Pandora’s Jar and Iran and a Cup of Coffee…

America has forced the lid off “Pandora’s Jar” and I am not sure that this time, America can put the lid on…

This is the thinking’s this morning over a great cup of Russian coffee as Tehran announced that it is ready to receive payment for oil supplies in gold as well as the national currencies of importer countries. Other words if you don’t want to pay with dollars then use your own currency. Tehran also is bartering with goods…

The East has seen the writing on the wall and I understand that even many Western countries are having some backroom sessions of discussion about the future of the dollar, out of the US ear shot…

You have to understand that Iran has been pushed into a corner and when, “The going gets tough, the tough get going!” Iran is no stranger to bull-crap from the West. The West did this because Iran was happy as a Meadow Lark to use dollars as was the rest of thee world… (Understand I said, was!)

The situation has developed to a point that it is obvious why the West is trying to destroy Iran. It has nothing to do with nuclear weapons or threats to Israel, because first off Iran has no “BOMB” and Iran threatens Israel much much less than Israel threatens Iran. In fact it has become a daily thing in the Western world to threaten Iran and all Iran wants is to be left alone to live a life of peace…

If for some stupid ignorant reason, Israel or America would attack Iran, then at that point it is a matter of when – not if – that we would have a world war. Russia and China have made it clear that Syria and Iran are where the line is being drawn. Why even Pakistan has drawn a muddy line in support of Iran and Pakistan is also a nuclear power…

What I see though is an America that really does not care. No America does not care! The people have this blind obsession that we must support Israel at all cost. This extends into the government twenty fold over the normal populace. Israel is calling the shots and if Israel attacks Iran, then America has no choice but to join in and at that point Russia and China have no choice but to join in and then guess what? We have what we call in America – “Russian Roulette”…

So by America forcing Iran to develop on a world scale a bartering, multi-currency society that will be gold/commodity based financial system to survive. Then America has no one but herself to blame as other countries follow suit, as they understand that they have to leave behind the 1000lb gorilla sitting in the room trying to monopolize the worlds issues and products…

But of course the Western world media says, “Iran is suffering and her people are starving because of our great and powerful sanctions to stop the evil killers known as Iranians! This is what they deserve, the media says!” Do you see that 1000lb gorilla beating his chest in all his glory while he tells you how tough he is? Since when do we spread joy at the ability of sanctions to hurt the population of a country?

The “Pandora’s Jar” has been opened by America against America and this time a war attempt to close it, will be called WWIII…

I for one think that it is time that America bites the bullet and stops trying to be the bullying gorilla in the room and join the rest of the world in a peaceful and harmonious attempt at life. The lid of the jar is off and you can’t put back the contents without all hell breaking loose. America had a good thing going and as always the will of a few override the will of the masses. All countries should be able to use whatever currencies that they feel like, to buy what ever they want to and if they want to trade a bushel of wheat for a bushel of apples then that is what they should do…

There are reasons why we have old fables, as the story of “Pandora’s Jar” is an example. We need to remember the lessons from the old and keep them in mind as we progress in life, because things never change, they just keep on changing face and going around…

Like in the story of “Pandora’s Jar”: We still have hope that the correct thing will be done and the world will be okay!

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russis!

Did the Paid, Out Number the Non Paid, at Sundays Encircle Rally in Moscow?

Sveta came home yesterday and said, “That is just right!” When she says that, I know she is thinking and has something to say. Usually the ending comes before the beginning with Sveta… 🙂

So I have to stop her and ask what is going on now?

So here is the idea of what she said: The people who supported the Garden Ring Road Encircle event to support honest elections, was made up of two parts. One part was paid and one part did not realize they could be paid. That is where the issue has begun…

It seems that many many many people were paid to join this encircling event on Sunday. Now it is not said exactly where the money came from, but the first two guess do not count. It seems that we have some very upset people who joined the rally (or flash mob as they like to call it) because they want to support democracy. Then they found out that they could have been paid to support this democracy as so many others; had been… 🙁

Guess what? It became an eye opening experience to see democracy at work first hand. Other words, who has the money gathers the crowd. In this case it was only 11,000 people but without paying the people they would have been lucky to have 2000 or 3000 people. Now they have pissed off the ones who really support the ideas that they are trying to spread and those ideas have been diluted by material ideologies…

It is interesting because I always thought that democracy was the will of the people, as a whole! But as I have gotten older, I realize that democracy is the will of the one, who has the money and the biggest stick!

As Sveta said about all her friends that felt ripped off by the system, because they did not get their share of the corruption and bribery money being handed out, “That is just right!”

I have to smile: Welcome to democracy Russia! You asked for it and you got it!

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia!

Orthodox Great Lent in Russia: Plus Upcoming Holidays…

When is Lent? – In 2012 Lent in Russia will be celebrated between : Date: February 27, 2012 to April 15, 2012…

What is Lent? – Lent, is the period of fasting and prayer before Easter. The days are to represent the time Jesus spent in the desert overcoming temptation by Satan. The period of Lent is preparation for the annual commemoration of the death and resurrection of Jesus, celebrated during Holy Week…

Year Great Lent
Begins
Pascha
(Easter)
Ascension Pentecost
2012 Feb. 27 April 15 May 24 June 3
2013 March 18 May 5 June 13 June 23
2014 March 3 April 20 May 29 June 8
2015 Feb. 23 April 12 May 21 May 31

I really did not realize that it was going on until Sveta came in last night and said, “Lent has started!” Oops! I said, “Then I need to do an article!”

In fact while I am at it lets give the whole list of the 2012 year’s important Holidays in Russia and Orthodox around the world…

FEBRUARY 2012

  • 2
    • Candlemas – Christian
    • Presentation of Christ in the Temple – Anglican Christian
    • Triodion – Orthodox Christian
    • Imbolc – Lughnassad * – Wicca/Pagan Northern and southern hemispheres
  • 3
    • Maha Shavartri ** – Hindu
    • Setsubum-sai – Shinto
  • 4
    • Mawlid an Nabi * – Islam
  • 5
    • Four Chaplains Sunday- Interfaith
  • 8
    • Tu BiShvat * – Judaism
  • 14
    • Saint Valentines Day – Christian
  • 15
    • Nirvana Day ** – Buddhist – Jain
  • 19
    • Meatfare Sunday – Orthodox Christian
    • Transfiguration – Christian
  • 21
    • Shrove Tuesday – Christian
  • 22
    • Ash Wednesday – Lent begins- Christian
  • 26 – March 1
    • Intercalary Days * – Baha’i
    • Cheesefare Sunday – Orthodox Christian
  • 27
    • Clean Monday – Great Lent begins – Orthodox Christian

MARCH 2012

  • 1
    • Saint David of Wales – Christian
  • 2 – 20
    • Nineteen Day Fast * – Baha’i
  • 4
    • Orthodox Sunday – Orthodox Christian
  • 8
    • Purim * – Judaism
    • Magha Puja Day ** – Buddhist
    • Holi ** – Hindu
  • 9
    • Hola Mohalla – Sikh
  • 13
    • L Ron Hubbard birthday ** – Scientology
  • 17
    • St Patrick’s Day – Christian
  • 19
    • Saint Joseph’s Day – Christian
  • 20 Equinox
    • Ostara * – Wicca/Pagan northern hemisphere
    • Mabon * – Wicca/Pagan southern hemisphere
  • 21
    • Naw Ruz (New Year) * – Baha’i
    • Norouz (New Year) – Persian/Zoroastrian
  • 23
    • New Year ** – Hindu
    • Prophet Zarathustra birth – Zoroastrian
  • 23-April 1
    • Ramayana ** – Hindu
  • 25
    • Annunciation of the Blessed Virgin Mary – Christian
  • 28
    • Khordad Sal (Birth of Prophet Zaranhushtra) ** – Zoroastrian

APRIL 2012

  • 1
    • Palm Sunday – Christian
    • Ramanavami – Hindu
  • 5
    • Maundy Thursday – Christian
    • Lord’s Evening Meal – Jehovah’s Witness Christians
  • 6-9
    • Theravadin New Year ** – Buddhist
  • 6
    • Good Friday – Christian
    • Hanuman Jayanti – Hindu
    • Mahavir Jayanti ** – Jain
  • 7-14
    • Pesach (Passover)   * – Judaism
  • 7
    • Lazarus Saturday – Orthodox Christian
  • 8
    • Easter – Christian
    • Palm Sunday – Orthodox Christian
  • 13
    • Holy Friday – Orthodox Christian
  • 14
    • Baisakhi New Year – Sikh
  • 15
    • Easter/Pascha – Orthodox Christian
  • 19
    • Yom HaShoah * – Judaism
  • 21
    • First Day of Ridvan * – Baha’i
  • 23
    • St. George Day – Christian
  • 27
    • Yom Ha’Atzmaut * – Jewish
  • 29
    • Ninth Day of Ridvan * – Baha’i
  • 30
    • Saint James the Great Day – Orthodox Christian
    • Lazarus Saturday – Orthodox Christian

