By Pepe Escobar
May 03, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - - "SCF"
- Putin’s
address to the Russian Federal Assembly – a de
facto State of the Nation – was a judo move that
left Atlanticist sphere hawks particularly stunned.
The “West” was not even mentioned by name. Only
indirectly, or via a delightful metaphor, Kipling’s
Jungle Book. Foreign policy was addressed
only at the end, almost as an afterthought.
For the best part of an hour and a half, Putin
concentrated on domestic issues, detailing a series
of policies that amount to the Russian state helping
those in need – low income families, children,
single mothers, young professionals, the
underprivileged – with, for instance, free health
checks all the way to the possibility of an
universal income in the near future.
Of course he would also need to address the
current, highly volatile state of international
relations. The concise manner he chose to do it,
counter-acting the prevailing Russophobia in the
Atlanticist sphere, was quite striking.
First, the essentials. Russia’s policy “is to
ensure peace and security for the well-being of our
citizens and for the stable development of our
country.”
Yet if “someone does not want to…engage in
dialogue, but chooses an egoistic and arrogant tone,
Russia will always find a way to stand up for its
position.”
He singled out “the practice of politically
motivated, illegal economic sanctions” to connect it
to “something much more dangerous”, and actually
rendered invisible in the Western narrative: “the
recent attempt to organize a coup d’etat in Belarus
and the assassination of that country’s president.”
Putin made sure to stress, “all boundaries have been
crossed”.
The
plot to kill Lukashenko was unveiled by Russian
and Belarusian intel – which detained several actors
backed, who else, US intel. The US State Department
predictably denied any involvement.
Putin: “It is worth pointing to the confessions
of the detained participants in the conspiracy that
a blockade of Minsk was being prepared, including
its city infrastructure and communications, the
complete shutdown of the entire power grid of the
Belarusian capital. This, incidentally means
preparations for a massive cyber-attack.”
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And that leads to a very uncomfortable truth:
“Apparently, it’s not for no reason that our Western
colleagues have stubbornly rejected numerous
proposals by the Russian side to establish an
international dialogue in the field of information
and cyber-security.”
“Asymmetric, swift and harsh”
Putin remarked how to “attack Russia” has become
“a sport, a new sport, who makes the loudest
statements.” And then he went full Kipling: “Russia
is attacked here and there for no reason. And of
course, all sorts of petty Tabaquis [jackals] are
running around like Tabaqui ran around Shere Khan
[the tiger] – everything is like in Kipling’s book –
howling along and ready to serve their sovereign.
Kipling was a great writer”.
The – layered – metaphor is even more startling
as it echoes the late 19th century
geopolitical Great Game between the British and
Russian empires, of which Kipling was a protagonist.
Once again Putin had to stress that “we really
don’t want to burn any bridges. But if someone
perceives our good intentions as indifference or
weakness and intends to burn those bridges
completely or even blow them up, he should know that
Russia’s response will be asymmetric, swift and
harsh”.
So here’s the new law of the geopolitical jungle
– backed by Mr. Iskander, Mr. Kalibr, Mr. Avangard,
Mr. Peresvet, Mr. Khinzal, Mr. Sarmat, Mr. Zircon
and other well-respected gentlemen, hypersonic and
otherwise, later complimented on the record. Those
who poke the Bear to the point of threatening “the
fundamental interests of our security will regret
what has been done, as they have regretted nothing
for a very long time.”
The stunning developments of the past few weeks –
the China-US
Alaska summit, the
Lavrov-Wang Yi summit in Guilin, the
NATO summit, the
Iran-China strategic deal,
Xi Jinping’s speech at the Boao forum – now
coalesce into a stark new reality: the era of a
unilateral Leviathan imposing its iron will is over.
For those Russophobes who still haven’t got the
message, a cool, calm and collected Putin was
compelled to add, “clearly, we have enough patience,
responsibility, professionalism, self-confidence,
self-assurance in the correctness of our position
and common sense when it comes to making any
decisions. But I hope that no one will think about
crossing Russia’s so-called red lines. And where
they run, we determine ourselves in each specific
case.”
Back to realpolitik, Putin once again had to
stress the “special responsibility” of the “five
nuclear states” to seriously discuss “issues related
to strategic armament”. It’s an open question
whether the Biden-Harris administration – behind
which stand a toxic cocktail of neo-cons and
humanitarian imperialists – will agree.
Putin: “The goal of such negotiations could be to
create an environment of conflict-free coexistence
based on equal security, covering not only strategic
weapons such as intercontinental ballistic missiles,
heavy bombers and submarines, but also, I would like
to emphasize, all offensive and defensive systems
capable of solving strategic tasks, regardless of
their equipment.”
As much as Xi’s address to the Boao forum was
mostly directed to the Global South, Putin
highlighted how “we are expanding contacts with our
closest partners in the Shanghai Cooperation
Organization, the BRICS, the Commonwealth of
Independent States and the allies of the Collective
Security Treaty Organization”, and extolled “joint
projects in the framework of the Eurasian Economic
Union”, billed as “practical tools for solving the
problems of national development.”
