The
Russian Phoenix: Hope or Illusion?
By Moti Nissami
February 09,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
-
" Greanville
Post
" - Apart
from the mainstream portrayal of Russia as a
ruthless expansionist dictatorship (a portrayal too
ludicrous to merit attention here), most awake
commentators fall into one of two camps.
Members of
the first camp believe that the realization of a
better world depends on Russia’s success in its
efforts to reform itself, maintain its independence,
and contain American ambitions.
Members of
the second camp believe that the Russo-American
confrontation is of no significance to the long-term
future of humanity either because that conflict is
being engineered by the people who control both
nations, or because both sides to the conflict are
“criminal networks that use brutality and violence
to enforce their control over given areas and to
terrorize others.”
Neither
camp, to my knowledge, provides a fact-based
bird’s-eye view of this topic. The present article
attempts to close this gap, thereby enabling readers
to form their own opinion. The article concludes
with my own tentative attempt to resolve the dispute
between these two camps, arguing that both are
partially in the right—and partially in the wrong. A
conversation on the same topic is available here.
Two
opposing views of the Russo/American Conflict
I’ve been studying Russian history
and culture most of my
life, but never as avidly as now. My main reason
for this more intense preoccupation is similar to
that of
Andre Vltchek’s:
“When I
visit a barbershop in Beirut or Amman, and am
asked ‘where are you from?’ (It used to be a
painfully confusing and complex question to
answer, just a few years ago), I now simply
reply: “Russia,” and people come and hug me and
say, ‘Thank you.’
“It is
not because Russia is perfect. It is not
perfect–as no country on Earth could or should
be. But it is because it is standing once more
against the Empire, and the Empire has brought
so many horrors, so much humiliation, to so many
people; to billions of people around the world .
. . and to them, to so many of them, anyone who
is standing against the Empire, is a hero. This
I heard recently, first hand, from people in
Eritrea, China, Russia, Palestine, Ecuador,
Cuba, Venezuela, and South Africa, to name just
a few places.”
Such
sentiments are shared, at least in part, by many
other commentators, including
F. William Engdahl, the
“Saker,” and
Pepe Escobar.
In sharp
contrast to such favorable views of Russia, there
are those who compare the Russo-American struggle to
the fake Democratic-Republican contest of American
politics.
James
Corbett:
“We
have been conditioned our entire lives to expect
that anything that opposes a demonstrably evil
entity must itself be good. . . . But when it
comes to the machinations of global geopolitics,
this is completely the wrong lens through which
to understand what is happening. Much more to
the point would be the metaphor of rival gangs
competing for territory. It is not the case that
the Bloods are the ‘good guys’ and the Crips the
‘bad guys’ or vice versa; they are both criminal
networks that use brutality and violence to
enforce their control over given areas and to
terrorize others.
“Similarly, if we understand that rivalries
between various international organizations (to
the extent that they exist at all) are really
only battles between gangsters for control over
the global turf, we can more clearly understand
that it is not a question of choosing sides in
the struggle, but opposing the very ideologies
of centralized, hierarchical control that make
these institutions possible.
“If
what we are combating is, as I posit,
essentially two (or more) gangs competing for
turf, then it is self-evident that we gain
nothing from supporting one gang over another
other than the vague hope that the other gang
will treat us more kindly.
“The
real solution to centralized, hierarchical
international institutions created by and for
the interests of the oligarchical elite are
decentralized, non-hierarchical relations
created by and for the grassroots.” (See also
Sibel Edmonds).
Brandon Smith
goes even farther, claiming that both criminal
networks are controlled by a higher-level criminal
network of bankers. These bankers are engineering a
potentially deadly conflict between their two (or
three, if one includes China) networks, in order to
enslave humanity. Thus, Smith is plausibly perplexed
by people who are
“so awake and aware of the false left/right paradigm
while remaining astonishingly naïve and short
sighted when it comes to the false East/West
paradigm. There are no “sides” in any modern
conflict, only proxies fighting on a global
chessboard controlled by the same elitist interests.
. . . War is meant to forcefully change the
“inertia” of civilization, and thus, forcefully
change the direction of civilization in a manner
that benefits the engineers of the conflict. . . .”
Elsewhere,
Smith says:
“Russia
and the U.S. are nothing but false champions
dueling in a fake gladiator match paid for by
the IMF. The most frightening aspect of the
false paradigm between East and West is the
potential it creates for the co-option of
liberty proponents here in America. . . . .There
is no nation out there in the ether of central
banking that is going to help us. The sooner we
come to terms with the reality that we are on
our own, the stronger we will be when the fight
begins.”
Such
conflicting views (e.g., Vitchek vs. Corbett) raise
two sets of questions.
First, is
the USA controlled by a criminal gang? The answer,
as we shortly illustrate and as anyone thinking for
herself can immediately see, is a resounding YES.
Second,
should we, the people who believe in environmental
stewardship, social justice, peace, spirituality,
common decencies, and freedom, throw our support
behind Russia, or should we treat the current
Russo-American conflict as nothing more than either
a larger-scale turf war between criminal outfits or
perhaps a phony fight between bankers’ marionettes?
Should we look to Russia and ourselves to solve the
world’s problems, or only to ourselves?
The bulk of
this article attempts to address this second,
complex, set of questions. The answer, lamentably
but unavoidably, is multifaceted, long, and
ambivalent. If reading such an exposition requires
more time or patience than you have, you might wish
to only read the last two sections (“the balance
sheet” and “the Russian Phoenix: Hope or
Illusion?”).
Alternatively, you might wish to click on the link
below and listen to a
conversation on the same topic at Jeff J.
Brown’s China Rising.
The
USA is Controlled by a Criminal Gang
The
question is, if they [American government] would
do this . . . if they would feed radioactive
oatmeal to helpless children and lie to them and
their parents about it for years . . .
well gee, is there anything they wouldn’t
do?–
Melissa Dykes, 2016
“The US
government is the most complete criminal
organization in human history.”—Paul
Craig Roberts (senior official in the Reagan
Administration), 2016
“We
live on a planet well able to provide a decent
life for every soul on it, which is all
ninety-nine of a hundred human beings ask. Why
in the world can’t we have it?” –Jack Finney,
1970
America is
controlled by a criminal gang whose ultimate goal
is, apparently, to empower and enrich itself while
impoverishing and enslaving everyone else. Here are
a few typical examples showing that American
policies at home and abroad are exploitative,
self-destructive, and utterly devoid of morality:
1. The
USA is secure from foreign conquests—and yet it
spends over $1,000,000,000,000 on the
monstrosity of conquest (the official number,
which is roughly half that figure, is a
blatant lie). That is, the USA alone spends more
on wars of aggression than all the nations of the
world combined spend on attacking others or
defending themselves! The USA likewise has one of
the
most corrupt war procurements establishments in
the world, and a collection of overseas military
garrisons “unprecedented
in history.” This rarely
stated attempt to rule the world by force is
clearly a crime against humanity, for it causes
millions of deaths, billions of partially fulfilled
lives, and environmental destruction.
The other
side of this massive gangsterism is opportunity
costs. Buckminster Fuller, for example, conclusively
showed that humanity could “take care of
everybody on Earth at a higher standard of living
than any have ever known” by merely shifting less
than half of the military budget to such things as
food, education, and shelter.
2.
“Go ahead and hate your neighbor,
Go ahead and cheat a friend.
Do it in the name of Heaven,
You can justify it in
the end.”—One
Tin Soldier
Syria provides one heart-rending
example of America’s
psychopathic strategy of “devouring
the world, one country at a time.” Since economic
blackmail and assassinations failed to shake Syria
from its independent path, America,
relying on a few of its viciously theocratic
allies in the Middle East,
trained, supplied, funded, and unleashed upon
Syria a barbarian horde of mercenaries.
This was
preceded by decades-long, well-funded,
indoctrination of these would-be mercenaries with
Wahhabism—an ideology that has little to do with
genuine Islam and everything to do with the Houses
of Rothschild’s, Rockefeller’s, and Saud’s
dictatorial and imperial aspirations. Against all
odds, the Syrians are valiantly resisting, and so
far they have not paid the awful price paid by such
victims of America’s imperialist designs as
Indonesia, Mexico, Iraq, or Libya.
