Tirarle mierda a Rusia, a los rusos y en especial a su presidente, Vladimir Putin, es el deporte favorito de Occidente en los tiempos que corren. Mequetrefes y ganapanes diversos de cinco continentes no ahorran calificativos despectivos a la hora de referirse a un país y su gente como lo hacen con Rusia, la potencia nuclear más importante del planeta. A través del blog The Vineyard of the Saker nos enteramos de esta nota de William Engdahl, originalmente para el New Eastern Outlook. Dice otra cosa, qué le vas a hacer, WP.
Título: Russia’s
Remarkable Renaissance
Epígrafe: Something
remarkable is taking place in Russia, and it’s quite different from what we
might expect. Rather than feel humiliated and depressed Russia is undergoing
what I would call a kind of renaissance, a rebirth as a nation. This despite or
in fact because the West, led by the so-called neo-conservatives in Washington,
is trying everything including war on her doorstep in Ukraine, to collapse the
Russian economy, humiliate Putin and paint Russians generally as bad. In the
process, Russia is discovering positive attributes about her culture, her
people, her land that had long been forgotten or suppressed.
Texto: My first of many
visits to Russia was more than twenty years ago, in May, 1994. I was invited by
a Moscow economics think-tank to deliver critical remarks about the IMF. My
impressions then were of a once-great people who were being humiliated to the
last ounce of their life energy. Mafia gangsters sped along the wide boulevards
of Moscow in sparkling new Mercedes 600 limousines with dark windows and
without license plates. Lawlessness was the order of the day, from the
US-backed Yeltsin Kremlin to the streets. “Harvard boys” like Jeffrey Sachs or
Sweden’s Anders Aaslund or George Soros were swarming over the city figuring
new ways to rape and pillage Russia under the logo “shock therapy” and
“market-oriented reform” another word for “give us your crown jewels.”
The human toll of
that trauma of the total collapse of life in Russia after November 1989 was
staggering. I could see it in the eyes of everyday Russians on the streets of
Moscow, taxi-drivers, mothers shopping, normal Russians.
Today, some two
decades later, Russia is again confronted by a western enemy, NATO, that seeks
to not just humiliate her, but to actually destroy her as a functioning state
because Russia is uniquely able to throw a giant monkey wrench into plans of
those western elites behind the wars in Ukraine, in Syria, Libya, Iraq and well
beyond to Afghanistan, Africa and South America.
Rather than
depression, in my recent visits to Russia in the past year as well as in
numerous discussions with a variety of Russian acquaintances, I sense a new
feeling of pride, of determination, a kind of rebirth of something long buried.
Sanctions
Boomerang
Take the
sanctions war that the Obama administration has forced Germany, France and
other unwilling EU states to join. The US Treasury financial warfare unit has
targeted the Ruble. The morally corrupt and Washington-influenced Wall Street
credit rating agencies have downgraded Russian state debt to “junk” status. The
Saudis, in cahoots with Washington, have caused a free-fall in oil prices. The
chaos in Ukraine and EU sabotage of the Russian South Stream gas pipeline to
the EU, all this should have brought a terrified Russia to her knees. It
hasn’t.
As we have
earlier detailed, Putin and an increasing number of influential Russian
industrialists, some of the same who a few years ago would have fled to their
posh London townhouses, have decided to stand and fight for the future of
Russia as a sovereign state. Oops! That wasn’t supposed to happen in a world of
globalization, of dissolution of the nation-state. National pride was supposed
to be a relic like gold. Not in Russia today.
On the first
anniversary of the blatant US coup in Kiev that installed a hand-picked regime
of self-professed Neonazis, criminals, and an alleged Scientologist Prime
Minister Andriy Yansenyuk, hand-picked by the US State Department, there was a
demonstration in downtown Moscow on February 22. An estimated 35,000 to 50,000
people showed up—students, teachers, pensioners, even pro-Kremlin bikers. They
protested not against Putin for causing the economic sanctions by his intransigence
against Washington and EU demands. They protested the blatant US and EU
intervention into Ukraine. They called the protest “Anti-Maidan.” It was
organized by one of many spontaneous citizen reactions to the atrocities they
see on their borders. Internet satirical political blogs are making fun of the
ridiculous Jan Paski, until last week the fumbling US State Department Press
Spokesperson.
Not even an
evident False Flag attempt in the London Financial Times and Western controlled
media to blame Putin for “creating the climate of paranoia that caused” Boris
Nemtsov’s murder is being taken seriously. Western “tricks” don’t work in
today’s Russia.
And look at US
and EU sanctions. Rather than weakening Putin’s popularity, sanctions have
caused previously apolitical ordinary Russians to rally around the president,
who still enjoys popularity ratings over 80%. A recent survey by the
independent Levada Center found 81 percent of Russians feel negatively about
the United States, the highest figure since the early 1990s “shock therapy”
Yeltsin era. And 71 percent feel negatively about the European Union.
