Chronicles - Sovereign Global Majority

Archives

Medvedev, pre-emptive strikes and what Putin really thinks

Featured image: A Ball of Vampires

Dmitry Medvedev had an interview with TASS. What is interesting is that he says that Russia now must consider responding in full or “even deliver preemptive strikes if need be.”

We have heard similar messaging from Dmitry Trenin very recently, and from Prof. Sergei Karaganov over a period of time. Then, we had Mr. Shoigu spelling out that NATO is still a threat.

These are serious voices in Russia and certainly voices that will not be ignored.

Medvedev’s Full Speech

https://tass.com/politics/1990623

Exactly 80 years ago, on July 17, 1945, the Potsdam Conference began, bringing together the heads of government from the Soviet Union, the United States, and Great Britain. The meeting laid the foundation for the post-war world order.

In an interview with TASS, Russian Security Council Deputy Chairman Dmitry Medvedev, both a politician and a lawyer, outlined the key lessons Russia has drawn from that historic event and explained its continued relevance in the context of the current situation around Ukraine.​

– Decisions from the Potsdam conference were almost immediately breached by the Soviet Union’s allies in the anti-Hitlerite coalition. In parallel, London developed Operation Unthinkable, a war plan against the Soviet Union. Is perfidy the West’s core?

– The anniversary of the Potsdam Conference provides an opportunity to reflect on the past as a mirror of the present. In doing so, we must use the “correct lenses”, without being naive or considering the events of July 1945 in isolation from the centuries-long attitude of European, or, more broadly, Western elites toward our country.

Revising or breaching the decisions from the Potsdam Conference was just a continuation of Western policies regarding Russia from before the war or even earlier.

Since the time of Peter the Great, when Russia established itself as a European power, we have witnessed a consistent trend of hostility, distrust and attempts to weaken our country in Western actions. As part of various coalitions, they [Western countries] have sought to turn Russia into Europe’s stepdaughter who was admitted only to the threshold the pan-European house for re-education. They have also sought to impose a subservient role on our country in European and, later, global affairs. But in vain.

To Western elites, an independent and strong Russia has always been a historical anomaly and a very effective rebuff to the idea of their supposed “civilizational superiority”. Fear and reluctance to engage in dialogue with other nations gives rise to villainy and aggression. This is why Western elites have been making repeated attempts to isolate Russia and avenge their past failures.

So, in 1945, the Potsdam [Conference] was not a prelude to lasting peace, but rather it paved the way for the Cold War. And today’s developments – a proxy war, or actually a full-out war involving the launch of Western-made missiles and satellite reconnaissance, sanctions packages, and loud statements on militarization in Europe – are yet another attempt to destroy the `historical anomaly’ that the West hates so much, to destroy our country.

So, the Potsdam Conference taught us that relations with the West should not be based on illusions. The West’s treacherous nature and its warped and very outdated sense of superiority are still evident. And we should therefore act accordingly, responding in full or even delivering pre-emptive strikes if need be.

The Potsdam Conference was an important history lesson for us.

We have learned the lessons of the Potsdam Conference. And today, as in 1945, our country is fighting not only to protect its borders, but also the idea of a just world order.

– As was at the Potsdam Conference that the Ds – demilitarization, denazification and democratization of Germany – were first formulated. Can the approaches outlined there be applied to present-day Ukraine? And which Ds could be added or adjusted, in your vision?

– The three ‘D’s – demilitarization, denazification and democratization – were developed to address Nazi Germany as an aggressor state that destroyed the world order. Of course, there are significant differences between the Reich of 1945 and present-day Ukraine, in terms of scale, global posture and even, formally, government ideology.

However, one clear similarity does exist.

Firstly, there is the identity crisis and the blatantly Nazi symbols. There is a cult of collaborationist and Nazi ideologists, as well as swastikas and Totenkopf prints on military uniforms and armored combat vehicles, not to mention other references to the Third Reich. Today’s ideology is based on hatred of the neighbor and calls to continue ‘fighting to the end’. All of this is supported by the government and is rippling through society. The militarization of society adds to this, with armed groups acquiring not only military, but also political functions, some of which, in effect, are poorly controlled by the state.

