Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 23 – The murder
of the Russian ambassador to Turkey is the first victim of the hatred of Russia
and Russians among the world’s billion Sunni Muslims that Vladimir Putin has
sparked by his support for Syria’s brutal Bashar al-Asad and Russia’s role in
the destruction of Aleppo, Vitaly Portnikov says.
Whatever else Putin and others think
Moscow achieved in Syria, the Ukrainian commentator says, it is now clear that
he has made Russia and Russians into “a real enemy of the Muslim or more
precisely the [dominant] Sunni Muslim world” and that both will pay a high
price for that (graniru.org/opinion/portnikov/m.257661.html).
“I consciously write ‘russkiye’ and
not ‘rossiyane’” because the Muslim anger is more likely to be directed at the
former than those who are Muslim among the latter, Portnikov says. But the
tragedy is that many Muslims will view Ukrainians and Belarusians as if they
are part of the same problem.
In this way, he says, “Vladimir
Putin, the president of an alien country and the enemy o four peoples has made
us a hostage of this hatred.” And as a
result, “we will die for Aleppo all together,” particularly since death will be
visited upon us not by a bullet but by bombs that don’t distinguish carefully
along ethnic or civic lines.
This bomb is going to follow
Russians everywhere in their own country and when they are abroad, he
says. “And no special services will
defend them from such death. The Putin special services are focused on
defending the regime from its own people rather than defending them from those
taking revenge from abroad.”
Putin and his acolytes will not
acknowledge this, of course. He and they will portray “the liberation of Aleppo
from terrorists and the victory of trump as foretastes of new victories for the
supporters of Russia in the West and the possible lifting of sanctions,” and
they will view Ukraine as a country that soon will live again within the borders
of “a single great power.”
` But they will be wrong to do so,
Portnikov argues. Russia after Aleppo is going to experience only “hatred,
blood, death and poverty” although of course, this situation is not the product
of Aleppo alone. The destruction of that city has become “a symbol of the moral
and political decline of the Russian Federation.”
To be sure, “the behavior of the West
which yet again has turned out to be incapable of stopping a mass murder doesn’t
look all that good either. But the West for all its cowardice and inconsistency
has money. Russia for all its decisiveness and cruelty doesn’t.
Consequently, while Trump and the
Europeans may lift sanctions, they cannot turn the clock back, they cannot
restore oil prices to the height “needed for the survival of a marginal regime,”
nor can they “return professionalism to the offices of Russian ministers and other
degrade palace flunkies.”
Most importantly in this context,
the West “cannot defend Russians from terror. Russia can be surrounded by
well-wishers and useful idiots on all sides, but its regime all the same will
not survive just as a cancer victim won’t even when surrounded on all sides by concerned
relatives and attentive caregivers.”
The reason is the same in both: the
tumor is on the inside; and Putin by his actions in Syria has made certain that
it will metasticize in truly horrific and fatal ways.
No comments:
Post a Comment