As in Guatemala, Iran, Vietnam,
and scores of other countries, this genocide
involves an outright rejection of
democracy:
“Such are
the West’s ‘democratic’ allies. They refuse to allow
what Assad and Putin have been insisting upon: a
Syrian Presidential election that will be
internationally monitored, and not concluded unless
and until the international monitors announce that
the results were not produced by fraud.
The reason
that the West refuses a democratic determination of
the matter is that even the polling that has been
done in Syria by Western polling firms consistently
shows that Assad would win any democratic election
in Syria overwhelmingly.
And the
reason Assad would win is obvious: the U.S fostered
this war at least from the moment that Barack Obama
became America’s President, and most Syrians blame
the U.S. and ISIS, not Assad, for their misery. And
so, they loathe America. They know that America
leads this invasion, from behind the scenes.”
Multiply this atrocity a thousand
times, with
variations, and you get the picture. Genocide,
deceit, hypocrisy, lawlessness, exploitation,
fascism, and heartlessness lie at the core of
America’s overseas behavior.
From the
colonization of America itself, to slavery, to
Mexico, Philippines, Nicaragua, Vietnam,
twice-conquered Germany, twice-nuked Japan,
Indonesia, Southern Cone, Honduras, Palestine, Iraq,
Saudi Arabia, Ukraine—since 1694 one rule defines
British and American foreign
policy: “and this rule is that there are no
rules.”
3. The
vicious brilliance of America’s rulers at times
defies belief. Thanks to
bribes,
assassinations, the new
Gladio conspiracy, extensive wiretapping and
blackmail of who’s who in Europe, economic warfare
(e.g., the recent
FIFA “scandal,” the
VW “scandal,” following an earlier
Toyota “scandal”), and control of the banks,
corporations, media, and intelligence services of
Western and central Europe, even that
once-independent half-continent is now a submissive
colony of the USA. In the words of one historian, “the
level of abjection passes belief.”
4.
Sadly, owing in part to the 1990s disastrous
collapse of the USSR, America’s real rulers
accelerated their war against their own people,
again playing by their favorite “anything goes”
rule.
They have
acquired vastly more power and riches, while
relegating the American Constitution into a
meaningless piece of paper, applied the lessons they
have learned from the
Gladio Conspiracy to their contrived
war on terror, assassinated or brutally tortured
their real and imaginary opponents, stole so much
from so many to the point that America’s 20
wealthiest people now own more wealth than the
bottom
half of the American population combined,
neglected America’s
infrastructure, elevated self-serving mendacity
to an art form, conducted a phony war on drugs, used
these very drugs and an utterly broken justice
system to turn the USA into an incarceration
nation in which jailers enjoy a de facto
license to kill, destroyed American industry,
and converted a once-rich country to the “most
bankrupt nation in history.”
5. As
a final example, take Michigan. Universal sunshine
bribery of federal officials led to the
abolition of tariffs on the imports of vehicles into
the USA, thus enabling Michigan’s car manufacturers
to move their factories overseas. This industrial
migration in turn caused massive unemployment and
underemployment in Michigan. To prevent violent
uprisings, besides controlling the mainstream
churches, schools, and media, the Invisible
Government deliberately initiated and sustained a
prescription and illegal drugs dependence epidemic.
One must
live for a while in Motown—once the richest city in
the Union—to really
assimilate its decline. Through no fault of
their own, countless Detroiters have been reduced to
welfare, homelessness, hopelessness, or extreme
poverty. In winter, one may see people standing
outdoors, staying warm by huddling around a pile of
burning tires. And, as in countries like Greece, the
bankers even let go of the pretense of
democracy—Detroit is administered by criminal
poverty enforcers indirectly nominated by the
bankers.
The mandate
of these enforcers is simple: Hand everything of
value to their bosses and their cronies, and rob the
people of the little dignity and possessions they
might have left. It’s a crass class war, a textbook
example of the
economic hit man strategy.
Water, a basic human right,
provides one macabre example of the bankers’ shock
doctrine. As part of the austerity regime, thousands
of people who cannot afford to pay for their
water—including Detroiters living within sight of
the mighty Detroit River—must do
without running water in their homes.
But those
9,000 and counting Detroiters are lucky. In Flint, a
sister city to the north which suffered an almost
identical fate of job losses and induced
helplessness, the class war has led to the
deliberate poisoning of the majority.
And no, we
are not talking here about the
treacherous addition of fluoride to the drinking
water of middle-class and poor Americans, where we
only need mention in passing that fluoride is a
waste product that does not prevent tooth decay but
does
cause “bone cancer in boys, bladder cancer,
hypothyroidism, hip fractures and lower IQ in
children.” In Flint, the bankers resorted to an
additional, older, trick of biological warfare. That
trick is lead, as in Arsenic and Old Lead.
In April
2014, the austerity enforcer switched Flint’s water
supply from the moderately-unsafe Detroit water
system to the industrial
cesspool otherwise known as the “Flint River.”
Besides the unhealthy witch’s brew imbibed by the
disempowered, unsuspecting, televised, and
fluoridized poor inhabitants of Flint, this decision
indirectly caused the “doubling or even tripling” of
lead levels in children. Both the governor of the
state and the
EPA (Environmental Plundering
Agency) were fully aware of the problem in
advance, but felt that it was worth harming and
dumbing down tens of thousands to save $100 a
day.
In reality,
the actions of these agents of the Invisible
Government have little to do with saving $36,500 a
year—and everything to do with this:
“In five
years, these kids are going to have problems with
special education. They’re going to have cognition
problems. Seven to 10 years, they’re going to have
behavioral problems.”
These
youngsters might, in other words, make obedient
welfare recipients, inmates of “schools” and
prisons, McDonald dishwashers, drug addicts—but
pathetic revolutionaries.
If you have
any doubts that the real goal is poisoning children,
not saving a miserly $36,500 a year, consider
this. That same criminal Michigan “governor”
behind the Detroit and Flint water warfare, gave
“away billions of dollars in tax credits to major
corporations and blown a huge hole in his budget”
while simultaneously squeezing additional $900
million from average Michiganders.
****
One can go
on forever wading through the sewer that still calls
itself the American government. Everywhere and
always, there are lies, propaganda, dumbing down,
corruption, theft, exploitation, poisoning,
brutalization, and vicious class warfare.
Thankfully,
in this article we have other sturgeon to fry and
will merely sum the above random sampler with the
following words: As far as the USA and the West are
concerned, James Corbett hit the nail on the head:
The American government is a criminal network.
But Corbett
sees no fundamental distinction between America and
Russia. Hence the question: Is the Russian
Federation a criminal network too?
Background Information: The Russian Catastroika
“Will we continue looting and destroying Russia
until nothing is left?”–Alexander
Solzhenitsyn, 2000.
Before
evaluating Russia, we need to look back at some of
the horrors visited on the Russian people by
America’s rulers and their handpicked Russian
quislings.
In the
1990s, America’s de facto occupation of Russia sank
that once-powerful country into chaos, poverty,
criminality, corruption, assassinations, organized
crime activities, and social discord. Washington and
its quislings were running—and ruining—the country,
controlling every aspect of life, including
mainstream information sources. For instance, in
1993 Yeltsin attacked the Russian parliament with
tanks for daring to protect the interests of the
Russian people, and in 1998 most Russian banks went
bankrupt.
Here is how
one historian described the aftermath of the Soviet
collapse in just one satellite
country:
“Today Romania is a dumping ground for foreign
goods. In the last 20 years, national industry has
completely disappeared, and strategic sectors have
been sold to foreign companies. Salaries have been
cut back, unemployment is rising, drugs and
prostitution are spreading. Today Romanians consider
December 1989 not as a victory of democracy over
dictatorship but as a tragedy and a mistake.”
Washington
also revved up its preparations for further
disintegrating the Russian Federation,
engineering rebellions inside that Federation
itself. Washington also broke a promise not to
expand NATO to previous members of the Warsaw Pact,
and encroached on the very borders of the Russian
Federation.
Much of
this changed for the better when Putin assumed the
presidency.
Does Russia Provide a Meaningful Alternative to
America’s Invisible Government?
