Why did they do it? This is the question that many in the Middle East are asking about Russia’s veto of a United Nations’ Security Council resolution on Syria.
In itself, the veto is neither here nor there. The uprising in Syria is unlikely to end because of it. Even if President Bashar al-Assad manages to hang on a bit longer, his crippled regime would not be much good to Russia or anyone else.
Nor is Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov’s hastily arranged visit to Damascus a sign that Moscow is able to save Assad’s doomed regime. In fact, Moscow has been briefing journalists with the claim that Lavrov went to Damascus to persuade Assad to step aside. If Assad goes because Russia asked him to do, Lavrov and his boss would not feel excluded as they did over other events in the “Arab Spring”.
Thus, we should not interpret Russia’s move as a vote of confidence in Assad. The move may have other reasons.
In tactical terms, the veto could enable Vladimir Putin, seeking to return as president, mobilise his support base on the eve of an increasingly difficult election.
Putin is caught in a pincer one arm of which consists of the re-energised Communist Party while Vladimir Zhirinovsky’s chauvinist outfit represents the other.
The two hate each other but are united by anti-West sentiments. They see the Syrian revolt, indeed the “Arab Spring”, as an extension of the West’s sphere of influence. By taking an anti-West s... >>>
| Title | Date | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| داستان مهدی (غایب) | May 18 | 51 |
| You're So Naive | May 22 | 50 |
| Nuclear Talks Planned In Moscow After Non-Agreement In Baghdad | May 25 | 49 |
| The Israel Lobby...... | May 18 | 49 |
| US Moving to Delist Mojahedin? | May 16 | 47 |
| Person | About | Day |
|---|---|---|
| Hossein Ronaghi Maleki: Prisoner of the day | Begins hunger strike to protest lack of medical attention | May 25 |
| Farzaneh Milani: "Words, Not Swords" | New book | May 25 |
| Tooraj (Tooji) Keshtkar: Eurovision | Shiraz-born pop star represented Norway in music contest | May 24 |
| Aria Jasuru Hasegawa: FC Tokyo | Iranian-Japanese footballer | May 24 |
| Shaheen Jafargholi: First music video | "Last Train Home" | May 24 |
| Amir Seif: Prisoner of the day | Five years in prison, 74 lashes | May 24 |
| Nima Arkani-Hamed: Understandig of the universe | Princeton professor | May 24 |
| Mohammad Jafar Montazeri: Judge Reverses Ban on House of Cinema | Orders Ershad Ministry to reconsider | May 23 |
| Bijan: Eurovision Report From Baku | Tekon tv comedian | May 23 |
| Lake Oroumiyeh Protesters: Prisoners of the day | More than 100 hundred arrested, human rights group reports | May 23 |
Syrian people are being "putinized." Are Iranians next?
by FG on Sat Feb 11, 2012 08:23 PM PSTHow do you like my new verb? "To putin" or "to be putinized" (meaning a non-Russian people gets slaughtered solely to assist Putin against a shaky political situation back home). If Russia reversed it's positions on Syria, Assad and his top thugs would flee the country within days.
WHY PUTIN SUPPORTS ASSAD & KHAMENEI WHILE THE REST OF THE WORLD SUFFERS REVULSION.
First reason: Domestic survival. He does fear growing demonstrations at home and needs a foreign threat as diversion. (Note: Khamenei does the same thing. It also explains why Egyptian generals are attacking foreign NGOS. It's called "diversion.")
Second reason: Successful popular revolutions in Syria and Iran are likely to encourage demonstrators in Russia.
If Assad falls, and Putin is still around he'll support any similar slaughter of civilians by Khamenei no matter how much the world complains. This is why Iranians should root for a massive outbreak of demonstrations in Russia this spring.
It's also another reason why the USA and West can't intervene too actively in Syria right now. Doing so might truncate upcoming spring and summer demonstrations in Russia whose regime must go so that overthrowing tyrannies elsewhere become easier.