Much has been going on in Russia’s borders in recent months:
from last year’s violent “Euromaindan”
protests sponsored by the West, to the annexation of Crimea, the Eastern and
Southern Ukraine’s invalid independence referendum, the sorry (at least in the
Western eyes) Sochi Olympics, the relentless economic and political sanctions, and
the stepping up of military patrols in Eastern Europe by NATO.
Not long ago did the West portray Russia as rebuilding a “Soviet
‘empire” when it went to war with Georgia in August 2008. Since then,
Western politicians and the mainstream media have spread their usual
fear-mongering propaganda against Russia.
What’s missing from this narrative is the question of why
Russia is forced to tackle its present challenges, especially along its
borders. For one, centuries of Russian empire and the 20th century’s
Soviet experiment solely points to the immense and legitimate influence Russia
has on its near abroad frontier, be it in greater Eastern Europe or former
Soviet republics, which include Ukraine.
What the West fails to understand is Moscow’s right and
obligation to protect ethnic Russians outside the country, especially in the
former Soviet republics. When the USSR collapsed in 1991, millions of Russian
suddenly found themselves second-class citizens in other former Soviet
republics, including in Ukraine.
For instance, back in February, one of the first “legislation”
of the new illegitimate government of Kiev was to ban
Russian language in Ukraine. Seriously, can language alone be of matter
national security concern? The judgment and intentions of those in power can be
in doubt especially if your country’s new
leaders do not even know the right flag for a country he is visiting. And
yet the West has the nerve to spread lies about Russia being the aggressor in
the Ukraine crisis rather than the other way around.
And how Western politicians and mainstream media portray
Russia’s fictitious ambitions is pretty much the same as how they portray China’s
assertiveness in the South China Sea: that hot foreign policy conceals and
overrides domestic concerns; a way to consolidate public support against a
foreign aggressor while forgetting
the troubles at home.
And yet all that protection for minorities outside Russia is
seen as part of Vladimir Putin’s “empire building", which in contrast to
the West’s military and covert interventions abroad pretty much vilifies those
accusing the Russian president instead.
Now that Russia is firmly out of the G8, eyes are focused on
where Russia’s economic potentials will go instead. Indeed, Russia is part of
the greater and more important G20, as well as the economic collective known as
the BRICS. For at least the past decade now, Russia and China has been busy
building new pipelines to transport
energy to countries East of Russia, which will help Moscow diversify its
economy to where the global economy is happening most: in the East.
And of course talks of a new Cold War with Russia (and
China) has been circulating in the Western mainstream media. Politicians up to
the highest levels, including Barack Obama himself, are trying to blame (or
deny) the new Cold War. Indeed, for some politicians in the West, the old Cold
War with the Soviet Union really did not go away.
A Reemerging Russia
is indeed what they fancy; after all, the fear of enemies abroad means the
sustainment of the military
industrial complex which Eisenhower feared will sustain America’s
insatiable appetite for a permanent
war economy.
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