Paul
Goble
Staunton, June 6 – Like Cinderella’s
coach at the stroke of midnight, Vladimir Putin’s “magic,” his “negative charm,
no longer works” as it did in the past, Aleksandr Golts says. Instead, as the
recent St. Petersburg Export Forum showed, it has disappeared or more precisely
turned into something else entirely (ej.ru/?a=note&id=31172).
For
most of Putin’s time at the top of the Russian political pyramid, foreigners
have been interested in what the Kremlin leader has to say on this or that
topic. But “suddenly it has turned out
that the surrounding world has simply lost interest in [his] views” and no
longer wants to speak with him about “generalities” but only about specific
issues.
That
shift first became obvious when Putin visited Paris and the new French
president Emmanuel Macron “coldly said what Paris wants from the master of the
Kremlin and what will be if these demands are not satisfied.” So dramatic was
this shift, Golts says, it “deprived the chief Russian official of his gift of
speech.”
Then
there was the behavior of NBC journalist Megan Kelly who chaired a session in
St. Petersburg where Putin spoke but “ignored the themes” he wanted to talk about,
refused to respond to his tactic of answers “in the style ‘but you lynch
Negroes,’” and ignored his crudities which his media claque called humor.
Instead,
Kelly did what a journalist is supposed to do. She asked the same question
again and again, about “the level of Moscow’s interference in American domestic
politics and in particular in the American elections.” That is a tactic which
works because finally those who don’t want to answer nonetheless give way.
That
is what happened with Putin this time, and the Kremlin leader conceded far more
than he likely intended with his comments about hackers and his refrain that
everybody can do this and nothing that they do really matters. And it is worth noting, Golts continues, that
the US media reported only this and not Putin’s preferred themes about the
economy and cooperation.
This
represents “a change in the paradigm of interrelationships between the master
of the Kremlin and the rest of the world. No one is trying to predict Moscow’s
actions based on Putin’s remarks. It is well known that the chief boss of
Russia lies as often as he breathes,” Golts continues.
And
so this time around “no one asked the question ‘Who is Mr. Putin?’ No one
sought to compose psychological portraits” of the man. Instead, “they offered
accusations about what had already been done and [just] watched to see how he
would [try to] justify himself” to the world.
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