Why I Wept at the Russian
Parade
By F. William Engdahl
May 14, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - Something
extraordinary just took place in Russia and it may have moved our disturbed
world one major step nearer to peace and away from a looming new world war. Of
all unlikely things, what took place was a nationwide remembrance by Russians of
the estimated 27 to perhaps 30 million Soviet citizens who never returned alive
from World War II. Yet in what can only be described in a spiritual manner, the
events of May 9, Victory Day over Nazism, that took place across all Russia,
transcended the specific day of memory on the 70th anniversary of the end of
World War II in 1945. It was possible to see a spirit emerge from the moving
events unlike anything this author has ever witnessed in his life.
The event was extraordinary in
every respect. There was a sense in all participants that they were shaping
history in some ineffable way. It was no usual May 9 annual show of Russia’s
military force. Yes, it featured a parade of Russia’s most advanced military
hardware, including the awesome new T-14 Armata tanks, S-400 anti-missile
systems and advanced Sukhoi Su-35 fighter jets. It was indeed impressive to
watch.
The military part of the events
also featured for the first time ever elite soldiers from China’s Peoples’
Liberation Army marching in formation along with Russian soldiers. That in
itself should shivers down the spines of the neoconservative warhawks in the EU
and Washington, had they any spines to shiver. The alliance between the two
great Eurasian powers—Russia and China—is evolving with stunning speed into a
new that will change the economic dynamic of our world from one of debt,
depression, and wars to one of rising general prosperity and development if we
are good enough to help make it happen.
During his visit, China’s
President XI, in addition to his quite visible honoring of the Russian Victory
event and its significance for China, met separately with Vladimir Putin and
agreed that China’s emerging New Silk Road high-speed railway infrastructure
great project will be integrated in planning and other respects with Russia’s
Eurasian Economic Union which now consists of Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and
Armenia with several prospective candidates waiting to join. While it may seem
an obvious step, it was not at all certain until
now.
The two great Eurasian countries
have now cemented the huge oil and gas deals between them, the trade deals and
the military cooperation agreements with a commitment to fully integrate their
economic infrastructure. Following his meeting with Xi, Putin told the press,
“The integration of the Eurasian Economic Union and Silk Road projects means
reaching a new level of partnership and actually implies a common economic space
on the
continent.”
It’s Zbigniew Brzezinski’s worst
geopolitical nightmare come to fruition. And that, thanks to the stupid,
short-sighted geopolitical strategy of Brzezinski and the Washington war faction
that made it clear to Beijing and to Moscow their only hope for sovereign
development and to be free of the dictates of a Washington-Wall Street Sole
Superpower was to build an entire monetary and economic space independent of the
dollar world.
The Parade of the Good
Yet the most extraordinary part of
the day-long events was not the show of military hardware at a time when NATO is
not only rattling sabres at Russia, but even intervening militarily in Ukraine
to provoke Russia into some form of war.
What was extraordinary about the
May 9 Victory Day Parade was the citizens’ remembrance march, a symbolic parade
known as the March of the Immortal Regiment, a procession through the streets of
Moscow into the famous and quite beautiful Red Square. The square, contrary to
belief of many in the West was not named so by the “Red” Bolsheviks. It took its
name from Czar Alexei Mikhailovich in the mid-17th Century from a Russian word
which now means red. Similar Immortal Regiment parades involving an estimated
twelve million Russians took place all over Russia at the same time, from
Vladivostock to St. Petersburg to Stevastopol in what is now Russian Crimea.
In an atmosphere of reverence and
quiet, some three hundred thousand Russians, most carrying photos or portraits
of family members who never returned from the war, walked on the beautiful,
sunny spring day through downtown Moscow into Red Square where the President’s
residence, the famous Kremlin, is also located.
To see the faces of thousands and
thousands of ordinary Russians walking, optimism about their future beaming from
their faces, young and the very old, including surviving veterans of the Great
Patriotic War as it is known to Russians, moved this writer to quietly weep.
