Monday, June 14, 2021

What worries America also worries Russia

Russian President Vladimir Putin: “My hope is that we will start engaging in positive work together”

Excerpts Organized by categories (only the President’s responses) from a June 11 Interview given by Russian President Vladimir Putin to an NBC interviewer

 

N

ATO

 

“This is a Cold War relic…, something that was born in the Cold War era. I’m not sure why it continues to exist. There was a time and there was some talk (“now kind of forgotten”) that this organization would be transformed. … We presume that it is a military organization…, an ally of the United States.”

“… NATO… has officially stated that it considers cyberspace a battlefield, an area of military action, and it conducts exercises in that battlefield.”

 

C

YBERSPACE

 Attacks

“[Y]ou have said that there is a weight of evidence of cyberattacks by Russia. And then you went on to list those official US agencies that have stated as much. Is that what you did?

[Interviewer Keir Simmons: Well, I’m giving you information about who said it so you can answer]

“Right.

“You are conveying information to me as to who said that. But where is evidence that this was indeed done? I will tell you that this person has said that (and) that person has said this. But where is the evidence? Where is proof? When there are charges without evidence, I can tell you that you can take your complaint to the International League of Sexual Reform (SIC).

“This is a conversation that has no subject. Put something on the table so that we can look and respond. But there isn’t anything like that.

“One of the latest attacks, as far as I know, was against the pipeline system in the US — Right? Yes.

“As far as I know, the shareholders of this company even made a decision to pay the ransom. They paid off the cyber gangsters. If you have listed an entire set of U.S. special services (powerful, global, respectable); after all, they can find whoever the ransom was paid. And once they do that, they will realize that Russia has nothing to do with it.

“Then there’s the cyberattack against a meat processing plant. Next time they will say there was an attack against some Easter eggs.

“It’s becoming farcical, like an ongoing, never-ending farcical thing. You said ‘plenty of evidence,’ but you haven’t cited any proof. [T]his is an empty conversation, a pointless conversation. What exactly are we talking about? There’s no proof.”

“We here in the Russian Federation have cybercrimes that have increased many times over in the last few years. We are trying to respond to it. We are looking for cyber criminals. If we find them, we punish them.”

“[T]he simplest thing to do would be for us to sit down calmly and agree on joint work in cyberspace; we did suggest that to Obama’s administration… in October. We started in September and during his last year in office. [A]t first they didn’t say anything. Then in November, they came back to us and said that, yes, it was interesting. Then the election was lost. We restated this proposal to Mr. Trump’s administration. The response was that it is interesting, but it didn’t come to the point of actual negotiations.”

There are grounds to believe that we can build an effort in this area with the new administration, that the domestic political situation in the U.S. will not prevent this from happening. But we have proposed to do this work together.

Let’s agree on the principles of mutual work.
Let’s find out what we can do together.
Let’s agree on how we will structure counter-efforts against the process that is gathering momentum.
  • We are willing to engage with international participants, including the United States.
  • You are the ones who have refused to engage in joint work. 
  • What can we do? 
  • We cannot build this work. 
  • We cannot structure this work unilaterally.

T

echnological Reach

“… [J]ust like space militarization, this is a very dangerous area. At some point, in order to achieve something in the nuclear area in terms of confrontation in the area of nuclear weapons, the USSR and the United States did agree to contain this particular arms race. But cyberspace is a very sensitive area. Today, many human endeavors rely on digital technologies, including the functioning of government. Interference in those processes can cause a lot of damage and a lot of losses; everybody understands that. And I am repeating for the third time: Let’s sit down together and agree on joint work on how to achieve security in this area.…

“In terms of what’s to be afraid of, why is it that we suggest agreeing on something? Because what people can be afraid of in America or are worried about in America, the very same thing can be a danger to us. The U.S. is a high-tech country. NATO has declared cyberspace an area of combat. That means they are planning something. They are preparing something. So obviously this cannot but worry us.…

“I repeat one more time. It is my hope that we will be able to start engaging in positive work in this area.”

 

F

OREIGN RELATIONS,  SUMMITS

 Allies’ Summits

“The fact that President Biden has been meeting up with his allies; there is nothing unusual about it. There’s nothing unusual about a G7 meeting.… Allies are getting together. …  I don’t see anything unusual about it. As a matter of fact it’s a sign of respect to the U.S. allies before a summit between the U.S. and Russian presidents. Probably it is being presented as desire to find out their opinion on the key issues of the current agenda, including those issues that President Biden and I will discuss. 

