Putin
Crushes BBC Smartass
From
Putin’s marathon press conference yesterday. Reference here
at Presidential Site.
Two
questions, Dear Readers:
Is
there any Western leader capable of standing up, without
Teleprompter, and answering a mass of questions, some softball, some
hostile, for several hours?
Given
the recent expulsion of Giulietto
Chiesa from Estonia for daring to question the Party Line,
do “Western values”© even permit Western leaders to be asked
question like Simpson’s?
.......
JOHN
SIMPSON, BBC: Western countries almost universally now believe that
there’s a new Cold War and that you, frankly, have decided to
create that. We see, almost daily, Russian aircraft taking sometimes
quite dangerous manoeuvres towards western airspace. That must be
done on your orders; you’re the Commander-in-Chief. It must have
been your orders that sent Russian troops into the territory of a
sovereign country – Crimea first, and then whatever it is that’s
going on in Eastern Ukraine. Now you’ve got a big problem with the
currency of Russia, and you’re going to need help and support and
understanding from outside countries, particularly from the West. So
can I say to you, can I ask you now, would you care to take this
opportunity to say to people from the West that you have no desire to
carry on with the new Cold War, and that you will do whatever you can
to sort out the problems in Ukraine? Thank you!
VLADIMIR
PUTIN: Thank you very much for your question. About our exercises,
manoeuvres and the development of our armed forces. You said that
Russia, to a certain extent, contributed to the tension that we are
now seeing in the world. Russia did contribute but only insofar as it
is more and more firmly protecting its national interests. We are not
attacking in the political sense of the word. We are not attacking
anyone. We are only protecting our interests. Our Western partners –
and especially our US partners – are displeased with us for doing
exactly that, not because we are allowing security-related activity
that provokes tension.
Let
me explain. You are talking about our aircraft, including strategic
aviation operations. Do you know that in the early 1990s, Russia
completely stopped strategic aviation flights in remote surveillance
areas as the Soviet Union previously did? We completely stopped,
while flights of US strategic aircraft carrying nuclear weapons
continued. Why? Against whom? Who was threatened?
So
we didn’t make flights for many years and only a couple of years
ago we resumed them. So are we really the ones doing the provoking?
So,
in fact, we only have two bases outside Russia, and both are in areas
where terrorist activity is high. One is in Kyrgyzstan, and was
deployed there upon request of the Kyrgyz authorities, President
Akayev, after it was raided by Afghan militants. The other is in
Tajikistan, which also borders on Afghanistan. I would guess you are
interested in peace and stability there too. Our presence is
justified and clearly understandable.
Now,
US bases are scattered around the globe – and you’re telling me
Russia is behaving aggressively? Do you have any common sense at all?
What are US armed forces doing in Europe, also with tactical nuclear
weapons? What are they doing there?
Listen,
Russia has increased its military spending for 2015, if I am not
mistaken, it is around 50 billion in dollar equivalent. The
Pentagon’s budget is ten times that amount, $575 billion, I think,
recently approved by the Congress. And you’re telling me we are
pursuing an aggressive policy? Is there any common sense in this?
Are
we moving our forces to the borders of the United States or other
countries? Who is moving NATO bases and other military infrastructure
towards us? We aren’t. Is anyone listening to us? Is anyone
engaging in some dialogue with us about it? No. No dialogue at all.
All we hear is “that’s none of your business. Every country has
the right to choose its way to ensure its own security.” All right,
but we have the right to do so too. Why can’t we?
Finally,
the ABM system – something I mentioned in my Address to the Federal
Assembly. Who was it that withdrew unilaterally from the ABM Treaty,
one of the cornerstones of the global security system? Was it Russia?
No, it wasn’t. The United States did this, unilaterally. They are
creating threats for us, they are deploying their strategic missile
defence components not just in Alaska, but in Europe as well – in
Romania and Poland, very close to us. And you’re telling me we are
pursuing an aggressive policy?
If
the question is whether we want law-based relations, the answer is
yes, but only if our national economic and security interests are
absolutely respected.
We
negotiated WTO accession for 19 years or so, and consented to
compromise on many issues, assuming that we are concluding cast-iron
agreements. And then… I will not discuss who’s right and who’s
wrong (I already said on many occasions that I believe Russia behaved
the right way in the Ukrainian crisis, and the West was wrong, but
let us put this aside for now). Still, we joined the WTO. That
organisation has rules. And yet, sanctions were imposed on Russia in
violation of the WTO rules, the international law and the UN Charter
– again unilaterally and illegitimately. Are we in the wrong again?
We
want to develop normal relations in the security sphere, in fighting
terrorism. We will work together on nuclear non-proliferation. We
will work together on other threats, including drugs, organised crime
and grave infections, such as Ebola. We will do all this jointly, and
we will cooperate in the economic sphere, if our partners want this.
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