What was conveyed in the smiles and eyes of the thousands of marchers was not a
looking back in the sense of sorrow at the horrors of that war. Rather what came
across so clearly was that the parade was a gesture of loving respect and
gratitude to those who gave their lives that today’s Russia might be born, a
new, future-looking Russia that is at the heart of building the only viable
alternative to a one-world dictatorship under a Pentagon Full Spectrum Dominance
and a dollar system choking on debt and fraud. The entire Russian nation exuded
a feeling of being good and of being victorious. Few peoples have that in
today’s
world.
When the television cameras zoomed
in on President Vladimir Putin who was also marching, he was walking freely and
open amid the thousands of citizens, holding a picture of his deceased father
who had served in the war and was severely wounded in 1942. Putin was surrounded
not by bulletproof limousines that any US President since the assassination of
Kennedy in 1963 would have, were he even to dare to get close to a crowd. There
were three or four presidential security people near Putin, but there were
thousands of ordinary Russians within arm’s length of one of the most
influential world leaders of the present time. There was no climate of fear
visible anywhere.
My tears
My tears at seeing the silent
marchers and at seeing Putin amid them was an unconscious reaction to what, on
reflection, I realized was my very personal sense of recognition how remote from
anything comparable in my own country, the United States of America, such a
memorial march in peace and serenity would be today. There were no “victory”
marches after US troops destroyed Iraq; no victory marches after Afghanistan; no
victory marches after Libya. Americans today have nothing other than wars of
death and destruction to commemorate and veterans coming home with traumas and
radiation poisonings that are ignored by their own government.
That transformation in America has
come about in those same 7o years since the end of the war, a war when
we–Americans and Russians, then the Soviet Union of course—had fought
side-by-side to defeat Hitler and the Third Reich. Today the Government of the
United States is siding with and backing neo-nazis in Ukraine to provoke Russia.
I reflected how much my countrymen
have changed over those few decades. From the world’s most prosperous nation,
the center of invention, innovation, technology, prosperity, in the space of
seven decades we have managed to let our country be ruined by a gaggle of stupid
and very rich oligarchs with names like Rockefeller, Gates, Buffett and their
acolytes in the Bush dynasty. Those narcissistic oligarchs cared not a whit for
the greatness of the American people, but saw us as a mere platform to realize
their sick dream of world dominion.
We let that happen.
I’ll let you in on a secret that I
recently discovered. The American oligarchs ain’t all-powerful; they ain’t some
new Illuminati or gods as some try to convince us. They ain’t omniscient. They
get away with murder because we allow them. We are hypnotized by their aura of
power.
Yet were we to stand tall and
clear in the open and say, “These silly would-be Emperors have no clothes!,”
their power would evaporate like cotton candy in hot water.
That’s what they’re terrified of.
That’s why they are deploying the US Armed Forces into Texas to stage war games
aimed at US citizens; that’s why they have torn up the Constitution and Bill of
Rights after 911. That’s why the Created a Department of Homeland Security. It’s
why they try to terrify our citizens to vaccinate with untested Ebola or other
vaccines. It’s why they are desperate to control free expression of political
ideas in the Internet.
Now, when I reflect on the true
state of America today compared with Russia, it brings tears. Today the economy
of the USA is in ruins. It has been “globalized” by its Fortune 500 global
companies and the banks of Wall Street. Its industrial jobs have been outsourced
to China, Mexico, even Russia over the past 25 or so years. Investment in the
education of our youth has become a politically-correct sick joke. College
students must go deep into debt to private banks, some $1 trillion worth today,
to get a piece of paper called a degree in order to look for non-existent jobs.
