Between the lines of the Biden-Putin summit
https://thesaker.is/between-the-lines-of-the-biden-putin-summit/
June 17, 2021
Biden hinted the US wants Russia ‘back in the fold’ but
Putin won’t be leaving China’s embrace any time soon
By Pepe Escobar with permission and first posted
at AsiaTimes
Let’s start with the written word.
In Geneva, the US and Russia issued a joint statement where “we
reaffirm the principle that a nuclear war cannot be won and must
never be fought.”
Assorted Dr. Strangeloves will cringe – but at
least the world has it in writing, and may breathe a sigh of relief with this
breakthrough of sorts. That doesn’t mean that a “non-agreement capable” US
industrial-military complex will abide.
Moscow and Washington also committed to engaging in
an “integrated bilateral Strategic Stability Dialogue in the near
future that will be deliberate and robust.” The devil in the details is in
which “near future” the dialogue will progress.
A first step is that ambassadors are returning to
both capitals. Putin confirmed that the Russian Foreign Ministry and the State
Department will “start consultations” following the new START-3 treaty extension
for five years.
Equally important was the actual Rosebud in Geneva:
the Minsk protocol. That was one of the key drivers for the White House to
actually request the summit to the Kremlin – and not the other way around.
The US establishment was shaken by the
lightning-flash military buildup in Russian territory contiguous to Donbas –
which was a response to Kiev provocations (Putin: “We conduct exercises on our
territory, but we do not conduct exercises dragging equipment and weapons to
the US border”).
The message was duly received. There seems to be a
change of posture by the US on Ukraine – implying the Minsk protocol is back.
But that can all be – once again – shadow play.
Biden said,
“We agreed to pursue diplomacy related to the Minsk
agreement.”
To “pursue diplomacy” not necessarily means
strictly abiding by a deal already endorsed by the UN Security Council which is
being disrespected by Kiev non-stop. But at least it implies diplomacy.
A benign reading would reveal that some red lines
are finally being understood. Putin did allude to it: “In general, it is clear
to us what our US partners talk about, and they do understand what we say when
it comes to the ‘red lines.’ But I should say frankly that we have not gone as
far as placing the emphases in detail and distribute and share something.”
So no detail – at least not yet.
Giving away the game
Talking before boarding Air Force One out of
Geneva, a relaxed Joe Biden seems to have given away the game – in a trademark
self-deluded way.
He said, “Russia is in a very, very difficult spot
right now… They are being squeezed by China. They want desperately to remain a
major power.”
This reveals a curious mix between zero-knowledge
about the complex, always evolving Russia-China comprehensive strategic partnership
and outright wishful thinking (“squeezed by China”, “desperate to remain a
major power”).
Russia is a de facto major power. Yet Putin’s
vision of complete Russian sovereignty can only flourish in a truly multipolar
world coordinated by a Concert of Sovereigns: a realpolitik-based Balance of
Power.
That’s in sharp contrast to the unipolarity privileged
by the Hegemon, whose establishment considers any political player calling for
sovereignty and multipolarity as a sworn enemy.
This cognitive dissonance certainly was not removed
by what Putin, Biden and their extended teams discussed at Villa La Grange.
It’s quite enlightening to revive the arc from
Anchorage to Geneva – which I have been chronicling for Asia Times for the past three
months. In Alaska, China was hurled into a dingy environment and received with
insults at the diplomatic table – responded in kind by the formidable Yang
Jiechi. Compare it with the Hollywood-style ceremonial in Geneva.
The difference in treatment offered to China and
Russia once again gives away the game.
US ruling elites are totally paralyzed by the
Russia-China strategic partnership. But their ultimate nightmare is that Berlin
will understand that once again they are being used as cannon fodder – which
they are as it’s been clearly visible throughout the Nord Stream 2 saga.
That might eventually propel Berlin into the
ultimate Eurasian alliance with Russia-China. The recently signed Atlantic
Charter signals that the ideal scenario for the Anglo-Americans – shades of
WWII – is to have Germany and Russia as irreconcilable opposites.
So the main American goal in the somewhat quirky
Putin-Biden photo op (Putin smirk meets Biden looking into the distance) was to
trick Putin into thinking Washington wants Russia “back into the fold”, moving
Moscow away from Beijing and avoiding a triple alliance with Berlin.
What about regional stability?
There were no substantial leaks from Geneva – at
least not yet. We don’t know whether Lavrov and Blinken actually did much of
the talking when only the four of them – plus translators – were in the library
room.
At the extended meeting, notorious Maidan cookie
distributor Victoria ‘F**k the EU’ Nuland had a seat on the table. That might
imply that even if US-Russia agree on nuclear stability, regional stability
remains largely off the table (Putin: “What is stable in supporting a coup in
Ukraine?”)
Biden vaguely referred to the US and Russia possibly
working together on humanitarian aid to Syria. That was code for Idlib – where
NATO’s Turkey is actively supporting jihadis of the al-Nusra kind. Not a word
on the illegal American occupation of Syrian territory – complete with oil
smuggling, and the fact that the real humanitarian crisis in Syria is a direct
result of US sanctions.
None of this was asked in both pressers. A passing
word on Iran, another passing word on Afghanistan, not even a mention of Gaza.
Putin, in full command of the facts and insisting
on logic, was clearly accommodating, emphasizing “no hostility” and “a
willingness to understand each other”. Biden, to his credit, said disagreements
were not dealt with in a “hyperbolic atmosphere” and his “agenda” is not
directed against Russia.
Putin went into extreme detail explaining how
Russia is “restoring lost infrastructure” in the Arctic. He’s “deeply
convinced” the US and Russia should cooperate in the Arctic.
On cybersecurity, he was adamant that Moscow
provided all information on US requests about cyber attacks, but never receives
answers from the Americans. He emphasized most
cyberattacks originate in the US.
On human rights: “Guantanamo is still working, does
not comply with any international law”. And “torture was used in American
prisons, including in Europe.”
Very important: they did touch upon, “casually”,
the vaccine wars and the “possibility” was evoked of mutual recognition of
vaccines.
For the record: US mainstream media was invited for
Putin’s presser – and felt free to lodge accusatory “questions” faithful to the
“rogue Kremlin behavior” script while no Russian media whatsoever was allowed
on Biden’s presser.
In a nutshell: applying Kissinger’s Divide and Rule
to put a spanner in the Russia-China works was D.O.A. when you’re dealing with
ultra-savvy players such as Putin and Lavrov.
Putin, in his presser, said, “I have no illusions,
and there can be no illusions”. Later, Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov was
asked if Geneva would lead to the US being removed from Russia’s Unfriendly
Nations list: “No…there are no grounds yet.”
Still, there are glimmers of hope. Stranger
geopolitical things have happened. If warmongers are sidelined, 2021 might even
end up as The Year of Strategic Stability.
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