Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 4 – The decision by
the Trump Administration to substitute at the last minute a list compiled from
other publicly available enumerations made by others for a specific list that
an inter-agency working group had been preparing for months discredits the United
States government and is a gift for Vladimir Putin, according to Andrey Illarionov.
In an interview to Elena Poskannaya
of the Gordon news agency, the Russian economist who now works in Washington at
the Cato Institute, said he was shocked by what has taken place (gordonua.com/publications/illarionov-tramp-ili-ego-sotrudniki-predprinyali-deystviya-v-rezultate-kotoryh-publikaciya-originalnogo-kremlevskogo-doklada-ne-proizoshla-229912.html).
On January 29th, when the
US administration was required to release the report on Russians who should be
subject to sanctions for their criminal activities and when people in Moscow
were worried about who would be on that list and what would happen to them as a
result, some strange things happened.
On that day, “the report was not
published at 9:00 am or at 12:00 or even at 6:00 in the evening when the
working day ends. It was released 12 minutes before the deadline of midnight. And it was not published on the sites of the
government agencies which had been involved in its compilation. Instead, it was
distributed via news agencies alone.
That in itself is “extremely
unusual,” Illarionov says, especially in the case of a document that the
Congress by law has required the executive branch to prepare and release. It
quickly was established, he continues, that the list released wasn’t the
original one but rather had been put together by combining part of Russian government’s
telephone list, Forbes’ list of Russian billionaires, and two others.
Moreover, it quickly became obvious
that those putting out the substitute list had done so in such a hurry that
they hadn’t corrected the other lists or reflected that someone on the Russian
government’s telephone list – like Russia’s chief archivist – were hardly the
political targets the Congressional action had required to be identified.
Perhaps worst of
all, Illarionov continues, the list reflected a certain confusion about the
nature of oligarchs. “An oligarch and
someone who has money are very different things. In contemporary Russian, the
term ‘oligarch’ is applied to a rich man who has influence on the decisions of
power.” Not all of the 96 names on the Forbes list fit that category.
“No one expected that the US
administration was capable” of this, what to all intents and purposes appears
to be “a failed joke.” Many were shocked not by the impact of the list but by
what is says about “the low quality of work of the present American
administration” on a matter of the greatest importance.
Illarionov says that as for himself,
he “couldn’t imagine that this was possible, that the report wasn’t posted on
the sites of the government agencies involved,” although that gives the basis
for concluding that the staff of these institutions “don’t take it seriously”
and want to “preserve their reputation and professional honor.”
As for Putin, he continues, “this
was a very valuable present from all points of view,” especially given that the
American incompetence allows him to suggest that the Americans aren’t being
careful in targeting this or that group of Russians but are acting as “total
Russophobes.”
“Basing oneself on the published
part of the report, you can’t dispute this argument. Such a report will bring
only harm,” Illarionov says.
One of the goals of the law calling
for this report and for sanctions was “to separate the sheep from the goats,”
to give those within Moscow the chance to “distance themselves from Putin
personally and his immediate entourage and from the criminal and corrupt
decisions of this regime as far as possible.”
“Instead,” the Cato scholar says, “what
has been obtained is exactly the opposite: for people far from the Putin
regime, there is no now reason to distance themselves because the American
administration has pained them all in one color.”
What has happened since the substitute
report was released has made the situation even worse, Illarionov continues. In
his State of the Union speech, Trump mentioned Russia only in the context of
being a competitor of the US and made no reference to sanctions even though he
discussed those in detail in terms of the other countries the US has imposed them
on.
Moreover, three leaders of the Russian
security services, despite the fact that two of them are under US sanctions,
visited Washington, with the US government lifting sanctions “in the interests
of national security.” (See hwindowoneurasia2.blogspot.com/2018/02/in-interests-of-national-security-us.html.)
There are too many coincidences to
ignore, Illarionov says, and that gives new impetus to the question “Who is Mr.
Trump?”
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