Secondly, there is a tenure of power and increasingly obvious signs of dictatorship. Electoral procedures have been canceled under the pretext of war, opposition activists have been persecuted or jailed, and freedom of speech has been annihilated.

Thirdly, the economy has been in decline. Like the Third Reich in its final months, present-day Ukraine is clearly experiencing an economic and management crisis that has been solely addressed through external funding and mobilization rhetoric.

All this makes the idea of using the three ‘D’s still relevant.

Demilitarization is not a punishment, but an opportunity for Ukraine to stop being used as a pawn in someone else’s bloody geopolitical games, which often target Ukraine itself. For this reason, too, the country’s non-aligned status is an essential part of its demilitarization. Furthermore, eliminating insane defense expenditures would provide additional funds for rebuilding its shattered economy.

Denazification or debanderization is not an act of revenge, but rather long-term work with public conscience and historical memory. The peoples of our countries and many other former Soviet republics share a common historical destiny. This shared heritage creates huge potential for not only peaceful neighborly relations, but also cooperation and joint development.

And democratization involves more than just elections. It involves restoring legal institutions, a free press, competition, and the separation of powers. Had these mechanisms been fully operational in Ukraine, its history since 2014 would have taken a far more favorable path.

To the three ‘D’s, I would add a fourth: deparasitization, or disinsection. Residents of the territories currently controlled by the so-called Ukraine must learn to live independently and take responsibility for their actions. Otherwise, a parasitic Ukraine has no chance of preserving its statehood.

– In violation of the Potsdam Agreements, the Western countries, unlike the Soviet Union, effectively failed to carry out the process of Germany’s denazification. Should this fact not only be acknowledged but also emphasized in the Russian historical narrative? Can the postwar West be considered a covert accomplice in the preservation of Nazism after 1945?

– I have addressed this topic on numerous occasions in my speeches and articles. Before the war, the Western powers nurtured and supported Hitler’s Nazi regime, and after the fascists were defeated in World War II, they made every effort to ensure that the ideology survived.

Rather than implementing genuine denazification measures in the territories under their control, our Western “allies” settled for superficial and perfunctory actions.

Most Nazi criminals tried with the participation of Western judicial authorities got off with little more than a slap on the wrist, receiving exceedingly lenient sentences or being granted amnesty just a few years after the war. Neither they, nor their descendants or close associates, were barred from entering positions of power.

The consequences of this astonishing “tolerance” toward Nazi criminals, combined with rabid and hysterical Russophobia, are being felt to this day. This is especially true in countries that served as Hitler’s lackeys or expendable resources: the Baltic states, Poland, and Ukraine, which has embraced a Banderite identity.

Many high-ranking figures in Germany still take pride in their fascist forebears, emulating them in both rhetoric and policy. A striking example is the recent statement by German Defense Minister Boris Pistorius about the country’s readiness to “kill Russian soldiers” on the “eastern flank” and to always deal with Russia “from a position of strength.” And the remarks of Chancellor Friedrich Merz, himself a direct descendant of Nazis, are no less appalling. All of this echoes the hypocrisy of those self-proclaimed “anti-fascists” who like to say their grandfather “heroically died in a concentration camp after falling from a guard tower.”

Let me remind you that our president stated unequivocally: Russia does not intend to go to war with NATO or ‘attack Europe.’ Such claims by Western politicians are utter nonsense. I would also like to add that this kind of drivel is deliberately injected into the information space to destabilize an already difficult situation. It is yet another front in the West’s open war against us.

Without question, all such facts must be brought to light, not swept under the rug. The saying ‘history will be the judge’ only holds true when all the facts and circumstances necessary for such judgment are known. After all, the principal judge for the Nazis in Hitler’s Germany, as we know, was the soldier of the Red Army.

