Paul
Goble
Staunton, January 20 – Moscow officials
and commentators have treated Barack Obama with “unconcealed hatred” at the end
of his presidency, blaming him for the absence of an agreement between
Washington and Moscow and forgetting how they welcomed him eight years ago and
how he pursued “the reset,” Vitaly Portnikov says.
On the Grani portal today, the
Ukrainian analyst says that Moscow outlets are presenting Obama now as “a
failure, ‘an imperialist,’ an enemy of Russia, and as someone who tried to
block history itself which had opened its parade route for the Putin motorcade”
(graniru.org/opinion/portnikov/m.258150.html).
But
when Obama was first elected, Portnikov continues, many of these same officials
and commentators welcomed him as representing a break from the Bush years or at
least as a better outcome for Moscow than a victory by his Republican
opponent. And they particularly greeted
his pursuit of “a reset” of relations between Moscow and Washington.
And
it is important to remember, the analyst says, that “this was a reset not with the
Russia of Yeltsin with whom Clinton found democracy in his heart, and even not
with the Russia of the early Putin, into whose soul George Bush looked.” Instead,
it was “the same Russia” the civilized world has to deal with today.
What
is that state? One ruled by a clutch of bandits who will do anything to
preserve their wealth and power, one where free media have been destroyed,
where elections are rigged, and one where Moscow feels free to invade
neighboring countries such as Georgia (and more recently Ukraine). In short, an
international outcast.
But
today, Moscow outlets blame Obama for the failure of the reset just as they
have blamed every American president for failing to come to terms with whatever
Russia does and whatever Russia want and for not seeing that Russia is on the
right side of history and that they are not.
And
thus the facts of the case are these: “Obama didn’t reach agreement with Putin
not because he was an arrogant idiot.” He didn’t because he “was a gentleman
who wanted honor from someone who was incapable of it” and who despite his
efforts to find a way forward was always rewarded with “demonstrated deception.”
That
is how Moscow has always behaved and how it has always treated American
presidents, Portnikov says; and he implies that Donald Trump will suffer the
same fate. Undoubtedly, Trump will try
to make a deal: “the American political tradition itself condemns him to such
an attempt.”
But
the Russian political tradition as embodied in the Kremlin dictator dooms this
effort from the start, something that is likely to become obvious to all before
very long.
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