Putin is well aware of threats US dictatorship poses to
entire world
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Putin is well aware of threats US dictatorship poses to entire
world
03.07.2014
By Paul Craig Roberts
Below is President Putin’s complete address to the Russian
diplomatic corps. It reveals Putin to be a person well aware of the threats
that US unilateralism poses to the entire world. Washington’s belief that the
US is exceptional and indispensable results in dictatorial behavior toward
other countries and the overriding of their legitimate national interests. From
such arrogance, wars are launched. Putin’s remarks show him to be a leader of
restraint who responds to provocations with reason and not with anger and who
is working to avoid conflict and war. Putin is well aware that he is getting no
help from Washington or EU leaders. Putin’s address shows that he is, without
question, the most important leader on the world scene at this time.
I have put a few passages in bold typeface and added two remarks
of my own in [brackets].
Conference of Russian ambassadors and permanent representatives
July 1, 2014, 15:45 Moscow
July 1, 2014, 15:45 Moscow
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PRESIDENT OF RUSSIA VLADIMIR PUTIN: Colleagues, friends,
Meetings with the diplomatic corps have become a tradition. We need this direct conversation to make an overall assessment of the situation in the world, to set current and long-term foreign policy objectives and on that basis to more effectively coordinate the work of our missions abroad.
Meetings with the diplomatic corps have become a tradition. We need this direct conversation to make an overall assessment of the situation in the world, to set current and long-term foreign policy objectives and on that basis to more effectively coordinate the work of our missions abroad.
I would like to begin by saying that the Foreign Ministry and our
embassies are under a lot of pressure; we see this, we are aware of this, but
this pressure will not be reduced. It will only increase, just as the requirement
to show efficiency, precision and flexibility in our actions to ensure Russia’s
national interests.
You know how dynamic and unpredictable international developments
may sometimes be. They seem to be pressed together and unfortunately are not
all of a positive nature. The potential for conflict is growing in the world,
old contradictions are growing ever more acute and new ones are being provoked.
We come across such developments, often unexpectedly, and we observe with
regret that international law is not working, the most basic norms of decency
are not complied with and the principle of all-permissiveness is gaining the
upper hand. [Putin is referring to Washington placing its unilateral action
above US law, the US Constitution, and International Law.]
We are observing this in Ukraine as well. We need to understand
clearly that the events provoked in Ukraine are the concentrated outcome of the
notorious deterrence policy. As you may know, its roots go deep into history
and it is clear that unfortunately, this policy did not end with the end of the
Cold War.
In Ukraine, as you may have seen, at threat were our compatriots,
Russian people and people of other nationalities, their language, history,
culture and legal rights, guaranteed, by the way, by European conventions. When
I speak of Russians and Russian-speaking citizens I am referring to those people who
consider themselves part of the broad Russian community, they may not
necessarily be ethnic Russians, but they consider themselves Russian people.
What did our partners expect from us as the developments in
Ukraine unfolded? We clearly had no right to abandon the residents of Crimea
and Sevastopol to the mercy of nationalist and radical militants; we could not
allow our access to the Black Sea to be significantly limited; we could not
allow NATO forces to eventually come to the land of Crimea and Sevastopol, the
land of Russian military glory, and cardinally change the balance of forces in
the Black Sea area. This would mean giving up practically everything that
Russia had fought for since the times of Peter the Great, or maybe even earlier
– historians should know.
I would like to make it clear to all: this country will continue
to actively defend the rights of Russians, our compatriots abroad, using the
entire range of available means – from political and economic to operations
under international humanitarian law and the right of self-defense.
I would like to stress that what happened in Ukraine was the climax
of the negative tendencies in international affairs that had been building up
for years. We have long been warning about this, and unfortunately, our
predictions came true.
You know about the latest efforts to restore, to maintain peace in
Ukraine. Foreign Ministry staff and the Minister himself took an active part in
this. You know about the numerous telephone conversations we had on this
subject.