Our Washington government has
become serial liars who have lied to us about the true state of the economy ever
since Lyndon Johnson during the Vietnam War ordered the Commerce and Labor
departments to find ways to fake the numbers to hide the developing internal
economic rot. The consequence, followed by every president since, is that we
live in a fairy tale world where the mainstream media tells us we are in the
“sixth year of economic recovery” and have a mere 5.4% unemployment. The reality
is that more than 23% of Americans today are unemployed but through clever
tricks have been defined out of the
statistics. Some 93 million Americans are unable to get full time work. It
isn’t the fault of Obama or Bush before him or Clinton, Bush, Reagan or Jimmy
Carter. It’s our own fault because we were passive; we gave them the power
because we did not believe in ourselves enough. We let billionaires decide for
us who will be our President and Congress because we no longer believed that we
were good.
By the same token, Russians today,
amid brutal Western economic and financial warfare sanctions; amid a NATO war in
Ukraine that has led more than one million Russian-speaking Ukrainians to flee
to Russia for safety, despite the demonization in the western media of their
country, exude a new optimism about their future. What makes Vladimir Putin so
extraordinarily popular, with over 83% approval, is that he acts out that
growing sense of representing that Russian soul, the people who are good, being
just, being right, the sense that the vast majority of Russians today have.
That was overwhelmingly visible in
the faces of the May 9 marchers. You could feel that Putin on the speaker’s
podium felt it when he looked into the vast crowd. It was clear when Defense
Minister Shoigu, a Russian-Mongolian Tuvan-born Buddhist, respectfully and
humbly made the Orthodox sign of the cross with bowed head as he passed through
the Kremlin’s Saviour Tower to take his place aside Putin. As Victor Baranets, a
noted Russian journalist put it: ”At that moment I felt that with his simple
gesture Shoigu brought all of Russia to his feet. There was so much kindness, so
much hope, so much of our Russian sense of the sacred in this
gesture.“ The legendary Russian Soul was manifest on May 9 and its alive
and very well, thank you.
And that’s why I shed the tears on
May 9, watching hundreds of thousands of peaceful Russians walk through their
capital city, the city that saw the defeat of Napoleon’s army and of Hitler’s. I
was moved deeply watching them slowly and deliberately walking into the Red
Square next to their President’s residence at a time when Washington’s White
House is surrounded by concrete barriers, barbed wire and armed guards.
You could see it in the eyes of
the Russians on the street: they knew that they were good. They were good not
because their fathers or grandfathers had died defeating Nazism. They were god
because they could be proud Russians, proud of their country after all the
ravages of recent decades, most recently the US-backed looting during the 1990’s
Harvard Shock Therapy in the Yeltsin era.
I shed tears being deeply moved by
what I saw in those ordinary Russians and tears for what I felt had been
destroyed in my country. We Americans have lost our sense that we are good or
even perhaps again could be. We have accepted that we are bad, that we kill all
around the world, that we hate ourselves and our neighbors, that we fear, that
we live in a climate of race war, that we are despised for all this around the
world.
We feel ourselves to be anything
but good because we are in a kind of hypnosis induced by those narcissistic
oligarchs to be so. Hypnosis, however, can be broken under the right
circumstances. We only have to will it so.
Postscript:
The last time I wept at a public
event was in November 1989 when the Berlin Wall came down and Germans—east and
west—danced together on the symbol of the Cold War division between East and
West, Beethoven’s Ode to Joy rang out. The German Chancellor made a speech to
the Bundestag proposing the vision of a high-speed rail linking Berlin to
Moscow. Then, Germany was not strong enough, not free enough from guilt feelings
from the war, to reject the pressure that came from Washington. The architect of
that vision, Alfred Herrhausen, was assassinated by the ‘Red Army Fraction’ of
Langley, Virginia. Russia was deliberately thrown into chaos by IMF shock
therapy and the criminal Yeltsin family. Today the world has a new, far more
beautiful possibility to realize Herrhausen’s dream—this time with Russia, China
and all Eurasia. This is what was so beautiful about the May 9 parade.
F. William Engdahl is
strategic risk consultant and lecturer, he holds a degree in politics from
Princeton University and is a best-selling author on oil and geopolitics,
exclusively for the online magazine “New
Eastern Outlook”.