Posts Tagged ‘chatham house’

13
February 2013

Jargonbuster gets ‘pragmatic’

Chatham House

If we are asked to be pragmatic, we are asked to consider the practical consequences of our actions. This can be seen as a positive quality. Pragmatism is in fashion among commentators decrying the ideological gridlock which paralyses US politics. But ‘pragmatic’ is also a term favoured by politicians searching for a grubby compromise. It is often followed by a sentence to the effect of ‘you’ve got to see the bigger picture’ – one where the needs of the powerful outweigh those of the weaker.

The Kremlin claims to pursue ‘pragmatic national interests’, particularly in relation to the countries around its border. It is actually pursuing international goals at the expense of countries whose interests must be sacrificed to assuage the former superpower, perhaps in exchange for assistance in other areas or for a little ‘give’ commercially. At least the Russians are open about their pragmatism. Much of the West may be more scrupulous, but it is also more underhand. Again with reference to Russia, the US has a ‘Magnitsky List’ – named in honour of a whistle-blowing lawyer who died in a Moscow prison – which bans Russians involved in human rights abuses from entering the US.

Unlike the US, Britain does not have an official list of banned Russians. The current government claims it could adversely affect jobs and money flowing into the City. Actually, we are told by Whitehall, the individuals on the Magnitsky List would probably not be able to gain entry to the UK if they tried to do so. So there is a list, but it is apparently better not to be open about it.

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22
September 2011

Cameron, You Dropped the Ball

The Moscow Times

Dear Prime Minister Cameron,

During your recent visit to Moscow you claimed that you would like to take on the skeptics of the Russian-British relationship. I would like to accept that challenge.

In your speech at Moscow State University on Sept. 12, you outlined two types of skeptics — those who believe Britain is untrustworthy and for whom the relationship is connected to the Soviet past, and those, you said, who believe that Russia should not modernize, innovate and open up.

Taking your second set of skeptics first, I can think of almost no one who believes that Russia should not modernize, innovate or open up. Where did you get that from? You would have to be reliving the Cold War to believe that Russia should be deliberately kept down in any way. All reasonable people want a modern Russia, even if we only define modernization narrowly, as the Kremlin has done, as scientific-technical modernization.

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