MAY 2012

  • 1
    • Beltane – Samhain – Wicca/Pagan Northern and Southern hemispheres
  • 2
    • Twelfth Day of Ridvan * – Baha’i
  • 3
    • National Day of Prayer – Interfaith USA
  • 6
    • Visakha Puja – Buddha Day ** – Buddhist
  • 10
    • Lag B’Omer * – Jewish
  • 17
    • Ascension Day – Christian
  • 23
    • Declaration of the Bab * – Baha’i
  • 24
    • All Ascension of Jesus – Orthodox Christian
  • 27
    • Pentecost – Christian
  • 27-28
    • Shavuot * – Jewish
  • 29
    • Ascension of Baha’u’llah * – Baha’i

JUNE 2012

  • 3
    • Trinity Sunday – Christian
  • 7
    • Corpus Christi – Catholic Christian
  • 3
    • Pentecost – Orthodox Christian
  • 9
    • Saint Columba of Iona – Christian
  • 10
    • All Saints – Orthodox Christian
  • 16
    • Lailat al Miraj * ** – Islam
    • Guru Arjan Dev martyrdom – Sikh
  • 15
    • Sacred Heart of Jesus – Catholic Christian
  • 19
    • New Church Day – Swedenborgian Christian
  • 20 Solstice
    • Litha * – Wicca/Pagan northern hemisphere
    • Yule * – Wicca/Pagan  southern hemisphere
  • 29
    • Saints Peter and Paul – Christian

JULY 2012

  • 3
    • Asalha Puja Day ** – Buddhist
  • 4
    • Lailat at Bara’ah * ** – Islam
  • 9
    • Martyrdom of the Bab * – Baha’i
  • 13-16
    • Obon  ** – Buddhist – Shinto
  • 15
    • Saint Vladimir Day – Christian
  • 20
    • Ramadan Begins * ** – Islam
  • 23
    • Emperor Haile Selassi I birthday – Rastafari
  • 24
    • Pioneer Day – Mormon Christian
  • 25
    • Saint James the Great Day – Christian
  • 29
    • Tisha B’Av * – Judaism

AUGUST 2012

  • 1
    • Fast in Honor of Holy Mother of Jesus – Orthodox Christian
    • Lammas – Christian
  • 2
    • Raksha Bandhan ** – Hindu
    • Lugnassad – Imbolc * – Wicca/Pagan Northern and southern hemispheres
  • 6
    • Transfiguration of the Lord – Orthodox Christian
  • 10
    • Krishna Janmashtami ** – Hindu
  • 14
    • Lailat al Kadr * ** – Islam
  • 15
    • Assumption of Virgin Mary – Catholic Christian
    • Dormition of the Theotokos – Orthodox Christian
  • 19-21
    • Eid al Fitr * ** – Islam
  • 29
    • Beheading of John the Baptist – Christian

SEPTEMBER 2012

  • 1
    • Ecclesiastical Year begins – Orthodox Christian
  • 8
    • Nativity of Mary – Christian
  • 14
    • Elevation of the Life Giving Cross – Holy Cross Day – Christian
  • 17-18
    • Rosh HaShanah * – Judaism
  • 19
    • Ganesh Chaturthi ** – Hindu
  • 20-29
    • Paryushana Parva ** – Jain
  • 22 Equinox
    • Mabon * – Wicca/Pagan northern hemisphere
    • Ostata * – Wicca/ Pagan southern hemisphere
  • 26
    • Yom Kippur * – Judaism
  • 28
    • Mesket- Ethiopian Orthodox Christian
  • 29
    • Michael and All Angels – Christian

OCTOBER 2012

  • 4
    • Saint Francis DayCatholic Christian
  • 1-7 (1-2 Primary Obligation Days)
    • Sukkot * – Judaism
  • 8
    • Shemini Atzeret * – Judaism
    • Thanksgiving – Canada – Interfaith
  • 9
    • Simhat Torah *- Judaism
  • 16-23
    • Navaratri ** – Hindu
  • 18
    • Saint Luke – Apostle and Evangelist – Christian
  • 20
    • Birth of the Báb * – Baha’i
    • Installation of Scriptures as Gukru Granth – Sikh
  • 24
    • Dasera ** – Hindu
  • 25
    • Waqf al Arafa – Hajj Day * – Islam
  • 26-29
    • Eid al Adha * ** – Islam
  • 28
    • Milvian Bridge Day – Christian
    • Reformation Day ** – Protestant Christian
  • 31
    • All Hallows Eve – Christian

NOVEMBER 2012

  • 1
    • All Saint’s Day – Christian
    • Samhain – Beltane * – Wicca/Pagan Northern and Southern hemispheres
  • 2
    • All Soul’s Day – Catholic Christian
  • 11
    • Jain New Year ** – Jain
  • 11-15
    • Deepavali  ** – Hindu
  • 12
    • Birth of Baha’u’llah * – Bahai
  • 13
    • Diwali – Deepavali ** – Hindu – Jain – Sikh
  • 15
    • Hijra – New Year * ** – Islam
    • Nativity Fast through 12-25 – Orthodox Christian
  • 22
    • Thanksgiving  USA – Interfaith
  • 21
    • Yule – Christian
  • 24
    • Ashura * ** – Islam
    • Guru Tegh Bahadur Martyrdom – Sikh
  • 25
    • Christ the King – Christian
  • 26
    • Day of the Covenant * – Baha’i
  • 28
    • Ascension of Abdu’l-Baha * – Baha’i
    • Guru Nanak Dev Sahib birthday – Sikh
  • 30
    • Saint Andrew’s Day – Christian

DECEMBER 2012

  • 2
    • Advent – First Sunday – Christian
  • 6
    • Saint Nicholas Day – Christian
  • 8
    • Rohatsu (Bodhi Day)  ** – Buddhist
    • Immaculate Conception of Mary – Catholic Christian
  • 9-16
    • Hanukkah * – Judaism
  • 16-25
    • Posadas Navidenas – Christian
  • 21  Solstice
    • Yule * – Wicca/Pagan northern hemisphere
    • Litha * – Wicca/Pagan southern hemisphere
    • Yule – Christian
  • 25
    • Christmas * – Christian
    • Feast of the Nativity ** – Orthodox Christians
  • 26
    • Zarathosht Diso (Death of Prophet Zarathushtra ** – Zoroastrian
  • 28
    • Holy Innocents – Christian
  • 30
    • Feast of the Holy Family – Catholic Christian
  • 31
    • Watch Night – Christian

Well that puts everything in a nutshell or at least a big nutshell… 🙂

Have a good Lent and Easter as it approaches…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia!

Western media bias: by Andre Vltchek, via e-mail…

Lets Have Tea Today...

I received this e-mail and was not sure it was real or not, but after checking it out and seeing it posted in several Chinese sites I realized that it was the real thing. So I am going to post it as it came to me. It is really a good e-mail on the world of the West and her Media…


Recently the BBC invited me to participate in a program with the title “Does China deserve respect from the rest of the world?”

I found the topic – the title itself – deeply disrespectful.

At the very least it is patronizing, if not insulting.

Who were we to decide if 1.3 billion people deserve respect or not.

But I agreed to participate, as I wanted to say on air that again and again China is told what to do and what not to do, how it should change and why it should acquiesce to the superior Western arrangement of the world.

The BBC and I were linked through the Skype and I listened to the live broadcast. After a news roundup, the debate began.

It was a very predictable discussion. Similar to ones that take place in the Western media on an almost daily basis.

It was well choreographed so there would be no comparison between China and the West and no discussion of their foreign policies and their human rights record.

Then, before I was invited to speak on air, I was asked what I was going to say?

I wasn’t sure I understood correctly, but they insisted that I outline what I wanted to say. “Human rights,” I said. I was asked to be more specific, but I refused, saying that I would explain when I was on the air. Soon it became clear that either I provided details, or I would not be allowed to speak.

I informed the producer, or whoever was talking to me, that I was going to talk about whether audiences in the United Kingdom or the United States would find it normal or acceptable if, whenever their country was mentioned, the debate began with their human rights record and the impact of colonialism and the neo-colonialism taking place in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya and many other places.

I was politely told to wait; now I was informed that my turn would come after the half-hour news bulletin. I knew, and the producer knew – my turn was not going to come at all.

What impressed me the most was efficiency and speed of the censorship. All this took place as the program was already under way.

According to the program, China does not deserve any respect, not because that is the view of the people of the world, but because the speakers were carefully selected to present that view.

Andre Vltchek, via e-mail


The views of the above author are not strictly the views of Windows to Russia. They are an independent view from an outside source and country that brings a better light on the world in general and Windows to Russia is pleased to have Andre Vltchek’s e-mail on its pages today…

Windows to Russia!