“[The men of the Invisible Government] would
continue to grow in strength, until they had the
whole silly world, the whole credulous world, the
whole ingenuous world, in their hands. Anyone who
would challenge them, attempt to expose them, show
them unconcealed and naked, would be murdered,
laughed at, called mad, ignored, or denounced as a
fantasy-weaver.”—Taylor Caldwell, 1972 (Captains
and the Kings)
To approach
this topic, we must look at the record of the
Russian government from a variety of angles.
I. The Russian Phoenix
Rises Again: 2000-2015
On his
deathbed, Yeltsin must have realized the extent of
his and Gorbachev’s folly: “Take care of Russia” he
told Putin.
Putin
obliged, starting by “patiently nursing the
collapsed Russian economy back to
health from 1999 to 2007,” ushering (according
to
his presstitute enemies), “a period of
unprecedented prosperity.”
Here are a
few examples of the remarkable economic and social
transformation of Russia in the last 15 years:
The
percentage of people living below the poverty
line went from 29%, in 2000, when Putin became
President and Washington’s power over Moscow’s
diminished, to 11% by 2013.
By October
2015, the Russian government
was “finalizing a bill which will give an
opportunity to every Russian citizen to obtain one
hectare of land, or a maximum of five hectares for a
family of five, in the Russian Far East for free.”
Homicides
declined from 19 per 100,000 in 2004 to 9 in 2012
(but they are still about twice the American
rate of 5.2 and 18 times the Swiss rate). This
reduction was made possible, in part, by upgrading
the quality of the police force, curbing the powers
of US-manufactured oligarchs, reducing poverty,
corruption, and destitution, fighting organized
crime, and curbing the activities of CIA- and
Saudi-supported Wahhabi terrorists.
Russia
returned to the people some of their stolen wealth,
e.g., ownership of national resources such as oil
and gas. Thus, instead of letting Western
corporations and their local stooges become the
principal beneficiaries of Russia’s vast natural
resources (as is the case in all Western “success”
stories, e.g., Ukraine, Mexico, Iraq . . . ), some
of the benefits, at least, accrue now to the
rightful owners—the Russian people themselves.
Life
expectancy climbed from 65 to 70 (2000-2012)
The
shipbuilding, aerospace, and auto industries
partially recovered, made possible in part by
reorganization, state guidance, and protective
tariffs.
Production
and exports of fossil and hydroelectric energy
resources improved.
A key
mechanism of weakening Russia in the 1990s involved
the destruction of its industry and agriculture. The
objective was simple: convert a literate, creative
nation to the level of Saudi Arabia or
Ghana—countries that have been reduced to exporters
of raw materials or a few cash crops. Such countries
depend on the Invisible Government for their very
existence and can be, at the moment they defy Wall
Street, readily destroyed via rigging of markets and
economic
warfare. Although much yet remains to be done,
Russia has taken a few tentative steps on the road
to self-sufficiency. Here is one example of this
developing strategy, as explained by
Russia’s president:
“We
are not only able to feed ourselves taking into
account our lands, water resources – Russia is able
to become the largest world supplier of healthy,
ecologically clean and high-quality food which
the Western producers have long lost, especially
given the fact that demand for such products in the
world market is steadily growing. . . . Ten years
ago, we imported almost half of the food from
abroad, and were dependent on imports. Now Russia is
among the exporters.
Last year, Russian exports of agricultural products
amounted to almost $20 billion – a quarter more than
the revenue from the sale of arms, or one-third the
revenue coming from gas exports.”
Russia
successfully derailed CIA-instigated “rebellions” in
Chechnya and Moscow.
Russia
legally and peacefully repatriated Crimea, thereby
forestalling Washington’s plans of Nazifying and
enslaving Crimeans (ethnic Russians for the most
part) and dismantling Russia’s all-important naval
base in Sevastopol.
Russia
revitalized and modernized its military, to the
point, perhaps, of regaining the ability to check
Washington’s plans of trampling under foot every
country on earth. The advances in the military field
have been so rapid and striking as to lead some
knowledgeable
observers to the (almost certainly mistaken)
view “that Russia has now become the world’s leading
military power.”
Advances
have been made in such symbolic areas as sports too,
partially restoring the remarkable achievements of
the USSR: “The Sochi Winter Olympics in 2014 were a
triumph for
Putin.” In Sochi, Russia had also received more
medals than any other country. Likewise, and despite
Washington’s Machiavellian attempts to
torpedo this, Russia is expected to host the
world soccer cup in 2018.
Obviously
then, Putin and his team uplifted the Russian nation
and the quality of life for the majority of its
citizens. As a result, as of June 2015, Putin
enjoyed a popularity rating of 87%! (Obama:
48%) Also, by 2014, 64% of Russians
trusted their government (a 27% improvement from
2007)
Such
numbers are especially striking when compared to
Americans’ attitude towards their own government.
Thus, according to one
source, only 35% of Americans trusted their
government. A more reliable
source gives the following late 2015 figures:
only 18% of registered American voters were content
with their government, while 82% were frustrated or
angry, of which 27% viewed the American government
as their enemy. Similarly, 81% of
Russians also had a negative view of the United
States.
II. Restoring
Multipolarity?
“Russia’s
entry to the side of the Syrian government has great
potential for finally stopping the US from treating
the world as a stepping-stone to unchallenged global
hegemony.”—Kim
Peterson and B. J. Sabri, 2016
“Washington doesn’t care about peoples’ dreams or
aspirations. What they care about is ruling the
world with an iron fist, which is precisely what
they intend to do for the next century or so unless
someone stops them. Putin’s actions, however
admirable, have not yet changed that basic
dynamic.”—Mike
Whitney
According to the CIA
Post:
“During the
Clinton administration, the United States pushed
hard to expand NATO, breaking a critical promise to
Russia not to threaten its sphere of influence.
During the George W. Bush administration, there were
more missteps, especially the U.S. walking away from
the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, causing
irreparable harm to the countries’ fragile
relationship.”
By 2007,
these extreme provocations, the earlier looting of
Russia, its ongoing encirclement, a series of regime
change attempts
involving Central Institute of Assassination
(CIA) agents provocateurs and
snipers, and American nuclear brinkmanship,
finally forced the Russian bear to begin to see that
it was being maneuvered into a cage:
“More
and more we witness the flouting of the basic
principles of international law. . . . The United
States is overstepping its national borders in every
field: in economics, in politics, even in the
humanitarian sphere. . . . And this, of course, is
very dangerous. . . . Russia is a country with a
history that spans more than a thousand years and
has practically always had the privilege of carrying
out an independent foreign policy. We are not going
to change this tradition today.”
Gilbert
Doctorow cogently explains Russia’s subsequent
actions:
“One may
suppose that the purpose is not to touch off or
accelerate an arms race but, on the contrary, to
bring the other side to its senses and persuade it
of 1) Russia’s seriousness about defending
militarily what it sees as vital national interests
and 2) its ability to deliver massive destruction to
an enemy even in the face of a possible first
nuclear strike, and so to reinstate the Mutually
Assured Destruction deterrence that America’s global
missile defense was supposed to cancel out. . . .
Russia has set down certain red lines, such as
against NATO expansion into Ukraine or Georgia over
which it will fight to the death using all its
resources. We ignore these messages at our peril.”
Russia’s
actions in recent years appear consistent with the
setting down of such red lines, most conspicuously
in Abkhazia and Ossetia, Crimea, and Syria. By
contrast, earlier, while Russia was weaker, it
watched in silence while the USA attacked Russia’s
allies Yugoslavia, Iraq, and Libya.
Russia’s
efforts to escape imperial tyranny are not confined
to itself or Syria. Every country that wishes to
escape servitude to America’s invisible rulers owes
its continued existence, in some part, to Russia.
Here for instance is Zimbabwe’s
Ambassador to Russia:
“Both
Russia and China are . . . continuing to oppose the
illegal sanctions the West has imposed on us—a
blatant attempt to change an elected government by
crippling our economy in the hope that the masses
would rise up against it.”
So much for
Russian actions which can be best seen as a
determined policy to restore its national
independence and the more civilized multipolar world
that existed before 1990. And yet, as with so many
aspects of the Russian paradox, there is another
side to this story too.
