UVA’s Miller Center Plans Three Days of Russophobia
Even as some Democrats are at long last growing frustrated with the lack of actual evidence for the past several months of stories about Russia stealing a U.S. election, Russiagate has penetrated so deeply that Trump’s ambassador to the United Nations has declared Russia’s alleged crimes to be acts of war. That Russia’s fictional actions being warfare would make Donald Trump guilty of treason is really a minor glitch not to be fretted over if we step back and view the situation calmly and wisely from the point of view of the weapons dealers.
The University of Virginia’s Miller Center has hardly met a war criminal it didn’t love. It’s now planning three days of nonstop Russophobia:
That’s one way of noting that the U.S. and its allies immediately sent their militaries into Russia to fight against the revolution — an action which had absolutely nothing to do with defending the United States or upholding the rule of law or preventing genocide or expanding women’s rights or spreading democracy or respecting national sovereignty, or any of the other pieces of nonsense put forward as excuses for wars these days. In fact, this warmaking was a blatant violation of the sixth of Wilson’s 14 Points, and of each of the first five general Points as well.
So, the U.S. sending troops into Russia didn’t set any tones, but the Bolsheviks’ disagreements with the “democratic capitalism” that is working out so well for us did that.
Putin, huh? His offer of friendship and support and gift of a memorial following September 11, 2001, his willingness to help with a U.S.-led attack on Afghanistan just doesn’t exist? We have to jump straight to the decline in relations that began when Putin would not support attacking Iraq, and pretend it happened three years earlier? Boy was he wrong about attacking Iraq, eh? That sure has paid off big time and set a moral standard for a world full of slimy rivals. (That the year 2000 is the wrong date on which to begin the “enmity” is acknowledged by one of the Miller Center’s articles.)
Sure you do. In preparation, the center has published several articles online. Here’s the conclusion of one that begins with Wilson and Lenin:
Never mind by whom we are told this and what value it may have!
Putin is very quickly transformed into “Putinism” on the basis of what “we are told,” and then denounced as an “abomination.” Egad! What can we do to avoid this abomination?
This festering turd of an analysis was produced by Erez Manela of Harvard “No Whistleblowers Allowed!” University. The proposal, to be clear, is for the United States, with more wars and overthrows than it can keep track of, having utterly destroyed Iraq, having turned the Middle East into a terrorism factory, in the process of starving the entire population of Yemen, should use moral pressure to urge Russia to start complying with the norms of good civilized cooperative behavior.
Another Miller Center article comes from Eugene B. Rumer of the Carnegie Endowment for International “Peace,” who gently hints at the possibility of questioning the wisdom of having expanded NATO before concluding: “In retrospect, it was a sensible approach to take during that time.” Rumer also tells us that the reason for hostile U.S.-Russian relations is all Russia’s fault and good justification for U.S. hostility:
Then Derek Chollet of the German Marshall Fund of the United States tells us that, “As long as Putin remains in charge, there is very little chance for a productive US-Russian relationship, and presidents should set expectations accordingly. . . . The United States should not be afraid of isolating Russia or plainly stating that it will work to contain Russia’s aspirations.”
Well, that ought to help things.
Vladislav Zubok, professor of international history at the London School of Economics, piles onthe anti-Putin propaganda:
It’s remarkable how little any of these demonizers of Putin even mention the existence of Donald Trump.
In a nod to fact-based reality, the Miller Center has included one article by Allen Lynch, professor of politics at the University of Virginia, which reminds us that, beyond Russia’s refusal to back an attack on Iraq in 2003, a big cause of animosity was the way in which the U.S. played Russia and other nations at the U.N. in 2011, when it pretended it wanted to attack Libya merely to prevent a fictional threat of genocide, but immediately proceeded to overthrow the government. It was this experience that led Russia to take a very different approach to U.S. actions in Syria.
Even Lynch, however, brings up the “Ukraine crisis” without ever mentioning the U.S. role in creating it. He does, however, acknowledge a Russian perspective:
That’s reality. I don’t expect it to get in the way of the Miller Center’s work.
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