Obama’s Flak Demeans Putin’s Posture
President Obama is going out of his way to insult Russian President
Putin prior to a summit meeting. Obama’s press secretary mocked
Putin as “desperate” and accused him of displaying poor posture in a
meeting with Israel’s Prime Minister Netanyahu, reports Robert
Parry.
By Robert Parry
September 25, 2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Consortiumnews"-
The demonizing of Russia’s President Vladimir
Putin appears to know no bounds, with the White House and The New
York Times going out of their way to mock his request for a
meeting with President Barack Obama and then ladling on insults
about Putin’s looks and posture
Indeed, what is perhaps most remarkable about the
Times publishing an
article bristling with such crude insults toward a world
leader is that it almost passes without notice these days in
Official Washington. One can only hope that Putin has an
extraordinarily thick skin and doesn’t stoop to the level of the
White House – and the Times – in dishing back insults about Obama
and America’s newspaper of record.
If he did, there would surely be hell to pay with
renewed demands from prominent American pols and pundits for “regime
change” in Moscow. It’s as if everyone in Official Washington wants
to play games with the possibility of thermonuclear war – to look
really, really tough.
The article on Friday was co-written by Michael R.
Gordon, the Times’ neoconservative national security
correspondent who helped promote the Iraq War by peddling a bogus
story in 2002 (co-written with Judith Miller) about Iraq obtaining
aluminum tubes for nuclear centrifuges – though it turned out the
tubes were unsuitable for that purpose. Miller later left the Times
but Gordon is still there, pushing for evermore “regime changes.”
It is in that context that Gordon and White House
correspondent Peter Baker produced an article in which Obama’s
spokesman went to extraordinary lengths to distance the President
from Putin – all the better to shield the timid Obama from a hail of
criticism for deigning to meet with Putin.
Rather than simply defend the principle of meeting
with foreign leaders with whom the U.S. has policy differences,
Obama dispatched press secretary Josh Earnest to disparage and
insult Putin, portraying the Russian leader as “desperate” for a
meeting with Obama.
“It is fair for you to say that based on the
repeated requests we’ve seen from the Russians, that they are quite
interested in having a conversation with President Obama,” Earnest
said. But he did not stop there. He commented in a derogatory
fashion about Putin’s appearance in a meeting this week with Israeli
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.
As the Times wrote: “the White House seemed to go
out of its way on Thursday not to show deference. At one point
during his daily briefing, Mr. Earnest noted Mr. Putin’s habit of
slouching while meeting with counterparts, pointing to a recent
photo of him with Israel’s prime minister. ‘President Putin was
striking a now-familiar pose of less-than-perfect posture and
unbuttoned jacket and, you know, knees spread far apart to convey a
particular image,’ he said.”
Clearly, such a casual posture in Netanyahu’s
presence is shocking to U.S. officials who normally take on the
appearance of trained seals, sitting at rapt attention waiting for
Netanyahu to toss them some rhetorical tidbit and then jumping up to
applaud. So, perhaps, the White House was just stunned not to see
Putin acting in a similar way.
But what the photos of the meeting actually show
is that both men had their suit coats open and both sat with their
legs apart at least for part of the time. Putin also doesn’t appear
to be “slouching.” Yet, the White House directed its Miss Manners’
finger-waving about proper posture only at Putin, not at Netanyahu.
Fear of Criticism
The White House wanted to make a public point by
insulting Putin, the leader of a major nuclear power, because Obama
is scared of criticism from neocons and their
liberal-interventionist sidekicks for agreeing to any kind of
face-to-face meeting with the Russian president.
Yet, even during Josef Stalin’s brutal reign and
during the height of the Cold War, American presidents regularly met
with their Soviet counterparts. They did so in a mature and
respectful way despite serious disputes between the two nations.
From Franklin Roosevelt to Ronald Reagan, presidents recognized the
need to coordinate on important geopolitical issues whatever their
personal feelings about the Soviet leaders.
Given the fact that both nations still have vast
nuclear arsenals, one might think there should still be at least a
modicum of decorum between the two sides. But Obama apparently feels
that the Putin demonization in Official Washington is so powerful
that he must insulate himself from attacks for just talking to
Putin.
In a Times
editorial on Monday, Obama’s team let it be known that
Obama considers Putin a “thug.” For his part, Putin has refrained
from returning this name-calling in kind, even continuing to
describe American and European officials as his “partners.”
Though Obama has spoken with Putin on the
sidelines of some recent international conferences, their last
formal meeting was in June 2013. That fall, Obama canceled a summit
meeting because Putin gave refuge to National Security Agency
whistleblower Edward Snowden, who had revealed legally questionable
bulk collection of data about Americans. Obama wanted Snowden
prosecuted and imprisoned for the disclosures.
U.S.-Russian relations worsened in February 2014
when neocon Assistant Secretary of State for European Affairs
Victoria Nuland helped orchestrate a coup d’etat in Ukraine, on
Russia’s border, overthrowing democratically elected President
Viktor Yanukovych and installing a regime hostile to Russia and to
ethnic Russians living in Ukraine.
The coup – and the resulting Ukrainian nationalist
violence directed against ethnic Russians – sparked a referendum in
which the residents of Crimea voted by 96 percent to leave Ukraine
and rejoin Russia, a development that was treated by the Obama
administration and The New York Times as a “Russian invasion.”
When ethnic Russians in eastern Ukraine also
resisted the new order in Kiev, the coup regime announced an
“Anti-Terror Operation” and dispatched troops including neo-Nazi,
Islamist and other irregular militias to crush the rebels. Some
8,000 or more people were killed, mostly ethnic Russian civilians.
When Russia supplied help to this resistance, the Obama
administration and the Times deemed the assistance “Russian
aggression.”
So, according to the latest “group think” of
Official Washington, the current Ukrainian regime is a paragon of
virtue, reform and human rights – despite its continued corruption
and its deployment of neo-Nazis and Islamists to kill ethnic Russian
Ukrainians – and Putin is the fount of all evil for not permitting
the slaughter to go on unchallenged.
Though I’m told that Obama understands how
inaccurate this black-and-white depiction is, he feels that he must
go with the flow to avoid being denounced by the neocons and liberal
interventionists as “weak.” Thus, Press Secretary Earnest was
dispatched to describe Putin as “desperate” and lacking good
posture.
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
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