To begin
with, when it comes to Western coups d’état and
other violations of international laws, Russia’s
actions are often characterized by puzzling
timidity. Take the Ukraine for instance, a country
inhabited for the most part by Slavs, who either
speak Russian or a Russian dialect, use the same
alphabet, have always been linked to Russia through
family and economic ties, and have traditionally
been affiliated with the Russian state. In the
1990s, Russia granted the fictional country of
Ukraine independence, but the ties uniting the two
countries remained. The CIA then proceeded to break
these ties, a project that took decades to
accomplish—while the Russians inexplicably stood
aside and looked! The CIA then ordered the massacre
of ethnic Russians in the East who democratically
chose to secede from Ukraine. Here too, Russia
provided the secessionists some help, but refused to
support independence or annexation—so the needless
carnage and oppression of Russians living in
modern-day Ukraine continues to this very day.
But such
examples are the tip of the timidity iceberg, for
Russia enigmatically eschews cheaper, more
effective, and less painful measures than its Syrian
campaign. This avoidance again casts doubts on the
Russian government’s commitment to a multipolar
world.
Prof. Michael Hudson
and others underscore the fact that the USA has
consistent, massive, balance of payments deficits
with such countries as Russia, China, and Japan.
Financialized and deindustrialized America buys real
goods from them and pays by running its printing
press. Consequently, such countries accumulate the
digital equivalents of billions or trillions of
dollars.
They then
use a good part of this money to buy U.S. treasury
bonds. The net result of this convoluted, scarcely
credible, process is straightforward: By financing
the U.S. military and economy, these countries
empower their own oppression.
One can
understand why nations like Japan or Germany would
engage in such self-destructive behavior, given the
presence of American garrisons in their lands and
the presence of thousands of bribed fifth columnists
and bootlickers in their media, economy, armed
forces, and assassination squads. But why would
Russia and China, now fighting for their very
survival, support their own military encirclement?
Do they
really believe that they can
win that ongoing war by small, painfully slow,
steps? Do they really believe, in other words, that
turtles can outrun hares? Why do they indirectly
finance the construction of the hundreds and
hundreds of nuclear bombs that one day might totally
and irrevocably turn Moscow or Beijing into a fate
worse than nothingness (already in the 1950s, “there
were 179 ‘designated ground zeros’ for atomic
bombs in Moscow” alone)? Why do they finance
America’s economic sanctions against them? Why don’t
they only accept payments for anything they sell in
gold, silver, or their own national currencies? Why
don’t they turn their enemies’ world upside down by
linking their currencies to silver or gold or by
resolutely stopping the rigging of the interest
rates market?
Why don’t
the Russians, for that matter, invest a few billion
dollars to stop, once and for all, the rigging of
the silver market by their paper-shuffling enemies?
They can thus gain billions and cause incalculable
harm to the dollar and the Western banking system
(at today’s rigged prices, all the silver in the
world is only worth about $14 billion and can be
manipulated up or down by just one of Russia’s top
oligarchs—let alone the Russian government)?
If they are
serious about their national independence, why do
they always react to Western actions,
instead of proactively checkmating their enemies?
This is
worth repeating: Russia is financing its own
encirclement and the ongoing attacks on its economy
and currency. Apart from its actions to save Crimea
and Syria and a few other places, the Russian
government is doing precious little to undermine the
new civilization that America has imposed, “where
the entire world is economically enslaved to the
United States,” and where the USA smashes to
smithereens any country that refuses to hand over
its economic surplus.
It should
be underscored that the failure so far to undermine
the dollar cannot be traced to ignorance. One of
Putin’s economic advisors, for instance,
outlined a “set of counter-measures specifically
targeting the core strength of the US war machine,
i.e., the Fed’s printing press.” Russia is likewise
taking some tentative steps in this crucial
de-dollarization campaign. But again, as in most
instances of Russia’s efforts to save itself and to
improve the lives of its citizens, steps
taken so far are slow and incongruous.
III. Information
Liberation?
The
Invisible Government’s power at home and abroad
partially depends on its brilliant propaganda.
Indeed, almost all mainstream information coming out
of the West—movies, books, TV, radio, newspapers,
government pronouncements, schools at all levels,
think tanks—has very little to do with truth or
reality and everything to do with advancing the
agenda of the Invisible Government that rules the
USA and its colonies.
That power
defies belief. Che Guevara stated: “Our every action
is a battle cry . . . for the alliance of the
world’s people’s against the great enemy of
humanity: the United States of America.” This is the
ABC of international relations, the guiding light of
decent and informed people everywhere.
And yet,
I’ve lived and traveled in scores of countries that
have been laid to waste by the USA—and most of the
people I interacted with looked up to America as the
City on the Hill. They play and dance to its
music—whose lyrics they often don’t understand and
whose melodies are no better than their own. They
watch US/UK imbecile TV series, sport teams, and
commercials, and read their “bestsellers.” They
adore imperial agents intent on robbing and
enslaving them and revile their own champions.
All this
and more is a testimony to the brilliance of the
Invisible Government’s soft power (and to
the vulnerability of most people to crass
propaganda).
Over the
last few years, Russia has taken some steps to
counteract that power—impressive enough for British
censors to
threaten Russia Today with “sanctions.”
Likewise,
in 2014, Russia wisely
passed a “law limiting foreign ownership of
media companies.”
Wikipedia—a useful but at
the same time disgracefully pro-imperial information
source—provides one example of the CIA’s masterful
monopolization of most mass information outlets.
Russia knows this and
plans to create its own online encyclopedia.
But again,
Russia’s infowars gambits do not go far enough:
To begin
with, many Russian television outlets—sadly the most
influential information dissemination source—are
owned directly or indirectly by the state. Thus,
in Russia as in the Western world, TV is often
government by another name.
As well,
even though Russia has been fighting for survival
for at least two centuries, and even though the USA
now is waging hybrid warfare against it,
state-connected Russian media often
treat American pronouncements on a variety of
topics as the gospel. They timidly defend themselves
from Western mendacities and smears, but they often
enigmatically refuse to employ their best weapon:
revealing outright American criminality at home and
abroad.
For
instance, Russian mainstream media do not often
mention Operation Gladio, nor do they
bother to inform their readers that the American
government’s versions of the “war on terror” or the
assassinations of the Kennedy clan, Martin Luther
King, Princess Diana, Dr. Kelly, or Gary Webb, are
pure, unadulterated,
claptrap.
Additionally, there are such fifth-column media as
the Moscow Times. Here is Israel
Shamir describing such media—as well as the
scandalous behavior of state-supported media:
“Can you
imagine Fox TV transmitting Russian propaganda? In
Russia, a major chunk of Russian media, state-owned
or authorized by the taxpayer, transmits pro-Western
and anti-Russian agenda, alleged the eminent film
director Nikita Michalkov, a staunch supporter of
Putin, in his
video seen by over two million viewers in a few
days. He called upon Putin to assert his line and
banish the enemies within, but state TV refused to
broadcast the video.”
To sum up:
In the last 15 years there have been some
improvements in presenting the Russian government’s
position to the world and limiting the power of CIA-
and oligarch-supported media. But in reality, the
Russian government betrays democratic ideals by
monopolizing TV (instead of handing most of it to
genuine grassroots organizations).
At the same
time, some mainstream Russian media are still
indirectly owned by hostile foreigners and their
agents. And state-owned, independent, and private
media are still afraid to tell the people of Russia
and the world ugly truths about the West and Russia,
still try to curry favor with Washington and the
bankers who control it, still champion at times CIA
propaganda. It is hard to reconcile such ambivalence
with the view that the Russian government serves the
interests of the Russian people—or of humanity.
IV.
Environment: Russia is Just as Recklessly Suicidal
as America
“Although
the chance of a disaster to planet Earth in a given
year might be quite low, it adds up over time, and
becomes a near certainty in the next thousand or ten
thousand years.”—Stephen
Hawking, 2016
The most
critical issue facing humanity is survival.
