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Showing posts with label Commentary -- Russia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Commentary -- Russia. Show all posts

Thursday, September 26, 2013

Is Russia About To Implode?


Russia's Coming Implosion -- Clifford May, Real Clear World

At first blush, Ilan Berman's timing could hardly be worse. His new book, Implosion: The End of Russia and What It Means for America, is being published just as Russian president Vladimir Putin has eaten American president Barack Obama's lunch and saved Syrian dictator Bashar Assad's bacon - figuratively speaking, of course.

Putin also has been empowering Iran's rulers, selling them the means to make nuclear weapons and denouncing economic sanctions as "a violation of international law." Adding insult to injury, Putin has been making the case, in the New York Times and elsewhere, that never again should the U.S. military be deployed without the U.N. Security Council's authorization. That has won him plaudits from progressive internationalists who appear not to comprehend that what he means is that never again should the U.S. military be deployed without his personal authorization - since Russia wields veto power at the U.N.

Read more ....

My Comment: Regular readers of this blog know that my nationality is Russian .... all of my uncles, aunts, and cousins are still there .... but the children of some of my cousins are now starting to move and live in Europe and the U.S.. In my own case .... I live in Montreal, Canada .... but I do make the effort of visiting my family in Russia/Ukraine at least once a year. It is in this context that I can respond to Clifford May's article on Russia .... and using my own experiences I can say that while her observations are spot on .... I do differ with her conclusions.

To begin .... there is a religious and spiritual revival in Russia .... and while this has not yet translated into the Russian political/economic world .... I am confident that with time it will  succeed. Russia is also incredibly rich with resources .... but it is also rich with a young generation who are embracing a future that is at odds with what Putin wants Russia to be .... and in this case I know that Putin and his generation cannot win .... to begin .... this younger generation are 40 years younger than him .... and they know that with time they will persevere. As to demographic trends .... even that is changing .... Russians are having children now .... more because their economic status is improving rather than government promotion and encouragement. And as to fears of "Muslims and Chinese hordes" taking over he country .... those fears have been around for centuries .... but they are just that .... fears with no real justification.

Russia will not implode .... and while it may change over the next few decades .... because of geography and resource wealth it will still be around and it will still exercise an influence on world affairs.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Russia And Alcohol Have Always Walked Hand In Hand

A group of men enjoy vodka near the remote mountain village of Tsovkra-1 in Russia's Caucasus region of Dagestan. (Thomas Peter/Reuters)

How Alcohol Conquered Russia -- Stan Fedun, The Atlantic

A history of the country’s struggle with alcoholism, and why the government has done so little about it.

Picture the Russian alcoholic: nose rosy, face unshaven, a bottle of vodka firmly grasped in his hands. By his side he has a half-empty jar of pickles and a loaf of rye bread to help the devilish substance go down. The man is singing happily from alcohol-induced jubilation. His world may not be perfect, but the inebriation makes it seem that way.

Today, according to the World Health Organization, one in five men in the Russia Federation die due to alcohol-related causes, compared with 6.2 percent of all men globally. In 2000, in her article “First Steps: AA and Alcoholism in Russia,” Patricia Critchlow estimated that some 20 million Russians are alcoholics in a nation of just 144 million.

Read more ....

My Comment: Regular readers of this blog know that my nationality is Russian .... so yes .... this particular story hits me at home. And while I now live in Canada .... I do travel back home at least once a year and yes .... when I go back home I am always horrified on how many Russians are either alcoholics or drug addicts.On the flip side .... and fortunately for the world .... there are many Russians who hate alcohol .... and they are probably the ones who have always kept the country together and the world safe by safeguarding it's nuclear stockpile.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

A New Russian Empire?

Russian President Putin. © RIA Novosti. Sergey Guneev

Russia’s Empire Strikes Back -- Anne Applebaum, Slate

Vladimir Putin’s empire-building has little to do with Russia’s interests. It’s all about what’s good for him and his cronies.