Unfortunately, President Poroshenko has resolved to resume
military action, and we failed – when I say ‘we’, I mean my colleagues in
Europe and myself – we failed to convince him that the road to a secure, stable
and inviolable peace cannot lie through war.
So far Mr Poroshenko was not directly linked to the orders to
begin military action, and only now did he take full responsibility, and not
only military, but political as well, which is much more important.
We also failed to agree to make public the statement approved by
the foreign ministers of Germany, France, Russia and Ukraine on the need to
maintain peace and search for mutually acceptable solutions.
I would like to draw your attention to the fact that after the
ceasefire was declared, no substantive, as you say, negotiations on the
settlement of the situation ever began. Virtually, a disarmament ultimatum was
given. However, even the ceasefire was not bad overall, though not enough to
settle the situation on a long-term basis in a way that would be acceptable to
all the people living in the country, including those in its southeast.
A constitution was made public, but it was never discussed.
Even within Ukrainian society there is a discussion of whether it is good or
bad, but nobody definitely ever discussed it with the east.
Of course, everything that is going on in Ukraine is the internal
affair of the Ukrainian state. It pains us to see people dying, especially
civilians. As you may know, the number of refugees in the Russian Federation is
growing. We will of course provide assistance to all those who need it.
However, killing journalists is unacceptable. I reminded the Ukrainian
President of this yesterday yet again.
In my view, we are observing a focused effort to liquidate all
media representatives. This applies to both Russian and foreign journalists.
Who could be afraid of fair reporting? Probably those, who are committing
crimes. We strongly hope that the Ukrainian authorities act on their promises
to carefully investigate the crimes.
More new hotspots are appearing on the world map. There is a
deficit of security in Europe, in the Middle East, South-East Asia, in the
Asia-Pacific region and in Africa. The global economic, financial and trade
systems are becoming unbalanced, and moral and spiritual values are being
washed out.
There is hardly any doubt that the unipolar world order did not
come to be. Peoples and countries are raising their voices in favour of
self-determination and civilizational and cultural identity, which conflicts
with the attempts by certain countries to maintain their domination in the
military sphere, in politics, finance, the economy and in ideology.
I know this has no direct bearing on us, however what is being
done to the French banks can cause nothing but indignation in Europe in general
and here as well. We are aware of the pressure our American partners are
putting on France to force it not to supply Mistrals to Russia. We even know
that they hinted that if France does not deliver the Mistrals, the sanctions
will be quietly lifted from their banks, or at least they will be significantly
minimized.
What is this if not blackmail? Is this the right way to act on the
international arena? Besides, when we speak of sanctions, we always assume that
sanctions are applied pursuant to Article 7 of the UN Charter. Otherwise, these
are not sanctions in the true legal sense of the word, but something different,
some other unilateral policy instrument.
In the past 20 years, our partners have been trying to convince
Russia of their good intentions, their readiness to jointly develop strategic
cooperation. However, at the same time they kept expanding NATO, extending the
area under their military and political control ever closer to our borders. And
when we rightfully asked: “Don’t you find it possible and necessary to discuss
this with us?” they said: “No, this is none of your business.” Those who
continue insisting on their exclusivity strongly dislike Russia’s independent
policy. The events in Ukraine prove this. They also prove that a model of
relations full of double standards does not work with Russia.
Nevertheless, I hope pragmatism will eventually prevail. We need
to get rid of ambitions, of attempts to establish a ‘world barracks’ and
arrange everybody by rank, or to impose single rules of behavior and life, and
to finally begin building relations based on equality, mutual respect and
concern for mutual interests. It is time we admit each other’s right to be
different, the right of every country to live its own life rather than to be
told what to do by someone else.
Colleagues, in its foreign policy Russia has been consistently
proceeding from the notion that solutions to global and regional conflicts
should be sought not through confrontation, but through cooperation and
compromise. We advocate the supremacy of international law while supporting the
UN’s leading role.
International law should be mandatory for all and should not be
applied selectively to serve the interests of individual select countries or
groups of states, and most importantly, it should be interpreted consistently.