Elsewhere I cataloged the numerous tipping
points and argued that—given humanity reckless
tendency to foul its own nest, its propensity to
employ any technology regardless of its
destructiveness, and the speed at which new
technologies are invented—that the probability of
human extinction within the next 200 hundred years
might exceed 90%. If so, everything—even such
precious things as freedom, real democracy, justice,
peace, space conquest, search for truth, or
spirituality—pale into insignificance when placed
side by side with environmental policies.
When it
comes to the environment, the USA, as one might
expect, gets a straight grade of F—and so does
Russia. Here is a sampler of Russian environmental
policies.
Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs).
These comprise the only sustainable spot I could
find. Russia will no longer import
dangerous GMO products,
stating
“If the
Americans like to eat GMO products, let them . . .
We don’t need to do that; we have enough space and
opportunities to produce organic food.”
Climate Disruptions
“Now we can
only wait till the day, wait and apportion our
shame.
These are
the dykes our fathers left, but we would not look to
the same.
Time and
again were we warned of the dykes, time and again we
delayed:
Now, it may
fall, we have slain our sons, as our fathers we have
betrayed.”–Rudyard Kipling
Earth’s
climate is extremely
complex. So, even with the best available
models, temperature measurements, and other data, we
can only make probability statements. It is also
true that science now is often the maidservant of
the Invisible Government—rather than the truth—and
so the scientific consensus about climate change
might be fraudulent. It is certainly true that,
after decades of
suppressing the truth, the bankers are about to
substitute money-making schemes for real actions,
thereby cleverly derailing genuine environmental
struggles.
And yet, my
own decades-long holistic
study of environmental politics leads me to
believe that the chances of catastrophic climate
disruptions before the year 2115 exceed 70%. But let
us humor climate “skeptics” and assume that the
chance of a catastrophe is “only” 7%. Should we take
that chance?
The answer
is: of course not: We should never risk humanity’s
future.
Moreover,
there is absolutely no reason to gamble with that
future. We can solve or curtail the prospects of
climate disruptions—and at the same time
significantly improve our health, wealth, and
prospects of survival. Here are just two examples:
We know how to make cars that would be just as good
as current cars, but that would be at least four
times as fuel-efficient—and we likewise know how to
make alcohol.
The only
problem with such steps is that they would harm the
bottom line of both American and Russian oil and gas
companies. And so, on this issue, at least, the
madmen in charge of this planet are in accord.
According to Jim
Hansen, the late 2015 Paris climate change
agreement is “just worthless words.” Another expert
points to a “lack of political will in Russia to
address climate change.”
Nuclear Power
By 1980 I
decided to move from smog-filled Irvine to another
California location, setting my sights first on the
town of Eureka. But, once I noticed the presence of
a nuclear power plant nearby, I moved to Oregon. I
did so because the horrors of nuclear power were
evident by then. In 1977, for example, Ralph Nader
and John Abbot wrote (The Menace of Atomic
Energy):
“What
technology has had the potential for both
inadvertent and willful mass destruction . . . for
wiping out cities and contaminating states after an
accident, a natural calamity, or sabotage? What
technology has been so unnecessary, so avoidable by
simple thrift or by deployment of renewable energy
supplies?”
In
the long run, nuclear power is probably not a
net generator of electricity and it is not, on its
own, economically viable (and even if it were, do we
really need to split the atom to boil water?). It
was created thanks to massive government subsidies
to begin with. Moreover, it now exists thanks to
government largesse (e.g., since no insurance
company in its right mind would insure nuclear power
reactors, the nuclear industry says it will build
them only if the taxpayers underwrite “liability
for future accidents.”)
Two of the
three most devastating nuclear power accidents took
place in the former Soviet Union, even though that
Union had ample fossil fuels and renewable energy
resources. Moreover, if anyone had any doubts about
nuclear power, the horrors of Fukushima (the worst
is yet to become apparent) should have settled the
issue. And if Fukushima was not enough, we must now
cross our fingers that collapsing Ukraine with its
19 nuclear power plants will not be visited soon by
yet
another Chernobyl.
Russia’s
rulers should know all this, and yet they are hell
bent on creating a lot more of these Frankenstein
Monsters for domestic use (one new plant every
year from now till 2028) and for exports (29 or
more–but see
this). This
amounts to a disheartening 37% of the “civil
nuclear facilities under construction globally.”
Oil
Spills
“Russian
oil industry spills more than 30 million barrels on
land each year — seven times the amount that escaped
during the Deepwater Horizon disaster — often under
a veil of secrecy and corruption. And every 18
months, more than four million barrels spews into
the Arctic Ocean, where it becomes everyone’s
problem.”
V. Real Democracy: No
Meaningful Difference between Russia and America
“A certain
class of people—sociopaths—are now fully in control
of major American institutions.”—Doug
Casey, 2016
Most people
readily condemn dictatorial and totalitarian regimes
but approve of representative “democracies.” True,
such “democracies” might now and then serve the
cause of liberty or justice—as they did at times in
the American republic during Jefferson’s presidency.
But such “democracies” are bound to undergo decay—as
happened in the USA from the very start (e.g.,
genocide of Native Americans and the suppression of
the entirely justified Shay Rebellion)—a slow
process of decay that in the USA is now approaching
fascism.
Likewise,
the Russia we see today, where the government has
somewhat improved the lot of the people and
protected them from foreign occupiers, is a
transitory phase. Eventually, the backstabbers—the
people who are willing to commit any crime and
treachery to enrich and empower themselves—are bound
to rise to the top. What you always get at the end (if
not now?) is the Ascendancy of the
Psychopaths. With Russian-style representative
democracy, it’s just a matter of time before the
invasion of the democracy snatchers.
I have
argued elsewhere that only real democracy
can minimize the chances of such a tragic outcome.
That is, the people are comparatively safe only when
they themselves “make all major political, legal,
and judicial decisions.”
Russia
tragically ignored both this irrefutable logic and
the historical record; instead of choosing real
democracy, it aped the Western “democratic” model.
Even some of the best Russian minds succumbed to
Western propaganda, failing to see that Western
“democracies” were in fact oligarchies that would
make Syracuse under Dionysius (inventor of the Sword
of
Damocles soiree) a shining example of liberty
and equality.
So now and
then, the current leadership of Russia does make a
stab at serving the people and protecting them from
foreign occupiers. Sooner or later, Russia will turn
into a criminal network that use brutality and
violence to enforce its “control over given areas
and to terrorize others.”
VI. Social Justice:
Curbing the Power of Oligarchs and Closing the Gap
between Rich and Poor
“The
elephant in the room of Russian politics is that a
handful of shysters basically stole Russia’s most
valuable companies in the 90s, minting a small
handful of mega-billionaires, while the rest of the
country ate dirt. The ace up Putin’s sleeve if ever
he were in need of a popularity boost, would be to
strip said shysters of their ill-gotten gains, and
redistribute shares to the people. The temptation to
rectify the injustice is just too large for it not
to happen, so it really is only a matter of time.”
And yet,
despite some laudable moves, the injustice is
growing by leaps and bounds!
“One
percent of the richest people in Russia now own 71
per cent of the country’s wealth. . . . high levels
of inequality persisted and even increased
throughout most of the 2000s. . . . Social
inequalities along gender, ethnic, age, and other
lines are another characteristic of contemporary
Russian society. . . . Women, elderly people,
homeless people, migrants, etc. regularly face
discrimination in the country.
“The high
cost of modern housing renders it inaccessible for
the majority of the population; in 2010, only 19.8
per cent of families could afford to buy new housing
with their own savings and/or loans. For the rest,
even rent often appears unaffordable; today around
half of all young adults (age 21–40) in Russia live
with extended family.
“Economic
inequality, according to the views of the Russian
population, leads to inequality before the law. More
than 70 per cent of Russians believe that the
current judicial system in Russia protects the
interests of rich and influential people more often
than the interests of common
people.”
“The number
of billionaires has grown at a staggering rate since
2000. According to the Forbes list, there
were no dollar billionaires in Russia in 2000. By
2003 there were already 17, and by 2008 this figure
had risen to 87. After the crisis of 2008, another
23 billionaires had joined the list. In its report,
Credit Suisse stated that the ‘survival chances’ of
billionaires in Russia are higher than in any other
BRIC or G7 country, and the super-rich in Russia
apparently enjoy an especially high level of
protection from the state.
