Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 27 – Many Americans
have tied themselves in knots trying to figure out which US presidential
candidate Vladimir Putin will again deploy his internet trolls to support, forgetting
that the Kremlin leader’s goal has never been the victory of this or that
individual but rather the undermining of the American political system, Kseniya
Kirillova says.
The US-based Russian journalist
tells Rosbalt observer Aleksandr Zhelenin that what Putin wants is “to see in the
White House an individual who will bring as much chaos into the American system
as possible” and thus allow Moscow to act with impunity because the Americans
will be unable to unite against him (rosbalt.ru/world/2020/02/27/1830196.html).
What Putin wants first of all is to “distract
Americans from thinking about interfering in Russia’s sphere of influence,” a
region that includes not only “the entire post-Soviet space” but “even in part
Eastern Europe.” If the US is focused on
chaos and other problems at home, it won’t be able to block him, Putin believes.
Further, the Kremlin leader is
committed to undermining the influence of the American intelligence community,
a group which is closely allied to the US establishment which overwhelmingly
opposes Trump and has strong doubts about Sanders. Thus promoting either or
both leads Trump at least to lash out at the intelligence community and weaken
its influence.
In order to understand what is going
on, Kirillova says, one must recognize that the US today is divided not in two
camps as was the case in 2016 but in three. The first consists of the supporters
of Trump; the second of moderate Democrats and Republicans who oppose him. And
the third includes “socialists and supporters of more leftist ideas.”
Their leaders are Bernie Sanders in
the first instance but also Elizabeth Warren.
It is that pattern that Moscow is
taking advantage of rather than seeking to back someone who can be counted on
to be pro-Moscow. Trump, “despite his declarations of toughness toward the
Russian Federation does relate to it in a very friendly fashion … because he
trusts Vladimir Putin” and believes that it was Ukraine, not Russia which interfered
in the 2016 elections.
As far as Sanders is concerned, “he,
as an extreme American liberal, has never displayed a negative attitude toward
Russia. After Putin invaded Ukraine, Sanders even suggested that “we need a new
NATO with the participation of Russia,” hardly the position that would have
given the Kremlin leader any pause.
But Putin’s support of either or both
arises from his view that both have the capacity to weaken the United States by
sparking controversy among Americans and that, rather than the victory of
either, is the Russian leader’s overriding goal, Kirillova concludes.
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