Russia: Lets Talk About Africa and the Global Economy!

Hello,

Every once in a while I venture from the beaten path of Russia! Though really not very far in this case. Africa is not really that far away from Russia. When you live in America it seems to be a long ways off, but it dawned on me the other day that when we were in Israel that we where very close to Africa.

I was asked to give a look at this information and I did. I then decided to post it because Russia and China have been making inroads into Africa because they see the potential that lies in wait.

America needs to get on the band wagon:

The Conversation Behind Closed Doors is a two-part, qualitative survey conducted by Baird’s CMC in partnership with the U.S. Chamber of Commerce.

Part one, The Corporate Conversation, is an inside-the-boardroom survey of attitudes toward corporate investment in Africa among leading U.S. corporations. The information was gathered during a series of behind closed door interviews. All interviews took place from January to November 2008 and were conducted in person by senior associates of Baird’s CMC. This document presents the findings of part one.

Part two, The Public Sector Conversation, will be conducted over the next several months. It is is an inside-the-government survey of the responses set forth in part one. (Link)

Download the Executive Summary

View Executive Summary in HTML

This is a not an advertisement for any particular organization. It is simply a promotion of an interesting subject by me.

I see the investment into Africa as a positive application that will help the whole world. Africa is part of the global economy albeit a small part but still a part. If developed properly and with care it could become a vital part of the global economy…

Windows to Russia!
comments always welcome.

Russia: First there was One! Then…..

Nicaragua
Hello,

Something interesting has happened……

Nicaragua a Central America country, bordering both the Caribbean Sea and the North Pacific Ocean, between Costa Rica and Honduras has become the first country outside Russia to recognize the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

The Central American state’s President, Daniel Ortega, said he backs Russia in its efforts to end tension in the Caucasus.

Vladimir Degay from the Russian Embassy in Nicaragua said that the president made the announcement on September 2.

“After the Georgian leadership launched an aggression that left thousands of people killed, wounded or displaced in these two republics, Ortega said Russia had no other option but to protect the free choice of these two states,” Degay said.

Lets see what happens next…..

Kyle & Svet

comments always welcome.

Russia: The Nicest Degradation Of The People!

Hello,

I kept this article since the 13th of March, I have read and reread this article several times. I am now going to give my opinion about this article called “Let Russians Be Russians!”

I find that Rodric Braithwaite has written the most beautiful wonderfully written article that still degrades & demoralizes the Russian People! A article that at the first reading looks & sounds good, then you reread because something hits you wrong……

1. “Given the chance, the Russians — like the Afghans, the Iraqis, the Pakistanis and others — turn out in large numbers to express their views through the ballot box. That is not enough, of course, to establish a working democracy in any country. But the result may well be a genuine expression of the popular view.” (Interesting comparison choices to third world countries.)

2. “The Russian government manipulated the electoral process — outrageously — to get the right result.”(What Proof?)

3. “Democracy is about throwing the rascals out, and most Russians are reconciled to their current rascals.” (Democracy is about Money!)

4. “This remarkable democratic experiment then went wrong for a number of reasons:” (The Democratic experiment has just started in Russia!)

5. “That does not mean that Russians are “genetically” incapable of democracy.” (What?)

6. “But if the Indians can do it, so can the Russians.” (Does Russia want to be like Indians? Or Americans? Or Britain’s? NO! Russians want to be like Russians!)

7. ” George Kennan, that great Russia-watcher and U.S. diplomat and historian, got it right when he wrote in 1951, at the height of the Cold War: “When Soviet power has run its course … let us not hover nervously over the people who come after, applying litmus papers daily to their political complexions to find out whether they answer to our concept of ‘democrats.’ Give them time; let them be Russians; let them work out their internal problems in their own manner. The ways by which people advance towards dignity and enlightenment in government are things that constitute the deepest and most intimate processes of national life. There is nothing less understandable to foreigners, nothing in which foreign influence can do less good.” (This statement made my Wife see red! I say 1951 was not the era to quote from…Who said that democracy is what anyone should advance toward? )

8. “who, like latter-day Christian missionaries, believe that we have a duty to spread the gospel of democracy — by military force, if necessary. Russians are not the only ones who find that proposition distinctly suspect.” (The only thing that he said that really made sense!)

The whole article is a nice pleasent slam to the Russian people. Slam to the Russian election! Slam to Putin and his government!

Yes, He did it very polite & politically correct. Bless Him.

