Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 30 – Donald Trump,
the Republican candidate for US president, is Vladimir Putin’s “most useful
idiot” not because he is the agent of the Kremlin as some have suggested,
Andrey Piontkovsky says, but rather because he believes what he says about
Russia and thus threatens “the end of the free world as we have known it.”
In a commentary for the Apostrophe
portal, Piontkovsky says that Trump’s willingness to accept Putin’s Anschluss
of Crimea and his unwillingness to defend NATO members in the Baltic region in
the case of a Russian attack cannot be dismissed as “campaign rhetoric.” They
are something much worse (apostrophe.com.ua/article/world/america/2016-07-30/prihod-putina-trampa-k-vlasti-v-ssha---eto-konets-zapada-i-konets-svobodnogo-mira/6497).
The average American voter, he
points out, “isn’t very much interested in Ukraine or the Baltics” and so
talking about these issues in this way at worst means “losing the votes of the Ukrainian
and Baltic communities.” And that shows
that what Trump is saying reflects “his deep foreign policy convictions.”
“In general,” Piontkovsky continues,
“Trump is Putin’s most valuable agent in America,” one more valuable than any
the KGB ever had there. And his greatest value is that “no one recruited him”
and therefore “it is impossible to unmask him” for what he in fact is. And that
is this, the commentator says.
Trump is “simply an exceptionally
useful illiterate bourgeois idiot” who “perfectly sincerely” wants to achieve
the go”als “Putin dreams about: the exit of the US from the world arena, the
dismantling of NATO and the handing over of Ukraine to the complete control of
Putin.”
In short, Piontkovsky says, “Trump
is an idiot who considers himself a patriot of America.” He is thus unlike his closest aides who have
worked for Russia and have financial interests in it. “They know for what and for whom they are
working and in every way support the insane fantasies of their illiterate
chief.”
The Republican candidate is “a
seriously ill man, a paranoid in love with himself who is completely illiterate
when it comes to issues of foreign policy.
[In Russia,] he wouldn’t have become even the head of a rural council.”
His success in attracting supporters thus raises questions about the political
sophistication of the American voters.
Of course, Piontkovsky continues, “Trump’s
readiness to the open surrender to Putin of the European allies of the US is to
a certain extent a continuation of a definite trend in Obama’s policies.” The
current president told “The Atlantic” last spring that “Russians want to rape
Ukraine more than we want to defend it,” and that the West has to deal with
that reality.
Obama’s remarks show that “such
attitudes are quite characteristic for the American political class.” But as
president, Obama has not acted on them whatever he may ultimately believe. Trump in contrast is campaigning to make
those impulses the center of his approach to the world by playing up
isolationism with his adoption of the old slogan of “America First.”
The danger that Trump could come to
power is “quite real. In any case, one cannot exclude it,” even if each day
brings fresh evidence of why he should never be allowed to gain office. And the fact that he is so close to Hillary
Clinton in the polls raises the possibility of an extremely dangerous scenario.
“Imagine for a minute,” Piontkovsky
says, “that somewhere in the middle of October in America occurs a
mega-terrorist act with the obvious participation of Islamists, a large number of
victims, and Barak Husseynovich as always trying to deny this and saying that
Islam here is not involved and that it is a beautiful religion of peace and so
on
That would bring an enormous number
of people over to Trump’s side, the Russian commentator says.
If Trump comes to power, it will be “a
colossal victory for Putin, a victory which the Soviet Union as a superpower
during all the years of the Cold War was not able to achieve.” Indeed, “the coming
to power of Putin-Trump is a threat not only to Ukraine but a threat to the
entire world.”
It would be “the end of the West and
the end of the free world as we have been accustomed to understand it.” It is
thus time, Piontkovsky says, to recognize the danger and to call things by
their proper names lest Putin-Trump come to power in the United States later
this year.
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