THE HANDSTAND |
LATE AUTUMN2008
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what the
russians know about "Western Society" http://www.veoh.com/videos/v389543cFf44FZC
Description: This is Edward Griffin's
shocking video interview Soviet Subversion of the
Free Press (1984) where he interviews ex-KGB
agent and soviet defector Yuri Bezmenov who
decided to openly reveal KGB's subversive tactics
against western society as a whole. Bezmenov
explains how Jewish Marxist ideology is
destabilizing the economy and purposefully
pushing the US into numerous crises so that a Big
Brother tyranny can be put into place in
Washington, how most Americans don't even realize
that they are under attack, and that normal
parliamentary procedures will not alter the
federal government's direction.
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Russia calls for
arms embargo on Georgia
LEIGH
PHILLIPS
01.09.2008 @ 15:52 CET
Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov has called for
an international arms embargo to be placed on Georgia.
"It would be right to impose an embargo on
weapons to this regime, until different authorities turn
Georgia a normal state," Mr Lavrov said on Monday (1
September) in a speech to foreign policy students in
Russia.
He also warned the European Union and the United
States against backing Georgian leader Mikheil
Sakaashvili."If instead of choosing their national
interests and the interests of the Georgian people, the
United States and its allies choose the Saakashvili
regime, this will be a mistake of truly historic
proportions," he said, according to a report from
the Associated Press.
Additionally, Moscow has also accused the US of
supplying Georgia with weapons hidden aboard ships
delivering humanitarian aid to the embattled Caucasian
republic.Speaking to reporters, Andrei Nesterenko, a
Russian foreign ministry spokesperson, said his
government suspected the ships of also containing "military
components".
Meanwhile in Brussels on Monday, deputy assistant
secretary of state for European and Eurasian affairs
Matthew Bryza, speaking at a debate with the Russian
ambassador to the EU and the Temur Yakobashvili, the
Georgian minister for reintegration, and the Polish
foreign minister, Radoslaw Sikorski, rubbished the idea
that the US was arming Georgia either since the conflict
or in the lead-up to hostilities."The Georgia Train-and-Equip
Programme delivered uniforms, boots, kalashnikovs and
side-arms," said Mr Bryza, referring to GTEP, a
series of activities launched by the Bush Administration
in 2002. "There were no heavy weapons.""We
did not arm Georgia militarily," he added.
Russia says ready to supply Syria with defensive weapons
MOSCOW, August 21 (RIA Novosti) - Russia is ready to
supply Syria with defensive weapons, the Russian foreign
minister said on Thursday following a meeting between the
two countries leaders in Russia's Black Sea resort of
Sochi.
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad arrived in Russia
Wednesday on a two-day visit to discuss bilateral
relations and regional developments, in particular the
situation in the Middle East and Iraq.
"We are ready, and Dmitry Medvedev has confirmed
this, to review a Syrian request to purchase new types of
weapons," Sergei Lavrov said following the meeting
between Medvedev and Assad.
"We will supply Syria primarily with weapons of a
defensive nature that will not disturb the strategic
balance in the region," he added.
In an interview with Russian business daily Kommersant
Assad said before his trip: "Our position is we are
ready to cooperate with Russia in any project that can
strengthen its security... I think Russia really has to
think of the response it will make when it finds itself
closed in a circle."
Israeli media reported on Monday that Russia was
planning to deploy Iskander surface missiles in Syria and
its Baltic exclave of Kaliningrad, in response to a
proposed U.S. missile shield in Central Europe and arm
sales by the U.S. and Israeli to Georgia.
When asked if Syria, a major importer of Russian
weapons, would agree to consider the Russian air defense
offer, Assad said: "In principle, yes. We have not
yet thought about it." The issue of installing
Iskander missile-defense systems had been raised by Syria
several years ago he added.
Americans play Monopoly, Russians
chess
Information Clearing House
By Spengler
19/08/08 "Asia Times" -- On the
night of November 22, 2004, then-Russian president - now
premier - Vladimir Putin watched the television news in
his dacha near Moscow. People who were with Putin that
night report his anger and disbelief at the unfolding
"Orange" revolution in Ukraine. "They lied
to me," Putin said bitterly of the United States.
"I'll never trust them again." The Russians
still can't fathom why the West threw over a potential
strategic alliance for Ukraine. They underestimate the
stupidity of the West.
