Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 11 – Ten years
ago this week, Vladimir Putin told the Munich Security Conference exactly what
he intended to do to oppose the West and restore Russia’s greatness – “but the
West didn’t believe” what he said and even “laughed about it” as nothing more a
reflection of the Kremlin leader’s personal grievance, Georgy Bovt says.
In a “Komsomolskaya Pravda” commentary
on this anniversary, the Moscow commentator asks “what might it have been possible
to avoid” if those listening to the Kremlin leader’s speech in 2007 had
actually paid attention to “the main theses of the Russian president” (kp.ru/daily/26642.7/3660783/).
And while Bovt is arguing that the
West should not only have paid attention to Putin but agreed with him and acted
on that agreement, his words point to a larger and more important problem: All
too often, leaders of democratic countries find it convenient to explain away
any comments they don’t like rather than think about they in fact portend.
The main target of Putin’s October
10, 2007 74-minute speech in Munich, Bovt says, was the United States which he
attacked for its insistence on “a unipolar world” in which Washington could
impose “its stereotypes” on all countries in the world. That was something Putin said that Russia
would not permit and would fight against.
A decade ago, Putin challenged the
idea that American anti-ballistic missile shields were being put in Europe to
defend against rogue states in the Middle East.
He said they were directed at Russia, and it is now clear that they
were. Western officials now acknowledge
that and say these shields are needed because of Moscow’s actions in Ukraine.
“If in 2007, the audience at the
Munich conference had listened to Putin about the danger of the further
enlargement of NATO to the east … then there wouldn’t have been a
Russian-Georgian war in August 2008 or even more the present Ukrainian crisis,”
Bovt continues. But the West kept pushing and Moscow responded as Putin predicted
it would.
In his Munich speech, the Moscow
commentator continues, Putin argued that Moscow was considering leaving the
conventional forces in Europe accord because in his view the West was in
violation of it and that the OSCE had been “transformed into a vulgar
instrument of the foreign policy interests of one group of countries toward
another.”
Putin’s audience in Munich “didn’t listen
because he said what they did not want to hear,” Bovt says, noting that Putin
declared that “unilateral and illegitimate actions have not resolved a single
problem. On the contrary, they have become the generator of new human
tragedies.”
Putin has been clear in stating his
intentions to stand up to the West in the name of Russia’s national interests
in subsequent speeches as well. His Crimea speech in 2014, for example,
contained “almost the very same theses” as in Munich one. As did his Valdai
speech the same year.
In that last one, Putin yet again
reminded the world that “the Russian bear won’t give up its taiga,” something
he had first made clear in Munich. Not
everyone understood that then or now. And that, Bovt suggests, is too bad for
the world.
Given how often Putin lies, it is of
course always tempting to ignore his words if one doesn’t like them or if responding
to them would take too much effort and might not be needed. But as Bovt makes
clear, albeit for a different purpose, ignoring what a dictator like Putin says
is dangerous – because if his words are ignored, his promised actions may all
too often follow.
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