His comparisions, examples & statements are from a biased ancient(Cold War) veiwpoint! In 1951 America was slapping communist lables on people who liked the color red and “Black Listing” them……….
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Let Russians Be Russians
By Rodric Braithwaite

Having listened to all the speculation about what kind of president Dmitry Medvedev will become, we should look more closely at a much more contested question: Are the Russians even capable of democracy?

Many people — both in Russia and abroad — argue that Russians have no democratic tradition, that they prefer the iron hand of the autocrat and that the country is too big, too heterogenous and too disorderly to be ruled any other way.

President Vladimir Putin is more subtle. He believes that Russians are not yet ready for democracy, that they need to be brought to it by a managed process, lest everything collapse in chaos. He reminds one of the British, who argued that Indian independence must be postponed until the natives were capable of governing themselves.

Given the chance, the Russians — like the Afghans, the Iraqis, the Pakistanis and others — turn out in large numbers to express their views through the ballot box. That is not enough, of course, to establish a working democracy in any country. But the result may well be a genuine expression of the popular view.

Most ordinary Russians, thoroughly inoculated against the Western model by the chaos, humiliation, poverty and corruption of the Yeltsin years and angered by endless hectoring and ill-conceived advice from the West, are willing to pay a price in democracy for the stability and growing prosperity that have accompanied the Putin years. So in the recent parliamentary and presidential elections, they twice voted heavily for a continuation of the “Putin system.” In the circumstances, that was a rational choice.

The Russian government manipulated the electoral process — outrageously — to get the right result. This is a curious sign of Putin’s weakness, not his strength, since no one doubted that most people would vote the way the government wanted, for their own good reasons. Nevertheless, both elections had a certain legitimacy despite the obvious flaws. The voters were offered a choice on March 2, and many of them took it. One in five voted for veteran Communist Party head Gennady Zyuganov — nearly twice as many as predicted. One in 10 voted for Liberal Democratic Party leader Vladimir Zhirinovsky. We may not like these results, but this is very different from what happened in Kazakhstan in 2006, when President Nursultan Nazarbayev, who had been in power for 17 years, was re-elected for another seven by 95 percent of the voters.

Democracy is about throwing the rascals out, and most Russians are reconciled to their current rascals. It was different in March 1989, when Mikhail Gorbachev organized the first contested elections in any Warsaw Pact country, under an electoral system of mind-boggling complexity designed to preserve the Communist Party’s monopoly power. But the voters recognized the rascals all right. They voted tactically and with great sophistication to throw out the bosses of Moscow, Leningrad and Kiev, a quarter of the regional party secretaries, a heap of generals and many other unpleasant people.

This remarkable democratic experiment then went wrong for a number of reasons: the sense of national humiliation that accompanied the collapse of the Soviet Union, the ensuing poverty, the inability of the liberal intelligentsia — the self-styled “conscience of the nation” — to agree on any effective course of action, the determination of the hard men in the army and the party to get their own back.

That does not mean that Russians are “genetically” incapable of democracy. Their history and their culture have not been propitious. The country has indeed for most of its history been a closed and imperial autocracy. But here, too, the Indian example is instructive. A country with a far larger population, an even more heterogenous culture and an unbroken history of autocratic and imperial rule has run a remarkably successful democracy for the past 60 years.

Although Russians today do not enjoy a Western kind of democracy, they do enjoy an unprecedented, if precarious, degree of personal prosperity, of access to information, of freedom to travel and even — within limits — to express their views. To argue that they cannot go on to construct their own version of democracy is a kind of racism. It may take decades, even generations; the construction of democracy always does. But if the Indians can do it, so can the Russians.

George Kennan, that great Russia-watcher and U.S. diplomat and historian, got it right when he wrote in 1951, at the height of the Cold War: “When Soviet power has run its course … let us not hover nervously over the people who come after, applying litmus papers daily to their political complexions to find out whether they answer to our concept of ‘democrats.’ Give them time; let them be Russians; let them work out their internal problems in their own manner. The ways by which people advance towards dignity and enlightenment in government are things that constitute the deepest and most intimate processes of national life. There is nothing less understandable to foreigners, nothing in which foreign influence can do less good.”

It is the wisest advice, but it is blissfully ignored by our policymakers who, like latter-day Christian missionaries, believe that we have a duty to spread the gospel of democracy — by military force, if necessary. Russians are not the only ones who find that proposition distinctly suspect.