American hardliners are the first to say that they feel
stupid next to Putin. Victor Davis Hanson wrote on August
12 [1] of Moscow's "sheer diabolic brilliance"
in Georgia, while Colonel Ralph Peters, a columnist and
television commentator, marveled on August 14 [2], "The
Russians are alcohol-sodden barbarians, but now and
then they vomit up a genius ... the empire of the czars
hasn't produced such a frightening genius since [Joseph]
Stalin." The superlatives recall an old observation
about why the plots of American comic books need clever
super-villains and stupid super-heroes to even the
playing field. Evidently the same thing applies to
superpowers.
The fact is that all Russian politicians are clever. The
stupid ones are all dead. By contrast, America in its
complacency promotes dullards. A deadly miscommunication
arises from this asymmetry. The Russians cannot believe
that the Americans are as stupid as they look, and
conclude that Washington wants to destroy them. That is
what the informed Russian public believes, judging from
last week's postings on web forums, including this writer's
own.
These perceptions are dangerous because they do not stem
from propaganda, but from a difference in existential
vantage point. Russia is fighting for its survival,
against a catastrophic decline in population and the
likelihood of a Muslim majority by mid-century. The
Russian Federation's scarcest resource is people. It
cannot ignore the 22 million Russians stranded outside
its borders after the 1991 collapse of the Soviet Union,
nor, for that matter, small but loyal ethnicities such as
the Ossetians. Strategic encirclement, in Russian eyes,
prefigures the ethnic disintegration of Russia, which was
a political and cultural entity, not an ethnic state,
from its first origins.
The Russians know (as every newspaper reader does) that
Georgia's President Mikheil Saakashvili is not a model
democrat, but a nasty piece of work who deployed riot
police against protesters and shut down opposition media
when it suited him - in short, a politician in Putin's
mold. America's interest in Georgia, the Russians believe,
has nothing more to do with promoting democracy than its
support for the gangsters to whom it handed the Serbian
province of Kosovo in February.
Again, the Russians misjudge American stupidity. Former
president Ronald Reagan used to say that if there was a
pile of manure, it must mean there was a pony around
somewhere. His epigones have trouble distinguishing the
pony from the manure pile. The ideological reflex for
promoting democracy dominates the George W Bush
administration to the point that some of its senior
people hold their noses and pretend that Kosovo, Ukraine
and Georgia are the genuine article.
Think of it this way: Russia is playing chess, while the
Americans are playing Monopoly. What Americans understand
by "war games" is exactly what occurs on the
board of the Parker Brothers' pastime. The board game
Monopoly is won by placing as many hotels as possible on
squares of the playing board. Substitute military bases,
and you have the sum of American strategic thinking.
America's idea of winning a strategic game is to
accumulate the most chips on the board: bases in
Uzbekistan and Kyrgyzstan, a pipeline in Georgia, a
"moderate Muslim" government with a big North
Atlantic Treaty Organization base in Kosovo, missile
installations in Poland and the Czech Republic, and so
forth. But this is not a strategy; it is only a game
score.
Chess players think in terms of interaction of pieces:
everything on the periphery combines to control the
center of the board and prepare an eventual attack
against the opponent's king. The Russians simply cannot
absorb the fact that America has no strategic intentions:
it simply adds up the value of the individual pieces on
the board. It is as stupid as that. But there is another
difference: the Americans are playing chess for career
and perceived advantage. Russia is playing for its life,
like Ingmar Bergman's crusader in The Seventh Seal.
Dull people know that clever people are cleverer than
they are, but they do not know why. The nekulturny
(uncultured) Colonel Ralph Peters, a former US military
intelligence analyst, is impressed by the tactical
success of Russian arms in Georgia, but cannot fathom the
end-game to which these tactics contribute. He writes,
"The new reality is that a nuclear, cash-rich and
energy-blessed Russia doesn't really worry too much
whether its long-term future is bleak, given problems
with Muslim minorities, poor life-expectancy rates, and a
declining population. Instead, in the here and now, it
has a window of opportunity to reclaim prestige and
weaken its adversaries."
Precisely the opposite is true: like a good chess player,
Putin has the end-game in mind as he fights for control
of the board in the early stages of the game.
