by Nomad
Yesterday Russian President Vladimir Putin declared the Internet was an ongoing CIA plot.
Once again, he demonstrated how he is not interested in providing an alternative to US-dominated hegemony. What Putin wants is something a bit more predictable and a bit more obvious.
The Alternative that Wasn't
Sometimes I
think there's a tendency in the West to give too much credit to Vladimir Putin. Oddly, the West has always seen the Russian leader as some kind of chess master when Putin's approach has been anything but subtle or even very clever.
Lately and in many ways, the Russian president seems to have exposed himself as a
somewhat backward leader without much in the way of a constructive vision. He is found playing
the same word games that once discredited the Soviet Union .
The great modern Russian tragedy is that it began with such promise. Over and over. Russia 's greatest strength -even
during Soviet times- has been that it offered an alternative view of the world. We didn't have to live in a world dominated by special interests. Through struggle, we could make the world better. True, it was always reactionary but at least, that vision provided a kind of
independent analysis of the West.
So went the theory at least.
Today, only Edward Snowden might
agree with that. Some American-born reporters on Russia Today might still think
that's true but, from the outside, that idea looks a little naive. While rushing to condemn the West for all its many faults and unscrupulous behavior, defenders of Putin require some skillful mental gymnastics to ignore something that is growing clearer every time Putin opens his mouth.
Under Vladimir Putin, Russia 's
view is neither different and definitely not indifferent. The Kremlin's objectives are shaped by an agenda not unlike any corrupted capitalist
empire in the West.