Paul Goble
Staunton, June 23 – Anti-Americanism
has become part of the discourse of ordinary Russians over the last year, but
senior government officials have generally been restrained in their use of such
phobias. But that has now changed,
“Nezavisimaya gazeta” says, and “anti-American phobias have acquired the status
of the official picture of the world in Russia.”
In
an editorial today, the paper says that Nikolay Patrushev, the secretary of the
Russian Security Council and former head of the FSB, has made it so by his
blunt statements in the course of the interview he gave to Moscow’s
“Kommersant” newspaper this week (ng.ru/editorial/2015-06-23/2_red.html).
Patrushev’s
remarks, “Nezavisimaya” says, are “practically unprecedented” as far as a
senior Russian official is concerned and thus provide clear testimony about
“the level of tension” which now dominates relations between Moscow and
Washington.
As the editors
note, Patrushev said that the US “very much wanted that Russia not exist at all
as a country” and misquoted former US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright in
support of the notion that in the view of Washington, Russia should not retain
either the Far East or Siberia because it doesn’t make good use of them.
Albright did not in fact say that.
To claim otherwise, “Nezavisimaya
gazeta” says, is to engage in talk like those who refer to “the Dulles Plan” or
“the Protocols of the Elders of Zion.”
Patrushev’s decision to do so, to
make use of “invented citations,” is “symptomatic,” the paper says. It shows
that “distrust and anger at the West and especially at the US has become for
the Russian authorities the chief motivating factor” and that anything, whether
it is true or not, is “suitable” for making its arguments.
The Kremlin officials words “mark
out the system of coordinates within which the Russian authorities intend to
act,” the paper says. For them, “the US wants to destroy Russia. De facto this
is an enemy” to be opposed rather than someone with whom one can negotiate. The
Europeans are less committed to the American position, Patrushev suggests.
“For those who support normal relations
with the West, Patrushev’s comments are a warning bell,” the paper continues.
They indicate that anti-Westernism and especially anti-Americanism are “not a
maneuver but a strategic choice” and that Russia’s conflict with the outside
world is reaching “a point of no return.”
The West will respond, “Nezavisimaya
gazeta” says. Indeed, it already has. Germany’s defense minister said yesterday
that “with Russia it is better to speak ‘from a position of strength.’” Thus, the attitudes of one side lead the
attitudes of the other to change and put the two into a dangerous spiral
downward.
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