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Separate Seating: Main Purpose of G20 Summit

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  • Separate Seating: Main Purpose of G20 Summit

    Izvestiya, Russia
    Sept 5 2013


    Separate Seating.

    Political Analyst Boris Mezhuyev on Main Purpose of G20 Summit

    [translated from Russian]


    Observers from all over the world will be in front of their television
    screens tomorrow looking for just one thing: how the leaders of Russia
    and the United States relate to one another, whether they look one
    another in the eye, whether they smile at one another or shake hands,
    and, if they do shake hands, how firmly they do so. And that aspect of
    the upcoming meeting will exercise observers much more even than such
    acute issues of the current agenda as preventing another twist to the
    world economic crisis and the need for consolidated action by the
    monetary authorities, which was supposed to be the focus of the
    upcoming G20 session. It looks as though the heads of state will make
    only routine, protocol speeches on ecological questions and on the
    subject of the danger from asteroids, which Russia introduced.

    Obviously, what everyone will have on their minds is not even the
    situation in Syria but first and foremost the attitude of all the
    other members of the Group towards Russia in connection with Syria.
    The Anglo-Saxon press most frequently refers to Russia, like Iran, as
    one of the parties involved in the internal war in that state: It sees
    Russia and Iran on one side (note: not China, which along with Russia
    objects to the unilateral use of force) and Saudi Arabia and Turkey on
    the other. The dispute is over whether America should join with the
    latter or stand aside from the conflict.

    Such an open split among the main members of the international
    community has not been seen in a long time. In 2003 Russia, along with
    France and Germany, opposed Bush's plan to occupy Iraq, but no one
    said that Russia was involving itself in the conflict on Saddam
    Husayn's side.

    Aware of the full seriousness of the situation that has taken shape,
    Vladimir Putin stated in his interview with Channel One and Associated
    Press that Russia may change its position on the Syrian question in
    the Security Council if the Americans and their allies present
    convincing proof of Al-Asad's complicity in the chemical attack in
    East Guta. This is a very precise diplomatic manoeuvre - a kind of
    response to Barack Obama's evasive decision to postpone any possible
    military action pending the support of both houses of Congress. The
    move is clearly a polite invitation to the American President to join
    in constructive cooperation on the Syrian problem - as if to say: We
    are not enemies, we understand your difficult position, and we are
    ready to help you extricate yourself from it. The complimentary
    comments about Obama and the very correct explanation of our country's
    position in the Snowden affair - in the spirit of the need to respect
    Russia's prestige as a state, without any ostentatious
    anti-Americanism - are confirmation of this very clearly expressed
    desire to support Obama. To support him if, of course, he shows
    himself ready to accept that support.

    The whole question now, strictly speaking, turns on what kind of a
    world the White House boss is living in right now. To what extent does
    he really believe McCain, Lindsey Graham, and his own immediate
    entourage when they tell him that Russia is an enemy to America and
    represents civilizational evil incarnate, a country where - as the
    British actor Stephen Fry, clearly no friend to Russia, says
    -homosexuals kill themselves in despair, where they are regularly
    beaten up by club-wielding skinheads and shot by police?

    Well, it would seem that in order to actually resolve this whole
    conflict in Syria, which he finds so unpleasant, Obama ought first of
    all to ask Russia for assistance and, to that end, upgrade its status
    just a little in the international field. Or in any event not portray
    it as some kind of medieval despotism. Yet for the past several months
    Obama has talked about Russia only in terms of some hackneyed
    nonsense. It has to be admitted that Moscow's clever boys have played
    into his hands in that respect with their highly untimely conservative
    legislative initiatives. But this era of rather flippant game-playing
    with our cultural contrasts seems to have ended: At any rate, judging
    from Putin's interview Russia has stopped playing that particular
    game. And it is clear why: Faced with a world war, it is possible to
    forget for a time about nuances in attitudes towards the unhappy
    champions of same-sex love.

    But as yet Obama has not openly given a single indication of being
    well disposed towards Russia. It may be that secretly, via channels
    inaccessible to the press, the Russian and American sides are
    conducting consultations of some kind (one would like to hope so), but
    all we know for the time being is that Obama is preparing to meet in
    St Petersburg with human rights organizations including activists from
    the LGBT community. Yet even the Cold War forced leaders to take the
    politics seriously to some extent, so that Khrushchev was able to
    reach agreement with Kennedy at the crucial moment and Nixon with Mao,
    and none of them thought about whether a particular conversation or a
    particular handshake would appear to be adding an extra few cents to
    his opposite number's "soft power" account.

    What does "soft power" matter, for heaven's sake, when the survival of
    civilization is actually at stake? Because, no matter how things may
    appear, the affair will not be limited to a couple of strikes against
    one country. To begin with the United States will hit Syria, then
    Israel will attack the Hizballah movement in Lebanon, then Iran will
    strike Israel, Turkey will attack Iran, Azerbaijan will attack
    Armenia, then Georgia will strike into South Ossetia again and of
    course Russia will be forced, as in 2008, to repel Georgia, and the
    NATO navy will rush to Georgia's aid once more. I am not trying to
    predict the future but merely identifying the likely dangers if the
    situation gets out of control. It may be that Israel has no plans to
    settle accounts directly with Hizballah and that Baku has no plans to
    take the conflict with Yerevan into a hot phase; but the problem is
    that a major war provides a fine pretext for resolving chronic
    territorial disputes. And a third world war could flare up even
    without any intention on the part of the United States and Russia of
    exchanging thermonuclear strikes. Simply because, while Russia and the
    United States are trying not to look one another in the eye, under the
    wing of their powerful patrons their "friends" are making their own
    arrangements. The First World War, by the way, began in precisely that
    way, even though nobody actually wanted it. It was simply that Russia
    and Germany considered themselves "obligated to defend" their allies.

    So tomorrow's G20 meeting is a last opportunity for Russia and America
    to agree on some kind of joint action plan. It will be a great pity
    if, in Petersburg, Obama prefers instead to discuss the sufferings of
    Russian gays and averts his eyes from his Russian colleague to smile
    sweetly at the Turks and the Saudis.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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