“The broad
mass of the population lives in varying degrees of
poverty.
“The
destruction of the forms of social ownership created
by the October Revolution has led to inequality
levels and a social disaster of historic
proportions.”
VII. Merchants of Death
“Russian
companies make and sell enough weapons for Russia to
remain the second largest exporter [behind the USA]
of arms in the world with the portfolio of
outstanding orders for Russian-made arms exceeding
$40
billion.”
VIII. Incarceration
Nation
Incarceration statistics tell us a great deal about
a country’s comparative freedom, poverty,
criminality, justice system, corruption, internal
policies, popular discontent, profound
misconceptions about the limits of the criminal
sanction, and moral decay. On this score again,
the USA is #2 (with 698 prisoners per 100,000
inhabitants, just behind #1 tiny Seychelles),
while Russia might (or might
not) be #12 (445 per 100,000). By comparison,
the respective numbers for Iceland and India are 45
and 33.
IX. Banking: Same
ownership as the West
“The issue
which has swept down the centuries, and which will
have to be fought sooner or later, is the people
versus the banks.”—John Acton (1834-1902)
Before
talking about Russia, we need to say a few words
about central banking in America and the West.
As we have
seen, we live now in an upside-down world of
perpetual war, tyranny, injustice, materialism,
selfishness, starvation, monstrous income
inequalities, and ever-growing prospects of
human extinction. But this, by itself,
constitutes a paradox, because our planet can
comfortably provide a decent life for every soul on
it. The chaos and suffering must therefore be
traced, at least in part, to our rulers.
The ruling
clique controlling the U.S., U.K., and most other
countries of the world is probably made up of
billionaires, generals, and spooks. The best guess
is that, at the apex of the pyramid of power and
riches, there resides a handful of banking families
dedicated to an inter-generational project of
enslaving, and perhaps even exterminating, humanity.
We have been warned repeatedly over the centuries
that, sooner or later, humanity will have to wage an
all-out war on these villainous bankers. A brief
history of Central Banking shows that in their war
against us, the bankers have not only relied on
mind control, human failings, co-option,
sunshine bribery, rigged elections, contrived
terror, and false flag operations, but that they
often
murdered influential opponents and just about
anyone
else who could possibly impede their project of
world domination.
Originally,
the bankers acquired wealth through the fractional
reserve
scam. This in turn gave rise to numerous other
scams, hoaxes, and machinations, needlessly dragging
us to wars, fascism, poverty, helplessness, massive
transfer of wealth from the people to the bankers,
declining health, and a probable environmental
catastrophe.
One quote
in particular, provided a dire warning to the
American people from the very start:
William Pitt, Chancellor of the Exchequer, said
of the inauguration of the first privately-owned
central bank of the United States under Alexander
Hamilton:
”Let the
American people go into their debt-funding schemes
and banking systems, and from that hour their
boasted independence will be a mere phantom.”
Such
warnings have been issued repeatedly since 1694 (the
fateful year when the Bank of England was chartered,
a bank whose owners have gradually expanded their
influence to the entire world). Here are few
warnings (many more can be found
here):
U.S.
Presidential candidate William Jennings Bryan
said [1896]:
“We believe
that the right to coin and issue money is a function
of government. . . . It is a part of sovereignty,
and can no more with safety be delegated to private
individuals than we could afford to delegate to
private individuals the power to make penal statutes
or levy taxes. . . . I stand with Jefferson . . .
that the issue of money is a function of government,
and that the banks ought to go out of the governing
business . . . When we have restored the money of
the Constitution, all other reforms will be
possible, but until this is done there is no other
reform that can be accomplished.”
Canadian Prime Minister William Lyon Mackenzie King
(1935):
“Until
the control of the issue of currency and credit is
restored to government and recognized as its most
conspicuous and sacred responsibility, all talk of
the sovereignty of Parliament and of democracy is
idle and futile.”
And here is
one of hundreds contemporary warnings (Charles
Hugh-Smith, 2015):
“If we
don’t change the way money is created and
distributed, nothing really changes: wealth
inequality will keep rising, governance will remain
a bidding process of the wealthy, wages will
continue stagnating, etc.”
All this
raises a fundamental question: Who owns and controls
Russia’s Central Bank?
The answer
is plain. The same parasitic bankers that enslave
Western “democracies,” the same bankers that are
behind perpetual warfare on humanity, the same
bankers that conduct false terror operations to
achieve their goals, the same bankers that are
destroying our planet’s life support systems, the
same bankers that are stealing everything everywhere
on earth, the same bankers that pose the gravest
risk to our few remaining liberties—are controlling
the issuance of money and the finances of the
Russian Federation.
The most
meticulous documentation of this paradoxical reality
known to me comes from Russian historian Nikolay
Starikov’s Rouble Nationalization (you can
read a book review
here or freely download the entire book
here):
“The
structure of today’s world is a financial one par
excellence. Today’s chains consist not of iron and
shackles, but of figures, currencies and debts.
That’s why the road to freedom for Russia, as
strange as it may seem, lies in the financial
sphere. Today we are being held back from the
progress at our most painful point—our rouble. . .
. Our rouble, the Russian currency unit, is—to put
it delicately—in a way, not quite ours. And this
situation is the most serious obstacle to our
country’s development. . . .
“Let us
start with the simplest question—who issues roubles?
This is easy—the Central Bank of Russia, also known
as the Bank of Russia, has the monopoly on issuing
the Russian national currency.
“‘Article
6. The Bank of Russia is authorized to file suits in
courts in accordance with the legislation of the
Russian Federation. The Bank of Russia is entitled
to appeal to international courts, courts of foreign
countries and courts of arbitration for protection
of its rights. . . .
“The
Russian economy does not have as much money as
required for its proper operation but equal to the
amount of dollars in the reserves of the Central
Bank. The amount of roubles that can be issued
depends of the amount of dollars Russia received for
its oil and gas. That means that the whole Russian
economy is artificially put in direct correlation
with the export of natural resources. This is why
a drop in oil prices causes a collapse of everything
and everywhere. . . .
“An
idea of a bank independent from the state was
brought into the Soviet Union as a Trojan
horse—through ‘advisors’, through those who had
practical trainings at Columbia University, those
who were recruited or simply betrayed their country
. . .
“Among
other things, it contains such amusing details as
article 7: ‘Drafts of federal law and regulatory
documents of the federal bodies of executive power
concerning duties of the Bank of Russia and its
performance shall be submitted to the Bank of Russia
for approval.’ If you want to dismiss bankers
through making amendments to the legislation—kindly
submit the draft of the bill to them in advance.
Otherwise, they might as well sue you for your legal
mayhem in a court of Delaware . . .
“The
second security level is the Constitution, as the
‘reformers’ shoved some words on the Central Bank
and its status even into the Constitution. Article
75 (points 1 and 2) says that ‘the currency of the
Russian Federation is the rouble’, and ‘issuing of
money shall only be done by the Central Bank of the
Russian Federation’, that ‘it performs independently
from any other governing bodies.’ If you want to be
surprised—have a look at Soviet Constitutions. Read
the Constitution of the USA. You will find no
mention of a bank that issues money independently
anywhere, because such articles should not be a part
of the main law of the country. What body issues the
currency is a technical question, it is not
fundamental for the country and its people. For the
people it is not very significant, but it is a key
issue for enslaving the country. That is why it was
hastily dragged into the Constitution. And now this
technical detail is there next to the fundamental
rights of Russian citizens.”
Most
truthful observers hold the same view. We have
earlier discussed the views of Michael Hudson
regarding the related paradox (that of Russia
financing its own destruction), a paradox which can
be best explained by the fact that Russian finances
are under the control of international bankers. But
just to dispel any doubts, let me cite a few other
observers:
F. William Engdahl
(2015):
“The key to
Russia’s economy, to any economy for that matter, is
the question of who controls the issue and
circulation of credit or money, and whether they do
it to serve, directly or indirectly, private special
interests or for the common national good. . . . The
Russian Central Bank . . . [has] de facto life and
death power over Russia’s economy. With Article 75
the Russian Federation de facto gave away
sovereignty over her most essential power–the power
to issue money and create credit.”