‘TIME’ and the Incredible Shrinking Brain: by Jon Hellevig…

In its latest edition the US magazine Time did its own bit of pre-election ranting about Russia and Putin with its cover story “Russia’s Incredible Shrinking Prime Minister.” The message is in the subhead which reads: “His grip on power is shakier than ever. That makes the world a more dangerous place.”

Intrigued by this caption, I signed on to Time’s website to get the whole story. – But there was none. In vain I searched the whole site over and over again, but all I found about Putin and Russia was a story by Simon Shuster under the heading “See Putin Run: How the Prime Minister Is Relying on Russia’s Heartland.” After all this must be it, I thought. Begrudgingly I read the stuff a couple of times hoping to detect the analysis by which Time motivated its bombastic claims.

But all I found was an insipid diatribe focusing on Putin’s campaign trip to Kurgan, one of the provincial towns of Russia with a population of 300 thousand people. It turns out that either Mr. Shuster wrote the wrong story, or the editor in charge of the front cover did not read Shuster’s story. Whatever, but in the article nothing much about Putin’s “shrinking support,” and why the world would be a “more dangerous place” for that.

Shuster’s article is written in the evergreen style of American exploring journalism. In this genre the gallant and unrelenting journalist is placed in a setting of ordinary people whose sentiments the journalist with his keen and receptive mind catches as his material goes about their everyday life. This style is eminently well suited for propaganda, because here you can ignore all the facts. No analysis will be needed for you are supposedly just reporting what you observe, and being an “independent journalist” representing the “free press” you are a trusted source. And this precisely overcomes the problem that the anti-Putin propaganda otherwise bumps into: it is so difficult to bend the facts to suit the story line as Russia’s achievements under Putin are so truly remarkable.

The story itself is a cynical lampoon full of contempt for the life and aspirations of ordinary Russians, depicting them in terms of trash and a brainless herd. This in accord with the modern self-centered Russian iClass which tried to organize a Facebook revolution against Putin (but for what, we don’t know) together with the self-proclaimed eternally angry and tired Intelligentsia (just imagine, there is this group of people that refer to themselves as the intelligent ones).

In his story, our intrepid explorer visits a “sooty industrial outpost” where “villagers” with “flasks in their pockets” are waiting for Putin to arrive. The scene of the alleged campaign visit, we are told, is “a typically Russian school, complete with busted windows, leaking roofs and a numbing cold inside the classrooms.” But the fact that the Prime Minister visits such a dilapidated school with all its real problems is twisted in Shuster’s Time to mean that this was just a reversed Potemkin village. Not hiding the reality behind a beautiful facade, the journalist insists, is a shrewd campaign trick. How warped does a mind get so as to reach such a conclusion? However, judging from the photo of the school cafeteria that Time adorns the article with, it does not look bad at all (maybe this is another detail they got wrong in the haste?).

A special dose of contempt is directed towards Kurganstalmost, a local steel-beam factory. Mr. Shuster accuses Putin of the crime of keeping the plant afloat by government contracts that pay the wages of its about 3,000 workers. This while back in the USA the steel belt has turned into a rust belt as factories are closing down and whole communities are turning into ghost towns. Without Putin’s concentrated hands-on efforts to keep the industry going all over the vast country, Russian workers could well have met the same fate as their American counterparts reeling under a de facto 16% unemployment versus Russia’s 6%. (According to the official statistics the US unemployment is some 9%, but this is only because they remove from the statistics the hopelessly long-term unemployed who the government labels too lazy to work).

By repeated rereading of the story we detect some traces of data that connect with the gutsy proclamations of the front cover. Remember that the story is supposed to prove the contentions that Putin’s popularity has plummeted and that this now poses a threat to world peace. To the first subject of drastically shrinking support, Shuster rattles off a list of astonishingly contradictory propositions.

First he states: “His ratings in Russia’s biggest cities have fallen to historic lows,” which he wants to prove by the claim that the “middle class” has “been rallying in Moscow by the tens of thousands.” However, next he states that Putin’s campaign message has “worked like a charm in places like Kurgan.”

This is followed by the again quite contradictory claim that “even in Kurgan Putin no longer has many diehard fans.” The latter conclusion Shuster draws from his observation of how Putin “walked into the local school,” especially by observing his “slightly pugilistic stride.” And as if that would not be contradictory enough, he adds that everyone in this town regards Putin as a Czar, which certainly in Russia is a positive reference as far as popular support goes.

Finally he quotes the local sociologist, Elena Gabitova, a pollster who is said to lament that all people back there “still support only Putin.” – So where is the shrinking support? It’s in Moscow, Shuster says. There we find the educated progressive “middle class” making up half of the population, according to the sociological data of Shuster. But Shuster does not tell the reader that even in this citadel of progress 50% of the voters are according to the latest polls going to vote for Putin. So finally what is the argument on which Time bases its incredible affirmation? Oh, Shuster tells that Putin’s approval ratings “in 2006” used to be “well over 70%.” But the approval rating is still over 60% of today.

So where’s the beef?  That’s huge support for anyone, and especially an elected leader who has been 12 consecutive years in power in a country plagued by a load of inherited problems. And ironically, this story was published on the same day, 24 February, when Levada, the pollster close to the opposition, admitted that Putin is on track to win in the first round with an overwhelming majority of two thirds of the vote. – Time has a very special notion of time as well. This article that was published on the 24th is dated 5 of March, and the magazine still insists that it is only then that it will appear. Try to make sense of these guys!

In the hurry to distribute the latest propaganda tagline, the venerable magazine completely forgot that the story did not have anything at all about the second part, that about the world being a more dangerous place following this alleged shrinking. Or perhaps this is supposedly proven by quoting a Paul Saunders from the Center for the National Interest (not from Kurgan but Washington) who informs us that Putin “will be tempted to appeal to Russian nationalists and may find it more difficult to pursue policies that would antagonize them.” Not much for a cover story.

Having thus perused this article it actually reminded me about another with a similar title, The Incredible Shrinking Brain, in the popular science magazine Discover (September, 2010). In this article John Hawks an anthropologist from the University of Wisconsin startles the readers by throwing out that the human brain has actually been shrinking in a recent evolutionary trend. The reporter asks whether it means that we’re getting dumber.

And in a comment to the article a reader contends that “it sure does explain a lot of what we observe every day in the United States.” Well, it doesn’t because human cognitive capacities are the same all over the world. But we may certainly speak about shrinking of the mind in a cultural sense – a numbing of the cognitive facility polluted by the modern propaganda.  This is the result of the erosion of a free and competitive press following a substantial consolidation of Western media assets in hands of a few media oligarchs with strong right-wing ties. For these media oligarchs truth is traded against pecuniary interests, power and the global ideology.  Being a Russia specialist, I read the ensuing propaganda against Russia as an open book, and harbor no doubt that the same occurs in all aspects of life this “free press” purports to report about.

I must conclude that this story in Time indeed needs to be seen as a cover story, that is, a fictitious account that is intended to hide from the readers the real motives of the publisher.

The author, Jon Hellevig, is a lawyer from Finland lawyerand Managing Partner of Hellevig, Klein & Usov (www.hkupartners.com) who has worked and lived in Russia since the beginning of 1990′s. He is the managing partner of the law firm Hellevig, Klein & Usov. Hellevig has written a book on the development of Russian law after the fall of the Soviet Union (Expressions and Interpretations) and on the conditions of democratic competition (All is Art. On Democratic Competition). www.hellevig.net hellevig@hku.ru

The views of the above author are not strictly the views of Windows to Russia. They are an independent view from an outside source and country that brings a better light on the world in general and Windows to Russia is pleased to have Jon Hellevig’s article on its pages today. It is hoped that we will have many more of his writings in the future…

Windows to Russia!

