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#4
Izvestia
April 3, 2003
BUSH IS NO HITLER, AND RUSSIA IS NOT AN ENEMY OF THE
UNITED STATES
Russia and America have common ideals after all
Author: editorial
[from WPS Monitoring Agency, www.wps.ru/e_index.html]
PARALLELS DRAWN IN THE RUSSIAN MEDIA BETWEEN BUSH AND HITLER, OR THE
HOLOCAUST AND THE WAR IN IRAQ, ARE INAPPROPRIATE. RUSSIA AND AMERICA MAY
DISAGREE ON TACTICS, BUT THEY HAVE A COMMON PURPOSE: COUNTERING INTERNATIONAL
TERRORISM.
Russian television channels are more and more insistently drawing parallels
between Bush and Hitler, the Holocaust and "massive extermination of Iraqi
civilians" by allied troops. These parallels are as incorrect, and even
blasphemous, as they are dangerous. They are twice as dangerous if they present
themselves as a reflection of the official point of view of the state.
Meanwhile, neither President Putin nor Foreign Minister Ivanov nor any other
Russian state officials have made any such statements at any time.
Russia, as well as all of humanity, is facing a very difficult moral and
political choice. This choice will have to be made, inevitably, and it cannot be
made by halves. When the US waged war on the Taliban regime in Afghanistan,
Russian unambiguously supported the counter-terrorist coalition. Moreover, when
this coalition was being formed, Moscow was really consulted - for the first
time since the break-up of the USSR. Russia was viewed as an outpost of the
battle against international terrorism. The Bush administration considered
evidence of Chechen guerrilla links with international terrorist organizations
convincing enough. Now Russia has disagreed with America on tactics - in this
specific war, but so far it has emphasized the importance of strategic
partnership in the cause of fighting international terrorism.
There are many reasons why Russia could not support the US war on Iraq. While
we had no contacts with the Taliban regime and it did not have the international
community's legitimate acknowledgement, the Iraqi regime, which was quite
legitimate, had been a friend of Moscow since Soviet times. Russia has
substantial business interests in Iraq - primarily in the oil sector and in the
arms trade area. Finally, Iraq owes us $8 billion. However, it's one matter to
simply refrain from supporting the war against Iraq - and quite another matter
to become a sworn enemy of America. Our current differences are a dispute over
the means, not the ends.
Being at odds with America is stupid, but not because America is stronger
than Russia. There is a more weighty reason: we have a common enemy and common
ideals. Russia has direct experience with centers of political extremism and
criminal terrorism screened by religious rhetoric. There is actually no
ideological difference between the Wahabbi guerrilla incursion from Chechnya
into Dagestan three years ago (which was actually the start of the second
Chechen campaign) and the terrorist attacks on the US on September 11, 2001.
Drawing parallels between Shamil Basayev and Osama bin Laden is far more
appropriate than between Bush and Hitler. We know that. We have experience that
for ourselves.
The existence of millions of "high-principled suicide terrorists",
prepared to murder any number of people and use any sort of weapons in order to
destroy all of Western civilization, is not only a challenge to America, but to
Russia as well. Firstly, to Christian Russia - as there is no higher value in
Christianity than human life. Second, to Muslim Russia - since, by hiding behind
Allah's name and laundering illicit gains from drugs and oil, the terrorists
defame Islam, trying to set the rest of the world against all Muslims. Third, to
Russia as a Eurasian country spanning two parts of the world, equally rooted in
both the Western and Eastern cultures.
Russia can and should call on the US to end the bloodshed in Iraq as soon as
possible. But that call should be directed to a companion- in-arms in a common
cause who is making a mistake, not to an enemy. We should object to attempts to
establish democracy in such a way, but not to democracy itself. Europe,
including Russia as its constituent part, is too weak to protect itself from the
challenges of international terrorism. America is strong, but it is not smart
enough to protect the achievements of Western civilization by the right methods.
Only by joining intellect and force can the world protect democracy as the most
reasonable form of social organization. And in this fight we are definitely on
the same side as America.
(Translated by P. Pikhnovsky)
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