In a nutshell: integration in effect, following
the Russian concept of “Greater Eurasia”.
“Tensions skirting wartime levels”
Now compare all of the above with the
White House Executive Order (EO) declaring a
“national emergency” to “deal with the Russian
threat”.
This is directly connected to President Biden –
actually the combo telling him what to do, complete
with earpiece and teleprompter – promising Ukraine’s
President Zelensky that Washington would “take
measures” to support Kiev’s wishful thinking of
retaking Donbass and Crimea.
There are several eyebrow-raising issues with
this EO. It denies, de facto, to any Russian
national the full rights to their US property. Any
US resident may be accused of being a Russian agent
engaged in undermining US security. A sub-sub
paragraph (C), detailing “actions or policies that
undermine democratic processes or institutions in
the United States or abroad”, is vague enough to be
used to eliminate any journalism that supports
Russia’s positions in international affairs.
Purchases of Russian OFZ bonds have been
sanctioned, as well as one of the companies involved
in the production of the Sputnik V vaccine. Yet the
icing on this sanction cake may well be that from
now on all Russian citizens, including dual
citizens, may be barred from entering US territory
except via a rare special authorization on top of
the ordinary visa.
The Russian paper Vedomosti has noted that in
such paranoid atmosphere the risks for large
companies such as Yandex or Kaspersky Lab are
significantly increasing. Still, these sanctions
have not been met with surprise in Moscow. The worst
is yet to come, according to Beltway insiders: two
packages of sanctions against Nord Stream 2 already
approved by the US Department of Justice.
The crucial point is that this EO de facto places
anyone reporting on Russia’s political positions as
potentially threatening “American democracy”. As top
political analyst Alastair Crooke has remarked, this
is a “procedure usually reserved for citizens of
enemy states during times of war”. Crooke adds, “US
hawks are upping the ante fiercely against Moscow.
Tensions and rhetoric are skirting wartime levels.”
It’s an open question whether Putin’s State of
the Nation will be seriously examined by the toxic
lunatic combo of neocons and humanitarian
imperialists bent on simultaneously harassing Russia
and China.
But the fact is something extraordinary has
already started to happen: a “de-escalation” of
sorts.
Even before Putin’s address, Kiev, NATO and the
Pentagon apparently got the message implicit in
Russia moving two armies, massive artillery
batteries and airborne divisions to the borders of
Donbass and to Crimea – not to mention top naval
assets moved from the Caspian to the Black Sea. NATO
could not even dream of matching that.
Facts on different grounds speak volumes. Both
Paris and Berlin were terrified of a possible Kiev
clash directly against Russia, and lobbied furiously
against it, bypassing the EU and NATO.
Then someone – it might have been Jake Sullivan –
must have whispered on Crash Test Dummy’s earpiece
that you don’t go around insulting the head of a
nuclear state and expect to keep your global
“credibility”. So after that by now famous “Biden”
phone call to Putin came the invitation to the
climate change summit, in which any lofty promises
are largely rhetorical, as the Pentagon will
continue to be the largest polluting entity on
planet Earth.
So Washington may have found a way to keep at
least one avenue of dialogue open with Moscow. At
the same time Moscow has no illusions whatsoever
that the Ukraine/Donbass/Crimea drama is over. Even
if Putin did not mention it in the State of the
Nation. And even if Defense Minister Shoigu has
ordered a
de-escalation.
The always inestimable Andrei Martyanov has
gleefully noted the “cultural shock when Brussels
and D.C. started to suspect that Russia doesn’t
‘want’ Ukraine. What Russia wants is for this
country to rot and implode without excrement from
this implosion hitting Russia. West’s paying for the
clean up of this clusterf**k is also in Russian
plans for Ukrainian Bantustan.”
The fact that Putin did not even mention
Bantustan in his speech corroborates this analysis.
As far as “red lines” are concerned, Putin’s
implicit message remains the same: a NATO base on
Russia’s western flank simply won’t be tolerated.
Paris and Berlin know it. The EU is in denial. NATO
will always refuse to admit it.
We always come back to the same crucial issue:
whether Putin will be able, against all odds, to
pull a combined Bismarck-Sun Tzu move and build a
lasting German-Russian entente cordiale (and that’s
quite far from an “alliance’). Nord Stream 2 is an
essential cog in the wheel – and that’s what’s
driving Washington hawks crazy.
Whatever happens next, for all practical purposes
Iron Curtain 2.0 is now on, and it simply won’t go
away. There will be more sanctions. Everything was
thrown at the Bear short of a hot war. It will be
immensely entertaining to watch how, and via which
steps, Washington will engage on a “de-escalation
and diplomatic process” with Russia.
The Hegemon may always find a way to deploy a
massive P.R. campaign and ultimately claim a
diplomatic success in “dissolving” the impasse.
Well, that certainly beats a hot war. Otherwise,
lowly Jungle Book adventurers have been advised: try
anything funny and be ready to meet “asymmetric,
swift and harsh”.
Pepe Escobar is
correspondent-at-large at
Asia Times.
His latest book is
2030. Follow him on
Facebook.-
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