Coffee and Why The Western Empire has an Aversion to Putin…

This morning with that cup of coffee, I had some interesting thinking’s that had to do with the upcoming elections in Russia. Of course these are elections for the president of Russia and the Western world is really in a tirade over the fact that Putin could win and set back the Western Empire’s plans of terror…

I watched the Western press make a big ta do out of 11,000 people standing in the cold and holding hands in solidarity against Putin. 11,000 people got so much coverage you would have thought that everyone in Moscow was holding hands…

Lets get this in perspective: When you have 15,000,000 (Give or take according to what day it is!) people stuffed in a city like Moscow. Then 11,000 people is like a drop in the bucket. Why I can get 11,000 people to stop and gather together at one place/ All you have to do is stop and stare at the top of a building down town Moscow long enough and 11,000 people will finally stop and look at the top of the building that you are staring at, just to see what is so interesting that you are looking at. There is simply that many people at any given time in Moscow. People in Moscow will follow a group just to see what is up. It happens all the time. Russians are very curious people and Winter is boring, so anything to do something is an excuse to do something…

Also do not even play games with the fact that 11,000 people braved the cold and that means they are serious! Russians play chess outside until at least -20 below zero and the children are playing in the playground for hours at -30 below zero. Cold is a way of life and cold does not stop a Russian from living life, much less from standing around and holding hands in solidarity on a boring Sunday…

All this mass of bodies, gathering to hate Putin is how the West put it…

I find it interesting that 11,000 people could gather for Ron Paul and the Western press forgets to mention it. 11,000 people can gather to call Obama a Obumer and the press ignores it. But let 11,000 people gather in Libya (We ignore Libya now!), Iraq (We ignore Iraq now!) Syria, China, Venezuela, North Korea, Russia and see what is printed about the event in the Western press. Watch 11,000 gather to cheer Ron Paul on and lets see what is printed about it in the Western press…

{Kinda the same thing going on with Syria and Libya in the past! Let 55 people die in Iraq (just like a few days ago!) and we forget to mention it! Let 20 people die in Syria and heaven forbid the sky is falling! Then that 20 grows to become 200 people to try to make a point!}

The biggest anti-Putin players are the scum-bags from the West, that live in Moscow! They are earning their money in Russia now. I have never seen so many articles of hate, deceit, degradation and devaluation against Putin. They are writing exactly what their Western Masters are telling them to write and doing a fine damn good job at being a scum-bag, if I may say so myself…

If there was a hint of truth in what they write, then that would be different, but they seem to have thrown truth out the window…

So it is clear why the West does not want Putin back in. Just look at what he has said in the last few days. Also remember that when he says he means. That is important…

‘”We should not allow someone to seek to realize ‘the Libyan scenario’ in Syria. The efforts of the international community should be targeted at the attainment of inter-Syrian reconciliation,” the Russian presidential candidate said in his program article entitled “Russia and the Changing World”, which is published in the Moskovskiye Novosti (Moscow News) newspaper on Monday.

I bet that will make Hillary yell “despicable” some more… 🙂

Or…

“By the way, I cannot realize from where such a militaristic itching comes? Why do they lack patience to work out a clear-cut and balanced collective approach, moreover, in case of the mentioned Syrian resolution draft it was already taking shape?” Putin contemplated.

Or…

“The right of veto is not a caprice, but an integral part of the world order fixed in the UN Charter, by the way, on US insistent demands,” the Russian prime minister recalled. “The sense of this right is that the decisions, which just one permanent member of the UN Security Council opposes, cannot be valid and efficient,” Putin underlined.

Or…

“Russia is concerned over a growing threat of a Western military strike in Iran. If this happens, the consequences will be really disastrous. Their real scale cannot be imagined,” Putin underlined.

Or…

“The West is too involved in ‘the punishment’ of some countries. On the least occasion, they use sanctions or a military stick. I will recall that we live not in the nineteenth century and even not in the twentieth century,” Putin underlined.

I guess Putin is just despicable as he points out some flaws that are manifesting in the West. The fact is that Putin will not be bought by the West as many have been in the past. That is a real big problem for the West, because the Western world likes to buy their friends and we all know what “fair weather friends” are…

It is easy to see – Why The Western Empire has an Aversion to Putin. He does not play by the Western rules…

Kyle Keeton
Windows to Russia!

Assassination Attempt on Russia’s Putin Stopped in Ukraine at the Source…

MOSCOW CHINA – Russian and Ukrainian secret agents have successfully stopped an assassination attempt on Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, local media reported Monday.

According to Russian state TV Channel One, the internationally wanted criminals were captured in Odessa, Ukraine.

They testified that they had intended to carry out the plot in Moscow immediately after the March 4 presidential election, said the TV station.

The investigation is still under way.

Putin’s press secretary Dmitry Peskov did not refute the report but refrained from making any comments to local media.

Hmm, interesting!

Kyle
Windows to Russia!

Update: RIA –

Ukrainian and Russian security services have gathered information about a plot to assassinate Russia’s Prime Minister Vladimir Putin, who is poised to be elected president on Sunday, the state-run Channel One reported on Monday.

The group of criminals involved were already on the international wanted list and were detained in the Ukrainian port city of Odessa in early January, after they survived an explosion in a rented apartment.

They had reportedly tried to produce a home-made explosive device. The two men were arrested, while a third man, who was also in the apartment, died during the explosion, the TV channel said.

According to the TV channel, after weeks of interrogation, the gang members confessed they were planning to assassinate Putin in Moscow, soon after the March 4 presidential elections.

One of the surviving militants, Ilya Pyanzin, said that the Chechen militant leader Doku Umarov, who is believed to be behind the deadliest terrorist attacks in Russia, hired him and the late Ruslan Madayev to kill Putin.

Pyanzin and Madayev came from the United Arab Emirates via Turkey to Ukraine. In Odessa, they were met by a local fixer, Adam Osmayev, who was supposed to brief the militants about the plan and send them to Moscow.

The TV report, featuring Osmayev ‘s interrogation, says that the militant, who had been on the international wanted list since 2007, is cooperating with investigators, as he hopes not to be extradited to Russia.

“The final task was to go to Moscow and carry out an assassination attempt on the premier Putin,” Osmayev said during questioning, adding that the late Madayev was ready to become a suicide bomber.

According to the assassination plan that was found in the militants’ laptop, they had to learn the structure of Putin’s security team and how his bodyguards worked, the TV report says.

“The deadline was set up for the period after the presidential elections,” Osmayev said.

Osmayev confessed that he scrutinized the routes of government corteges and that the preparation for the attack was in its final stage.

The TV report also said that the militants were going to use mines hidden along Moscow’s Kutuzovsky Avenue, which Putin passes every day on his way to the government building in downtown city.

An unknown security official told the TV channel that the mines were powerful enough to “tear apart a truck.”

Ukrainian Security Services confirmed the information released about the assassination plot.

Putin’s spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, was not available for comment.

Putin, who served as president from 2000 to 2008, is expected to return to the Kremlin for a third, non-consecutive term in office in elections on March 4.

Hmm, again…

Vladimir Putin on foreign affairs…

In my previous articles I have discussed some of the key foreign challenges that Russia now faces. This subject deserves more detailed discussion and not only because foreign policy is an integral part of any government strategy. External challenges and the changing world around us are forcing us to make decisions that have implications for our economy, our culture, and our budgetary and investment planning.

Russia is part of the greater world whether we are talking about the economy, the spread of information or the development of culture. We do not wish to and cannot isolate ourselves. We hope that our openness will lead to economic and cultural development in Russia while increasing levels of mutual trust, a resource that is in increasingly short supply today.

However, we intend to be consistent in proceeding from our own interests and goals rather than decisions dictated by someone else. Russia is only respected and has its interests considered when the country is strong and stands firmly on its own feet. Russia has generally enjoyed the privilege of conducting an independent foreign policy and this is what it will continue to do. In addition, I am convinced that global security can only be achieved through cooperation with Russia rather than by attempts to push it into the background, weaken its geopolitical position or compromise its defenses.

Our foreign policy objectives are strategic in nature and are not based on opportunistic considerations. They reflect Russia’s unique role on the world political map as well as its role in history and in the development of civilization.

I do not doubt that we will continue on our constructive course to enhance global security, renounce confrontation, and counter challenges like the proliferation of nuclear weapons, regional conflict and crises, terrorism and drug trafficking. We will do everything we can to see that Russia enjoys the latest achievements in scientific and technical progress and to assist our entrepreneurs in occupying their rightful place in the world market.

We will strive to ensure a new world order, one that meets current geopolitical realities, and one that develops smoothly and without unnecessary upheaval.

Who undermines confidence

As before, I believe that the major principles necessary for any feasible civilization include inalienable right to security for all states, the inadmissability of the excessive use of force, and the unconditional observance of the basic principles of international law. To neglect any of these principles can only lead to the destabilization of international relations.

It is through this prism that we perceive some aspects of U.S. and NATO conduct that contradict the logic of modern development, relying instead on the stereotypes of a bloc-based mentality. Everyone understands what I am referring to – an expansion of NATO that includes the deployment of new military infrastructure with U.S.-drafted plans to establish a missile defense system in Europe. I would not touch on this issue if these plans were not conducted in close proximity to Russian borders, if they did not undermine our security and global stability in general.

Our arguments are well known, and I will not spell them out again. Regrettably, our Western partners are unresponsive and have simply brushed our concerns aside.

We are worried that although the outline of our “new” relations with NATO are not yet final, the alliance is already providing us with “facts on the ground” that are counterproductive to building mutual trust. At the same time, this approach will backfire with respect to global objectives, making it more difficult to cooperate on a positive agenda and will impede any constructive reallignment in international relations.

The recent series of armed conflicts started under the pretext of humanitarian aims is undermining the time-honored principle of state sovereignty, creating a moral and legal void in the practice of international relations.

It is often said that human rights override state sovereignty. This is undoubtedly true – crimes against humanity must be punished by the International Court. However, when state sovereignty is too easily violated in the name of this provision, when human rights are protected from abroad and on a selective basis, and when the same rights of a population are trampled underfoot in the process of such “protection,” including the most basic and sacred right – the right to one’s life – these actions cannot be considered a noble mission but rather outright demagogy.

