Official Washington’s Putin-bashing knows no bounds as the Russian president’s
understandable complaints about U.S. triumphalism and NATO expansion, after the
Soviet collapse in the 1990s, are dismissed as signs of his “paranoia” and
“revisionism,”
By Robert Parry
May 07, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Consortium
News" - If the Washington Post’s clueless
editorial page editor Fred Hiatt had been around during the genocidal wars
against Native Americans in the 1870s, he probably would have accused Sitting
Bull and other Indian leaders of “paranoia” and historical “revisionism” for not
recognizing the beneficent intentions of the Europeans when they landed in the
New World.
The Europeans, after all, were bringing the
“savages” Christianity’s promise of eternal life and introducing them to the
wonders of the Old World, like guns and cannons, not to mention the value that
“civilized” people place on owning land and possessing gold. Why did these
Indian leaders insist on seeing the Europeans as their enemies?
But Hiatt wasn’t around in the 1870s so at least the Native
Americans were spared his condescension about the kindness and exceptionalism of
the United States as it sent armies to herd the “redskins” onto reservations and
slaughter those who wouldn’t go along with this solution to the “Indian
problem.”
However, those of us living in the Twenty-first Century can’t
say we’re as lucky. In 2002-03, we got to read Hiatt’s self-assured Washington
Post editorials informing us about Iraq’s dangerous stockpiles of WMD that were
threatening our very existence and giving us no choice but to liberate the Iraqi
people and bring peace and stability to the Middle East.
Though Hiatt reported these WMD caches as “flat-fact”
when that turned out to be fact-free, there was, of course, no accountability
for him and his fellow pundits. After all, who would suggest that such
well-meaning people should be punished for America’s generous endeavor to
deliver joy and happiness to the Iraqi people who instead chose to die by the
hundreds of thousands?
Because Hiatt and his fellow deep-thinkers didn’t get
canned, we still have them around opening our eyes to Vladimir Putin’s
historical “revisionism” and his rampaging “paranoia” as he fails to see the
philanthropic motives of the U.S. free-market economists who descended on Russia
after the end of the Soviet Union in the 1990s to share their wisdom about the
unbounded bounty that comes from unrestrained capitalism.
That many of these “Harvard boys” succumbed to the temptation
of Russian girls desperate for some hard currency shouldn’t be held against
these selfless business “experts.” Nor should the reality that they sometimes
shared in the plundering of Russia’s assets by helping a few friendly
“oligarchs” become billionaires. Nor should the “experts” be blamed for the many
Russians who starved, froze or suffered early death after their pensions were
slashed, medical care was defunded, and their factories were shuttered. Just the
necessary “growing pains” toward a “modern economy.”
And, while these U.S. economic advisers helped put Russia onto
its back, there was also the expansion of NATO despite some verbal promises from
George H.W. Bush’s administration that the anti-Russian alliance would not be
pushed east of Germany. Instead, Bill Clinton and George W. Bush shoved
NATO right up to Russia’s border and touched a raw Russian nerve by taking aim
at Ukraine, too.
But Russian President Putin simply doesn’t appreciate the
generosity of the United States in making these sacrifices. The “paranoid” Putin
with his historical “revisionism” insists on seeing these acts of charity as
uncharitable acts.
‘Mr. Putin’s Revisionism’
In Tuesday’s Post, Hiatt and his team laid out this new line
of attack on the black-hatted Putin in an
editorial that was headlined, in print editions, “Mr. Putin’s
revisionism: His paranoia shouldn’t blot out the good the West tried to offer,”
and online as “After the fall of the Soviet Union, the U.S. tried to help
Russians.” The editorial began:
“President Vladimir Putin recently was interviewed for a
fawning Russian television documentary on his decade and a half in power. Putin
expressed the view that the West would like Russia to be down at the heels. He
said, ‘I sometimes I get the impression that they love us when they need to send
us humanitarian aid. . . . [T]he so-called ruling circles, elites — political
and economic — of those countries, they love us when we are impoverished, poor
and when we come hat in hand. As soon as we start declaring some interests of
our own, they feel that there is some element of geopolitical rivalry.’
“Earlier, in March,
speaking to leaders of the Federal Security Service, which he once
led, Mr. Putin warned that ‘Western special services continue their attempts at
using public, nongovernmental and politicized organizations to pursue their own
objectives, primarily to discredit the authorities and destabilize the internal
situation in Russia.’”
That was an apparent reference to the aggressive use of
U.S.-funded NGOs to achieve “regime change” in Ukraine in 2014 and similar plans
for “regime change” in Moscow, a goal openly
discussed by prominent neocons, including National Endowment for Democracy
president Carl Gershman who gets $100 million a year from Congress to finance
these NGOs.
But none of that reality is cited in the Post’s editorial,
which simply continues: “Mr. Putin’s remarks reflect a deep-seated paranoia. …
Mr. Putin’s assertion that the West has been acting out of a desire to sunder
Russia’s power and influence is a willful untruth. The fact is that thousands of
Americans went to Russia hoping to help its people attain a better life. … It
was not about conquering Russia but rather about saving it, offering the proven
tools of market capitalism and democracy, which were not imposed but welcomed. …
The Americans came for the best of reasons.”
Hiatt and his cohorts do acknowledge that not everything
worked out as peachy as predicted. There were, for instance, a few bumps in the
road like the unprecedented collapse in life expectancy for a developed country
not at war. Plus, there were the glaring disparities between the shiny and
lascivious nightlife of Moscow’s upscale enclaves, frequented by American
businessmen and journalists, and the savage and depressing poverty that gripped
and crushed much of the country.
Or, as the Post’s editorial antiseptically describes these
shortcomings: “Certainly, the Western effort was flawed. Markets were distorted
by crony and oligarchic capitalism; democratic practice often faltered; many
Russians genuinely felt a sense of defeat, humiliation and exhaustion. There’s
much to regret but not the central fact that a generous hand was extended to
post-Soviet Russia, offering the best of Western values and know-how.
“The Russian people benefit from this benevolence even now,
and, above Mr. Putin’s self-serving hysterics, they ought to hear the truth: The
United States did not come to bury you.”
Or, as a Fred Hiatt of the 1870s might have commented about
Native Americans who resisted the well-intentioned Bureau of Indian Affairs and
didn’t appreciate the gentleness of the U.S. Army or the benevolence of life
on the reservations: “Above Sitting Bull’s self-serving hysterics, Indians ought
to hear the truth: The white man did not come to exterminate you.”
Investigative reporter
Robert Parry broke many of the Iran-Contra stories for The Associated Press and
Newsweek in the 1980s. You can buy his latest book, America’s Stolen Narrative, either in print
here or as an e-book (from
Amazon
and barnesandnoble.com).
You also can order Robert Parry’s trilogy on the Bush Family and its connections
to various right-wing operatives for only $34. The trilogy includes
America’s Stolen Narrative. For details on this offer, click here.
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