And (2015):
“The
prospect that there may be collaborators and fifth
columnists at Russia’s Central Bank should surprise
no one. The RCB is an independent organization that
serves the interests of global capital and regional
oligarchs the same as central banks everywhere.”
Valentin Katasonov
(2015):
“Yeltsin,
for example, needed correctly educated and
brought-up ‘advisors’. They were needed to present
the law on the Central Bank of Russia at the right
moment which hardly did less damage than a whole
army of invaders in making Russia lose its
sovereignty.”
Paul Craig Roberts
(2015):
“Putin
needs to clear out the traitors who run the Russian
central bank and serve the interests of foreign
capital at the expense of Russia’s interest.”
The “Saker”
(2014):
“Putin
rejects the western political model while apparently
still fully endorsing its economic model.”
Mikhail Khazin
(2016):
“All the
real levers of running [Russia’s] economy and
finance remain in the hands of people placed there
by the very same global financial elite.”
***
Needless to
say, this reality—that Russia’s all-important
economy and central bank are controlled by the same
people who control the Federal Reserve—is consistent
with the view that the Russian government is just
another criminal gang looking for turf. What’s more,
this reality is even consistent with the view that
both sides of the Russo-American conflict are simply
following the orders of their common banking
overlords.
Could
Russia’s Ambivalence be Explained?
I call it
the Madman Theory, Bob. I want the North Vietnamese
to believe I’ve reached the point where I might do
anything to stop the war. We’ll just slip the word
to them that, “for God’s sake, you know Nixon is
obsessed about Communism. We can’t restrain him when
he’s angry—and he has his hand on the nuclear
button—and Ho Chi Minh himself will be in Paris in
two days begging for peace.—Richard
Nixon, 1968
Why does
Russia take enormous risks in Syria but fails to
take the crucial steps of nationalizing its Central
Bank and thereby weaken its chief adversary more
than any military action possibly could? Why does it
let the Rockefellers run its economy? Why didn’t
Russia set Syria free from the empire’s brainwashed,
crazed, foreign mercenaries by sending large enough
ground forces to liberate the whole of Syria in a
few weeks, instead of giving its enemies plenty of
time to undermine Syria’s independence and
territorial integrity? Why in heaven’s name did
Russia
betray its natural allies Iran and Libya at the
United Nations Security Council? Why does it ban
GMOs but still insist on boiling more and more water
with a radioactive witch’s brew? Why doesn’t Russia
take the stolen money and resources from all
the criminal, Western-propped, oligarchs and return
them to the people? Why does Russia simultaneously
act for and against the interests of its people and
of humanity as a whole?
It is
doubtful that anyone—including the Russian
leadership itself—knows the answer. Here, instead,
are a few guesses.
1. One
intriguing explanation has been recently put forward
by the
“Saker.” According to him, real power in Russia
is held by two principal camps. The first is
comprised of the “Atlantic Integrationists,” the
oligarchs who connive to make Russia join the West
as a junior partner. These Integrationists
“are still
in full control of the Russian financial and banking
sector, of all the key economic ministries and
government positions, they control the Russian
Central Bank and they are, by far, the single
biggest threat to the rule of Putin and . . . to the
Russian people and Russia as a whole.”
The second
camp is comprised of “Eurasian Sovereignists” whose
goal is “to fully sovereignize Russia and make her a
key element in a multi-polar but unified Eurasian
continent.” This camp enjoys the support of 90% of
the Russian people and the military, police, and
intelligence services.
The balance
between these two inimical factions has only
recently reached a 50/50 point of (unstable)
equilibrium. Putin, we are assured, “is a very
good man in charge of a very bad system.” His acts
cautiously and timidly because his hands are tied
and because he must always watch his back and
prevent his overthrow.
So it’s
just a matter of time until Putin and his faction
“crack down on the Central Bank and the economy
ministries.”
I don’t
find this explanation persuasive. Since Putin enjoys
the support of the Russian people, police, army, and
intelligence services, the solution to this 50/50
configuration is simple. Dismiss the fifth
columnists, return most of their wealth to where it
belongs (the Russian people), and offer them a deal
they can’t refuse: Prison terms for murders and
thefts, or comfortable retirement in Russia with a
few millions of their ill-gotten gains intact.
2. A
second, more convincing explanation for Russian
puzzling timidity is again offered by the
Saker:
“I am
sure that Putin fully realizes that, at least
potentially, his policy of resistance,
sovereignization and liberation can lead to an
intercontinental nuclear war and that Russia is
currently still weaker than the AngloZionist
Empire. Just as in the times of Stolypin, Russia
desperately needs a few more years of peace to
develop herself and fully stand up.”
3. The
situation could be worse. Throughout the first
chapter of the Cold War (1945-90), Russia was always
lagging behind. Even the Cuban Missile Crisis,
according to one
source, was a sadly asymmetrical standoff. Does
the Invisible Government of the UK/US still possess
a decisive military trump card which forces Russia
to tread with extreme caution?
4. A
slight variation of this speculates that Putin knows
he is dealing with Dr. Strangeloves and General
LeMays. These madmen have been terrorizing the world
for a quarter of a century with impunity and are not
yet psychologically reconciled to a position of
primus inter pares (first among equals). Perhaps,
Russian policy makers might feel, the madmen
controlling Washington need time to adjust to new
realities. Russia’s foreign minister
put it this way:
“The West’s
total domination . . . is in the midst of a long
transition period to a more durable system in which
there will not be one or even two dominant
poles–there will be several. The transition period
is long and painful. Old habits die slowly. We all
understand this.”
5. The
Russians might suspect that the American empire
might be close to
self-destruction. Russia must avoid at all costs
an all-out nuclear war and merely give the empire
enough rope to hang itself.
6.
There is no reason to believe that run-of-the-mill
politicians are smarter, better educated, or endowed
with a more holistic vision of the world than most
plumbers, basketball players, scientists, or other
specialists. In this world of ours, it is only a
rare individual who can achieve both power and
wisdom. So it is conceivable that Russian leaders
operate in the dark when it comes to understanding
and reacting to such complex challenges as
psychopathy, climate change, nuclear power,
overpopulation, dollar hegemony, or banking.
7.
London and Washington have a long, indisputable,
tradition of assassinating their opponents. In fact,
assassinations constitute one of the
seven pillars of their power. For example,
Nikolai Starikov, a contemporary Russian historian,
presents strong
evidence that the English government murdered
Stalin and, before that, almost all the descendants
of Louis XIV of France. The evidence that this
practice continues to the present day is
conclusive, with a higher level of probability
than the assertion that tobacco kills. By now the
Invisible Government has perfected its assassination
technology to the point of killing with impunity,
without anyone being able to definitely prove their
involvement. Could the timidity of Russia’s leaders
be traced to their justified fear for their very own
lives?
8. The
City of London and Wall Street have been bribing
their way to victory for centuries. Could they
likewise be bribing, or promising the moon, to a
powerful segment of the Russian leadership?
9. For
centuries, Russian leaders appear to have been under
the spell of Western snake charmers. Before
Tolstoy’s time, the Russian upper class preferred
French to its own beautiful language and some
Russian intellectuals hoped that Napoleon would
conquer Russia. Later, some Russian intellectuals,
seeing the horrors of Stalinism,
strove for American victory in the Cold War
(until their dream came true and they realized that
they naively undermined their own people and
culture). The same psychology, the same unjustified
but deep-seated inferiority complex, could explain
Russian failure to react decisively to the
existential threats it faces now.
10. We
know that the key institutions in Russia—its central
bank and finance ministries—are controlled by the
same bankers who control Washington. Isn’t it
reasonable to assume that the Russian government is
under the control of these bankers too?
11.
The last explanation that comes to mind can be best
introduced with the perceptive short story “Lather
and Nothing Else,” of Colombian writer Hernando
Téllez.
The setting
is a barbershop in a Colombian town. The narrator is
the barber, a member of the revolutionary movement
struggling against a banker-propped savage
oligarchy. A captain of the Colombian version of the
Death Squads enters the barbershop to have a shave.