It is important for the United Nations and its Security Council to effectively counter the dictates of some countries and their arbitrary actions in the world arena. Nobody has the right to usurp the prerogatives and powers of the UN, particularly the use of force with regard to sovereign nations. This concerns NATO, an organization that has been assuming an attitude that is inconsistent with a “defensive alliance.” These points are very serious. We recall how states that have fallen victim to “humanitarian” operations and the export of “missile-and-bomb democracy” appealed for respect for legal standards and common human decency. But their cries were in vain – their appeals went unheard.

It seems that NATO members, especially the United States, have developed a peculiar interpretation of security that is different from ours. The Americans have become obsessed with the idea of becoming absolutely invulnerable. This utopian concept is unfeasible both technologically and geopolitically, but it is the root of the problem.

By definition, absolute invulnerability for one country would in theory require absolute vulnerability for all others. This is something that cannot be accepted. Many countries prefer not to be straight about this for various reasons, but that’s another matter. Russia will always call things as it sees them and do so openly. I’d like to emphasize again that violating the principle of unity and the inalienable right to security – despite numerous declarations committing to it – poses a serious threat. Eventually these threats become reality for those states that initiate such violations, for many reasons.

The Arab Spring: lessons and conclusions

A year ago the world witnessed a new phenomenon – nearly simultaneous demonstrations against authoritarian regimes in many Arab countries. The Arab Spring was initially received with hope for positive change. People in Russia sympathized with those who were seeking democratic reform.

However, it soon became clear that events in many countries were not following a civilized scenario. Instead of asserting democracy and protecting the rights of the minority, attempts were being made to depose an enemy and to stage a coup, which only resulted in the replacement of one dominant force with another even more aggressive dominant force.

Foreign interference in support of one side of a domestic conflict and the use of power in this interference gave developments a negative aura. A number of countries did away with the Libyan regime by using air power in the name of humanitarian support. The revolting slaughter of Muammar Gaddafi – not just medieval but primeval – was the manifestation of these actions.

No one should be allowed to employ the Libyan scenario in Syria. The international community must work to achieve an internal Syrian reconciliation. It is important to achieve an early end to the violence no matter what the source, and to initiate a national dialogue – without preconditions or foreign interference and with due respect for the country’s sovereignty. This would create the conditions necessary to introduce the measures for democratization announced by the Syrian leadership. The key objective is to prevent an all-out civil war. Russian diplomacy has worked and will continue to work toward this end.

Sadder but wiser, we oppose the adoption of UN Security Council resolutions that may be interpreted as a signal to armed interference in Syria’s domestic development. Guided by this consistent approach in early February, Russia and China prevented the adoption of an ambiguous resolution that would have encouraged one side of this domestic conflict to resort to violence.

In this context and considering the extremely negative, almost hysterical reaction to the Russian-Chinese veto, I would like to warn our Western colleagues against the temptation to resort to this simple, previously used tactic: if the UN Security Council approves of a given action, fine; if not, we will establish a coalition of the states concerned and strike anyway.

The logic of such conduct is counterproductive and very dangerous. No good can come of it. In any case, it will not help reach a settlement in a country that is going through a domestic conflict. Even worse, it further undermines the entire system of international security as well as the authority and key role of the UN. Let me recall that the right to veto is not some whim but an inalienable part of the world’s agreement that is registered in the UN Charter – incidentally, on U.S. insistence. The implication of this right is that decisions that raise the objection of even one permanent member of the UN Security Council cannot be well-grounded or effective.

I hope very much that the United States and other countries will consider this sad experience and will not pursue the use of power in Syria without UN Security Council sanctions. In general, I cannot understand what causes this itch for military intervention. Why isn’t there the patience to develop a well-considered, balanced and cooperative approach, all the more so since this approach was already taking shape in the form of the aforementioned Syrian resolution? It only lacked the demand that the armed opposition do the same as the government; in particular, withdraw military units and detachments from cities. The refusal to do so is cynical. If we want to protect civilians – and this is the main goal for Russia – we must make all the participants in the armed confrontation see reason.

And one more point. It appears that with the Arab Spring countries, as with Iraq, Russian companies are losing their decades-long positions in local commercial markets and are being deprived of large commercial contracts. The niches thus vacated are being filled by the economic operatives of the states that had a hand in the change of the ruling regime.

One could reasonably conclude that tragic events have been encouraged to a certain extent by someone’s interest in a re-division of the commercial market rather than a concern for human rights. Be that as it may, we cannot sit back watch all this with Olympian serenity. We intend to work with the new governments of the Arab countries in order to promptly restore our economic positions.

Generally, the current developments in the Arab world are, in many ways, instructive. They show that a striving to introduce democracy by use of power can produce – and often does produce -contradictory results. They can produce forces that rise from the bottom, including religious extremists, who will strive to change the very direction of a country’s development and the secular nature of a government.

Russia has always had good relations with the moderate representatives of Islam, whose world outlook was close to the traditions of Muslims in Russia. We are ready to develop these contacts further under the current conditions. We are interested in stepping up our political, trade and economic ties with all Arab countries, including those that, let me repeat, have gone through domestic upheaval. Moreover, I see real possibilities that will enable Russia to fully preserve its leading position in the Middle East, where we have always had many friends.

As for the Arab-Israeli conflict, to this day, the “magic recipe” that will produce a final settlement has not been invented. It would be unacceptable to give up on this issue. Considering our close ties with the Israeli and Palestinian leaders, Russian diplomacy will continue to work for the resumption of the peace process both on a bilateral basis and within the format of the Quartet on the Middle East, while coordinating its steps with the Arab League.

The Arab Spring has graphically demonstrated that world public opinion is being shaped by the most active use of advanced information and communications technology. It is possible to say that the Internet, social networks, cell phones, etc. have turned into an effective tool for the promotion of domestic and international policy on par with television. This new variable has come into play and gives us food for thought – how to continue developing the unique freedoms of communication via the Internet and at the same time reduce the risk of its being used by terrorists and other criminal elements.

The notion of “soft power” is being used increasingly often. This implies a matrix of tools and methods to reach foreign policy goals without the use of arms but by exerting information and other levers of influence. Regrettably, these methods are being used all too frequently to develop and provoke extremist, separatist and nationalistic attitudes, to manipulate the public and to conduct direct interference in the domestic policy of sovereign countries.

There must be a clear division between freedom of speech and normal political activity, on the one hand, and illegal instruments of “soft power,” on the other. The civilized work of non-governmental humanitarian and charity organizations deserves every support. This also applies to those who actively criticize the current authorities. However, the activities of “pseudo-NGOs” and other agencies that try to destabilize other countries with outside support are unacceptable.

I’m referring to those cases where the activities of NGOs are not based on the interests (and resources) of local social groups but are funded and supported by outside forces. There are many agents of influence from big countries, international blocks or corporations. When they act in the open – this is simply a form of civilized lobbyism. Russia also uses such institutions – the Federal Agency for CIS Affairs, Compatriots Living Abroad, International Humanitarian Cooperation, the Russkiy Mir Foundation and our leading universities who recruit talented students from abroad.

However, Russia does not use or fund national NGOs based in other countries or any foreign political organizations in the pursuit of its own interests. China, India and Brazil do not do this either. We believe that any influence on domestic policy and public attitude in other countries must be exerted in the open; in this way, those who wish to be of influence will do so responsibly.

New challenges and threats

Today, Iran is the focus of international attention. Needless to say, Russia is worried about the growing threat of a military strike against Iran. If this happens, the consequences will be disastrous. It is impossible to imagine the true scope of this turn of events.

I am convinced that this issue must be settled exclusively by peaceful means. We propose recognizing Iran’s right to develop a civilian nuclear program, including the right to enrich uranium. But this must be done in exchange for putting all Iranian nuclear activity under reliable and comprehensive IAEA safeguards. If this is done, the sanctions against Iran, including the unilateral ones, must be rescinded. The West has shown too much willingness to “punish” certain countries. At any minor development it reaches for sanctions if not armed force. Let me remind you that we are not in the 19th century or even the 20th century now.

Developments around the Korean nuclear issue are no less serious. Violating the non-proliferation regime, Pyongyang openly claims the right to develop “the military atom” and has already conducted two nuclear tests. We cannot accept North Korea’s nuclear status. We have consistently advocated the denuclearization of the Korean Peninsula – exclusively through political and diplomatic means — and the early resumption of Six-Party Talks.

However, it is evident that not all of our partners share this approach. I am convinced that today it is essential to be particularly careful. It would be inadvisable to try and test the strength of the new North Korean leader and provoke a rash countermeasure.

Allow me to recall that North Korea and Russia share a common border and we cannot choose our neighbors. We will continue conducting an active dialogue with the leaders of North Korea and developing good-neighborly relations with it, while at the same time trying to encourage Pyongyang to settle the nuclear issue. Obviously, it would be easier to do this if mutual trust is built up and the inter-Korean dialogue resumes on the peninsula.

