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US And Russia: Great Enemies Or Partners?

USS Caron getting rammed by the Russians in the Black Sea – Feb 1988
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Russia continues to build up troops and flex its muscles on the borders with Ukraine. Despite harsh fear-mongering rhetoric in the global mainstream media, US officials seem to be quite aware that any Russian invasion of its neighbor, at least at this point, seems very improbable. 

The US President Joe Biden announced an exit from Afghanistan and the very next day he placed sanctions on Moscow, expelling ten Russian diplomats and massively escalating the degradation of the US-Russia relations. He told Congress he is declaring a national emergency “with respect to the unusual and extraordinary threat to the national security, foreign policy, and economy of the US posed by specified harmful foreign activities of the Government of the Russian Federation”. At the same time, in testimony before a House of Representatives, American Air Force General Tod Wolters said there is a “low to medium” risk that Russia will invade Ukraine over the next few weeks. 

The US imposed sanctions on Moscow nevertheless. The formal reason for such a decision was alleged Russian cyber-attacks and “other hostile acts”. The latest sanctions target 32 entities and officials accused of trying to influence the 2020 US presidential election “and other acts of disinformation”. In addition, ten Russian diplomats are being expelled from the United States. The executive order also bars the US financial institutions from purchasing rouble-denominated bonds from June. The punitive measures, however, do not target big Russian state companies in finance or energy, nor any powerful Russian oligarchs. 

Russia’s response to American sanctions was rather moderate and limited. According to the Russian Foreign Ministry, ten US diplomats will be expelled from the country, and Moscow will ban US diplomatic facilities from hiring Russians and third-country citizens. In addition, Moscow will be banning the operations of US foundations working in Russia with the aim of meddling in the country’s domestic politics. Although Washington imposed financial sanctions on Russia, the Kremlin did not implement reciprocal measures. Thus, the Russian Federation is expected to keep buying US bonds. It is worth noting that Russia brought the volume of investments in US government securities to $6 billion in December 2020, according to the data of the US Treasury.

Russia also “responded” to the US sanctions by closing part of the Black Sea in the direction of the Kerch Strait until the end of October, but only for warships and state vessels of other countries. In other words, Ukrainian ports of Mariupol and Berdyansk in the Sea of Azov will not be cut off for civilian traffic, nor will the Russian “blockade” affect the Ukrainian economy. Moreover, on April 15 Kyiv started importing electricity from Russia – a country that is apparently preparing to invade Ukraine.  

In spite of threats and sanctions, business ties not only between Russia and Ukraine, but also between Moscow and Washington, remain more or less intact. US companies such as Deloitte Touche and Marsh still operate in Russia, and there are no indications that they plan to leave the country. Moreover, the Kremlin keeps buying US dollars, even though Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said in 2020 that Moscow “continues the policy of the economy’s de-dollarization”. It is worth noting that Lavrov recently suggested that Russia could abandon payments in US dollar. Even if such an action really takes place – which at this point does not seem very probable – it will unlikely happen before the US, as well as other countries, completely abandon currencies and go purely digital in a global blockchain system. In the meantime, Moscow and Washington are expected to keep doing business as usual.  

Recently, Moscow hosted a summit on Afghanistan, and the US special representative Zalmay Khalilzad attended, even though Biden previously said that he believes his Russian counterpart Vladimir Putin is “a killer”. Indeed, Russia and the United States may act as bitter geopolitical rivals, but whenever they have a common interest, their partnership prevails. On April 13, the US President even held a phone call with the “killer Putin”, proposing a summit between the two leaders. Although they reportedly agreed to meet, the Kremlin later announced that Putin won’t meet with Biden in the near future. In other words, they will surely meet, but not just yet. 

In the coming months, the two leaders are expected to hold their summit “on the neutral ground”. Where could that be? Although EU members Austria, Czech Republic, and Finland offered to host the meeting, there are speculations that Putin and Biden could meet in a country that is not in the EU, nor is a member of any military alliances. That country is Serbia – a place where the US Special Representative for Ukraine Kurt Volker and Russian presidential aide Vladislav Surkov already met in 2017 to discuss the Donbass conflict. 

