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Home Front: Politix
Why Putin Fears Clinton
2016-09-18
And why he is cheating to elect Trump?
[DallasNews] If Hillary Clinton is elected president, the world will remember Aug. 25 as the day she began the Second Cold War.

In a speech last month nominally about Donald Trump, Clinton called Russian President Vladimir Putin the godfather of right-wing, extreme nationalism. To Kremlin-watchers, those were not random epithets. Two years earlier, in the most famous address of his career, Putin accused the West of backing an armed seizure of power in Ukraine by "extremists, nationalists, and right-wingers." Clinton had not merely insulted Russia's president: She had done so in his own words.

Worse, they were words originally directed at neo-Nazis. In Moscow, this was seen as a reprise of Clinton's comments comparing Putin to Hitler. It injected an element of personal animus into an already strained relationship. But, more importantly, it set up Putin as the representative of an ideology that is fundamentally opposed to the United States.
Clinton had ideology?
To Russian ears, Clinton seemed determined in her speech to provide this missing ingredient for bipolar enmity, painting Moscow as the vanguard for racism, intolerance, and misogyny around the globe.

The nation Clinton described was unrecognizable to its citizens. Anti-woman? Putin's government provides working mothers with three years of subsidized family leave. Intolerant? The president personally attended the opening of Moscow's great mosque. Racist? Putin often touts Russia's ethnic diversity. To Russians, it appeared that Clinton was straining to fabricate a rationale for hostilities.
Always having a crisis on hot-standby?
Let's not mince words: Moscow perceives the former secretary of state as an existential threat. The Russian foreign-policy experts I consulted did not harbor even grudging respect for Clinton. The most damaging chapter of her tenure was the NATO intervention in Libya, which Russia could have prevented with its veto in the U.N. Security Council. Moscow allowed the mission to go forward only because Clinton had promised that a no-fly zone would not be used as cover for regime change.

Russia's leaders were understandably furious when, not only was former Libyan President Moammar Gadhafi ousted, but a cellphone recording of his last moments showed U.S.-backed rebels sodomizing him with a bayonet. They were even more enraged by Clinton's videotaped response to the same news: "We came, we saw, he died," the secretary of state quipped before bursting into laughter, cementing her reputation in Moscow as a duplicitous warmonger.
I'm not yet totally convinced about the warmonger part.
I'd go with functional psychopath. But that's just my opinion.
Her temper became legendary in Moscow when she breached diplomatic protocol by storming out of a meeting with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov just moments after exchanging pleasantries. And the perception that she is unstable was exacerbated by reports that Clinton drank heavily while acting as America's top diplomat - accusations that carry special weight in a country that faults alcoholism for many of Boris Yeltsin's failures.

Moscow prefers Trump not because it sees him as easily manipulated, but because his "America First" agenda coincides with its view of international relations. Russia seeks a return to classical international law, in which states negotiate with one another based on mutually understood self-interests untainted by ideology. To Moscow, only the predictability of realpolitik can provide the coherence and stability necessary for a durable peace.
And Clinton likes it for the 'Putin stole the election for Trump' aspect.
Cultural differences in decorum have made the situation worse. In Russia, where it is considered a sign of mental illness to so much as smile at a stranger on the street, leaders are expected to project an image of stern calm. Through that prism, Clinton has shown what looks like disturbing behavior on the campaign trail: barking like a dog, bobbing her head, and making exaggerated faces. (To be clear, my point is not that these are real signs of cognitive decay, but that many perceive them that way in Moscow.)
Posted by:Bobby

#8  Putin doesn't fear them. He fears Russian demographics and little else.
Posted by: rjschwarz   2016-09-18 23:42  

#7   a senile evil old hag in control of the World's heaviest military and an army of flying monkeys.
Posted by: SteveS   2016-09-18 15:49  

#6  This essay makes the highest sense to me. I'd jump it a bit farther on the strategic implications, but for what it is and what it contemplates, this essay feels to me like a spread of illumination rounds in the conceptual night that is Washington D.C. and its academic supports.

Yuppers: national interest rather than ideological nausea.

The "farther" I would take it is about grand national strategic objective, I call it Three Brothers Doctrine: http://theological-geography.net/?s=three+brothers+strateg
Posted by: TopRev   2016-09-18 13:53  

#5  Of course he fears her. I fear her. Any man with a modicum of sense fears a senile evil old hag in control of the World's heaviest military.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2016-09-18 13:03  

#4  An enemy of our enemy is our friend. If Putin attacks ISIS then we are of the same mind. Kinda like WWII...
Posted by: Tennessee   2016-09-18 12:46  

#3  "Why Putin Fears Clinton"

He's a hypochondriac afraid of pneumonia?
Posted by: Cromosing Dark Lord of the Danes5997   2016-09-18 12:39  

#2  I don't think he fears either of them, but he probably despises her more for the whoring out of our national security interests. See: Rosatomuranium deal
Posted by: Frank G   2016-09-18 11:12  

#1  Resetting the reset.

Lefties still resent Eastern Europeans for overthrowing their Communist regimes.

The ingrates!

As for Putin, he'll push Russia's interests as he sees them, and our leadership should respond when our interest are stake, without making it a personal vendetta.
Posted by: charger   2016-09-18 11:07  

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