Nemtsov's Murder May Be Used to Fuel Western Hostility Against Russia
Murder of Russian politician Nemtsov may be used for attempts to increase Western hostility against Russia and even to motivate further serious sanctions, experts claim.
Murder of Russian politician Nemtsov may be used for attempts to increase Western hostility against Russia and even to motivate further serious sanctions, experts claim.
28
February, 2015
MOSCOW
(Sputnik), Daria Chernyshova – Friday's murder of Russian
opposition politician Boris Nemtsov in the center of Moscow could be
used by the West as reason to fuel tensions and increase pressure on
Russia, experts told Sputnik on Saturday.
“This
provocation will be used for attempts to increase Western hostility
against Russia and even to motivate further serious sanctions. I for
sure have the feeling that the murder of Nemtsov is a direct
consequence of the Minsk ceasefire agreement and its apparent
success,” political analyst Jon Hellevig told Sputnik.
Hellevig
added that a provocative killing was obviously needed “to fuel the
flames”, suggesting that the killing could be a false flag
operation of some Western special task forces.
“Of
course, I cannot know for sure at this point, but the murder clearly
bears all the hallmarks of such a staged murder complete with a
careful choice of the scene of the crime on a bridge with the
Kremlin, the Red Square and St. Basil’s cathedral – the symbols
of Russia – in the background,” Hellevig added.
German
MP Urges to Refrain From Sweeping Conclusions on Nemtsov’s Murder
The
expert also said he expected that the international reaction to the
murder would far exceed “the two earlier similar Western propaganda
campaigns”, in what he meant murder of Russian journalist Anna
Politkovskaya and the death of former Russian Federal Security
Service (FSB) officer Alexander Litvinenko.
“One
can't help but think that Nemtsov has been knocked off by those
looking to cause instability in Russia and overthrow [Russian
President Vladimir] Putin. Nemtsov while being opposition was not in
anyway popular with the Russian public, nor was he a threat to
Putin,” the analyst concluded.
Mitch
Feierstein, hedge-fund manager and chief executive of the Glacier
Environmental Fund Limited, agreed that Nemtsov’s murder could be a
pretext to accuse the Russian president of some links to the killing.
“This
cold-blooded murder opens the door for conspiracy theorists and media
propagandists to summarily convict Putin, the West’s “boogeyman,”
without any facts, evidence or a trial,” Feierstein told Sputnik.
Boris
Nemtsov’s Killers Tried to Destabilize Russia – Gorbachev
Feierstein
further said it was unlikely that the world waited for the results of
an independent and thorough investigation before making “wildly
speculative” conclusions. Instead, the expert argued that an
increase in international and domestic tensions was likely to take
place.
Boris
Nemtsov, an opposition politician who served as Russian deputy prime
minister and energy minister under the country's former President
Boris Yeltsin in the 1990s, was shot at several times on Friday night
from a bypassing car.
After
the deadly shooting, a number of Western leaders, including US
President Barack Obama, French President Francois Hollande and German
Chancellor Angela Merkel expressed their condolences over the tragedy
and urged prompt and impartial investigation into the case.
On
Saturday, Russian investigators said that murder may have possible
links to current events in Ukraine, Nemtsov's business activity and
his stance on the Charlie Hebdo attack in Paris.
And what we are likely to get from the western media. The general line was that Nemtsov had evidence of Russian military involvement in Donbas, and was about to spill the beans before being murdered by - you guessed it! - Vladimir Putin
This
quote from former chess champion Garry Kasparov captures the
significance of a Russian opposition leader's murder
28
February, 2015
Russian
opposition leader Boris Nemtsov was
shot dead in
Moscow Friday, and many of his supporters including the former
chess champion Garry Kasparov assume
Vladimir Putin is to blame.
Kasparov
— one of the world’s greatest chess players and an ally of
Nemtsov’s who helped him organise protests against Putin — says
Nemtsov’s death shows Russia’s leader is
lying about his supposedly high approval ratings.
“If
you have 86% support, why do you kill someone like Boris?” Kasparov
said, according
to the Associated Press.
“He maybe can reach two million people online at best. A
demonstration brings out a hundred thousand people at most. So if you
are so confident, why do that?”