Until Putin and Biden meet – be it in the Serbian capital Belgrade or elsewhere – tension between Russia and Ukraine will likely remain very high. That, however, does not necessarily mean that Moscow and Kyiv will fight a major war. Dmytro Razumkov, speaker of the Ukrainian Parliament said that there is no reason for martial law in Ukraine, which clearly suggests that even Kyiv does not take Russian military performances on the border too seriously. Still, the show must go on, as well as the “new Cold War” narrative. 

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3 comments

mondo cane April 17, 2021 at 2:17 am

There is absolutely no reason that the United States cannot work with Putin’s Russia, but for the fact that our president, after 47 years of doing nothing but being in government and never holding a real job, is stuck in his 1950s ‘cold war’ mindset.

It’s a pity we are temporarily suffering from his complete lack of understanding of the world as it is currently, and no thanks to him, the world as it could be.

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Jersey Prophet April 18, 2021 at 7:55 am

Revealing how the mainstream media hopped on the leftist “Russia Russia Russia” meme when it comes to President Trump. Now that Biden – a real warmonger and the impostor president and titular head of the Democrat War Party which has started every war since the 20th Century began – calls Russia’s president a “killer,” the MSM are crickets.

In actual fact, the US and Russia have more in common than not. We are both victims and inexorably linked together by the specter of Islamic terrorism (remember Beslan?). True, neither country is spotless in the realm of interference in the affairs of other nations, but it would be helpful for the War Party to step away and see who the REAL enemy of civilization is.

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George April 19, 2021 at 10:45 pm

IF I was a Russian, I’d be worried about a significant western military force on my west doorstep, too. I’d do what the Russians are doing, preparing defenses.

The American-suffered Pearl Harbor was only 3,000 Americans. 9-11 was 3,000 self-inflicted murders. Imagine if 12% of Americans had been killed in WW2.

When Germany invaded Russia in WW2, it attacked across a front as long as the distance from the northern tip of Maine to the southern tip of Florida. The Germans killed 20,000,000 people in the former Soviet Union, which only had a population of 170,000,000. The Germans killed 12% of the Soviet population, and almost all of that was in the nation’s western end, in the Ukraine and Russia and other countries.

There darn well ought to be some empathy, sympathy, and respect for the Russia people and the Russian government and the Russian nation, considering the trauma it suffered at the hands of the Germans, not to mention at the hands of communists.

The real enemy of both Russians and Americans is also the common enemy of all people and nations:
Central banks loaning the public currency as a debt at interest.

That’s what all this danger and war fear is about: America, doing the bidding of superrich people and corporations and their central banks, like the so-called “Federal” “Reserve” which is neither federal nor a reserve of any kind.

They are attempting to stop Russia from operating independently of the Federal Reserve, the IMF, and other central banks and global IMF schemes and scams. Russia broke out from that a few years back. The U.S.A. would quickly be restored to economic abundance if it broke out from it, too.

From what I understand, a Crimean military base was a Russian right, in danger of being taken away. The Russians feared another invasion. They fear ABM’s that could be nuclear armed also near their nation, too, in Poland and probably elsewhere. Too bad they didn’t consider the fear that Iran would present to Europe and the U.S. with ICBMs and nuclear weapons. Those ABM’s would not have been needed.

There are too many stupid younger people in the military and government, and central banking, who did not live the extreme fear and disaster that the Russians did in WW2. There’s not enough fear of war nowadays, especially when billions could die. This is literally billions. EMPs around the globe would be almost as bad as whole cities of 20 million turning to a sea of melted, blasted, radiated wreckage.

With thousands of nuclear warheads aimed at each other, there’s no good reason for any conventional skirmishes between Russia and the U.S., or even getting close to them. I hope both the Russians and Americans love their children, too.

We should be great friends, and great friends who are aligned against, and actively seeking to destroy and remove from the face of the earth, our common enemy. They number only in the lower thousands, if not hundreds.

Reply

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