All this fervor around the nuclear programs of Iran and North Korea makes one wonder how the risks of nuclear weapons proliferation emerge and who is aggravating them. It seems that the more frequent cases of crude and even armed outside interference in the domestic affairs of countries may prompt authoritarian (and other) regimes to possess nuclear weapons. If I have the A-bomb in my pocket, nobody will touch me because it’s more trouble than it is worth. And those who don’t have the bomb might have to sit and wait for “humanitarian intervention.”

Whether we like it or not, foreign interference suggests this train of thought. This is why the number of threshold countries that are one step away from “military atom” technology, is growing rather than decreasing. Under these conditions, zones free of weapons of mass destruction are being established in different parts of the world and are becoming increasingly important. Russia has initiated the discussion of the parameters for a nuclear-free zone in the Middle East.

It is essential to do everything we can to prevent any country from being tempted to get nuclear weapons. Non-proliferation campaigners must also change their conduct, especially those that are used to penalizing other countries by force, without letting the diplomats do their job. This was the case in Iraq – its problems have only become worse after an almost decade-long occupation.

If the incentives for becoming a nuclear power are finally eradicated, it will be possible to make the international non-proliferation regime universal and firmly based on existing treaties. This regime would allow all interested countries to fully enjoy the benefits of the “peaceful atom” under IAEA safeguards.

Russia would stand to gain much from this because we are actively operating in international markets, building new nuclear power plants based on safe, modern technology and taking part in the formation of multilateral nuclear enrichment centers and nuclear fuel banks.

The probable future of Afghanistan is alarming. We have supported the military operation on rendering international aid to that country. However, the NATO-led international military contingent has not met its objectives. The threats of terrorism and drug trafficking have not been reduced. Having announced its withdrawal from Afghanistan in 2014, the United States has been building, both there and in neighboring countries, military bases without a clear-cut mandate, objectives or duration of operation. Understandably, this does not suit us.

Russia has obvious interests in Afghanistan and these interests are understandable. Afghanistan is our close neighbor and we have a stake in its stable and peaceful development. Most important, we want it to stop being the main source of the drug threat. Illegal drug trafficking has become one of the most urgent threats. It undermines the genetic bank of entire nations, while creating fertile soil for corruption and crime and is leading to the destabilization of Afghanistan. Far from declining, the production of Afghan drugs increased by almost 40% last year. Russia is being subjected to vicious heroin-related aggression that is doing tremendous damage to the health of our people.

The dimensions of the Afghan drug threat make it clear that it can only be overcome by a global effort with reliance on the United Nations and regional organizations – the Collective Security Treaty Organization, the Shanghai Cooperation Organization and the CIS. We are willing to consider much greater participation in the relief operation for the Afghan people but only on the condition that the international contingent in Afghanistan acts with greater zeal and in our interests, that it will pursue the physical destruction of drug crops and underground laboratories.

Invigorated anti-drug measures inside Afghanistan must be accompanied by the reliable blocking of the routes of opiate transportation to external markets, financial flows and the supply of chemical substances used in heroin production. The goal is to build a comprehensive system of anti-drug security in the region. Russia will contribute to the effective cooperation of the international community for turning the tide in the war against the global drug threat.

It is hard to predict further developments in Afghanistan. Historical experience shows that foreign military presence has not brought it serenity. Only the Afghans can resolve their own problems. I see Russia’s role as follows – to help the Afghan people, with the active involvement of other neighboring countries, to develop a sustainable economy and enhance the ability of the national armed forces to counter the threats of terrorism and drug-related crime. We do not object to the process of national reconciliation being joined by participants of the armed opposition, including the Taliban, on condition they renounce violence, recognize the country’s Constitution and sever ties with al-Qaeda and other terrorist groups. In principle, I believe it is possible to build a peaceful, stable, independent and neutral Afghan state.

The instability that has persisted for years and decades is creating a breeding ground for international terrorism that is universally recognized as one of the most dangerous challenges to the world community. I’d like to note that the crises zones that engender a terrorist threat are located near the Russian borders and are much close to us than to our European or American partners. The United Nations has adopted the Global Counter-Terrorism Strategy but it seems that the struggle against this evil is conducted not under a common universal plan and not consistently but in a series of responses to the most urgent and barbarian manifestations of terror – when the public uproar over the impudent acts of terrorists grows out of proportion. The civilized world must not wait for tragedies like the terrorist attacks in New York in September 2001 or another Beslan disaster and only then act collectively and resolutely after the shock of such cases.

I’m far from denying the results achieved in the war on international terror. There has been progress. In the last few years security services and the law-enforcement agencies of many countries have markedly upgraded their cooperation. But there is still the obvious potential for further anti-terrorist cooperation. Thus, double standards still exist and terrorists are perceived differently in different countries – some are “bad guys” and others are “not so bad.” Some forces are not averse to using the latter in political manipulation, for example, in shaking up objectionable ruling regimes.

All available public institutions – the media, religious associations, NGOs, the education system, science and business – must be used to prevent terrorism all over the world. We need a dialogue between religions and, on a broader plane, among civilizations. Russia has many religions, but we have never had religious wars. We could make a contribution to an international discussion on this issue.

The growing role of the Asia-Pacific Region

One of our country’s neighbors is China, a major hub of the global economy. It has become fashionable to opine about that country’s future role in the global economy and international affairs. Last year China moved into second place in the world in terms of GDP and it is poised to surpass the U.S. on that count, according to international – including American – experts. The overall might of the People’s Republic of China is growing, and that includes the ability to project power in various regions.

How should we conduct ourselves in the face of the rapidly strengthening Chinese factor?

First of all, I am convinced that China’s economic growth is by no means a threat, but a challenge that carries colossal potential for business cooperation – a chance to catch the Chinese wind in the sails of our economy. We should seek to more actively form new cooperative ties, combining the technological and productive capabilities of our two countries and tapping China’s potential – judiciously, of course – in order to develop the economy of Siberia and the Russian Far East.

Second, China’s conduct on the world stage gives no grounds to talk about its aspirations to dominance. The Chinese voice in the world is indeed growing ever more confident, and we welcome that, because Beijing shares our vision of the emerging equitable world order. We will continue to support each other in the international arena, to work together to solve acute regional and global problems, and to promote cooperation within the UN Security Council, BRICS, the SCO, the G20 and other multilateral forums.

And third, we have settled all the major political issues in our relations with China, including the critical border issue. Our nations have created a solid mechanism of bilateral ties, reinforced by legally binding documents. There is an unprecedentedly high level of trust between the leaders of our two countries. This enables us and the Chinese to act in the spirit of genuine partnership, rooted in pragmatism and respect for each other’s interests. The model of Russian-Chinese relations we have created has good prospects.

Of course, this is not to suggest that our relationship with China is problem-free. There are some sources of friction. Our commercial interests in third parties by no means always coincide, and we are not entirely satisfied with the emerging trade structure and the low level of mutual investments. We will also closely monitor immigration from the People’s Republic of China.

But my main premise is that Russia needs a prosperous and stable China, and I am convinced that China needs a strong and successful Russia.

Another rapidly growing Asian giant is India. Russia has traditionally enjoyed friendly relations with India, which the leaders of our two countries have classified as a privileged strategic partnership. Not only our countries but the entire multipolar system that is emerging in the world stands to gain from this partnership.

We see before our eyes not only the rise of China and India, but the growing weight of the entire Asia-Pacific Region. This has opened up new horizons for fruitful work within the framework of the Russian chairmanship of APEC. In September of this year we will host a meeting of its leaders in Vladivostok. We are actively preparing for it, creating modern infrastructure that will promote the further development of Siberia and the Russian Far East and enable our country to become more involved in the dynamic integration processes in the “new Asia.”

We will continue to prioritize our cooperation with our BRICS partners. That unique structure, created in 2006, is a striking symbol of the transition from a unipolar world to a more just world order. BRICS brings together five countries with a population of almost three billion people, the largest emerging economies, colossal labor and natural resources and huge domestic markets. With the addition of South Africa, BRICS acquired a truly global format, and it now accounts for more than 25% of world GDP.

We are still getting used to working together in this format. In particular, we have to coordinate better on foreign policy matters and work together more closely at the UN. But when BRICS is really up and running, its impact on the world economy and politics will be considerable.

In recent years, cooperation with the countries of Asia, Latin America and Africa has become a growing focus of Russian diplomacy and of our business community. In these regions there is still sincere goodwill toward Russia. One of the key tasks for the coming period, in my view, is cultivating trade and economic cooperation as well as joint projects in the fields of energy, infrastructure, investment, science and technology, banking and tourism.

The growing role of Asia, Latin America and Africa in the emerging democratic system of managing the global economy and global finance is reflected in the work of the G20. I believe that this association will soon become a strategically important tool not only for responding to crises, but for the long-term reform of the world’s financial and economic architecture. Russia will chair the G20 in 2013, and we must use this opportunity to better coordinate the work of the G20 and other multilateral structures, above all the G8 and, of course, the UN.