Nemtsov
served as a deputy prime minister and a regional governor in Russia
in the 1990s, when he helped put free-market reforms in place.
Ukraine’s president believes Nemtsov was murdered because he had
evidence that Russia
armed forces in Ukraine.
And
Kasparov believes his ally’s death is a sign that Russia viewed him
is a threat and believes public support is flagging. The former chess
champion’s quote referenced a poll this month showing Putin’s
approval rating at a staggering 86%, according
to CNN.
Kasparov is not the only one who thinks Putin is fabricating his high
approval ratings.
“That
figure is made up,” Ben Judah, author of “Fragile Empire: How
Russia Fell In and Out of Love with Vladimir Putin,” told CNN.
And,
naturally, the Guardian is right at the head of the pack in pushing
the general line
History
of opposition to Vladimir Putin seen as most likely reason for death
of former deputy prime minister
Poroshenko Claims Nemtsov Was to Reveal Links Between Russia and Conflict in East Ukraine
28
February, 2015
Ukrainian
President Petro Poroshenko said Saturday Russian opposition
politician Boris Nemtsov was murdered because he planned to disclose
evidence of Russia's involvement in Ukraine's separatist conflict.
Poroshenko
paid tribute to Nemtsov, who was shot dead late on Friday, and said
the fierce critic of President Vladimir Putin had told him a couple
of weeks ago that he had proof of Russia's role in the Ukraine crisis
and would reveal it.
"He
said he would reveal persuasive evidence of the involvement of
Russian armed forces in Ukraine. Someone was very afraid of this ...
They killed him," Poroshenko said in televised comments during a
visit to the city of Vinnytsia.
More
than 5,600 people have been killed since pro-Russian separatists
rebelled in east Ukraine last April, after the ousting of a
Moscow-backed president in Kiev and Russia's annexation of the Crimea
peninsula.
Kiev
and its Western allies say the rebels are funded and armed by Moscow,
and backed by Russian military units. Moscow denies aiding
sympathizers in Ukraine, and says heavily armed Russian-speaking
troops operating without insignia there are not its men.
A
sampling of western MSM russophobic hyperbole:
After Boris Nemtsov’s Assassination, ‘There Are No Longer Any Limits’
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/28/magazine/after-boris-nemtsovs-assassination-there-are-no-longer-any-limits.html
Nemtsov killing: A chilling historical parallel?
In Leningrad on December 1, 1934, a lone gunman killed Sergey Kirov, a powerful Bolshevik who stood as an alternative to Josef Stalin.
Stalin’s involvement in the murder was denied, and never proved. It goes without saying that the Kremlin also was quick to deny Putin’s involvement in Nemtsov’s death.http://www.cnn.com/2015/02/28/opinion/dawisha-nemtsov-killing/
‘We are all Nemtsov': Hundreds gather to protest death of Russian opposition leader as Ukraine Prime Minister blames Putin for his death.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2972813/Russian-opposition-politician-Boris-Nemtsov-shot-dead-Moscow-street.html
After Boris Nemtsov’s Assassination, ‘There Are No Longer Any Limits’
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/28/magazine/after-boris-nemtsovs-assassination-there-are-no-longer-any-limits.html
Nemtsov killing: A chilling historical parallel?
In Leningrad on December 1, 1934, a lone gunman killed Sergey Kirov, a powerful Bolshevik who stood as an alternative to Josef Stalin.
Stalin’s involvement in the murder was denied, and never proved. It goes without saying that the Kremlin also was quick to deny Putin’s involvement in Nemtsov’s death.http://www.cnn.com/2015/02/28/opinion/dawisha-nemtsov-killing/
‘We are all Nemtsov': Hundreds gather to protest death of Russian opposition leader as Ukraine Prime Minister blames Putin for his death.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2972813/Russian-opposition-politician-Boris-Nemtsov-shot-dead-Moscow-street.html
And
not to be outdone in Canada, Harper’s Globe and Mail:Fear
envelops Russia after killing of Putin
critic
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/russian-opposition-mourns-murdered-leader-nemtsov/article23237379/
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/world/russian-opposition-mourns-murdered-leader-nemtsov/article23237379/
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