It is impossible to interpret it in one way today, and in a different way
tomorrow to match the political goals of the day.
World development cannot be unified. However, we can look for common issues, see each other as partners rather than competitors, and establish cooperation between states, their associations and integration structures.
World development cannot be unified. However, we can look for common issues, see each other as partners rather than competitors, and establish cooperation between states, their associations and integration structures.
These are the principles we were guided by in the past, and they
continue to guide us now as we promote integration within the CIS.
Strengthening close friendly ties and developing mutually advantageous economic
cooperation with our neighbours is the key strategic priority of Russia’s
long-term foreign policy.
The driving force behind Eurasian integration is the trio of
Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan. The Agreement on the Eurasian Economic Union,
signed in Astana on May 29, symbolises a qualitatively new step in our
relations. A powerful centre of economic development that attracts business and
investors, a common market is being formed in Eurasia. That is why our CIS
partners show a strong interest in this union. I hope that very soon, Armenia
will become a full-fledged member of this union. Negotiations with Kyrgyzstan
are at an advanced stage. We are open to other Commonwealth states as well.
As we promote the Eurasian integration project, we are in no way
trying to separate ourselves from the rest of the world; we are ready to
consider prospects for creating free trade zones both with individual states
and with regional associations and unions, primarily the European Union, of course.
Europe is our natural and most significant trade and economic
partner. We strive to find new opportunities to expand our business
cooperation, to open up new prospects for mutual investment and to lift trade
barriers. This requires an upgrade of the legal contractual base of our
cooperation and the stability and predictability of ties, primarily in such
strategically important areas as energy. Stability on the entire territory of
Eurasia and sustainable development of the EU economies and Russia depend on
well-coordinated cooperation based on consideration for mutual interests.
We have always held high our reputation of a reliable supplier of
energy resources and invested in the development of gas infrastructure.
Together with European companies, as you may know, we have built a new gas
transportation system called Nord Stream under the Baltic Sea. Despite certain
difficulties, we will promote the South Stream project, especially since ever
more European politicians and businessmen are coming to understand that someone
simply wants to use Europe in their own interests, that it is becoming a
hostage of someone’s near-sighted ideologized approaches.
If we return to Ukraine, the violation by Ukraine of its
commitments regarding the purchase of our natural gas has become a common
problem. Kiev refuses to pay on its debt. This is absolutely unacceptable. They
have not paid for November-December of last year, though there were no
arguments whatsoever then.
Our partners are using blatant blackmail – this is what it is.
They demand an ungrounded reduction of prices on our goods, though the
agreement was signed in 2009, and the parties complied with it in good faith.
Now, as you may know, the court in Kiev has lifted all accusations against
Ukraine’s former Prime Minister Tymoshenko, who signed the contract. Thus, the
Kiev court authorities admit that they have done everything right not only by
international law, but by Ukrainian law as well. But they do not wish to
comply, or to pay for the product already received.
As of June 16, as you may know, we have transferred Ukraine to a
pre-payment system, so they will get exactly the amount of gas they pay for.
Today they do not pay; therefore, they are not getting anything – only in the
so-called reverse mode. We know all about this reverse mode: it is a fake;
there is no reverse mode. How can you supply gas two ways along the same
pipeline? One does not have to be a gas transportation expert to understand
that this is impossible. They are playing tricks with some of their partners:
in fact, they are getting our gas and paying some western partners in Europe
who are not receiving their volume. We are quire aware of this.
We are not taking any action at this point only because we do not
want the situation to deteriorate. However, everyone should draw the proper
conclusions from the situation. The main thing is that honest gas consumers and
suppliers should not suffer from the actions of Ukrainian politicians and
bureaucrats.
Generally, all of us – Ukraine, our European partners, and we –
should seriously consider how to reduce the probability of any type of
political or economic risks or force majeure situations on the continent.
