Paul
Goble
Staunton, July 15 – Like his Soviet
and Russian predecessors, Vladimir Putin is given to whataboutism, the term which refers to a proclivity to invoke in
any discussion about or with the Americans a supposedly clinching argument “But
in your country, they lynch Negroes?” But
now the Kremlin leader faces a US leader who uses an analogous technique, Ilya
Milshtein says.
That is something new, the Moscow
analyst says; but Donald Trump’s behavior at the NATO summit, in which he attacked
German Chancellor Angela Merkel for paying for Russian gas rather than spending
on defense “was whataboutism in a
pure form” (grani-ru.appspot.com/opinion/milshtein/m.271459.html).
“Looking
back,” he continues, “it is impossible not to remember that the West won the
Cold War because of the maximum firmness of the Americans who led the most
powerful alliance and rejected compromises in clashes with ‘the evil empire.’” The advocates of Ostpolitik, a more
compromising position, argue they made a contribution as well.
But,
however that may be, “had it not been for Reagan, the fraternal Soviet peoples
up to now would be enthusiastically building communism, and the most outstanding
builders would be awarded with tours to the countries of the Warsaw Pact,”
Milshtein argues.
“Now
instead of Reagan, there is Trump who certain hotheaded supporters even compare
with a president wo forced us into perestroika; but this is not a fitting comparison.
To imagine that the earlier Republican would say aloud that Andropov could sometime
become his friend or in response to the invasion of Afghanistan by these future
friends could say that this was under Carter who is guilty of everything is,”
Milshtein says, “impossible.”
“Undoubtedly,
differences of opinion among NATO partners existed even then, but they weren’t
expressed in public let alone in such an ugly way –to the joy of the aggressor.
Reagan was perhaps simple-minded, but he was not, to put it mildly, a cocky
simpleton capable of threatening or imposing sanctions on America’s closest friends
or blackmailing them by threatening to withdraw from NATO.”
When the US president and his
Russian counterpart meet in Helsinki and when each deploys his whataboutism on the other, it is not
hard to predict who will come out ahead. “Behind Vladimir Vladimirovich is a century-old
tradition plus training in the secret school” of the KGB, Milshtein says.
“Behind his friend Donald is only
personal experience in television shows and presidential debates with the likely
assistance of the Kremlin. The forces are clearly unequal,” Milshtein says; but
Trump’s behavior at the NATO meeting suggests that he is in training for a
session with Putin, perhaps an indication that he won’t do as badly as one
fears.
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