation. There are none. We are not interested in
that. We are interested in having a good atmosphere, environment and
energy dialogue around Russia".
So, what should Putin do? And how else can he meet his
responsibilities to the Russian people without taking
defensive "retaliatory" action to Bush's act of war. By expanding its
nuclear capability to Europe, all of Russia is in imminent danger,
and so, Putin must decide "precisely which means will be used to
destroy the installations that our experts believe represent a
potential threat for the Russian Federation". (Note that Putin NEVER
THREATENS TO AIM HIS MISSILES AT EUROPEAN CITIES AS WAS REPORTED IN
THE WESTERN MEDIA)
Putin has made great strides in improving life for the Russian
people. That is why his public approval rating is soaring at 75%. The
Russian economy has been growing by 7% a year. He's lowered the
number of people living beneath the poverty-line by more than half
and will bring it down to European levels by 2010. Real incomes are
growing by an astonishing 12% per year. As Putin says, "Combating
poverty is one of our top priorities and we still have to do a lot to
improve our pension system too because the correlation between
pensions and the average wage is still lower here than in Europe."
If only that was true in America!
Russia now has the ninth largest economy in the world and has amassed
enormous gold and currency reserves--the third largest in the world.
It is also one of the leading players in international energy policy
with a daily-oil output which now exceeds Saudi Arabia. It is also
the largest producer of natural gas in the world. Russia will only
get stronger as we get deeper into the century and energy resources
become scarcer.
Putin strongly objects to the idea that he is not committed to human
rights or is "rolling back democracy". He points out how truncheon-
wielding police in Europe routinely use tear gas, electric-shock
devices and water cannons to disperse demonstrators. Is that how the
West honors human rights and civil liberties?
As for the Bush administration---Putin produced a copy of Amnesty
International's yearly report condemning the United States conduct in
the war on terror. "I have a copy of Amnesty International's report
here, which includes a section on the United States," he said. "The
organization has concluded that the United States IS NOW THE
PRINCIPLE VIOLATOR OF HUMAN RIGHTS AND FREEDOMS WORLDWIDE."
He added, "We have a proverb in Russian, 'Don't blame the mirror if
your face is crooked.'"
Putin is fiercely nationalistic. He has helped to restore Russia's
self-confidence and rebuild the economy. He's demonstrated a
willingness to compromise with the Bush administration on every
substantive issue, but he has been repeatedly rebuffed. The last
thing he wants is a nuclear standoff with the United States. But he
will do what he must to defend his people from the threat of foreign
attack. The deployment of the missile defense system will require
that Russia develop its own new weapons systems and change its
thinking about trusting the United States. Friendship is not possible
in the present climate.
As for "democracy"; Putin said it best himself:
"Am I a 'pure democrat'? (laughs) Of course I am, absolutely. The
problem is that I'm all alone---the only one of my kind in the whole
wide world. Just look at what's happening in North America, it's
simply awful---torture, homeless people, Guantanamo, people detained
without trial and investigation. Just look at what's happening in
Europe---harsh treatment of demonstrators, rubber bullets and tear
gas used first in one capital then in another, demonstrators killed
on the streets..... I have no one to talk to since Mahatma Gandhi
died."
Well said, Vladimir.
:: Article nr. 33582 sent on 11-jun-2007 01:31 ECT
J
:: Article nr. 33582 sent on 11-jun-2007 01:31 ECT
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