Posts Tagged ‘medvedev’

22
April 2012

Obama Suckering America into Loving Russia

American Thinker
April 22, 2012 By Kim Zigfeld

Lies have consequences. And the lies told by the Obama administration about Russia for the past four years, lies which can be characterized only as Goebbels-like propaganda, have had devastating consequences indeed.

Polls show that from the moment Vladimir Putin took power, Americans began to think ill of Russia. Throughout the Gorbachev years, the American view of Russia as an enemy was waning, and when Boris Yeltsin took power for the first time, more Americans reported viewing Russia as a friendly country, or even an ally, than saw it as unfriendly or an enemy. By the middle of the Yeltsin term in office, the gap in Russia’s favor had become enormous.

But throughout the Putin years this process reversed itself, so that by 2008, significantly more Americans saw Russia as a threat than as a balm. In fact, the process began even before Putin, when Americans were shocked to see Yeltsin bomb his own parliament building and give virulent support to the genocidal maniacs in Serbia, which Russians look on as their “little brother.” To top that off, of course, Yeltsin named Putin, a proud KGB spy, as his successor.

Then Barack Obama took power and placed Michael McFaul in charge of his Russia policy, which soon came to be labeled as “reset.” McFaul and Obama deluged Americans with brazen lies for four years, telling them that Putin was no longer in charge of Russia; that a new generation led by Dmitri Medvedev, the new president, had taken power; and that this generation could be trusted and befriended.

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28
March 2012

Obama’s Open Microphone

National Review Online

The remarks of President Obama to Dmitry Medvedev over an open microphone, in which he promised that in a second term, he will have flexibility on the issue of global missile defense, shows that when it comes to U.S.–Russian relations, Obama is a stunningly slow learner.

The relations between a U.S. president and a Russian leader often follow a depressing pattern. The American leader charms (or thinks he charms) his Russian counterpart. The Russian leader begins to engage in criminal behavior, which gets steadily worse. Finally, something big happens — the invasion of Afghanistan, the nuclear poisoning of Alexander Litvinenko in London, the invasion of Georgia — and the realization dawns that the Russian is neither a Christian nor a friend and he has to be approached with realism.

Since taking office in 2008, Obama has had ample reason to reconsider the wisdom of relying on Russian goodwill, including Russia’s fixed elections and official involvement in the murder of Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky. But he persists in seeing the Putin regime as a “partner” and the real threat as coming from the political opposition in the U.S.

Obama hinted in his now-public conversation with Medvedev that he is ready to meet Russian concerns. In fact, he needs to be prevented from doing so because the steps the Russians are demanding will not lead to a real improvement in relations and are inimical to the security interests of the U.S.

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17
January 2012

Presidential council to discuss complaint about pressure on Magnitsky’s relatives

RAPSI

Presidential human rights council will discuss a complaint from Sergei Magnitsky’s relatives about the Interior Ministry’s pressure and will try to help them, council member Kirill Kabanov told RIA Novosti.

“We will hold the council’s working group meeting soon,” said Kabanov emphasizing that the human activists will try to influence the situation and help the relatives.

Magnitsky, who was accused of corporate tax evasion in relation to his work for the investment fund, died in an investigative isolation ward in November 2009. According to the Prosecutor General’s Office, his death was caused by cardiovascular insufficiency.

The criminal case against Magnitsky was terminated by the Investigative Committee due to his death, but the Prosecutor General’s Office decided to resume the investigation. Magnitsky’s relatives have demanded that the case against him be dropped.

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20
December 2011

What Putin’s Return Means for U.S.-Russia Policy

The American Interest

Vladimir Putin’s return to the Kremlin as Russia’s President next spring will once again align real and formal power in Russia, as they were during his earlier two terms in office. Although the Russian Prime Minister is nominally subordinate to the President, Putin has dominated Russian politics throughout Dmitri Medvedev’s presidency. As if to underscore that point, both Putin and Medvedev have implied that they had agreed on Putin’s return as a condition for Medvedev’s assumption of the presidency in 2008. (The Constitution banned a third consecutive term for Putin.) Although that was likely true only in a general way—that Putin reserved the right to return should circumstances warrant—the public insinuations stripped Medvedev of credibility as a leader and his achievements in office of any lasting political worth.

And there were achievements both at home and abroad, no matter how artificial the so-called Medvedev-Putin tandem may now appear. Abroad, Medvedev’s more “modern” image eased the repair of relations with the United States and Europe after the dark days of the last two years of the Bush Administration. At home, Medvedev’s presence as a second pole of power, albeit very circumscribed, fostered a much-needed broader elite discussion of the challenges facing Russia and the appropriate policy responses to them, enticing participation from progressives suspicious of Putin. Putin’s presence, meanwhile, reassured the more retrograde elements that Medvedev’s “reforms” would not spin out of control as Gorbachev’s had a generation earlier. As a result, Russia’s standing in the world improved and a spotlight was turned on the requirements for Russian modernization in the face of the corrosive effects of “legal nihilism.” Little was accomplished in a practical way in this latter portfolio, but there was at least hope, and hope can kindle morale and, ultimately, action.

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15
December 2011

Russian President: EU Parliament ‘means nothing’

EU Observer

President Dmitry Medvedev at his last-ever EU summit told MEPs to stay out of Russian affairs and dropped hints on a $10 billion donation for euro bail-outs.

One day earlier, the European Parliament by a thumping majority called for Russia to hold new parliamentary elections and for the EU to impose a visa ban on officials guilty of killing anti-tax-fraud lawyer Sergei Magnitsky.

