The Moment When It Became Impossible to Say Anything Good About Assad

Her first article, published as Syria’s government started to attack citizens, was met with a wave of criticism. Both Buck and Vogue’s editor, Anna Wintour, were accused of taking part in a public relations campaign on behalf of the Syrian regime.

Within a month or so, the article was removed from the magazine’s website. Almost a year later Wintour broke her silence on the matter to explain that “we were hopeful that the Assad regime would be open to a more progressive society” but “as the terrible events of the past year and a half unfolded in Syria, it became clear that its priorities and values were completely at odds with those of Vogue.”

Buck’s contract with Vogue was not renewed and that’s when she decided to offer an a 5,000-word explanation for her original sin.

It suggests that she was the victim of of manipulation from beginning to end…

Reference: http://www.theguardian.com/media/greenslade/2012/aug/01/asma-al-assad-anna-wintour

I don’t know when it became impossible to say anything good about Putin, but, as I’m trying to show by my quotations about Putin series, it was pretty early in the game.

But the Assad thing is interesting, isn’t it? The moment when the Word comes down from on high and otherwise trendy and with-it people are instructed that they must eat crow. We don’t often see it in action do we?

The author fired, the article withdrawn and a Big Wheel forced to apologise.

 

 

 

 

 

Today’s Quotation about Putin

Ikea has arrived in Moscow. So has a tight-lipped 47-year-old KGB staffer, with clear blue eyes and authoritarian tendencies strong enough to bomb one of Russia’s republics back into the middle ages…Now a man like Vladimir Putin has arrived to remind the IMF just how far the dark continent has slipped back into the Tsarist 19th century.

David Hearst, How Russia was lost, The Guardian, 27 March 2000, http://www.theguardian.com/world/2000/mar/27/russia.comment1

Today’s Quotation About Putin

Psychiatry recognizes a condition known as “moral idiocy.” Every time he opens his mouth in public, Putin confirms this diagnosis for himself. Do you want to know what life will be like in Russia over the next 8 or maybe 14 years? Go to the B. Pokrovsky theater to see Alfred Schnitke’s opera “Life with an idiot.” Geniuses are able to tell the future without even realizing it.

Andrei Piontkovsky, The Russia Journal, 2000 http://russiajournal.com/node/2857

 

The Fabled Isolation of Putin

From the Presidential website

Vladimir Putin had a telephone conversation with President of the United States of America Barack Obama on the American side’s initiative. January 13, 2016 22:15 http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/51165

Vladimir Putin had a telephone conversation with King Abdullah II of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan on the initiative of the Jordanian side. January 14, 2016 18:10 http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/51169

So isolated that you just can’t get anything done without talking to him.

 

Today’s Putin Quotation

Those who were executed, sent to camps, shot and tortured number in the thousands and millions of people. Along with this, as a rule these were people with their own opinions. These were people who were not afraid to speak their mind. They were the most capable people. They are the pride of the nation.

Talking with the Press after visiting the Butovo Memorial Site, 30 Oct 2007 http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/transcripts/24627

More on Butovo http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/08/world/europe/08butovo.html?fta=y&_r=0

 

RF Sitrep 20160114

RUSSIAN FEDERATION SITREP 14 January 2016

PUTIN INTERVIEW. Long interview with the German paper Bild. (Part 1, Part 2) As always, you should read it yourself rather than what interested parties want you to think he said. “We strongly objected to developments taking place, say, in Iraq, Libya or some other countries. We said: ‘Don’t do this, don’t go there, and don’t make mistakes.’ Nobody listened to us! On the contrary, they thought we took an anti-Western position, a hostile stance towards the West. And now, when you have hundreds of thousands, already one million of refugees, do you think our position was anti-Western or pro-Western?” Good question eh? What would the world look like today if Europe had taken Russia’s advice? Or, if realists in Washington had been running things? But they didn’t and they won’t; they weren’t and they won’t be. And so, here we are today. But, cheer up: tomorrow we’ll look back on today with yearning for a lost Golden Time.