The Europe factor

Russia is an inalienable and organic part of Greater Europe and European civilization. Our citizens think of themselves as Europeans. We are by no means indifferent to developments in united Europe.

That is why Russia proposes moving toward the creation of a common economic and human space from the Atlantic to the Pacific Ocean – a community referred by Russian experts to as “the Union of Europe,” which will strengthen Russia’s potential and position in its economic pivot toward the “new Asia.”

Against the background of the rise of China, India and other new economies, the financial and economic upheavals in Europe – formerly an oasis of stability and order – is particularly worrisome. The crisis that has struck the eurozone cannot but affect Russia’s interests, especially if one considers that the EU is our major foreign economic and trade partner. Likewise, it is clear that the prospects of the entire global economic structure depend heavily on the state of affairs in Europe.

Russia is actively participating in the international effort to support the ailing European economies, and is consistently working with its partners to formulate collective decisions under the auspices of the IMF. Russia is not opposed in principle to direct financial assistance in some cases.

At the same time I believe that external financial injections can only partially solve the problem. A true solution will require energetic, system-wide measures. European leaders face the task of effecting large-scale transformations that will fundamentally change many financial and economic mechanisms to ensure genuine budget discipline. We have a stake in ensuring a strong EU, as envisioned by Germany and France. It is in our interests to realize the enormous potential of the Russia-EU partnership.

The current level of cooperation between Russia and the European Union does not correspond to current global challenges, above all making our shared continent more competitive. I propose again that we work toward creating a harmonious community of economies from Lisbon to Vladivostok, which will, in the future, evolve into a free trade zone and even more advanced forms of economic integration. The resulting common continental market would be worth trillions of euros. Does anyone doubt that this would be a wonderful development, and that it would meet the interests of both Russians and Europeans?

We must also consider more extensive cooperation in the energy sphere, up to and including the formation of a common European energy complex. The Nord Stream gas pipeline under the Baltic Sea and the South Stream pipeline under the Black Sea are important steps in that direction. These projects have the support of many governments and involve major European energy companies. Once the pipelines start operating at full capacity, Europe will have a reliable and flexible gas-supply system that does not depend on the political whims of any nation. This will strengthen the continent’s energy security not only in form but in substance. This is particularly relevant in the light of the decision of some European states to reduce or renounce nuclear energy.

The Third Energy Package, backed by the European Commission and aimed at squeezing out integrated Russian companies, is frankly not conducive to stronger relations between Russia and the EU. Considering the growing instability of energy suppliers that could act as an alternative to Russia, the package aggravates the systemic risks to the European energy sector and scares away potential investors in new infrastructure projects. Many European politicians have been critical of the package in their talks with me. We should summon the courage to remove this obstacle to mutually beneficial cooperation.

I believe that genuine partnership between Russia and the European Union is impossible as long as there are barriers that impede human and economic contacts, first and foremost visa requirements. The abolition of visas would give powerful impetus to real integration between Russia and the EU, and would help expand cultural and business ties, especially between medium-sized and small businesses. The threat to Europeans from Russian economic migrants is largely imagined. Our people have opportunities to put their abilities and skills to use in their own country, and these opportunities are becoming ever more numerous.

In December 2011 we agreed with the EU on “joint steps” toward a visa-free regime. They can and should be taken without delay. We should continue to actively pursue this goal.

Russian-American affairs

In recent years a good deal has been done to develop Russian-American relations. Even so, we have not managed to fundamentally change the matrix of our relations, which continue to ebb and flow. The instability of the partnership with America is due in part to the tenacity of some well-known stereotypes and phobias, particularly the perception of Russia on Capitol Hill. But the main problem is that bilateral political dialogue and cooperation do not rest on a solid economic foundation. The current level of bilateral trade falls far short of the potential of our economies. The same is true of mutual investments. We have yet to create a safety net that would protect our relations against ups and downs. We should work on this.

Nor is mutual understanding strengthened by regular U.S. attempts to engage in “political engineering,” including in regions that are traditionally important to us and during Russian elections.

As I’ve said before, U.S. plans to create a missile defense system in Europe give rise to legitimate fears in Russia. Why does that system worry us more than others? Because it affects the strategic nuclear deterrence forces that only Russia possesses in that theatre, and upsets the military-political balance established over decades.

The inseparable link between missile defense and strategic offensive weapons is reflected in the New START treaty signed in 2010. The treaty has come into effect and is working fairly well. It is a major foreign policy achievement. We are ready to consider various options for our joint agenda with the Americans in the field of arms control in the coming period. In this effort we must seek to balance our interests and renounce any attempts to gain one-sided advantages through negotiations.

In 2007, during a meeting with President Bush in Kennebunkport, I proposed a solution to the missile defense problem, which, if adopted, would have changed the customary character of Russian-American relations and opened up a positive path forward. Moreover, if we had managed to achieve a breakthrough on missile defense, this would have opened the floodgates for building a qualitatively new model of cooperation, similar to an alliance, in many other sensitive areas.

It was not to be. Perhaps it would be useful to look back at the transcripts of the talks in Kennebunkport. In recent years the Russian leadership has come forward with other proposals to resolve the dispute over missile defense. These proposals still stand.

I am loath to dismiss the possibility of reaching a compromise on missile defense. One would not like to see the deployment of the American system on a scale that would demand the implementation of our declared countermeasures.

I recently had a talk with Henry Kissinger. I meet with him regularly. I fully share this consummate professional’s thesis that close and trusting interactions between Moscow and Washington are particularly important in periods of international turbulence.

In general, we are prepared to make great strides in our relations with the U.S., to achieve a qualitative breakthrough, but on the condition that the Americans are guided by the principles of equal and mutually respectful partnership.

Economic diplomacy

In December of last year, Russia finally concluded its marathon accession to the WTO, which lasted for many years. I must mention that, in the finishing stretch, the Obama administration and the leaders of some major European states made a significant contribution to achieving the final accords.

To be honest, at times during this long and arduous journey we wanted to turn our backs on the talks and slam the door. But we did not succumb to emotion. As a result a compromise was reached that is quite acceptable for our country: we managed to defend the interests of Russian industrial and agricultural producers in the face of growing external competition. Our economic actors have gained substantial additional opportunities to enter world markets and uphold their rights there in a civilized manner. It is this, rather than the symbolism of Russia’s accession to the World Trade “club”, that I see as the main result of this process.

Russia will comply with WTO norms, as it meets all of its international obligations. Likewise, I hope that our partners will play according to the rules. Let me note in passing that we have already integrated WTO principles in the legal framework of the Common Economic Space of Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan.

Russia is still learning how to systematically and consistently promote its economic interests in the world. We have yet to learn, as many Western partners have, how to lobby for decisions that favor Russian business in foreign international forums. The challenges facing us in this area, given our priority of innovation-driven development, are very serious: to achieve equal standing for Russia in the modern system of global economic ties, and to minimize the risks arising from integration in the world economy, including Russia’s membership in the WTO and its forthcoming accession to the OECD.

We are badly in need of broader, non-discriminatory access to foreign markets. So far Russian economic actors have been getting a raw deal abroad. Restrictive trade and political measures are being taken against them, and technical barriers are being erected that put them at a disadvantage compared with their competitors.

The same holds for investments. We are trying to attract foreign capital to the Russian economy. We are opening up the most attractive areas of our economy to foreign investors, granting them access to the “juiciest morsels,” in particular, our fuel and energy complex. But our investors are not welcome abroad and are often pointedly brushed aside.

Examples abound. Take the story of Germany’s Opel, which Russian investors tried and failed to acquire despite the fact that the deal was approved by the German government and was positively received by German trade unions. Or take the outrageous examples of Russian businesses being denied their rights as investors after investing considerable resources in foreign assets. This is a frequent occurrence in Central and Eastern Europe.

All this leads to the conclusions that Russia must strengthen its political and diplomatic support for Russian entrepreneurs in foreign markets, and to provide more robust assistance to major, landmark business projects. Nor should we forget that Russia can employ identical response measures against those who resort to dishonest methods of competition.

The government and business associations should better coordinate their efforts in the foreign economic sphere, more aggressively promote the interests of Russian business and help it to open up new markets.

I would like to draw attention to another important factor that largely shapes the role and place of Russia in present-day and future political and economic alignments – the vast size of our country. Granted, we no longer occupy one-sixth of the Earth’s surface, but the Russian Federation is still the world’s largest nation with an unrivaled abundance of natural resources. I am referring not only to oil and gas, but also our forests, agricultural land and clean freshwater resources.

Russia’s territory is a source of its potential strength. In the past, our vast land mainly served as a buffer against foreign aggression. Now, given a sound economic strategy, they can become a very important foundation for increasing our competitiveness.