“I will not comment on their decisions. They mean nothing to me … The European Parliament should deal with internal issues because the EU has a lot of problems of its own,” Medvedev told press in Brussels on Thursday (15 December).

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12
December 2011

Public scoff’s over president’s online bid to probe vote fraud

Washington Post

President Dmitry Medvedev used his Facebook page Sunday to disclose that he had ordered an investigation into reports of election fraud, a statement his audience greeted with derision.

The posting quickly went viral, and drew more than 8,000 mostly offended and even offensive comments in a little over six hours, revealing the depth of the disillusionment with Mr. Medvedev, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and their government. Tens of thousands of Russians spoke up in demonstrations across the country Saturday, protesting the Dec. 4 parliamentary elections, and they apparently had no intention of returning to their former silence.

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12
December 2011

Dmitry Medvedev Facebook message against Russian protesters backfires

The Daily Telegraph

Dmitry Medvedev has been humiliated online after his Facebook page, in which he posted a message denouncing Saturday’s 50,000-strong rally in Moscow, was flooded by protesters criticising the Russian president.

The post, which came on the same day that the controversial head of the elections commission avoided an attempt to remove him, sparked disbelief and disgust and within two hours more than 3,500 people had posted comments, the vast majority overwhelmingly negative.

Mr Medvedev used the Facebook message to announce he had ordered an investigation into violations at the Russian parliamentary elections.

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23
November 2011

A Quick Way to Become a Superpower

The Moscow Times

In a meeting with Volga Federal District media professionals on Saturday, President Dmitry Medvedev essentially buried his earlier proposal for government officials to declare their large expenditures.

Russia, along with 139 other countries, is a signatory to the United Nations Convention Against Corruption. The only problem is that when the State Duma ratified this convention, it insisted on excluding one of its most important articles: Article 20, which states that illicit enrichment — a significant increase in the assets of public officials that they cannot justify in relation to their declared income — is a criminal offense.

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04
November 2011

Medvedev’s Time

International Herald Tribune

“What time is it?” asked Ksenia.

“My cellphone says it’s 9 a.m., and the wall clock says it’s 10. Can anybody tell me what time it really is?” This, from Alexander.

And from Alexei, in London: “Dear Moscow colleagues, please bear in mind that I am now four hours behind you, not three.” And in case that wasn’t clear enough: “That means when it’s 11 in Moscow, it’s still 7 in the morning where I am!”

On Sunday, October 30, Russian speakers the world over were preoccupied with the most quotidian of questions.

Another two dozen comments on the topic of time rounded out my Facebook page that Sunday — the first day in 30 years that Russia did not turn its clocks back in the autumn. Now Russia will be frozen indefinitely in daylight savings time. In winter, the sun will rise long after most people have arrived at work or school.

And making one’s way in the dark every frigid morning will likely be the enduring legacy of Dmitri Medvedev’s four-year term as president.

When Vladimir Putin’s handpicked successor took office in May 2008, he seemed full of good, even grand, intentions. He planned to fight corruption. He promised to reform the country’s ineffective and often brutal law enforcement services. He said he would draw human rights groups and other noncommercial organizations into the governing process. He claimed he would find ways for the Russian state finally to acknowledge the crimes of Stalinism and honor its victims. He also mentioned wanting to do something about the fact that Russia spans 11 time zones — the only issue he planned to tackle about which no one but the new president seemed at all concerned.

The fight against corruption did not get very far. Between 2007 and 2010 (the last year for which figures are available), Russia dropped from 143rd to 154th place in Transparency International’s annual Corruption Perceptions Index — out of a possible 178. Of the many outrageous stories of Russian corruption, the most heartbreaking happened on Medvedev’s watch. A young accountant named Sergei Magnitsky uncovered an embezzlement scheme in which tax officials and police officers swindled the Russian treasury out of $230 million in taxes. Apparently in retaliation for this, Magnitsky was arrested and held in conditions best described as torture, until he died in prison in November 2009, at the age of 37. Medvedev promised to identify those responsible for Magnitsky’s death and have them punished. Two years later, this still has not happened, and the accountant’s executioners continue to serve in law enforcement. The only thing that has changed is a name: what used to be known as the militia is now the police.

Medvedev’s cooperation with human rights activists and nongovernmental organizations has not gone well either. His own committee of just such people, the Presidential Council on Human Rights, investigated Magnitsky’s death and issued a report detailing the torture to which he’d been subjected and listing those responsible. But its findings have been all but ignored. And despite Medvedev’s promises, victims of Russia’s earlier regimes have fared no better. For two years now he has been expected, and has failed, to sign a decree finally establishing a national museum devoted to the memory of victims of Soviet terror.

The only goal Medvedev set for himself and actually fulfilled is decreasing the number of time zones in Russia — from 11 to nine — and canceling the seasonal resetting of the clock.

Time zones are a reflection of cultural values almost as much as they are a reflection of physical reality. China has only one: The entire country lives on Beijing’s clock, much as it lives by Beijing’s rules in other ways. Austria, which is geographically located in Eastern Europe, maintains Western European time to indicate that it belongs to that part of the continent.

The Russian president has moved Chukotka one hour closer to Moscow but has moved Moscow one hour farther away from Berlin, Paris, London and New York — just as it has moved Moscow farther and farther away from such Western cultural values as transparency, human rights and the rule of law. займ на карту займ на карту без отказов круглосуточно zp-pdl.com https://zp-pdl.com/get-a-next-business-day-payday-loan.php hairy girls

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