“However, I’m inclined to think that despite all of these niceties, the United States, as far as their relationship with Russia, will be promoting what they consider important and necessary for themselves, above all for themselves, in their economic and military interests. However, to hear what their allies have to say about it – probably never hurts. This is working procedure.”

Russian-U.S. Summits

“[T]here is nothing unusual about it. … [A]s you know, he (Joseph Biden) had supported the extension of the START treaty, which of course was bound to meet with support from our side. We believe that this treaty in the area of containment of strategic offensive weapons has been worked through and thoroughly, and meets our interests, and meets the U.S. interests. So this offer could be expected.… President Biden launched this initiative.… 

“We have a bilateral relationship that has deteriorated to what is the lowest point in recent years. 

“However, there are matters that need a certain amount of comparing notes and identification and determination of mutual positions, so that matters that are of mutual interest can be dealt with in an efficient and effective way in the interests of both the United States and Russia…. This meeting should have taken place at some point.…”


Predictability and stability, Instability and unpredictability

“The most important value in international affairs is predictability and stability. I believe that on the part of our U.S. partners, this is something that we haven’t seen in recent years.

  • “What kind of stability and predictability could there be if we remember the 2011 events in Libya where the country was essentially taken apart, broken down?
  • What kind of stability and predictability was there? 
  •  
  • There has been talk of a continued presence of troops in Afghanistan; and then, all of a sudden— BOOM — the troops are being withdrawn from Afghanistan.
  • Is this predictability and stability again? 
  •  
  • Middle East events
  • Is this predictability and stability?
  • [In] Syria —
  • What is stable and predictable about this?
  • What will all of this lead to?”


Case of U.S. v. Syria (another Afghanistan, Libya)

“I’ve asked my US counterparts, ‘You want Assad to leave? Who will replace him? What will happen when he’s replaced with somebody?’

“The answer is odd. The answer is, ‘I don’t know.’ Well, if you don’t know what will happen next, why change what there is?

“It could be a second Libya or another Afghanistan. Do we want this? No.”
What is and isn’t path toward stability
“Let us sit down together, talk, look for compromise solutions that are acceptable for all the parties. That is how stability is achieved.

“It cannot be achieved by imposing one particular point of view, the ‘correct’ point of view; whereby all the other views are incorrect. That’s not how stability is achieved.”
Sovereignty v. Foreign Interference
“What we count on is that nobody should interfere in domestic internal affairs of other countries; neither the U.S. in ours nor we in the USA’s political processes, or any other nations.

All nations of the world should be given an opportunity to develop calmly. Even if there are crisis situations, they have to be resolved by the people domestically, without any influence or interference from the outside.

“…It appears to me that the U.S. government will still continue to interfere in the political processes in other countries. I don't think that this process can be stopped because it has gained a lot of momentum. However, as far as joint work in cyberspace for the prevention of some unacceptable actions on the part of cyber criminals, that is definitely something that can be agreed upon. And it is our great hope that we will be able to establish this process with our U.S. partners.”




Sources

President of Russia official web site
Interview to NBC post data June 14, 2021— The Kremlin, Moscow — Vladimir Putin answered questions from NBC correspondent Keir Simmons. The interview was recorded on June 11 in the Kremlin.” http://en.special.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/65861

The interviewer of President Putin, Keir Simmons, is an English journalist formerly with British television network’s Independent Television News (ITN) and currently has stints with U.S. television broadcasting enterprises including the NBC Today show, NBC Nightly News, and MSNBC

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keir_Simmons
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ITV_News
 

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Friday, March 26, 2021

Cut through U.S. Press Corps shallowness to Discover Substance in the 46th’s Presser…

And my disappointment

I read the White House transcript and found these nuggets (promises) in President Joseph Robinette Biden Jr’s responses in the March 25, 2021 press conference (excerpt).

I

mmigration (and immigrant) Challenge

Root Causes

“The reason they’re coming (in January through March) is that it’s the time they can travel with the least likelihood of dying on the way because of the heat in the desert. .
“…[T]hey’re coming because of circumstances in-country — in-country.

“The way to deal with this problem — (is to put) together a bipartisan plan … to deal with the root causes of why people are leaving (their countries).”

“Is it … because of earthquakes, floods, lack of food, because of gang violence…; (likely) … because of a whole range of things.  

“… I’ve asked the Vice President of the United States … to be the lead person on dealing with focusing on the fundamental reasons why people leave Honduras, Guatemala, and El Salvador in the first place.”