In this connection, I would like to remind you that in August 2015
we will be marking 40 years of the Final Act of the Conference on Security and
Cooperation in Europe. This anniversary is a good reason not only to turn to
the basic principles of cooperation on the continent that were laid back in
1975, but also to jointly make them work, to help them take root in practical
European politics.
We have to work consistently to rule out any unconstitutional
coups in Europe, any interference in the internal affairs of sovereign states,
the use of blackmail or threats in international relations or the support of
radical and neo-Nazi forces.
All of us in Europe need a sort of safety net to make sure that
Iraqi, Libyan or Syrian – and unfortunately, I have to say also Ukrainian –
precedents do not become contagious. This is especially dangerous for the
post-Soviet area, because the states have yet not gained political or economic
strength, they do not have a stable political system. It is very important that
the constitutions of these states be treated with great care and respect.
[Washington does not respect the US Constitution, so why would it respect
constitutions of other countries?]
Why is this important – and not only on the post-Soviet area, but
all over Europe? Because even in those countries of Western and Eastern Europe
where things seem to be going fine, there are quite a few hidden ethnic and
social contradictions that may become acute any moment, may serve as ground for
conflicts and extremism, and may be used by external forces to rock the social
and political situation to achieve an illegitimate undemocratic change of power
with all the negative consequences.
Firm guarantees of indivisible security, stability, respect for
sovereignty and non-interference in each other’s internal affairs should become
the basis that we can use to build a common space for economic and humanitarian
cooperation that would spread from the Atlantic Ocean to the Pacific Ocean – I
already spoke of this as a single space from Lisbon to Vladivostok.
I would like to ask the Foreign Ministry to draft a set of
proposals in this respect, with special focus on the inadmissibility of any attempts
to influence internal political processes from the outside. The job is to work
the traditional principle of non-interference into the modern European
realities and initiate a serious international discussion on the subject.
We also need to continue strengthening the eastern vector of our
diplomacy, to more intensively use the impressive potential of the Asia-Pacific
region in the interests of the further development of our country, primarily,
of course, of Siberia and the Far East. We should continue to direct Russia’s
policy in Asia and the Pacific at maintaining the security of our eastern
borders and at supporting peace and stability in the region. The coming
leadership of Russia in the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation, and the SCO and
BRICS summits to be held in Ufa in the summer of 2015 work to support this.
We need to strengthen overall partnership and strategic
cooperation with the People’s Republic of China. We can say that a strong
Russian-Chinese connection has taken shape on the international arena. It is
based on a coincidence of views on both global processes and key regional
issues. It is of primary importance that Russian-Chinese friendship is not
directed against anyone: we are not creating any military unions. On the
contrary, this is an example of equal, respectful and productive cooperation
between states in the 21st century.
We intend to further develop our relations with our traditional
partners in this area of the world: with India and Vietnam, who are playing an
ever-greater role in the world; with Japan and other countries, including the
ASEAN states. We intend to further use the potential of the growing markets in
Latin America and Africa and the great experience of political and humanitarian
relations with the countries there.
Our contacts with the United States of America are of great
importance for the whole world. We do not intend to shut down our relations
with the USA. True, bilateral relations are not in their best shape, but – I
would like to stress this – not through Russia’s fault. We have always tried to
be predictable partners and conduct our affairs on the basis of equality.
However, in return, our lawful interests were often ignored.
Now over to various types of international meetings. If we are
assigned the observer role without a decisive vote on key issues that are of
vital importance to us, then such meetings are of little interest to us. We
should not sacrifice our vital interests just for the sake of being able to sit
and observe. I hope our partners will eventually come to understand this
obvious fact. So far, we have been hearing ultimatums or mentoring.
Nevertheless, we are ready for dialogue, but I would like to stress that this
should be an equal dialogue.
Colleagues, the complicated and unpredictable situation in the
world places great demands on Russian diplomats’ professional level. The
Foreign Ministry’s staff in Moscow and the Russian embassies abroad worked
effectively and in coordinated fashion during the serious situation with Crimea
and Ukraine, and I want to thank you for this. I particularly note the work
done by the heads and staff of Russia’s representative missions at the UN and
other key international organizations.
