As a counterpoint to the 24/7 Russophobia oozing out of the US and the UK, Vladimir Putin is all but guaranteed to be re-elected for a fourth presidential term this Sunday.
Beyond the foregone conclusion, what’s really hanging in the balance is the 70:70 equation: whether Putin can be assured of a 70% voter turnout and win roughly 70% of the vote. That would represent a firm endorsement of his domestic and foreign policy plans up to 2024.
Although Beijing does not provide official numbers, Putin is arguably as popular in Russia as Xi Jinping is in China – even with Xi being derided by the usual Western suspects as “the new Mao.” Under the framework of the Russia-China strategic partnership, geopolitically this is, and will continue to be, the Putin-Xi era.
Putin’s domestic popularity is confirmed by a Levada poll according to which 70% of those surveyed say the annexation of Crimea has been good for Russia. Overall support for Crimea rejoining Russia after a referendum stands at a whopping 86%.
On the Russian presidential race, the West has only paid attention to Alexei Navalny – whose candidature was rejected. Navalny called for a boycott of the polls.
The Communist Party candidate, Pavel Grudinin, may end up getting around 7% of the votes. The perennial Vladimir Zhirinovsky, a hardcore nationalist from the LDPR party, may get just over 5%. And Ksenia Sobchak, the Liberal candidate – and a self-described standard-bearer of the protest vote against everybody – will muster barely 1.5%.
Sobchak, a political novice, did strike a few moves – for instance wearing a sweatshirt with a big anti-war script to emphasize her take on Putin as the representative of the War Party.
Echoing Bernie Sanders, Sobchak insisted defense spending should be redirected to building domestic infrastructure. But then she blasted the “illegitimate” Russian “occupation” of Crimea. That did not go down well: 80% of the electorate said they would never vote for her. Sobchak at least managed to start positioning herself for the 2024 elections.
Back to the Great Game
Russia’s presidential campaign has been lively – belying the Western infowar barrage blasting the country’s “autocracy.” Observers such as Gilbert Doctorow have managed to offer balanced overviews.
Western-style debates were broadcast on the two leading news channels – Rossiya-1 and Pervy Kanal – and also on the less watched, state-run ORT and TVT. No holds were barred when denouncing the gap between Moscow and other regions enjoying budget surpluses, the best salaries and good public services, compared to the so-called “deficit regions.”
Same for the “gasification” of the Russian countryside – as in Gazprom earning US$740 billion in the past decade, mostly from exports, but investing only $12 billion in bringing gas to Russian households.
Putin benefitted from the release onto Russian social networks Vkontakte and Odnoklassniki, at the last stage of the campaign, of two slick new documentaries, one crammed with good political soundbites and the other centering on his family history. Both were hits, with millions of views.
Turning the collapsing Russiagate script upside down, many in Russia are interpreting it as direct UK interference in the Russian presidential campaign
And by the way, his full, unedited interview with NBC’s Megyn Kelly was a completely different animal compared with the heavily-cut 20-minute version shown to American viewers. No question the interview burnished his presidential credentials with Russian voters.
But then came the Salisbury poisoning-of-a-double-agent fiasco – a John le Carré plot gone bonkers. Turning the collapsing Russiagate script upside down, many in Russia are interpreting it as direct UK interference in the Russian presidential campaign.
The UK government’s version of Russian culpability has been challenged by independent sources.
The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) had previously been clear about the “completed destruction of Russia’s entire chemical weapons program, including of course its nerve agent production capabilities.”
The OPCW – which includes both the UK and the US – even doubted ‘Novichoks‘ as chemical weapons actually exist.
Former UK ambassador to Uzbekistan Craig Murray, trying to dissect the riddle, emphasized how he “witnessed personally in Uzbekistan the willingness of the UK and US security services to accept and validate intelligence they knew to be false in order to pursue their policy objectives.”
Sound questions have been asked about what’s really been happening to MI6 assets on British soil as London plays an ultra-high stakes geopolitical game with a foreign traitor despised by Russia and passed on by the US as part of a spy swap.