D

omestic Challenges 
In cold type, the president seemed to reserve his most passionate words for domestic challenges.

“I meant what I said when I ran. And a lot of you still think I’m wrong, and I respect that. I said, ‘I’m running for three reasons:

  • To restore the soul, dignity, honor, honesty, transparency to the American political system;
  • To rebuild the backbone of this country — the middle class, hardworking people, and people struggling to get in the middle class; and
  • To unite the country

“… I’ve not been able to unite the Congress, but I’ve been uniting the country, based on the polling data. We have to come together. We have to.
…[F]rom my perspective, … it’s about …getting out there, putting one foot in front of the other, and just trying to make things better for people — just hardworking people. … Basic things.

“I’m of the view that the vast majority of people, including registered Republicans, by and large, share … that same view, that same sense of … what’s appropriate.”
“I want to change the paradigm. …
[R]eward work, not just wealth.
[C]hange the paradigm”

1. “[W]e’re going to invest in American workers and American science.”

In the 1960s we invested “a little over 2 percent of our entire GDP in pure research and investment in science; today it’s 0.7 percent. I’m going to change that. We’re going to change that. … (and) make sure we invest closer to 2 percent.

“[W]e’re going to invest in medical research — cancer, Alzheimer’s, diabetes, the things — industries of the future — artificial intelligence, quantum computing, biotech. [W]e’re going to make real investments. China is out investing us by a long shot, because their plan is to own that future.”

“I see stiff competition with China…We’ve got to prove democracy works.”

2. [W]e’re going to reestablish our alliances. (… …not anti-Chinese…).


3. We’re going “to rebuild the infrastructure — both physical and technological infrastructure … — so that we can compete and create significant numbers of really good-paying jobs. …China is investing three times more in infrastructure than the United States is.” 

“There’s so much we can do that’s good stuff, makes people healthier, and creates good jobs.”

Infrastructure (is) the place where we … significantly increase American productivity, at the same time providing really good jobs for people. But we can’t build back to what they used to be…; global warming has already done significant damage.” [R]oads that used to be above the water level — … now have to be rebuilt three feet higher.

Areas of concern

  • · “Bridges: More than one third of our bridges — 231,000 of them — need repairs. Some are physical safety risks or preservation work.
  • · Roadways: One in five miles of our highways and major roads are in poor condition. That’s 186,000 miles of highway.
  • · Aviation: 20 percent of all flights … weren’t on time, resulting in 1.5 million hours lost in production.
  • · Wells and Water lines: Six to ten million homes in America still have lead pipes servicing their water lines. More than 100,000 wellheads are not capped, leaking methane. … [W]e can put many pipefitters and miners to work capping those wells.
  • · Schools and residences: In many schools, the kids can’t drink the (tap) water out of the fountain. Many schools are still in the position where there’s asbestos? Many schools haven’t adequate ventilation.

Many homes, buildings, office complexes with leaking windows or porous connections waste billions of barrels of oil over time because they can’t hold in the heat or the air conditioning.

My disappointment

B

ecause of the inferiority, poor character and caliber of the U.S. press corps, there was

  • No mention of the America’s made-in-Washington globetrotting violence—relentless wars with impunity, relentless hostility, provocation, occupations against sovereign nations and peoples.
  • No mention of America’s all-consuming war economy, the enrichment of war industrialists and politicians who pander to war industrialists.
  • No mention of America’s disgracefully neglected (cavalierly accepted) tent cities, refugee camps, America’s people without permanent shelter, the homeless citizenry among whom are “thanks-for-your-service” U.S. military veterans   
  • No questions addressing the compelling need to change the caliber, character, and ethos of U.S. leadership.

 

Source

White House • Speeches and Remarks East Room “Remarks by President Biden in Press Conference” March 25, 2021,1:27 P.M. EDT, https://www.whitehouse.gov/briefing-room/speeches-remarks/2021/03/25/remarks-by-president-biden-in-press-conference/

 

 

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Monday, March 22, 2021

Perpetual Aggressors, plunderers and predators never intend to “learn” lessons — any more than they genuinely “support the troops" and are “thankful” for their “service”; or possess any internalized ethic, manifested in actions, of genuine “thoughts and prayers.”