Demographics stand at the center of Putin's calculation,
and Russians are the principal interest that the Russian
Federation has in its so-called near abroad. The desire
of a few hundred thousand Abkhazians and South Ossetians
to remain in the Russian Federation rather than Georgia
may seem trivial, but Moscow is setting a precedent that
will apply to tens of millions of prospective citizens of
the Federation - most controversially in Ukraine.
Before turning to the demographics of the near abroad, a
few observations about Russia's demographic predicament
are pertinent. The United Nations publishes population
projections for Russia up to 2050, and I have extended
these to 2100. If the UN demographers are correct, Russia's
adult population will fall from about 90 million today to
only 20 million by the end of the century. Russia
is the only country where abortions are more numerous
than live births, a devastating gauge of national despair.
Under Putin, the Russian government introduced an
ambitious natalist program to encourage Russian women to
have children. As he warned in his 2006 state of the
union address, "You know that our country's
population is declining by an average of almost 700,000
people a year. We have raised this issue on many
occasions but have for the most part done very little to
address it ... First, we need to lower the death rate.
Second, we need an effective migration policy. And third,
we need to increase the birth rate."
Russia's birth rate has risen slightly during the past
several years, perhaps in response to Putin's natalism,
but demographers observe that the number of Russian women
of childbearing age is about to fall off a cliff. No
matter how much the birth rate improves, the sharp fall
in the number of prospective mothers will depress the
number of births. UN forecasts show the number of
Russians aged 20-29 falling from 25 million today to only
10 million by 2040.
Russia, in other words, has passed the point of no return
in terms of fertility. Although roughly four-fifths of
the population of the Russian Federation is considered
ethnic Russians, fertility is much higher among the
Muslim minorities in Central Asia. Some demographers
predict a Muslim majority in Russia by 2040, and by mid-century
at the latest.
Part of Russia's response is to encourage migration of
Russians left outside the borders of the federation after
the collapse of communism in 1991. An estimated 6.5
million Russians from the former Soviet Union now work in
Russia as undocumented aliens, and a new law will
regularize their status. Only 20,000 Russian "compatriots"
living abroad, however, have applied for immigration to
the federation under a new law designed to draw Russians
back.
That leaves the 9.5 million citizens of Belarus, a relic
of the Soviet era that persists in a semi-formal union
with the Russian Federation, as well as the Russians of
the Western Ukraine and Kazakhstan. More than 15 million
ethnic Russians reside in those three countries, and they
represent a critical strategic resource. Paul Goble in
his Window on Eurasia website reported on August 16:
Moscow retreated
after encountering fierce opposition from other
countries, but semi-legal practices of obtaining
Russian citizenship that began in former Soviet
republics in the early 1990s continue unabated. There
is plenty of evidence that there are one to two
million people living in the territory of the former
Soviet Union who have de facto dual citizenship and
are reluctant to report it to the authorities. Russia
did little to stop the process. Moreover, starting in
1997, it encouraged de facto dual citizenship.
Russia has an existential
interest in absorbing Belarus and the Western Ukraine. No
one cares about Byelorus. It has never had an independent
national existence or a national culture; the first
grammar in the
Belorussian language was not printed until 1918, and
little over a third of the population of Belarus speaks
the language at home. Never has a territory with 10
million people had a sillier case for independence. Given
that summary, it seems natural to ask why anyone should
care about Ukraine. That question is controversial; for
the moment, I will offer the assertion that partition is
the destiny of Ukraine.
Even with migration and annexation of former Russian
territory that was lost in the fracture of the USSR,
however, Russia will not win its end-game against
demographic decline and the relative growth of Muslim
populations. The key to Russian survival is Russification,
that is, the imposition of Russian culture and
Russian law on ethnicities at the periphery of the
federation. That might sound harsh, but that has been
Russian nature from its origins.
Russia is not an ethnicity but an empire, the outcome of
hundreds of years of Russification. That Russification
has been brutal is an understatement, but it is what
created Russia out of the ethnic morass around the Volga
river basin. One of the best accounts of Russia's
character comes from Eugene Rosenstock-Huessey (Franz
Rosenzweig's cousin and sometime collaborator) in his
1938 book Out of Revolution. Russia's territory
tripled between the 16th and 18th centuries, he observes,
and the agency of its expansion was a unique Russian type.