Sir Rodric Braithwaite, British ambassador to the Soviet Union and Russia from 1988 to 1992, is author of “Moscow 1941: A City and its People at War.” This comment appeared in the Financial Times.
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The world will disagree with me, but I have studied this article with care, Once again a article that does not uplift Russia. It is an article that covers up the Russian bashing with Flowers & pretty Ribbons……..

Kyle

comments always welcome!

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Russia to Ukraine: Lets Fight Over The Crimea!

Crimea is in the middle of the map, in the Black Sea!

Hello,

It gets better everyday around here. I had a comment from a reader (MattMacL) he came up with this suggestion that Russia should stress the issue of the Crimea, before NATO can bring Ukraine into its arms.

——————————————-
MOSCOW, May 26 (RIA Novosti) – Sergei Mironov, speaker of the upper house of Russia’s parliament, said on Monday Russia could claim back Sevastopol, a Russian naval base on Ukraine’s Crimean peninsula.

Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko recently ruled not to extend lease terms for Russia’s Black Sea Fleet in Ukraine after May 28, 2017.

“Undoubtedly, we must raise the issue ourselves, and if necessary, with the Ukrainian authorities,” Mironov told reporters commenting on Yushchenko’s decision.

“We should study the issue more closely. If Yushchenko is making such statements, we can also start looking into the issue properly,” the senator said, describing Yushchenko’s instructions as “illogical and untimely.”

Mironov pledged to give instructions to a number of Federation Council committees to consider drafting a bill on Russia’s Black Sea Fleet.

There have been frequent disputes between Russia and Ukraine over the lease of the base. In the latest dispute, Moscow Mayor Yury Lyzhkov was barred from entering the former Soviet republic over similarly provocative statements.

According to Luzhkov, Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev gave the Crimea to Ukraine in 1954 as “a token of brotherly love,” but under a 1948 decree Sevastopol was assigned special city status “under the governing central authorities,” and, therefore, could not be included in the list of territories transferred to Ukraine.

On Thursday Russia’s Foreign Ministry issued a statement saying that in response to Ukraine’s decision to prohibit Luzhkov from entering Ukraine, Russia announced a number of Ukrainian politicians would not be allowed entry into Russia.

The Crimea, now an autonomous region within Ukraine, is a predominantly Russian-speaking territory. Since the 1991 breakup of the Soviet Union, the Crimea has unsuccessfully sought independence from Ukraine. A 1994 referendum in the Crimea supported demands for a broader autonomy and closer links with Russia.
——————————————–

Well MattMacL looks like Russia may be listening to you…..

Kyle & Svet

comments always welcome.

Meet Sammy – The Russian 310221 Volga!

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Sammy…

Some of you have meet Sammy before (above). She was a stubborn girl when we had to get tags for her after we bought her. Sammy was the second Volga that we have owned. The first was a model 2410 Volga which had a abrupt end to her life by being stolen, stripped and burned.

IMG_0993
Nelly…

We called the first Volga, Nelly! She was a fantastic machine that never failed us when the going got tough. The going got tough allot because we traveled about 50,000 km in Nelly. She took us to many CIS countries and back safely. Nelly went places that maybe we should not have gone, but she went without complaints and got us back home.

But as great as Nelly the Volga was, she pales in comparison to Sammy the 310221 Volga. The station wagon that we have now is a whole other world above the model 24 we had.

The model 2410 could sometimes reach 150 km per hour if you had a tailwind and going downhill. The 310221 cruises at that speed all day. We do not need any tailwind anymore. The model 2410 had drum brakes all the way around but Sammy has disc front and that is a different world in stopping power. The 2410 also had a 4 speed manual transmission and we now have a 5 speed manual in the 310221.

There are dozens of reasons that Sammy is better than Nelly except in one area. Sammy has not traveled all over Russia with us like Nelly did. But we are getting ready to solve that problem this summer and do so with several trips planned of many interesting kilometers.

We think Sammy will do just fine for after all she is a Volga…

Windows to Russia!

In a Auto in Russia You Must Have Icons…

I was reminded by a reader of ours about the icons that seem to be in most if not all Russian cars. I have grown use to them and have them in our car as well. It just seems to be correct and who am I too upset any apple cart…

Because of an icons connection to the divine figures they present, they were seen as powerful protectors that help keep away bad fortune. So Icons are used in automobiles as a guardian angle type of situation.

I consider them a comfort and could not imagine my car without them now. This reader expressed that he has them in his car in America and I think that is really cool. Because no matter where you are in the world a little help in surviving, is not out of the question when it comes to driving the roads of today’s byways!