Legislative Branch’s careless acquiescence is the Executive Branch’s careless Killing sprees
Another 21st century war anniversary passes

Iraq 2021: The situation deteriorated further after the United States (and partners’) bombing of Iraq left people, human relations, and essential infrastructures in tatters. As desperate “Iraqis looted and destroyed state institutions,” U.S. military personnel stood by protecting only Iraq’s “the Ministry of Oil.”

U

SA in Iraq: a Historical view

U.S. sanctions in the 1990s “led to an increase in crime, theft, and prostitution.” Though the Iraqi government’s monthly distribution of basic rations “prevented mass starvation in Iraq,” these rations failed to curb “malnutrition.”

U.S. sanctions ‘caused hundreds of thousands of deaths, decimated the health of several million children; destroyed a whole economy; made a shambles of a nation’s education and health care systems; reduced a sophisticated country, in which much of the population lived as the middle class …; and in a society notable for its scientists, engineers, and doctors, established an economy dominated by beggars, criminals, and black marketers.’”

Estimates are “that at least 500,000 children died between 1990 and 2003 because of malnutrition and lack of basic services.

“When asked by a journalist about the price of half a million Iraqi children for the sanctions,” the U.S. Secretary of State in the William “Bill” Jefferson (Blythe) Clinton administration, Madeleine Albright, “infamously replied that ‘the price is worth it’ in order to exert pressure on [former U.S. ally] Saddam Hussein’s regime to disarm.”

While the United States sometimes killed Iraqis directly through bombardment and the imposition of sanctions, it also turned a blind eye to the death of Iraqis at the hands of Saddam Hussein through the support of his regime and prolonging of his wars. In these instances, it was not only an illiberal state that was killing its own citizens, but also a liberal state eliminating the lives of imperial subjects in the name of national security, democracy and freedom, and the protection of global peace.

Through support of Saddam Hussein, the prolonging of regional Middle East wars, and direct military interventions — “the United States has created conditions of death and dispossession for Iraqis inside Iraq (and in far flung places).”

Because of United States’ “imperial entanglement in Iraq, Iraqis have lived in the shadow of wars and authoritarian brutalities for decades. Violence has constituted the rhythm of everyday life in Iraq, rather than being an interruption of it. The intervention of the United States in Iraq has produced a volatile situation, and rendered Iraqis disposable human beings whose suffering and death has warranted little attention “ in U.S. mainstream media and within the general population.

Practices and policies “legalized” by U. S. officials and their partners “have unequally distributed life and death, claiming the power (of exceptionalism) to kill populations outside U.S. national territories.”

The imperial encounter between Iraq and the United States has made life deeply precarious for Iraqis. For decades, Iraqis have lived with fear for their own and their family’s lives, the loss of loved ones and their homeland.” They have suffered severe “economic hardship, and the destruction of the very fabric of their social lives.”

U

SA Twenty-first Century in Iraq
Men Deciders of War

From the dawn of the 21st Century to the present, U.S. belligerents’ torment the people of Iraq:

U.S. Presidents / Vice Presidents 
  • 1. George W. Bush / Richard B. Cheney (2001-2009)
  • 2. Barack H. Obama II / Joseph R. Biden Jr. (2009-2017)
  • 3. Donald J. Trump / Michael R. Pence (2017-2021)
  • 4. Joseph R. Biden Jr. / Kamala D. Harris (January 20, 2021 incumbent)

107th through 117th U.S. Congresses

Before being seated in the U.S. vice presidency (January 2009-January 20, 2017) and U.S. presidency (January 20, 2021 – present), Joseph R. Biden Jr. had been entrenched in the U.S. Senate for nineteen consecutive Congresses: 93rd – 111th (1973 – 2009).

In 2002 (October), the 107th U.S. Congress handed power to President George W. Bush to launch, at will, “any military attack” against the sovereign nation of Iraq; and on March 20, 2003, the Bush regime set off a devastating bombing assault against the people of Iraq.

The U.S. Congress’ surrender of its exclusive authority to declare war, by enacting “the 2002 Authorization for Use of Military Force” (the legal basis for war against Iraqi President Saddam Hussein’s “alleged weapons of mass destruction”) …, “has been stretched to cover many other, sometimes marginally related uses of force, not only in Iraq; but also ‘in Syria and elsewhere.’”

P

arty of War: One after another U.S. Presidency and Congress

2003: U.S. invaded Iraq and overthrew Iraq’s head of state.
2007: U.S., having created a power vacuum, chaos, and tribal conflicts, poured on more thousands of troops and thus more violence against Iraq.
2008: the U.S. president agreed to but never fulfilled the agreement to withdraw all U.S. combat troops from Iraq.
2011: U.S. president promised but failed to fill the promise of withdrawing U.S. hostile forces from Iraq.