The renaissance I
detect is evident in more than protests or polls, however. The US-instigated
war in Ukraine since March 2014 has caused a humanitarian catastrophe, one
which the US-steered German and other western media have blocked out of their
coverage. More than one million Ukrainian citizens, losing their homes or in
fear of being destroyed in the insane US-instigated carnage that is sweeping
across Ukraine, have sought asylum in Russia. They have been welcomed as
brothers according to all reports. That is a human response that has untold
resonances among ordinary Russians. Because of the wonders of YouTube and smart
phone videos, Russians are fully aware of the truth of the US war in eastern
Ukraine. Russians are becoming politically sensitive for the first time in
years as they realize that some circles in the West simply want to destroy them
because they resist becoming a vassal of a Washington gone berserk.
Rather than bow
to the US Treasury’s Ruble currency war and the threat that Russian banks will
be frozen out of the SWIFT (Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial
Telecommunication) international interbank clearing system, something likened
to an act of war, on February 16, the Russian government announced that it had
completed its own banking clearing network in which some 91 domestic credit
institutions have been incorporated. The system allows Russian banks to
communicate seamlessly through the Central Bank of Russia.
That is inside
Russia among banks that otherwise were vulnerable even domestically to a SWIFT
cut. Russia joined the Brussels-based private SWIFT system as the Berlin Wall
crumbled in 1989. Today her banks are the second largest users of SWIFT. The
new system is inside Russia. Necessary, but not sufficient, to protect against
SWIFT cutoff. The next step in discussion is joint Russia-China interbank
clearing independent of SWIFT and Washington. That is also coming.
The following day
after Russia’s “SWIFT” alternative was announced as operational, Chinese Vice
Foreign Minister Cheng Guoping said China will build up its strategic
partnership with Russia in finance, space and aircraft building and “raise
trade cooperation to a new level.” He added that China plans to cooperate more
with Russia in the financial area and in January Russia’s First Deputy Prime
Minister Igor Shuvalov said that payments in national currencies,
de-dollarization, were being negotiated with China. China realizes that if
Russia collapses, China is next. Failing empires try desperate measures to
survive.
Russians also
realize that their leaders are moving in unprecedented ways to build an
alternative to what they see as a morally decadent and bankrupt American world.
For most Russians the disastrous decade of poverty, chaos and deprivation of
the Yeltsin era in the 1990’s was reminder enough what awaits should Russia’s
leaders again prostitute themselves to American banks and corporations for
takeover, Hillary Clinton’s infamous “reset” of US-Russian relations she
attempted when Medvedev was President. Russians see what the US has done in
neighboring Ukraine where even the Finance Minister, Natalia Jaresko, is an
American, a former State Department person.
Russia and its
leaders are hardly trembling behind Kremlin walls. They are forging the
skeleton of a new international economic order that has the potential to
transform the world from the present bankruptcy of the Dollar System. Moscow
and Beijing recently announced, as I discussed in a previous posting, their
project to create a joint alternative to the US credit rating monopoly of
Moody’s, S&P and Fitch. President Putin’s travel agenda in the past year
has been mind-boggling. Far from being the international paraiah Washington and
Victoria Nuland hoped for, Russia is emerging as the land which has the courage
to “just say No!” to Washington.
Russia’s
president has been in Cyprus where possible basing for the Russian navy was
discussed, in Egypt where General al-Sisi warmly welcomed the Russian leader
and discussed significant economic and other joint cooperation. Late last year
Russia and the BRICS states agreed to form a $100 billion infrastructure bank
that makes the US-controlled World Bank irrelevant. The list grows virtually
every day.
The special human
side
For me, however,
the most heartening feature of this Russian renaissance is in the generation
which is today in their late thirties to early forties—young, highly
intelligent and having experience of both the depravity of Soviet communist
bureaucracy but as well of the hollow world of US-led so-called “free market
capitalism.” I share some examples from the many Russians I have come to know
in recent years.
What is unique in
my mind about this generation is that they are the hybrid generation. The
education they received in the schools and universities was still largely
dominated by the classical Russian science. That classical Russian science, as
I have verified from many discussion with Russian scientist friends over the
years, was of a quality almost unknown in the pragmatic West. An American
Physics professor from MIT who taught in Moscow universities in the early 1990s
told me, “When a Russian science student enters first year university, he or
she already has behind them 4 years of biology, 4 of chemistry, of physics,
both integral and differential calculus, geometry…they are starting university
study at a level comparable to an American post-doctoral student.”