The Russian peasant, Rosenstock-Huessey observed, "was
no stable freeholder of the Western type but much more a
nomad, a pedlar, a craftsman and a soldier. His capacity
for expansion was tremendous."
In 1581 Asiatic
Russia was opened. Russian expansion, extending even
in the eighteenth century as far as the Russian River
in Northern California, was by no means Czaristic
only. The "Moujik", the Russian peasant,
because he is not a "Bauer" or a "farmer",
or a "laborer", but a "Moujik",
wanders and stays, ready to migrate again eventually
year after year.
Russia was never a multi-ethnic
state, but rather what I call a supra-ethnic state, that
is, a state whose national principle transcends ethnicity.
A reader has called my attention to an account of the
most Russian of all writers, Fyodor Dostoyevsky, of his
own Russo-Lithuanian-Ukrainian background:
I suppose that one of
my Lithuanian ancestors, having emigrated to the
Ukraine, changed his religion in order to marry an
Orthodox Ukrainian, and became a priest. When his
wife died he probably entered a monastery, and later,
rose to be an archbishop. This would explain how the
Archbishop Stepan may have founded our Orthodox
family, in spite of his being a monk. It is somewhat
surprising to see the Dostoyevsky, who had been
warriors in Lithuania, become priests in Ukraine. But
this is quite in accordance with Lithuanian custom. I
may quote the learned Lithuanian W St Vidunas in this
connection: "Formerly many well-to-do
Lithuanians had but one desire: to see one or more of
their sons enter upon an ecclesiastical career."
Dostoyevsky's mixed
background was typically Russian, as was the Georgian
origin of Joseph Stalin.
Russia intervened in Georgia to uphold the principle that
anyone who holds a Russian passport - Ossetian, Akhbaz,
Belorussian or Ukrainian - is a Russian. Russia's
survival depends not so much on its birth rate, nor on
immigration, nor even on prospective annexation, but on
the survival of the principle by which Russia was built
in the first place. That is why Putin could not abandon
the pockets of Russian passport holders in the Caucusus.
That Russia history has been tragic, and its nation-building
principle brutal and sometimes inhuman, is a different
matter. Russia is sufficiently important that its tragedy
will be our tragedy, unless averted.
The place to avert tragedy is in Ukraine. Russia will not
permit Ukraine to drift to the West. Whether a country
that never had an independent national existence prior to
the collapse of communism should become the poster-child
for national self-determination is a different question.
The West has two choices: draw a line in the sand around
Ukraine, or trade it to the Russians for something more
important.
My proposal is simple: Russia's help in containing
nuclear proliferation and terrorism in the Middle East is
of infinitely greater import to the West than the dubious
self-determination of Ukraine. The West should do its
best to pretend that the "Orange" revolution of
2004 and 2005 never happened, and secure Russia's
assistance in the Iranian nuclear issue as well as energy
security in return for an understanding of Russia's
existential requirements in the near abroad. Anyone who
thinks this sounds cynical should spend a week in Kiev.
Russia has more to fear from a nuclear-armed Iran than
the United States, for an aggressive Muslim state on its
borders could ruin its attempt to Russify Central Asia.
Russia's strategic interests do not conflict with those
of the United States, China or India in this matter.
There is a certain degree of rivalry over energy
resources, but commercial rivalry does not have to turn
into strategic enmity.
If Washington chooses to demonize Russia, the likelihood
is that Russia will become a spoiler with respect to
American strategic interests in general, and use the
Iranian problem to twist America's tail. That is a
serious risk indeed, for nuclear proliferation is the one
means by which outlaw regimes can pose a serious threat
to great powers. Russia confronts questions not of
expediency, but of existence, and it will do whatever it
can to gain maneuvering room should the West seek to
"punish" it for its actions in Georgia.
One irony of the present crisis is that Washington's neo-conservatives,
by demanding a tough stance against Russia, may have
harmed Israel's security interests more profoundly than
any of Israel's detractors in American politics. The neo-conservatives
are not as a rule Jewish, but many of them are Jews who
have a deep concern for Israel's security - as does this
writer. If America turns Russia into a strategic
adversary, the probability of Israel's survival will drop
by a big notch.
Notes
1. See National Review OnlineMoscow's Sinister Brilliance.
2. See New York Post, A czar is born: Bad Vlad wins war,
dupes West & proves he's genius
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