Iraq Body Count 2003-2013 total: 184,512
Iraq Body Count Documented
civilian deaths from violence to date: 185,593 – 208,667
(Latter data based on “51,607 database entries from the beginning of the war to February 28, 2017, and on monthly preliminary data from that date onwards”)  https://www.iraqbodycount.org/database/

According to the Cost of War Project at Brown University, which began its count in 2013, “the total number of people who have died from the Iraq War, including soldiers, militants, police, contractors, journalists, humanitarian workers and Iraqi civilians, had reached at least 189,000 people, including at least 123,000 civilians. That number has only grown higher throughout the years.”

2014: U.S. again reinforced “official” aggression against the people of Iraq.
2014-2017: U.S. continued engaging with “insurgents” created by U.S. provocation and practices.
2020 (January 3): U.S., as an apparent presidential parting shot, launched a missile against the Baghdad International Airport, Baghdad Governorate, Baghdad, targeting and cold-bloodedly killing leading Iranian military officer Qasem Soleimani, who had been engaged in work to combat “terrorists.”
2021: U.S. aggression in and around Persia and Mesopotamia continues to the present day. (Additional background source Wikipedia)

Costs of War
Iraq Body Count of Dead

Human costs of War: 801,000

(5-plus Western Asia area countries: Iraq, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Syria, Yemen)

 

Economic costs of War

U.S. Budgetary costs $6.4 Trillion

https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/figures

“The impact of this war is painfully visible in many areas, where human security has been violated: in physical harm, in psychological damage and in lack of necessities.

“A recent UNICEF report reveals that 5.6 million people, including 2.6 million children, continue to need humanitarian assistance. The continuing social and economic instability make any humanitarian assistance difficult. Even securing permission and obtaining access remain a challenge.”

The U.S. War, occupation, and relentless hostility and atroci against the people of the sovereign nation of Iraq extend further back than the 21st century (e.g., President Clinton, Sen. Biden’s Gulf (Iraq) War). 

But in the twenty-first century alone, U.S. torment of the Iraqi people has extended through ten U.S. Congresses and four U.S. Presidents (43rd-46th).

 

Sources / notes

Commentator and former British MP George Galloway’s opening monologue and poll questions remember Iraq, its land and people in the opening 21st-Century (2003 - ) and continuing criminal foreign (principally U.S. / UK) aggression against Iraq, with no belligerents in the aggression nor culprits in the foreign policy “blunder” brought to book. “The Mother of All Talk Shows” March 20 (archived), 2021, headlined “Putin & Russia; US, Trump & Biden; China; Myanmar; Anti-Protest Bill; COVID-19, Lockdown & Vaccines” https://sputniknews.com/radio-moats/202103221082414906-putin--russia-us-trump--biden-china-myanmar-anti-protest-bill-covid-19-lockdown--vaccines/

Costs of War Project October 13, 2020 “The Human Cost of U.S. Interventions in Iraq: A History From the 1960s Through the Post-9/11 Wars” by Zainab Saleh https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/files/cow/imce/papers /2020/History%20of%20U.S.%20Interventions%20in%20Iraq_Saleh_Costs%20of%20War_Oct%2013%202020.pdf
https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/papers/2020/IraqHistory

Iraq Body Count December 31, 2020 “IRAQ 2020: Legitimacy, security and war crime let-offs” by Lily Hamourtziadou [Iraq Body Count 2003-2013: total 184,512] https://www.iraqbodycount.org/analysis/numbers/2020/

Military Times Commentary by Dr. Neta C. Crawford and Dr. Catherine Lutz March 19, 2021, “What the 18th anniversary of the Iraq War teaches us about the costs of war” https://www.militarytimes.com/opinion/commentary/2021/03/19/what-the-18th-anniversary-of-the-iraq-war-teaches-us-about-the-costs-of-war/

Iraq Body Count https://www.iraqbodycount.org/database/
https://www.iraqbodycount.org/analysis/numbers/2020/

Costs of War Project figures https://watson.brown.edu/costsofwar/figures

Statista Civilian Deaths in Iraq War since 2003 https://www.statista.com/statistics/269729/documented-civilian-deaths-in-iraq-war-since-2003/

Wikipedia Iraq War https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iraq_War

Biographical Directory of the United States Congress
https://bioguide.congress.gov/search/bio/B000444

 

 

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