They grew up in a
Russia where it was common for young girls to learn classical ballet or dance,
for all children to learn to play piano or learn a musical instrument, to do
sports, to paint, as in classical Greek education of the time of Socrates or
Germany in the 1800s. Those basics which were also there in American schools
until the 1950s, were all but abandoned during the 1980s. American industry
wanted docile “dumbed-down” workers who asked no questions.
Russian biology,
Russian math, Russian physics, Russian astrophysics, Russian geophysics—all
disciplines approached their subject with a quality that had long before
disappeared from American science. I know, as I grew up during the late 1950’s
during the “Sputnik Shock,” where we were told as high school pupils we had to
work doubly hard to “catch up to the Russians.” There was a kernel of truth,
but the difference was not lack of American students working hard. In those
days we worked and studied pretty hard. It was the quality of Russian
scientific education that was so superior.
Teaching of the
sciences especially, in Russia or the Soviet Union, had been strongly
influenced by the German education system of the 1800s, the so-called Humboldt
Reforms of Alexander von Humboldt and others.
The strong ties
in Russian education with classical 19th Century German culture and science
went deep, going back to the time under Czar Alexander II who freed the serfs
in 1861, following the example of his friend, Abraham Lincoln. The ties were
deepened to German classical culture later under Czar Alexander II prior to the
1905 Russo-Japanese War when the brilliant Sergei Witte was Transport Minister,
then Finance Minister and finally Prime Minister before western intrigues
forced his resignation. Witte translated the works of the German national
economist Friederich List, the brilliant opponent of England’s Adam Smith, into
Russian. Before foreign and domestic intrigues manipulated the Czar into the
disastrous Anglo-Russian Entente of 1907 against Germany a pact which made
England’s war in 1914 possible, the Russian state recognized the German
classical system as superior to British empiricism and reductionism.
Many times I have
asked Russians of the 1980s generation why they came back to Russia to work
after living in the USA. Always the reply more or less, “The US education was
so boring, no challenge…the American students were so shallow, no idea of
anything outside the United States…for all its problems, I decided to come home
and help build a new Russia…”
Some personal
examples illustrate what I have found: Irina went with her parents to Oregon in
the early 1990s. Her father was a high-ranking military figure in the USSR.
After the collapse he retired and wanted to get away from Russia, memories of
wars, to live his last years peacefully in Oregon. His daughter grew up there,
went to college there and ultimately realized she could be so much more herself
back in Russia where today as a famous journalist covering US-instigated wars
in Syria and elsewhere including Ukraine, she is making a courageous
contribution to world peace.
Konstantin went
to the USA to work as a young broadcast journalist, did a master’s degree in
New York in film and decided to return to Russia where he is making valuable TV
documentaries on dangers of GMO and other important themes. Anton stayed in
Russia, went into scientific and business publishing and used his facility with
IT to found his own publishing house. Dmitry who taught physics at a respected
German university, returned to his home St Petersburg to become a professor and
his wife also a physicist, translates and manages a Russian language internet
site as well as translating into Russian several of my own books.
What all these
Russian acquaintances, now in their late 30s or forties share is that they were
born when the remnants of the old Soviet Russia were still very visible, for
better and for worse, but grew to maturity after 1991. This generation has a
sense of development, progress, of change in their lives that is now proving
invaluable to shape Russia’s future. They are also, through their families and
even early childhood, rooted in the old Russia, like Vladimir Putin, and
realize the reality of both old and new.
Now because of
the brazen open savagery of Washington policies against Russia, this generation
is looking at what was valuable. They realize that the stultifying bureaucratic
deadness of the Soviet Stalin heritage was deadly in the USSR years. And they
realize they have a unique chance to shape a new, dynamic Russia of the 21st
Century not based on the bankrupt model of the now-dying American Century of
Henry Luce and FD Roosevelt.
This for me is
the heart of an emerging renaissance of the spirit among Russians that gives me
more than hope for the future. And, a final note, it has been policy among the
so-called Gods of Money, the bankers of London and New York, since at least the
assassination in 1881 of Czar Alexander II, to prevent a peaceful growing
alliance between Germany and Russia. A prime aim of Victoria Nuland’s Ukraine
war has been to rupture that growing Russo-German economic cooperation. A vital
question for the future of Germany and of Europe will be whether Germany’s
politicians continue to kneel to the throne of Obama or his successor or define
their true interests in closer cooperation with the emerging Eurasian economic
renaissance that is being shaped by President Putin’s Russia and by President
Xi’s China.
Ironically,
Washington’s and now de facto NATO’s “undeclared war” against Russia has
sparked this remarkable renaissance of the Russian spirit. For the first time
in many years Russians are starting to feel good about themselves and to feel
they are good in a world of some very bad people. It may be the factor that
saves our world from a one world dictatorship of the bankers and their
military.
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