The new chessboard
For all the hysteria, the Salisbury saga has done little to offset Putin’s game-changing speech on March 1 outlining, in detail, not only his domestic agenda but also how Russia is ready to rearrange the geopolitical chessboard.
He stressed how “Russia must firmly assert itself among the five largest global economies, and its per-capita GDP must increase by 50% by the middle of the next decade.”
He extolled Eurasian integration – as in the development of “large Eurasian transport corridors,” especially the “Europe-Asia-Pacific corridor” being built by China, Russia and Kazakhstan, as well as “the capability of the Baikal-Amur Mainline and the Trans-Siberian Railway.”
“Any use of nuclear weapons against Russia or its allies, weapons of short, medium or any range at all, will be considered as a nuclear attack on this country. Retaliation will be immediate, with all the attendant consequences”
He also stressed how the Northern Sea Route, from Murmansk to the Bering Strait, “will be the key to developing the Russian Arctic and Far East,” as well as being one-third faster in moving cargo from Asia to Europe.
Russia will invest tens of billions of dollars by 2030 to develop ships, shipbuilders and ports along the Northern Sea Route – with cargo expected to grow tenfold by 2025.
And that happens to be the strategic Arctic priority for China as well – as the Polar Silk Road has now been totally integrated into the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI).
Then there’s the Yamal Peninsula mega-project, centered on low-cost gas enabling Russia to at least double its share of the global market in liquefied natural gas (LNG) by 2020.
For all the pull of Gazprom, Putin managed a counterbalance: “The dependence of the economy on hydrocarbon prices has been substantially reduced. We have increased our gold and currency reserves. Inflation has dropped to a record low level – just over 2%.”
MAD is back
Then came the stormer.
Putin detailed how MAD (Mutually Assured Destruction) is now back with a vengeance – implying that the whole US missile defense apparatus may be, by now, useless.
And this had absolutely nothing to do with “Russian aggression,” as the usual suspects spin it. This was Moscow’s response to over two decades of NATO encroaching on Russia’s borders.
In Putin’s own words: “I will speak about the newest systems of Russian strategic weapons that we are creating in response to the unilateral withdrawal of the United States of America from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty and the practical deployment of their missile defense systems both in the US and beyond their national borders.” Putin first announced his intention to respond no fewer than 11 years ago.
Naval analyst Andrei Martyanov has thoroughly dissected what all of this implies. The major take away, however, was another chilling announcement by Putin: “Any use of nuclear weapons against Russia or its allies, weapons of short, medium or any range at all, will be considered as a nuclear attack on this country. Retaliation will be immediate, with all the attendant consequences. There should be no doubt about this whatsoever.”
So MAD 2.0 is the new normal. Prof. Stephen Cohen’s assessment is fundamentally correct.
By now the ‘Putin As The Ultimate Bogeyman’ narrative has spiraled totally out of control. Even Sweden is nurturing a scheme to “mobilize” its society against Russia. The cartoonish narrative is mutating towards Russia as a rogue state threatening the whole world with chemical weapons.
Where Xi Jinping will concentrate on a complex internal tweaking of the Chinese model while continuing his multi-layered connectivity drive via BRI, Putin must concentrate on getting the Russian economy back on track while solidifying Russia’s position in the concert of powers.
Plenty among the Atlanticist elites disregard Xi and Putin as “dictators.” As far as Eurasian integration – the real deal in the 21st century New Great Game – is concerned, that is absolutely irrelevant.
Without taking sides, this is a much better written and documented article than the other two posted on Asia Times.
Is there a way to clone several copies of Pepe so that we can see more news that are not allowed to appear in the corporate media?
Muito obligado, Pepe!
Without Pepe as a contributor Asian Times has no credibility. In fact I would venture to say that the Asian Times needs a make over after reading some of these FAKE STORIES that Asian Times releases to the public!!
Arctic BRI already on the drawing board !
Indeed, no matter what the West does makes Putin stronger, just as it did Iran.