This is what Mr Putin has to say:

Click on the link and the video clip will play in its own window. Stay to the end (it is short). We have it from source now: The Ball of Vampires is about to end!

IMG_0980

37 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Figmund Fraud
Figmund Fraud
9 months ago

Interesting comments on languages. I studied Russian in college at the U of Minn, my first trip abroad was to the ussr. One month in Leningrad, during white nights, 1979, the last year of detente. No one speaks of detente anymore. My Russian friend said Nixon was a great hero… Read more »

Mr P
9 months ago

I think, and this is from years ago and memory, that it was at Saker, or possibly MoA, that somebody that was familiar with old German idiomatic language said that the noun term “Nazi” predated the Hitler period, that it was in use perhaps in 1900…and it meant more or… Read more »

Don
Don
9 months ago

I stick by my original post. I can see on here that NO ONE has a solid definition of what “fascism” is and that is why I DO NOT USE THE WORD. I am sick of that word. My definition is, and always will be what Mussolini AND Giovanni Gentile… Read more »

emersonreturn
9 months ago
Reply to  Don

we’re dealing with english. the one thing i once admired about english was its simplification. we once had a russian family live with us for a year & a half. one of the children was amazed we only had one word for snow, russians have almost a hundred, each described… Read more »

Hank
Hank
9 months ago
Reply to  Don

you stick to your original post, and some others can stick to the fact that we need a word to designate the way the ruling class and the liberal order tosses democracy out of the window when capitalism starts to falter as it inevitably does.

Don
Don
9 months ago
Reply to  Hank

What does “democracy” mean? To me it means MOB RULE. Yet another buzz word that has no meaning any longer.
They told me I was fighting “communism” and bringing “democracy” to the Vietnamese people.
Yeah, sure.

AHH
AHH
9 months ago

There is much dissimulation and faux outrage, but Russia always knew the score: the entire West was, is and will remain nazi. 

The real raging is the imminent forced releasing of Oreshniks and whatnot beyond 404. 

The deranged West keeps pressing the collective suicide. 

Once the genie escapes eastern Europe… 

comment image

Don
Don
9 months ago
Reply to  AHH

“Nazi” is yet another word that has NO MORE MEANING. What does it mean? Have you ever met an ACTUAL National Socialist? “Nazi” is just yet another stupid word that was made up many, many years ago and now it is totally out of control. If someone does not like… Read more »

AHH
AHH
9 months ago
Reply to  Don

You have a rather rigid view of language Don.. As linguists will tell you, or understanding of history, every tongue changes over time, including the meanings and usage. This is normal, as we’re always evolving and changing as a group, even if imperceptible in our own lifetime. As a matter… Read more »

Don
Don
9 months ago
Reply to  AHH

If there is no common agreement on words and their meanings in general, then we have nothing more than a tower of Babel. No one is on the same page. I went to public schools when they actually TAUGHT. And no, not upper class public schools, either. My pubic schools… Read more »

Don
Don
9 months ago
Reply to  amarynth

The three volumes of the Gulag Archipelago were novels? 200 Years Together was a novel?

Don
Don
9 months ago
Reply to  amarynth

200 Years Together is NOT a novel. What are you talking about? I am done with all of you. What a bunch of clowns.

Don
Don
9 months ago
Reply to  amarynth

I am a REDNECK. A well educated redneck but still a REDNECK. Sometimes heads need to be cracked wide open. You grew up in Africa. OK. So what. I grew up in Appalachia. When and where I grew up, there was still hookworm and tuberculosis. And rheumatic fever. I had… Read more »

Don
Don
9 months ago
Reply to  amarynth

I have not drank alcohol in many years. YOU ARE AN IDIOT. Goodbye.

emersonreturn
9 months ago
Reply to  Don

dear don, amarynth is our host. we are guests. “O Great Spirit, help me to always speak the truth quietly, to listen with an open mind when others speak, and to remember the peace that may be found in silence.” Cherokee proverb. my sis in law, an okie cherokee’s fav… Read more »

Don
Don
9 months ago
Reply to  emersonreturn

You people are PATHETIC.