This captain, the revolutionary barber knows, is a
fiendish cutthroat trying to scare the townspeople
into submission. Recently, the captain forced the
entire town to witness the brutal execution and
mutilation of four of the barber’s fellow
revolutionaries. The four were stripped naked, hung,
and then certain parts of their bodies were used for
target practice. The captain also tells the narrator
of his plan to kill and torture more prisoners later
that day.
The
narrator, holding a sharp razor in his hands and
attending to the defenseless murderer, faces a
wrenching dilemma. On the one hand, he knows he
should kill the villain, if only to delay the
impending doom of his imprisoned comrades. On the
other hand, he knows that such an action would
either cost him his life or radically alter it. He
recoils from the image of cutting throats, of
snuffing out the life of a monster in the shape of a
human being. He also feels that “he is a
revolutionary, not a murderer.” What he wants in
life is “lather and nothing else.”
Throughout
the shaving session, the narrator believes that the
captain knows nothing of his, the barber’s,
revolutionary sympathies or internal struggle. At
the end, upon leaving unscathed, the Death Squad
captain says: “They told me that you’d kill me. I
came to find out. But killing isn’t easy.”
It could be
that the current Russian leadership finds itself in
a similar situation to that barber. For the enemies
of Russia, scruples are incomprehensible at best,
contemptible at worst. To win against such villains,
the leaders of Russia must employ their opponents’
tactics. But for good people, this is easier said
than done. Could it be that the Russian leadership
is just too decent or timid to engage in
assassinations, regime changes, destabilizations,
and genocides?
These are
all the possible explanations I can cull from the
literature or come up with at the moment. No doubt
such explanations or others, separately or jointly,
account for the paradox of Russian indecisiveness.
Regardless
of the correct explanation, no one could accuse the
Russian leadership of competently and wholeheartedly
fighting for a better, safer, freer, and fairer
world.
The Balance
Sheet
Instead of
a clearcut resolution, our backbreaking game of
chess ended in a stalemate. Before trying to make
sense of this outcome, let’s summarize it.
We began
with the question: Should those of us who are aware
and who care support Moscow’s struggle against
Washington or should we view it as a struggle
between two competing criminal gangs?
We next
showed that the USA is indeed controlled by a
criminal network, and provided a brief review of the
1990s plunder of Russia by America’s rulers.
We then
moved on to explore the provocative statement that
the Russian government is just another version of
organized—and legal—crime. This survey yielded the
following results:
- For
ordinary Russians, Putin’s rise to power was a
mini-miracle. Suddenly, a government appeared in
Moscow that stopped the plunder and
disintegration of the Gorbachev and Yeltsin
years, and restored normalcy. Poverty,
lawlessness, and corruption declined, life
expectancy, industrial production, and
agriculture vastly improved, the further
disintegration of the Russian Federation was
brought to an end, CIA efforts to destabilize
Russia were counteracted, Crimea was restored,
the vicious attempt of overthrowing the
democratically elected secular government of
Syria is being thwarted by military means,
defense capabilities were vastly improved, and
the power of the criminal oligarchs have been
diminished. Russians could again feel proud of
their country and heritage, and they could, at
long last, trust their government.
- On the
military and political front, Russia is standing
up to American imperialism and is apparently
striving to resurrect the multipolar world of
the Cold War years. If it succeeds, this can
only be welcomed by the world’s war-weary
people, especially by countries trying to escape
the depredations of the bankers and strike an
independent path. Paradoxically though, on many
other occasions involving its allies and vital
interests, Moscow turned a blind eye while the
Invisible Government turned country after
country into a wasteland. Likewise, on the
economic front, Russia is actually enabling the
strangulation of its economy and currency as
well as financing its own military encirclement
and eventual conquest.
- The
same perplexing indecisiveness is observed in
the critical information wars. While Russia has
taken some steps in presenting its version of
events to the world, and while it limits the
Invisible Government’s control of its media,
Russian TV is for the most part owned by the
state, the Russian media suppresses inconvenient
truths and genuine dissent, and they often
parrot American lies instead of exposing them.
- Russia
and America are equally indifferent to
humanity’s environmental predicament. The only
bright spots in Russia’s environmental record is
its incipient opposition to genetically modified
crops and to
Rockefeller medicine and its intention to
pursue organic agriculture. Apart from that,
Russia mimics or even outdoes America in its
attack on the biosphere and the health of its
people. For instance, it learned nothing from
its own nuclear catastrophes in
Kyshtym and Chernobyl and is developing
nuclear power for exports and domestic
consumption. Or, to take another example, Russia
does nothing to mitigate the specter of climate
disruptions.
-
Instead of establishing
real democracy, Russia aped the Western
model of representative “democracy.” Even at the
best of times, such “democracies” do not
represent the interests of ordinary people.
Sooner or later, they are doomed to be taken
over by psychopaths.
- “A
handful of shysters basically stole Russia’s
most valuable companies in the 90s, minting a
small handful of mega-billionaires, while the
rest of the country ate”—and is still
eating—dirt. Very little has so far been done
“to strip said shysters of their ill-gotten
gains, and redistribute shares to the people.”
As a result, unlike the much-maligned Soviet
Union, Russia is plagued by vast income
inequalities, poverty for the majority,
inequality before the law, and unaffordable
housing.
- Russia
is the second largest exporter of killing
machines in the world (behind the USA), and,
allegedly, #12 incarceration nation (the USA is
#2).
-
Incredibly, Russia’s central bank and economy
are under foreign control. Unless the Russian
Constitution is overhauled, and unless Russia
regains control of its economy and currency,
Russia is sure to follow the disastrous,
life-destroying,
path of countries ruled by and for bankers.
The
Russian Phoenix: Hope or Illusion?
The madmen
are planning the end of the world. What they call
continued progress in atomic warfare means universal
extermination, and what they call national security
is organized suicide.—Lewis
Mumford, 1946
We have now
assembled, in one place, some facts and arguments
about the bewildering ambivalence of the current
Russian government—enough, hopefully, for readers to
make up their own minds.
For my
part, this assemblage suggests the following
tentative resolution.
To begin
with, I feel that this issue can be best addressed
by asking two questions, not just one.
The first
question is: Should we—humanitarians or
revolutionaries—sympathize with Russia in its
current half-hearted struggle with the Invisible
Government?
My answer
to this question depends on the validity of Brandon
Smith’s hunch that Russia and the U.S. are dueling
in a fake gladiator match. If his hunch turns out to
be correct, then that match is no concern of ours.
But if the
Russian government is nothing more than a criminal
network competing with other networks for turf, or
if, as appears more likely, it is a government that
is partially committed to strengthening Russia and
improving the lives of ordinary people, then our
sympathies should be with Russia. Unlike the
American or English governments of the last 15
years, the Kremlin during that time has made Russia
stronger and happier. Moreover, if Russia succeeds
in restoring a multipolar world, the vast majority
of people everywhere will benefit. To see this, you
only need to compare living conditions of ordinary
people in Crimea to the rest of Ukraine, in Syria
(where hope is still alive and where depleted
uranium is not yet contaminating the land) to Iraq,
in the USA and the West before and after Soviet
collapse. And, Russian success would open a
much-needed space for humanitarian and revolutionary
struggles everywhere.
The second
question is: Should we dedicate our meager resources
exclusively to our own revolutionary
program, or should we also divert some resources
to Russia’s dubious struggle for building an
alternative to the Invisible Government?
In the long
run, it makes little difference to the world’s
people and to the future of humanity if the bankers
exercise their vicious rule through the City of
London, Wall Street, Beijing, Moscow, Timbuktu—or an
habitable planet of Alpha Centauri. Moreover, absent
sweeping reforms, it is unrealistic to expect Russia
to come even close to realizing the dream of a more
free, just, peaceful, and survivable world. If we
share that dream, then all our resources should be
dedicated to its single-minded pursuit.
To sum up
my own appraisal. Progressives and revolutionaries
of every nation on earth ought to sympathize with
the Russian government’s struggle against the
bankers. However, they cannot realistically expect
that government to do their work for them. When it
comes to the crucial struggle for survival, freedom,
peace, and justice, they are on their own.
Moti Nissani
is professor emeritus, Wayne State University,
interdisciplinarian, and compiler of
A Revolutionary’s Toolkit.
© The Greanville Post |