The alternatives to Putin are what, exactly?
The totally unreconstructed Communist Party of the Russian Federation, which looks to have done well this time.
The Islamist terrorists of the South.
The National Bolsheviks beloved of the BBC, their flag that of the Nazis except that a black hammer and sickle replaces the swastika.
Which of those would you prefer, and why?
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Well Putin knows that British lead western foreign policy is to break up Russia into 3 separate states supporting Islamic/Turkic pan Turanian separatism in the Caucasus, Central Asia, the Balkans and Xinjing, China to create a collection of pro-western Turkic states that will control Caspian and Eurasian energy with pipelines through Turkey and Kosovo into Europe.
ReplyDeleteIn 97 in a meeting arranged by Chechnya’s foreign intelligence minister who was also the head of the Chechen mafia in Russia through a Polish/British CIA asset contacted British Lords for the new regime under Maskhadov to sign contracts establish British intelligence fronts in Chechnya and a £3 billion Caucasus oil investment.
In 93 MI6 working from Moscow were involved in the coup in Azerbaijan so secure British BP lead oil contracts in the Caspian Basin.
FBI whistleblower Sibel Edmonds recently did an interview and covered it on her blog which is something I have been writing and talking about for years.
http://www.corbettreport.com/interview-422-sibel-edmonds/
As for the opposition touted by the west lead by anti-corruption blogger Alexey Navalny, that they seem to have given up on former PM Kasanov (I think that was his name) and the National Bolsheviks, is a western aligned creation.
“Navalny has become an Internet celebrity over the past year, since launching exposes of the siphoning of millions of dollars and rubles out of major government-funded projects such as the East Siberia-Pacific Ocean pipeline. He has also been heavily cultivated in the West: in 2010 he was a fellow in the Yale World Fellows Program, a project created by Yale University President Richard C. Levin with input from former Mexican President Ernesto Zedillo (who has his own long history of collaboration with Soros in the "Drugs and Democracy" pro-dope legalization project), to "create a global network of emerging leaders." The participants are trained by the likes of UN Deputy Secretary-General Mark Malloch Brown (famous for creating the Saakashvili project, with Soros, in Georgia), Aryeh Neier, who heads Soros's Open Society Institute, and Tom Scholar, the UK Executive Director at the World Bank and IMF.
Upon Navalny's return to Russia, he was featured in a highly unrepresentative mock Moscow mayoral election, run online by the financial daily Kommersant. Navalny "won", with 45% of the 67,000 votes cast. Another paper, Vedomosti (co-owned by the Financial Times of London), named Navalny "Person of the Year" in 2009. He was the subject of an April 2011 puff piece in The New Yorker on "one man's cyber-crusade against Russian corruption." He famously dubbed United Russia "the Party of Crooks and Thieves." In 2005, he and Maria Gaidar, daughter of the architect of the disastrous neoliberal 1990s economic policies, formed a group with the neurolinguistic programming-style name of "Da!" ("Yes!"), but he has also linked up with the anti-immigrant Russian March movement.”
http://www.larouchepac.com/node/20680