Stephen
Cohen: Vladimir Putin -- The 21st Century’s Greatest Statesman or
Its Greatest Threat?
John
Batchelor has an extremely popular political talk show on
America’s largest radio network, WABC.
He
has Stephen Cohen on live in the studio almost every week for a full
45 minute segment, the only guest he gives that much time to.
Why?
Because Cohen’s appearances are killing the ratings.
America seems to be thirsting for an alternative
and critical view of Obama’s Russia policy.
Nation contributing
editor Stephen F. Cohen and John Batchelor continue their weekly
discussions of the new US-Russian Cold War.
This
installment focuses on Putin’s policies at home and abroad since he
became Russia’s leader in 2000.
Cohen
argues that a factual and balanced evaluation is of vital importance
because the demonization of Putin personally, which indicts him for
most everything from ripping apart the world order to murdering his
personal opponents, is the central element in the orthodox American
political-media narrative of the new Cold War that is leading
increasingly to the possibility of actual war between the United
States and Russia.
Cohen
itemizes what might otherwise be considered Putin’s achievements at
home and aboard—pluses—but which are omitted from the demonizing
narrative.
At
home, they include stabilizing a Russia laden with weapons of mass
destruction and on the verge of disintegration in 2000 and improving
in many tangible ways the well-being of the great majority of the
Russian people. (For example, per capita income, social benefits,
longevity, and birth rates are up; infant deaths and suicides are
down.)
If
Russia’s democratization has meanwhile been diminished, Cohen
reminds listeners that democratization began in Soviet Russia under
Mikhail Gorbachev and its reversal began under the first post-Soviet
President, Boris Yeltsin, though Putin may be criticized for
continuing the latter process.
Putin’s
pluses abroad, especially those abetting US policy, also are not
credited. They include important Russian assistance to Washington’s
war against the Taliban in Afghanistan after 9/11, which saved
American lives; Putin’s vital role in bringing about the
destruction of Syrian President Assad’s chemical weapons in 2013;
his instrumental role in achieving the 2015 agreement that limited
Iran’s nuclear weapons capability; and most recently Russia’s
contributions to major military defeats of the Islamic State in Syria
in 2015–16.
Cohen
adds a special issue that has plagued American-Russian relations for
decades, if not centuries: Russian anti-Semitism. Many Russian Jews
and Israelis say today, “Putin is the best friend Jews and Israel
have ever had in the Kremlin.”
Finally,
Cohen turns to the major demonizing accusation: Putin has pursued
“aggressive policies” abroad for 16 years or at least since
the US-Russian proxy war in Georgia in 2008.
Reviewing
the history of US-Russian relations since 2000, Cohen concludes that
Putin has been less an “aggressive” foreign policy leader than a
reactive leader, as is often complained in Moscow.
Looking
at the ongoing major US-NATO military buildup (on land, sea, and in
the air) on or near Russia’s borders, Cohen asks: Who is
“aggressing” against whom, and who is mostly reacting?
Listen to the podcast HERE
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