We even have a little extra in the lower right part of the windshield and to top it off if that is not enough we have an extra icon by the ashtray that insures safety on the road…

So believe in it or not, you now have a little more knowledge about Russia

Windows to Russia!

Russia is Starting To Talk About Korea…

One thing that seems to be normal for Russia is that she takes her time and thinks about issues before spouting out all over the news. Then the news that is put out, has to be carefully examined…

This time the Russian news is abuzz with this information: Konstantin Pulikovsky, is a rare person who has spent time with North Korea’s secretive leader and has traveled extensively with Kim Jong Il. This leading Russian expert on North Korea said on Thursday, that he had serious doubts about Pyongyang’s involvement into the sinking of South Korea’s Cheonan warship.

Konstantin Pulikovsky who maintains official contacts with Pyongyang, because he was presidential envoy to Russia’s Far East in 2000-2005. Has broken the Russian silence, he said,

“I personally have serous doubts that it was North Korea that sank the ship. Why do this? For what purpose?… I don’t see any logic.”

This is the start of the summation of what Russia is thinking…

Windows to Russia!

Stalin is Back in Moscow and Invited by the Communist Party!

This is stirring up a issue in Moscow, Russia today and some people are having issues with a new billboard…

Billboards with the face of Communist leader Joseph Stalin have appeared on the streets of the city of Voronezh in Central Russia.

The dictator’s return is due to the Communist Party, who bought ten advertisement panels throughout the city, paying 8,000 roubles (around $260) for each one, Nezavisimaya Gazeta reports.

The campaign was launched on June 22, the day Russia commemorated the victims of the Great Patriotic War. On that day, the German Nazi forces suddenly invaded the Soviet Union without a declaration of war.

The Communists say it is dedicated to the 130th birthday of Stalin, celebrated this year on December 6 2009.

The dictator’s image appears in front of a red flag and accompanied by a slogan: “The victory will be ours”. (Link)

I found this interesting and wondered what others think of this advertisement ploy by the Communist Party?

Windows to Russia!
comments always welcome.

Russia: Lets Talk NATO with Russia’s envoy to NATO Dmitry Rogozin!

Hello,
Windows to Russia!
Russia’s envoy to NATO Dmitry Rogozin gives a good interview with Russia Today. He gives a much different side than what is being played out in the Western press. I really like the way he kinda gets the newscaster confused at times. I guess I have been around Russians to long because Rogozin’s broken English sounds normal to me.

I have already seen CNN in a bold face lie about troops being sent by other countries in NATO. But if I was America, I would lie also because it would not help the home front much to find out that Europe is really tired of this Afghanistan War.

They have arrested hundreds of people and most likely will arrest hundreds more before it is over at the NATO party time.

I know – they just do not mention much about the arrests. 🙂

Russia is making it clear that while it is fun that NATO loves Russia so much at this moment. Russia has no plans on getting married! Nor is Russia giving up its new kids, Abkhazia and South Ossetia…

NATO – equals SAD!

Kyle and Svet

comments always welcome.

Russia Asks – Did North Korea Sink the Cheonan…

I had an article that got destroyed by South Korea because I asked questions about the North/South ship sinking incident. Windows to Russia went under a DOS attack and a SQL attack because of that article. For some reason that article was never able to be recovered even from cache in any of the search engines. This article did not go without notice and it had thousands of hits from my fan group in Washington, DC. (I always know when I hit a sore spot by DC hits on the site…) This particular article had even hundreds of hits from Moscow. So I know that attention was being paid to the questions that I asked in that article. I will not go into the same detail as I did in that article but will say that all is not what it seems…

“Medvedev believes it is crucial to establish the true cause of the loss of the vessel and to establish beyond all doubt who bears personal responsibility for what happened,” the Kremlin press service said in a special statement.

Looks like Russia does not really believe the whole story just like I did not take the story at face value. South Korea has invited Russia, at Medvedev’s insistence, to look over the evidence.

READ THE REPORT IN FULL

PDF download Investigation result on the sinking of Cheonan [72KB]

I will say again that you need to read the report linked above. The only real evidence in that whole report is that it is without a doubt a North Korea torpedo. (But that torpedo is sold all over the world by North Korea. ) This report has no evidence that would hold up in a court of law.There has been two men who are defectors from the North Korean Army and they say that we can not prove it but they (North) did it…

It is he-say, she-say and they-say issue that has become a political mess…

Windows to Russia!

PS: With this logic I would say that if you hit someone over the head with a Craftsman wrench then it is Sears fault because they made the damn Wrench…