Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 22 – The Russian economy
is small relative to that of Europe or the United States. It military is hardly
capable of competing with NATO. But “the Kremlin has a secret weapon which no one else in the world
has: enormous criminal financial resources” that Vladimir Putin can deploy to
promote his goals, according to Igor Eidman.
During the time of Putin’s rule, “trillions
of dollars” have flowed out of Russia abroad, a trend that is “not simply a
criminal affair” but rather “the story about the struggle for rule in the world”
designed to promote the goals of the FSB and its master in the Kremlin, the
Russian analyst says (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=58D15268674FA).
(Eidman doesn’t
mention it, but the size of these cash flows out of Russia is now so large that
some banks and countries are afraid to go after Putin’s holdings because of the
enormous profits that they are making from holding or laundering this money (nr2.lt/News/Society/Zapad-poka-hochet-zarabatyvat-na-procentah-putinskih-milliardov-125012.html).
This “criminal
money is the main weapon of the secret war which Putin is conducting against
democracy. It is used for buying off Western elites. Financing propaganda, and
manipulating public opinion as well as for supporting destructive political
forces, organizing hacker attacks, and collecting compromising information and
blackmail of influential people.”
“The goal of all this is a sharp strengthening
of Putin’s influence in the world, splitting the EU and NATO, destroying the
union between Europe and the US, and destabilizing the situation in democratic
countries,” Eidman says. “Now, the most important tasks are sparking hysteria
about the refugee crisis in the EU and unleashing a new conflict in the
Balkans.
Eidman surveys the way Russian money has
been used in Montenegro, Bosnia, Serbia, Bulgaria, Poland, Sweden, Hungary, the
Czech Republic, Germany, France, Italy, and the US. “In addition,” he says, “the
Kremlin also supports ultra-right, separatist and isolationist forces in the UK,
Spain, the Netherlands, Greece and other European countries.”
The way in which Moscow is using its
illegal money to destabilize the situation in the former Soviet republics is “particularly
dangerous,” Eidman says, and thus requires “a separate discussion.”
In many ways, Eidman suggests, “the situation
is like the development of cancer. The
tumor (the Putin corporation) is so large that it is impossible to remove
without harm to the healthy part of the organism. The infected (the West) is
afraid of this and is refusing to have an operation.”
“But if the surgery is put off forever,
the tumor will spread to the point that the life of the victim will be at risk.
And then those ill from it will simply die.” The West needs to recognize this
and to recognize that Putin is using his “dirty money” not only to affect the
political systems of Western countries but also their economies.
Moreover, the West needs to recognize
something else: Even in those relatively few cases where the Russian money
involved is not dirty to begin with – it may have flowed out in completely
legal ways – it has been hijacked by the Kremlin and put to criminally
dangerous political use.
Consequently, Eidman concludes, “the
capital and influence of Russian bureaucrats and oligarchs must be surgically
removed from Western society. Otherwise, the metasticizing of Putinism will not
stop.”
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