How Western Media completely missed Putin’s ‘Listen to Us Now’ remarks

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… from Southfront

President Putin’s remarks on Russia’s progress in its nuclear rearmament have sparked panic in the West about Moscow’s supposed plans to kick off an arms race and start a new Cold War. But what observers ignored was the core of his message – that it was the West itself that forced Russia to build up its capabilities amid endless provocations.

Vladimir Putin has made it crystal clear that Moscow is on the defensive, years after fruitlessly asking its Western ‘partners’ to stop encircling Russia with a web of strategic weapons, bases and power-changing conflicts – from the Middle East to Eastern Europe.

Commenting on the president’s “Nobody wanted to listen to us. So listen now,” remarks, which accompanied the new strategic weapons unveiled in his Thursday speech, the Guardian and Voice of America accusedPutin of “threatening” the US with an arms race, while The Washington Post charged the Russian leader with digging up “chilling echoes” of the Cold War.



The Pentagon boasted that it was “ready” to react to “anything that may come our way.” The White House, in turn, accused Moscow of “developing destabilizing weapon systems…in direct violation of its treaty obligations.”

  • The Guardian screengrab
  • VOA screengrab
  • The Washington Post screengrab

In Thursday’s speech, Putin recalled a warning he made in 2004 to build a new generation of strategic weapons to counter the deployment of the US global missile defense system.

“As you can see, we made no secret of our plans and spoke about them openly, primarily to encourage our partners into holding talks. Let me repeat, this was in 2004,” Putin emphasized. Unfortunately, notwithstanding Moscow’s status as a nuclear power, “nobody really wanted to talk to us about the core of the problem. Nobody wanted to listen to us. So listen now,” he quipped, before moving on to a series of presentations about Russia’s latest strategic weapons.

For any mainstream media giants who would like to blame Russia’s new weapons for being the opening shot in a Cold War 2.0 confrontation, there are a few things worth bearing in mind.

#1: It wasn’t Moscow that withdrew from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in 2002 and began to deploy a missile defense system on its strategic rival’s western borders, under the pretense of an imaginary threat from Iran.

In 2016, Putin recalled that Washington had continued its missile defense buildup in Poland and Romania even after the signing of the Iranian nuclear deal in 2015, thus dispelling any pretense that the system was a response to any sort of Iranian threat.

Pointing out that Moscow had made a series of proposals to Washington on the creation of a joint missile defense shield, Putin pointed out that all of Russia’s proposals “were rejected…Everything is done unilaterally, without taking into account our concerns.”

The US Army Corps of Engineers Europe District is managing the construction of a $134 million Aegis Ashore Missile Defense Complex in Deveselu, Romania
The US Army Corps of Engineers Europe District is managing the construction of a $134 million Aegis Ashore Missile Defense Complex in Deveselu, Romania

 

In what can now be seen as an obvious nod to the strategic weapons which were unveiled this week, Putin emphasized in his 2016 remarks that Moscow would not allow itself to be dragged into an arms race, but would “go our own way, working very carefully, without exceeding the plans on financing of the rearmament program we already have. But we will adjust these plans to account for the emerging threats to Russia’s security.

2#: It’s the US and NATO which have been encroaching on Russia’s borders and ringing the country with military bases, not the other way around.

The Western alliance has long forgotten the promises it made to Moscow in the early 1990s not to expand eastward, pushing further and further east in several waves in 2000, 2004, 2009 and 2017, and eyeing the prospects of alliance membership for Georgia, Finland, and Sweden.

The 2014 Maidan coup d’état in Kiev only heightened Russian concerns, bringing the prospect of NATO troops and weaponry stationed in the Russian heartland one step closer to reality.

Map of Cold War military alliances in Europe. Since the Soviet collapse, NATO has swallowed up every country that was once part of the Warsaw Pact, and even began advancing into the former USSR itself.
Map of Cold War military alliances in Europe. Since the Soviet collapse, NATO has swallowed up every country that was once part of the Warsaw Pact, and even began advancing into the former USSR itself.

 

#3: It’s the US, not Russia, which recently adopted a dangerous Nuclear Posture Review approving the use of nuclear weapons to react to non-nuclear threats, up to and including cyber threats.

President Putin said as much in Thursday’s speech, stressing that Russia was “greatly concerned” by the document’s implications, and warning that the new doctrine “reduces the threshold for the use of nuclear weapons.”

“I should note that under our country’s military doctrine, Russia reserves the right to use nuclear weapons solely in response to a nuclear attack, or an attack with other weapons of mass destruction against our country or its allies, or an act of aggression against us using conventional weapons which threatens the very existence of the state,” Putin emphasized.

RS-24 Yars
RS-24 Yars

 

4#: Unlike Washington, Moscow has not spent the last two and a half decades attempting to establish a unipolar world order through the use of military force, from Yugoslavia and Afghanistan to Iraq, Libya, Yemen, Syria and elsewhere.

Putin summed up Moscow’s pursuit of new strategic weapons systems in Thursday’s speech:

“We are not threatening anyone, aren’t going to attack anyone or take anything from anyone by threat of arms….Just the opposite…Russia’s growing military power is a solid guarantee of global peace, as it preserves and will continue to preserve strategic parity and the balance of forces in the world, which, as is well-known, has been and remains a key factor of international security after WWII and up to the present day.”

US soldiers stand near the landmark Hands of Victory, built by executed Iraqi president Saddam Hussein to commemorate Iraq's victory in the Iran-Iraq war, inside Baghdad's Green Zone as they prepare to go on a mission on July 5, 2008
US soldiers stand near the landmark “Hands of Victory”, built by executed Iraqi president Saddam Hussein to commemorate Iraq’s victory in the Iran-Iraq war, inside Baghdad’s Green Zone as they prepare to go on a mission on July 5, 2008

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5 COMMENTS

  1. LOW DOWN ON A HIJACK
    The embedded Israeli ‘triggers’ in the computer components of US nuclear weaponry (see ‘Talpiot’) is hopefully to the fore of Russia’s rudimentary and military scientific reckoning. Could this fact in any way account for the benign as against condign response to Israeli actions in Syria to date? It can be taken as a gimme or, given as taken, that the Israelis have access to over-ride the US arsenal. Putin’s only oversight was NOT to point an accusatory finger at Israel, but I stand corrected because with Israel already running the Rhode Island Red Rooster hen-house all references allude directly to Tel Aviv. So many fingers in the pie, (P)utin’s (I)rascible (E)nemies cannot wait to complete the encirclement of Russia to go in and plunder its resources. Pie or Pi represents the symbol π used by mathematicians to indicate the ratio of a circle’s circumference to its diameter and also marks the first letter of the Greek word perimetros, meaning circumference. But for all Putin’s practical purposes he and his fellow patriots need only remember basic math to know their enemies, one and one is = shtaim (Hebrew for two) the word ‘steam’, pronounced phonetically by motley Micks of the Pentagon and Langley, as in
    Jim – “She went off in a huff.”
    Kevin – “Horse drawn or ‘shtaim’ driven?”

  2. Except that these new weapons came in at cost and that they probably work. Something unheard of over in the USA. Hopefully Mr. Putin will figure out how to keep us out of a global nuclear war. I have more trust in Mr. Putin than Mr. Trump.

    • Why should they listen to Mr. Putin when their masters in the MIK whisper to them to force a weapons race and a new cold war ?

    • Trakkath, i’m almost sure they will use this situation to double twice more the military budget… If Russia creates a rocket for 1 million $, USA needs 11 millions. The military business has deep roots in Washington. And now it turns out that billiards of money were spent really against Iran, ’cause against the main target-Russia it won’t work well.

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