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No panic from Putin as West still doesn’t recognize nature of his threat to the world, Pavlova says

Putin. MH17: The blood on his hands. (Political cartoon by Ramirez, 2014)
Edited by: A. N.

Many Russian opposition commentators are saying that in the wake of the release of the report showing Moscow’s culpability in the shooting down of the Malaysian airliner Vladimir Putin is panicking and fears being hauled before an international tribunal in the Hague.

Irina Pavlova, Russian historian
Irina Pavlova, Russian historian

But these commentators are wrong, historian Irina Pavlova says, because Putin recognizes not only that he is not threatened by such a fate but also that the West has failed to take his measure and put in place measures that would end or at least limit his use of the strategies and tactics he has been using.

Analysts like Andrey Illarionov and Vitaly Portnikov, not to mention those who have long been predicting the imminent end of Putin’s regime and the emergence of a new Russia at peace with the world have fastened on the MH17 report as pointing to that, the US-based Russian historian argues.

They are almost certainly wrong, she says, pointing to the words of another Russian commentator, Ilya Milshteyn, whose conclusions about what the MH17 report really means for Putin and the West that still has yet to take his measure.

He writes: [quote]“For the first time in all of history, humanity has been taken hostage and something as yet unclear is required for its liberation: Either capitulation with a further signing of agreements with the Kremlin about the division of the world, or a clash and victory, or a longterm policy of patient and exhausting balancing on the edge of war and peace.”[/quote]

Milshteyn continues: “Right now, this clash of humanity with a most powerful terrorist organization — one that Russia hasn’t banned but chosen — has entered a new stage.” But all indications are that “everything still remains in a fog” with the West still unsure of what it is up against and how it must act as a result.

Russian mercenaries taking photographs with personal items found among the debris at the crash site of MH17 (Image: Dmitry Lovetsky/AP)
Russian mercenaries taking photographs with personal items found among the debris at the crash site of MH17 (Image: Dmitry Lovetsky/AP)

If somewhat emotionally expressed, Pavlova says, this is exactly right, because the West still has not recognized that “today it is dealing not simply with a dangerous figure but with a new type of political player on the world arena,” one who behaves — albeit armed with the most powerful weapons — like a thuggish youth who “spits on rules, obligations, and Western values.”

Putin is, she says, “aggressive, purposeful and consistent in his actions,” all facts that many in the West and in Russia too have failed to take into account.

Pavlova concludes by quoting her own words of more than a year ago: “Today, from the Western countries and above all the US, wisdom and political will is required to oppose the political challenge posed by the Kremlin.” This response must be peaceful because in a military conflict, Putin will use his nuclear weapons.

Therefore, she wrote then and reiterates now: [quote]“The response must be intelligent, precise and unexpected. The Russian powers that be must be forever deprived of the temptation to build their policy on human ignorance, lies and disinformation” and thus take away from them the ability to act in foreign policy by “Stalinist methods of provocation.”[/quote]

Russian "Buk" surface-to-air missile system at  an arms show. The Dutch National Detective Force said there was conclusive evidence that a missile from the Russian-made Buk 9M38 missile system downed the MH17 passenger flight on July 17, 2014, killing all 298 people on board.
Russian “Buk” surface-to-air missile system at an arms show. The Dutch National Detective Force said there was conclusive evidence that a missile from the Russian-made Buk 9M38 missile system downed the MH17 passenger flight on July 17, 2014, killing all 298 people on board.

For that to happen, Pavlova says, “it is vitally necessary to find ‘a key’ to change the policy of the present Russian authorities, to undermine the pro-Stalinist identity constructed by it within the country, and to destroy the image of the global world, which the Kremlin is trying to build, using the values and methods of Stalinist great power approach.”

“Unfortunately,” she writes now, “there is none of this in evidence yet.” And because there isn’t, Putin isn’t panicking and will continue to act as he is confident that he can get away with murder and much else besides.


 

Edited by: A. N.
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