We must continue working with just such energy and dignity, in a
spirit of tact, restraint and sense of measure of course. Our position must be
based on clear and unshakeable principles of international law and legal and
historical justification, on truth, justice, and the strength of moral
superiority.
For my part, I can say that our country’s leadership will continue to do everything necessary to give you good conditions for your professional activity. As you know, I have signed presidential executive orders raising the wages of Foreign Ministry staff. Wages of people working at the central office will increase 1.4-fold on average.
Pensions for diplomatic personnel taking their retirement after
January 1, 2014, will increase 3.5-fold on average. Pay for the heads of
foreign diplomatic missions will increase four-fold on average in ruble
equivalent. Pension top-ups for ambassadors and permanent envoys going into
retirement have also increased considerably.
Wages in rubles for personnel at diplomatic missions abroad will
be increased a bit later, from January 1, 2016, but this will be a four-fold
increase. I hope that these steps will help to boost the Foreign Ministry’s
human resources potential and thus make us more effective in carrying out our
foreign policy.
I also ask the Government to speed up the decision on providing
additional guarantees for personnel from other agencies and administrative and
technical personnel working at Russian missions abroad, especially in
situations where there are terrorist threats.
The Foreign Ministry has raised the question of giving diplomatic
service the official legal status as a special type of civil service in Russia.
We will examine this proposal.
This concludes my opening remarks.
I thank the members of the media for the attention they have given
our work.
The article originally
appears on www.paulcraigroberts.org
6 comments:
Putin had more integrity and honesty is this one speech then Obama has had in his entire pathetic life.
Good for you Putin.
Then he should read this: http://www.resist.com/SecretGovernment-Spiridovich.pdf This will tell you exactly what the evil Rothschilds did to Russia and how and why they slaughtered Russia's Czars who were good, honest, and great leaders of Russia.
don't be fooled by this good cop bad cop routine, it's the same old shit as the cold war. but what we fail to piece together is that, when the mir space station was decomissioned, it weighed three times as much as it did when it went up there, and most of the 'added' weight was american parts, so... it would seem that the 'cold war' wasn't too cold after all. You only have to look at the secret science colaborations between these two countries to see that there is no difference between them. can you smell the coffee yet?
JOHN; I'M WRITING TO TELL YOU THAT THEY ARE WORKING ON HACKING NESARANETWORK.COM ALSO. I CANNOT GET IT NOW AND IT IS LEAVING THIS ERROR MESSAGE: Error establishing a database connection YOU SHOULD CALL YOUR WEBHOST AND LET THEM KNOW WHAT IS GOING ON. THEY WILL HELP YOU GET IT FIXED.
FDR and Churchill bankrolled the Soviets in order to keep them in the war, slaughter whole countrysides and start the cold war. I was all a setup - why would we bail them out then maintain a cold war? Because the people stayed on a treadmill for 50 years believing that crap while the big boys amassed lots of money, gold, expensive toys, underground bases and we paid for all of it. The Russian and US space capabilities are intense. Nasa is a facade for the real deal; anti-gravity, moon bases, space weapons. Unknow what was on the Mir, it could have been stolen gold.
Why was it so important to go to the moon and we never went back? If we can go there why not build on the moon instead of a space station? Incidentally the moon landing was fake but the shadow government has been to the moon. That tinfoil rocket cap the Apollo could never it make it to the moon, the space shuttle can't even circumnavigate the moon. Conventional rockets/ ships would not survive outside the Van Allen Belts. Just saying we never get the truth, not trying to start anything. Nasa = never a straight answer. Look at this;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kFAZoVGxqY4
Freewill here, The webhost is a crappy one and I have been experiencing those errors since the first day I got nesaranetwork up and running. John and I are getting a better web host and dedicated server to host nesaranetwork. The current server has a remote server to run the database and that is why the errors are frequent. They just plain suck. A few more donations on either site and the costs can be covered. A dedicated server averages around $400 per month for a good one.
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