The recent ceremony of accession of four Ukrainian regions to Russia brought a speech from President Putin that  outlined the reasons behind Russia’s current struggles, the character  and identify of its foes and, more importantly, laid the groundwork for  Russia’s next level of confrontation with the West beyond the ongoing  military conflict in Ukraine.  In his speech, Putin clearly defined the  present fight as a worldwide battle in which Russia plays a leading role  against the Deep State that ultimately runs the West and which uses all  available tools – including military, economic, cultural, and social –  in its attempt to preserve unipolar world domination.
 Putin’s  words were directed to three distinctive audiences: the collective West,  the Global South and Russia. He went back to Middle Ages history to  remind the origins and impact of Western resource exploitation and  colonialism in the Americas, Asia and Africa through imperialistic wars,  racism, and slavery.  He touched upon the military exploits of the  20th century led primarily by the US and its allies and its impact in  Germany and Japan at the end of the Second World War, Korea in the  1950s, Vietnam in the 1960-70s and its latest failed adventures in Iraq,  Libya, Syria, and Afghanistan. He also highlighted the dire days of  Russia during the 1990s and the Western powers’ attempts to turn it into  a dismembered and passive cheap natural resources outlet. Putin’s  message to Russians had nationalistic and religious tones, touching on  the defence of traditional family values as a call to arms against the  threat caused by dwindling population growth. He also named US monetary  printing as one of the key tools used by the Western establishment to  achieve its self-preservation and supremacy goals, reminding that paper  doesn’t feed nor warms human beings.
 It would be tempting to  see this speech narrowly as just another manifestation of Russia’s  position in the big geopolitical battles, but what Putin has done is  setting international rivalry in deep historical and cultural terms  which have an undoubted appeal across the globe. Critics will see  Putin’s benign characterization of Russia as a cynical ploy that hides  the country’s role, through its commanding post in the Soviet Union, in  the subjugation of Eastern European countries after World War II, but  nevertheless the Global South will see things differently.
 Putin’s scathing attack against the West is a multi-headed weapon as it  rallied to the conservative segments of a population dismayed by  globalism imposing a deeply disturbing agenda that goes against  traditional views on family, marriage and sex, but it also has leftist  tones, as his criticism also goes against the same globalism that is  worsening wealth disparity, and even a libertarian appeal as he referred  to the imposition of states of emergency, media control and sanctions  on other societies as examples of Western made totalitarianism. Putin’s  primary target was the Anglo-Saxon establishment, mainly the US and  Great Britain, and he attempted to build a wedge within the West as he  focused on sovereignty, a cry with resonance in countries like Hungary  and Italy, and on traditional anti-war sentiments in Germany and Japan  by remembering the horrors of the World War II bombings in Dresden,  Hamburg, Cologne, Hiroshima, and Nagasaki.
 An immediate  consequence of Putin’s rhetorical escalation will be increased US  pressure on the Global South to follow anti-Russian sanctions.  To  successfully counter this menace, and as Russia needs its continuous  support, it will have to combine ideology with pragmatic and tangible  support in terms of access to critical energy and food resources to the  poorer countries. The recent abstentions of China, India and Brazil on a  UN Security Council resolution calling for condemnation of the Ukraine  referenda no doubt were driven by these countries’ expectations on  Russia’s future actions.
 Following the end of the Cold War and  the collapse of the Soviet Union, and as it gradually abandoned  socialism, Russia lost the powerful ideological appeal that it had  during decades in the Global South and in the West’s anti-establishment  segments.  The most remarkable aspect of Putin’s recent speech is  bringing back ideological confrontation into the forefront. This new  battle looks to present the West’s defence of democracy, freedom, and  sovereignty as hollow and hypocritical. A combined message of  anti-colonialism and conservatism is a powerful tool but Putin’s  indirect and subtle appeal to people power as the only way to finally  counter the Deep State is even stronger. Putin’s identification of the  Deep State as humanity’s foe may be his ultimate ideological legacy,  something avoidable if the US would have resigned itself to be just a  normal country and to focus primarily on its people’s prosperity.
Oscar Silva-Valladares is a former investment banker that has lived and worked in North and Latin America, Western & Eastern Europe, Saudi Arabia, Japan, the Philippines and Western Africa. He currently chairs Davos International Advisory, an advisory firm focused on strategic consulting across emerging markets.
Source: Ron Paul Institute

 
 
 
 
 
 
 