THE RUSSIAN ISLAND. I’m always amused when I see people solemnly assuring us that Russia is “in decline” (Eurasia Group). Doesn’t look it to me: pick any indicator you want and, starting in 2000, it will have improved. On the other hand, do the same for the EU or the USA and you would find decline pretty much everywhere, wouldn’t you? This year’s European troubles (Greece, Ukraine, sanctions, refugees/migrants) are the foretaste of worse to come. The USA with police killings, racial tension, disappearing middle class, armed militias, endless losing wars (about two-thirds of Americans see their country as on the wrong track) doesn’t look much better. I do not, therefore, consider it absurd, or even improbable, to suggest that, in another half decade or so, Russia will be seen as an island of stability in a troubled world.

IS THE US LIVING IN A FANTASY? Couldn’t resist giving you this exchange with the otiose US State Dept spokesman.

RUSSIAN WEAPON PHILOSOPHY. The Russian activities in Syria are certainly making people in the war business sit up and take notice and even reconsider their assumptions. Thanks to the Saker, we have an example of an important difference between the Russian and American approaches. It hasn’t always been the case, witness the B-52 or the Sidewinder missile, but these days the USA tends to start from scratch. The end result are things like the F-35 or the littoral combat ship: fabulously expensive systems that may not work very well. The Russian (and Soviet) approach is to start simple and then improve with experience. The S-400 is an example of a system that started out in the 1970s and has been steadily developed since. The Russians have engineered a system based on their GLONASS network to make “dumb bombs” into “smart bombs”. It is being used in Syria and gives the lie to scornful Americans. And, best of all, it’s a modification to the aircraft so it’s not destroyed when the bomb hits. So, it appears that the Russians often get “more bang for their buck”. Incidently, read to the end: corruption is a big problem in the Russian procurement system and the Saker discusses it in this example.

FOOD. Once upon a time Russia imported a lot of pork from Canada. Then came sanctions and counter-sanctions and that market is gone. Forever. Bloomberg tells us that Russian pork production is booming. It’s even exporting a bit. As many say, the anti-Russia sanctions are tough but, in the end, will be beneficial. We have never seen what Russian agriculture is capable of – serfdom, the village mir and communism were pretty deadly to production – and now we have an opportunity to. Certainly, Putin has a large ambition here. Not an impossible one and pork production is one improvement. Another is that Russia is a substantial grain exporter; something pretty unimaginable to those who remember Canadian wheat shipments to the USSR. Not exactly a country “in decline”, is it? Yesterday is shown here; tomorrow in a few years.

THE LATEST BOGUS ATROCITY. Starvation in Madaya, Syria. I am continually amused that the propaganda makers still haven’t learned that digital photos can be dated and geolocated.

UKRAINE. According to the responsible Russian agency 1.3 million displaced Ukrainians have contacted it and 419,000 have filed asylum claims in Russia. Another dismal Western poll. Yanukovich cancelled the EU association agreement when his experts told him it would cost Ukraine $160 billion. Karlin shows some of the statistics of the Ukrainian economic collapse since Maidan. Of course, the simple-minded blame Putin. Or as he said in the interview in reference to demands that Russia fulfil MinskYou cannot demand that Moscow do something that needs to be done by Kiev.” But Ukraine was never really about Ukraine, was it?

© Patrick Armstrong Analysis, Canada Websites: ROPV, US-Russia, Russia Insider

Today’s Putin Quotation

We strongly objected to developments taking place, say, in Iraq, Libya or some other countries. We said: “Don’t do this, don’t go there, and don’t make mistakes.” Nobody listened to us! On the contrary, they thought we took an anti-Western position, a hostile stance towards the West. And now, when you have hundreds of thousands, already one million of refugees, do you think our position was anti-Western or pro-Western?

RF President Putin, Interview with German newspaper Bild, Sochi 5 January 2016