1953 CIA fell elected Mossadegh to stop Oil nationalization. In 20 years Iran triples Oil price.
1979 enemies circle Iran. To North godless Soviets, to East Afghan Communists, to West Socialist Saddam. We eliminated them one by one.
1980s Carter/Reagan goad Paks to make Afghanistan Russia’s Viet-nam. Result – gone Iran’s enemy to North. Now Christian Russia is Iran’s ally sharing defense production and nuke tech.
1980s at Reagan’s behest Israel creates Hezbollah. Today, Lebanon is Iran’s Cuba.
1990s US Bush/Clinton untooth Saddam, W. Bush packs him 10 years later. Iran’s enemy to the West is history. Today Iraq is Iran’s colony with polity and business in tow.
2000s W. Bush/Obama rout Taliban, no more Iran’s enemy to East. West half Afghanistan is de-facto Iranian.
Today, Iran is the ONLY polity in Asia – Tokyo to Istanbul – with no enemies on its borders. Japan has China, China has India, India has Pakistan, Arabs have Israel.
Some claim that Trump White House has become a paid Russian agent. Has it always been an Iranian agent, or do the Mullahs have a direct line to Allah who answers their prayers even before they are made? The Mullahs may chant "death to America" in the street, but privately they must be saying "Thank you America".
So should Putin.
Should the US and UK be so lucky as to have Putin as their respective President an Prime Minister
It would seem nobody who is even just borderline rational can take the West seriously anymore. Accusations can be made without evidence, as the year-long Russia witch hunt has proven, as the Salisbury incident shows. Language and logic no longer has meaning when talking to "our western partners", agreements non-binding, useless. Warmongers are righteous peacekeepers; countries that sanction and starve whole nations are human rights champions; nations that violently topple "regimes" they dislike are upholders of order and stability. Orwell himself would be impressed.
Could they worse?
Being a conspiracy theorist and an authoritarian apologist does not automatically make you a champion of alternative media.
I’m happy with my quality time with Pepe. I’ll leave the corporate media (NYT, WaPo, CNN, MSNBC, The Guardian, The Independent, BBC) to champion-lovers.
George Ohrwell I imagine you’re the sort that used to argue that the Soviet Union wasn’t all that bad really :p
How much do you get paid by the Russian state for this narrative construction?
Jakob Mxrxelx yawn
If only Pepe would drop the silly libertoonian economics and #LearnMMT he’d be the best journo on the planet.
It depends on what you compare. For lifestyle, the SU didn’t look too bad. Kim Philby seemed pretty comfortable over there. I’d need to experience it myself to make any kind of judgement. Too bad it was strangled by the freedom lovers and disappeared from the face of the earth 🙁
For the media, I actually think it was much worse than what we had in the West, by a long shot. At the USSR time, anyone literate over there knew they were fed lies. By contrast, most people in the West, from the intellectuals down, didn’t know that the corporate media fed them lies 🙁
I don’t know about you, but I was infinitely impressed by our education system 😉
Who is winning the 21st Century Great Game? Cerainly not the "West". Move over decent social democrats in some Western countries and many indecent illiberals in many Western countries – with the US leading the charge – and let Xi and Putin take over. The 20th Century never wholly belonged to the West aka the rise of the Bolsheviks and the Maoists (well some credit to Ho Chi Minh and Fidel Castro as well) and it is most unlikely the 21st Century will ever be reclaimed by the West. Should we mourn this or celebrate this? My take is it depends on how fearful and prejudical one is of seisemic changes.
LOL! As though Putin leaves it to chace with actual elections! It’s like the fox trusting the scorpion. We seem to have forgotten exactly what Putin IS. His nature. He’s a KGB thug! COME ON!
The ultra rich ultra powerful elites in the US/UK are buying nuclear bunkers, while funding NGOs and think tanks for promote war. They are psychopathic morons.
A strong Russia led by Putin will derail America’s ambitions in the Middle East. A strong China led by Xi Ping will derail America’s overtures into the Far East, especially the South China sea. Together Russia and China including their allies will most likely dump the dollar