I would like to mention, in particular, the growing shortage of fresh water in the world. One can foresee in the near future the start of geopolitical competition for water resources and for the ability to produce water-intensive goods. When this time comes, Russia will have its trump card ready. We understand that we must use our natural wealth prudently and strategically.

Support for compatriots and Russian culture in the international context

Respect for one’s country is rooted, among other things, in its ability to protect the rights of its citizens abroad. We must never neglect the interests of the millions of Russian nationals who live and travel abroad on vacation or on business. I would like to stress that the Foreign Ministry and all diplomatic and consular agencies must be prepared to provide real support to our citizens around the clock. Diplomats must respond to conflicts between Russian nationals and local authorities, and to incidents and accidents in a prompt manner – before the media announces the news to the world.

We are determined to ensure that Latvian and Estonian authorities follow the numerous recommendations of reputable international organizations on observing generally accepted rights of ethnic minorities. We cannot tolerate the shameful status of “non-citizen.” How can we accept that, due to their status as non-citizens, one in six Latvian residents and one in thirteen Estonian residents are denied their fundamental political, electoral and socioeconomic rights and the ability to freely use Russian?

The recent referendum in Latvia on the status of the Russian language again demonstrated to the international community how acute this problem is. Over 300,000 non-citizens were once again barred from taking part in a referendum. Even more outrageous is the fact that the Latvian Central Electoral Commission refused to allow a delegation from the Russian Public Chamber to monitor the vote. Meanwhile, international organizations responsible for compliance with generally accepted democratic norms remain silent.

On the whole, we are dissatisfied with how the issue of human rights is handled globally. First, the United States and other Western states dominate and politicize the human rights agenda, using it as a means to exert pressure. At the same time, they are very sensitive and even intolerant to criticism. Second, the objects of human rights monitoring are chosen regardless of objective criteria but at the discretion of the states that have “privatized” the human rights agenda.

Russia has been the target of biased and aggressive criticism that, at times, exceeds all limits. When we are given constructive criticism, we welcome it and are ready to learn from it. But when we are subjected, again and again, to blanket criticisms in a persistent effort to influence our citizens, their attitudes, and our domestic affairs, it becomes clear that these attacks are not rooted in moral and democratic values.

Nobody should possess complete control over the sphere of human rights. Russia is a young democracy. More often than not, we are too humble and too willing to spare the self-regard of our more experienced partners. Still, we often have something to say, and no country has a perfect record on human rights and basic freedoms. Even the older democracies commit serious violations, and we should not look the other way. Obviously, this work should not be about trading insults. All sides stand to gain from a constructive discussion of human rights issues.

In late 2011, the Russian Foreign Ministry published its first report on the observance of human rights in other countries. I believe we should become more active in this area. This will facilitate broader and more equitable cooperation in the effort to solve humanitarian problems and promote fundamental democratic principles and human rights.

Of course, this is just one aspect of our efforts to promote our international and diplomatic activity and to foster an accurate image of Russia abroad. Admittedly, we have not seen great success here. When it comes to media influence, we are often outperformed. This is a separate and complex challenge that we must confront.

Russia has a great cultural heritage, recognized both in the West and the East. But we have yet to make a serious investment in our culture and its promotion around the world. The surge in global interest in ideas and culture, sparked by the merger of societies and economies in the global information network, provides new opportunities for Russia, with its proven talent for creating cultural objects.

Russia has a chance not only to preserve its culture but to use it as a powerful force for progress in international markets. The Russian language is spoken in nearly all the former Soviet republics and in a significant part of Eastern Europe. This is not about empire, but rather cultural progress. Exporting education and culture will help promote Russian goods, services and ideas; guns and imposing political regimes will not.

We must work to expand Russia’s educational and cultural presence in the world, especially in those countries where a substantial part of the population speaks or understands Russian.

We must discuss how we can derive the maximum benefit for Russia’s image from hosting large international events, including the APEC Leaders’ Meeting in 2012, the G20 summit in 2013 and the G8 summit in 2014, the Universiade in Kazan in 2013, the Winter Olympic Games in 2014, the IIHF World Championships in 2016, and the FIFA World Cup in 2018.

* * * * *

Russia intends to continue promoting its security and protecting its national interest by actively and constructively engaging in global politics and in efforts to solve global and regional problems. We are ready for mutually beneficial cooperation and open dialogue with all our foreign partners. We aim to understand and take into account the interests of our partners, and we ask that our own interests be respected.

Lets Make Kasha: Some Russian Kasha (Porridge) Recipes…

On this side of the world you can’t go wrong with using the term kasha! Kasha means porridge and that porridge comes in many forms. Especially buckwheat, wheat, barley, oats, millet and rye. Kasha is a wonderful winter meal, but it is eaten by all, year around. As always there is millions of recipes for Kasha as for all other Russian delights, but we will try these out today and or try out a past article http://windowstorussia.com/you-can%E2%80%99t-feed-a-russian-without-a-kasha.html

Lets make some Kasha:

Kasha Semolina recipe:
Ingredients: 1 cup – semolina , 4 cup – milk, 2 tb – butter , 3 ts – sugar, salt to taste
Method: Bring milk to boil, stir in semolina (purified wheat middling’s of durum wheat) gradually. Add butter, sugar and salt. Bring back to a boil and then turn down and let cook on low heat for 10-15 minutes, with a lid on. Serve with jam, honey or fruits…

Kasha Rice with Cheese recipe: (Done this one before in above link and so Yummy!)
Ingredients: 2 cups rice , 4 cups water , 250 g grated cheese , 3 tb real butter , salt
Method: Wash rice under running water in a colander. Fry it in real butter until lightly brown. Pour over water and bring to boil, salt and cook on low heat for 40 minutes. Before serving, sprinkle with grated cheese…

Buckwheat Kasha recipe:
Ingredients :200 g buckwheat , 1 cup water , 25 g butter
Method: In Russia kasha was usually made in crockery. Fill 3/4 of a pot with buckwheat groats, add salt and butter. Pour over boiling water up to the top. Stir in carefully. And put into a pre heated oven for 3-4 hours. One hour before finishing, cover the pot with a large pan and turn upside down. A half an hour before serving, put wet fabric round in order that kasha falls off from the pot sides. Serve with cold baked milk and or real butter…

Gouryevskaya Kasha recipe: (This is harder to make, but – oh so delicious!)
Ingredients : 2 cup semolina , 3 cup milk , 3 tb butter , 3 tb sugar , 2 cup dense cream , 2/3 cup nuts, 2 cups canned fruit, 1/2 cup sugar, 1/2 tb ea lemon and vanilla, three pinches of salt Method: Take a not very deep pan. Put cream (must be dense) into the hot oven. As soon as there is a pink skin on the cream, take it carefully away on the plate. Be careful not to tear. Do it until you have 6-7 skins…

Boil a viscous kasha (mush) on milk. Add butter, sugar (2 tb), vanilla, salt and mix very well. Put kasha into the oven to warm up for 30 minutes. Add the rest of baked cream to kasha. Nuts caramelizing: nuts must be caramelized otherwise kasha will be grey and not have a very good taste. Nuts must be tempered (fired) at first. Then put in a very hot water for 10 minutes. After that take the skins off and dry and chop them. Put sugar (1/2 c) in the pan on the heat, add lemon juice, wait until red colour and add nuts. As soon as nuts are caramelized, take them out and let cool down…

Prepare a baking form. Grease it with butter. Put a little kasha as first layer, then a skin and nuts, chopped canned fruits. Repeat it until all the skins are used. The last layer is made of kasha. Decorate with sugar, fruits and nuts and put the form into the hot oven for 10-20 minutes…

Gouryevskaya Kasha is served with apricot puree or any fruit juice…

Windows to Russia!

Me Thinks – 1: By Paul Wen…

Me thinks that USA will have cheat elections for president this time. Maybe last time it was also but who knows?

Me thinks Russia and China will be close together!

Me thinks burning Koran by US is very hurtful to international standings! Much worse than most things!

Me thinks India needs to become its own person and peak at the East side!

Me thinks Pakistan is upset at some things and that is not good!

Me thinks Russia has asked Pakistan to build a $1 billion pipeline to Iran by Gazprom with finance and that is a good thing!

Me thinks that will upset USA!

Me thinks that China is a nicer place than most! 😉

Me thinks that China smiles as Chinese fashion designer Jason Wu, Jason Wu, of the discount store (Target) for the “target” design of cheap cheap clothing and even President Barack Obama’s wife Michelle were wearing cheap Chinese clothes last weekend in which a printed jumpsuitdress to attend a public information activities in Florida. (Thank you!)

Me thinks China owns USA and Europe but we have not owned Russia yet!

Me will have more thinks later and I will get better at them!

Paul Wen

The views of the above author are not strictly the views of Windows to Russia. They are an independent view from an outside source and country that brings a better light on the world in general and Windows to Russia is pleased to have Paul Wen’s article on its pages today. He wants to make a regular Me Thinks! It is hoped that we will have many more of his writings in the future…

Windows to Russia!