Paul
Goble
Staunton, September 10 – US President
Barack Obama put his finger on what Vladimir Putin is about when he said after
his meeting with the Kremlin leader that there is “a trust gap” between Putin
and the rest of the world, a gap that Putin has created by lying about
everything all of the time, Igor Yakovenko says.
Putin first created this “trust gap”
within Russia and has extended it to the world as a whole in what the Moscow
commentator suggests constitutes “a world war against trust,” one that Putin
cannot hope to win but that is already causing enormous problems for other
countries and for Russia itself (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=57D3ABB57D54F).
It is difficult to describe just how
large this gap has become because “Putin lies all the time. He lied by saying that
Russian forces weren’t in Crimea. Then he himself rejected this lie but
continued to lie that Crimea itself, without any pressure had conducted a
referendum in correspondence with international law.”
Now, the Kremlin leader “lies when
he says that there are no Russian soldiers in the Donbass and that Russia is
not sending arms” to them. “He lies that the LDNR and Russia do not have any
relation to the destruction of the Malaysian Boeing. [And] he lies when he says
that the Russian air force is bombing only ISIS terrorists.”
What this means, Yakovenko says, is that
“the Putin lie has become one of the chief challenges to the world at the
beginning of the 21st century. All politicians of the world know that Putin
lies all the time.” They can’t ignore Russia, but they are reacting to this by
lowering the level of contacts (the US), not shaking his hand (the UK), or trying
for compromises (Japan).
In response to Japanese Prime
Minister Shinzo Abe, Putin himself talked about the need for “mutual agreement”
on the basis of “heightened trust.” But
Putin is conducting a war against such trust and thus his words have a completely
different meaning than what they would mean if used by anyone else.
With regard to the dispute over the
Northern Territories (the Kuriles), Putin made five points: First, he said, “Russia
doesn’t trade in territories.” Second, he said that he recognized the 1956
accord which called for returning two of the islands to Japan. Third, he spoke
about the need for “lengthy negotiations.” Fourth, he said, any resolution “must
be a compromise.”
And “fifth and most important, there
must be ‘a high level of trust,’” which Putin defined not as anyone else would
but rather as Japan’s agreement to accept Russia’s actions in Ukraine and
Moscow’s dominance over the post-Soviet space and also Tokyo’s willingness to
end its security cooperation with the United States.
Besides the obvious internal
contradictions of Putin’s declaration, there is another aspect of his remarks
to Abe that merits attention: the Kremlin leader hopes to force all countries
to deal with Russia on a bilateral basis rather than as members of communities
of trust. Hence he is working to destroy those communities.
That reflects Putin’s work in the
KGB, where “the result of recruitment always is the establishment of
patron-client relationships” rather than relationships based on trust. And this
is behind his attack on the EU, “the largest ‘trust factory’ on the planet.” He
has attacked it directly and used others, including ISIS, to weaken that
collective “trust” group.
According to Yakovenko, “Putin is
not an ideologue and therefore will not write a book, ‘Mein Kampf with Trust.’
And he clearly does not consider his activities in such categories. But if such a book were to appear, it would
have two parts,” the first devoted to Putin’s war on trust inside Russia up to
2014, and the second to his war against it internationally since that time.
Putin has achieved many of his goals
domestically, but his chances for victory in this war internationally are
non-existent. Unfortunately, the Moscow
commentator says, he has a great chance to inflict misfortunes of various kinds
on others – even while the chances he is inflicting damage on his own country
remain high as well.
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