Don
Don
9 months ago
Reply to  emersonreturn

There really are a lot of pathetic, super soft left wing cry baby soft weak fools on this site. You remind me of the super left wing USA crybabies whining over some creature that slithered over the US border ILLEGALLY that would cut their throat. Go ahead, you can call… Read more »

HT
HT
9 months ago
Reply to  Don

Time to walk it off.

Don
Don
9 months ago
Reply to  amarynth

Process of morphing? What the hell are you talking about? Too many buzz words and nonsense. Too many pseudo-intellectuals on here.

Don
Don
9 months ago
Reply to  AHH

If any of you want to really know something about me cue up the Hank Williams, Jr. video and song, “A Country Boy Can Survive.”
I love that song and identify with it.

cronetoo
9 months ago

Fascism extends beyond Germany, beyond Europe … the USA is fascist, has been for some time. Israel is fascist … zionism = fascism . (My two cents)

Medvedev does not mention this … aloud.

[Has Netanyahooooo apologized … to Africans everywhere? ]

cronetoo
9 months ago
Reply to  cronetoo

apologies … meant to post link to last part of comment

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=elNCcI7WFx8

(lifelong ‘cage rattler’ here … can’t help myself)

Don
Don
9 months ago
Reply to  cronetoo

I am so sick of hearing the word “Fascism.” What is YOUR definition of “fascism?” It is a word that is bandied about by mostly the ignorant. Mussolini’s fascism? Or the original Roman fascism? Or some other meaning? Just a stupid “buzz” word that is way way way overused and… Read more »

cronetoo
9 months ago
Reply to  Don

The classic definition of fascism is the merger of corporate and state … Some current definitions are found in various dictionaries … fascism /făsh′ĭz″əm/ nounA system of government marked by centralization of authority under a dictator, a capitalist economy subject to stringent governmental controls, violent suppression of the opposition, and typically… Read more »

AHH
AHH
9 months ago
Reply to  Don

I’ll wait for Mr P, who’s studied since 1950s the nebulous topic foundational to the Last Drang on mankind.  After enforced repression and incubation since 1945, I suspect it’s a wide pathological spectrum at this point. It spans dainty effete specimens like former Canadian PM Trudeau to hard-core thugs marching… Read more »

Mr P
9 months ago
Reply to  AHH

I can offer only my opinion > The unification of the state with organized crime and big business, the erasure of all morality naturally then occurs, power, fear, and lust rule universally…crime is indistinguishable from law, love from rape…here’s an old film clip from Orwell’s imagination > https://youtu.be/TAGtA0_WSjA “imagine a… Read more »

Hank
Hank
9 months ago
Reply to  Don

there is no one fascism. Depending on the historical and cultural context, it differs. It is not a psychological condition, nor is it a set of symbols. Those are the external signs. Here is a good short definition “Fascism begins the moment a ruling class, fearing the people may use… Read more »

K
K
9 months ago
Reply to  Don

IMO Mussolini’s definition is irrelevant. What do fascists care if they are telling the truth? Fascism when Big Biz and government join hands to militarily suppress, exploit or extort the people for the benefit of the ruling elite. Any historical or political occurrence will vary depending on the culture and… Read more »

Snow Leopard
Snow Leopard
9 months ago
Reply to  K

Yes K: Well said as usual. There was the beginning of a discussion with Michael Hudson on this site a while back where he was invited to speak to the insight that “Capitalism is power.” That discussion was begging for an esoteric analysis of “motive.” This is an understanding that… Read more »

johnm33
johnm33
9 months ago
Reply to  Don

It’s a bit like democracy but with something added, so if democracy is ‘ government for the people of the people and by the people’ for fascism simply change to ‘by the people who own the banks’, these are the oligarchs who make up the roman fasces. Obviously their MO… Read more »