"Right makes might, and not the other way around," President Obama said in the Rose Garden a few weeks ago. We all know what he meant: In this age of soft power, great countries can win friends not through the use of brute force but through their books and movies, their sophisticated economies, their technological innovations, and, above all, through their attractive and inspiring national ideals.

Maybe that's true, some of the time. But for those who find soft power difficult to wield, hard power is still available. Indeed, in the very same week that the American president made his Rose Garden speech, events on the other side of the globe were proving that might certainly can make right. Even while the world's attention was fixed on Russian-American diplomacy in Syria, back home Russian President Vladimir Putin was pulling off a much quieter but potentially more significant diplomatic coup.

Read more ....

My Comment: As I have remarked on many occasions in this blog .... President Obama's focus has always been on transforming America. As for Russian President Putin .... his focus has always been on reconstituting much of the former Soviet Union .... and as the above analysis concludes .... at the moment he is doing a very good job at it.

Saturday, September 14, 2013

The Rise Of Russian Influence In The Middle East Comes At The Expense Of America's

Syrian President Bashar Assad with Russian President Vladimir Putin. Photo: REUTERS

Analysis: Syria Chemical Weapons Proposal Is Putin’s Masterstroke -- Jonathan Spyer, Jerusalem Post

The Russian president has maneuvered a win-win situation.

White House spokesman Jay Carney on Wednesday asserted that Russian prestige was now “on the line” regarding Syria.

Carney’s statement recalled an earlier remark by US President Barack Obama himself. Speaking to reporters, Obama said, “I didn’t set a redline. The world set a redline.”

Therefore, he continued, it was not his “credibility” that was on the line. Rather, it was “the international community’s credibility” that was to be tested.

These curious statements reflect perhaps better than anything else the sense of confusion emanating from Washington surrounding the events of the past week. The president’s remarks came just prior to the US’s surprise agreement to a Russian proposal that would ostensibly see Syria voluntarily give up its chemical weapons capability. Carney’s words were said in the days following the accord.

But both statements contain an unmistakable effort to deflect attention, and transfer responsibility.

Read more ....

Update: Obama's larger Syria strategy in disarray -- Breadley Klapper/AP

My Comment: Domestically .... this Syrian agreement is a big win for President Obama. The mass majority of Americans have no interest in becoming involved in another Middle East war .... and are generally pleased with this decision. But internationally this is a huge defeat for the U.S. .... the U.S. has lost credibility with our allies, and it has emboldened our enemies. There is going to be blow-back from this perceived diminishing of U.S. presence in the world ... the only question is when and in what form will it be in.

Friday, September 13, 2013

Moscow's Fear Of Jihad Is What Is Driving Moscow's Policy On Syria

Russian President Vladimir Putin (RIA Novosti/Aleksey Nikolskyi)

What Putin Wants: Moscow's Fear of Jihad Drives Policy on Syria -- Uwe Klussmann, Spiegel Online

Russian President Vladimir Putin is clearly enjoying his role as a key player in the Syrian conflict. But Moscow also has a very real concern: If Islamist extremism prevails in Syria, there could be serious consequences for Russia.

Whenever Russian President Vladimir Putin makes a proposal, skepticism is the first reaction from the West. This week has provided the most recent example: He had hardly finished making his suggestion that Syrian chemical weapons be put under international control before German weekly Die Zeit wrote of "Russia's cynical game in the Middle East" and the daily Süddeutsche Zeitung wondered "if it was a feint from Moscow." In a piece for the New York Times on Thursday, Putin sought to explain his position to the global public.

Read more ....

My Comment: Many Russians do not understand America's political correctness when it comes to radical Islam and jihad. On the other side .... many in the U.S. do not understand Russia's deep concerns on Jihad and radical Islam. I guess geography and history has a lot to do with this .... but it is a fundamental difference on how both powers view the Middle East .... and with the U.S. playing a minimal role in the Middle East, Russia has certainly stepped into this vacuum and it is they who are now dictating the course of events on Syrian today.