Why I Blame the Arrogant, Foolish West

Guest Post by Peter Hitchens

Our response to this crisis in Ukraine has been to react with mistrust and abuse, and with blatant attempts to worsen the situation

We have been utter fools.

We have treated Russia with amazing stupidity. Now we pay the price for that. We had the chance to make her an ally, friend and partner.

Instead we turned her into an enemy by insulting a great and proud country with greed, unearned superiority, cynicism, contempt and mistrust.

I have to endure, often several times a day, listening to people who are normally perfectly sensible and reasonable, raging wildly against Russia and Russians.

Once, I was just like them. I had the normal anti-Russian prejudice of so many Western people.

But, by great fortune, I am not like them now. I lived in Russia, I knew Russians as friends. I learned to distinguish between what was Russian and what was Communist.

And I saw something most people will never see – a pivotal event in history, when we could have changed the world for the better.

We have been utter fools. We have treated Russia with amazing stupidity. Now we pay the price for that. We had the chance to make her an ally, friend and partner, writes PETER HITCHENS. Above: PETER HITCHENS in Moscow in 2007

We have been utter fools. We have treated Russia with amazing stupidity. Now we pay the price for that. We had the chance to make her an ally, friend and partner, writes PETER HITCHENS. Above: PETER HITCHENS in Moscow in 2007

One of the most joyful moments of my life was the day Communism died in Moscow.

I could have sworn the sky was actually clearer and brighter, the people looked happy instead of downtrodden – even the revolting, corrupt traffic police, for once, went into hiding.

The litter bins were full of red-and-gold Communist Party membership cards, burning merrily in the late summer sunshine as they dissolved into grey ash.

So I drove my red Volvo through the liberated city, a lot faster than usual, proudly displaying the special yellow number plate (with its ‘K’ for ‘Korrespondent’ and its ‘001’ for Britain, top nation) which had up until then simply made me a target for bribe-hunters and officious cops who prevented me from going on picnics in the missile-crammed woods outside the city.

I even found myself singing the hymns of my childhood.

Just a few days earlier I had been sunk in the most abject gloom. Communism, after a long retreat, had struck back.

The reforming Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, had been kidnapped in his Crimean holiday home.

Tanks, barrels aslant and tracks grinding the surface into dust, came growling down my majestic Moscow street in the early morning light.

This was not some ancient newsreel. I was there, and it was unfolding before me in full colour.

My elite block of flats, which I shared illegally with dozens of hoary old Stalinists, KGB men and Kremlin loyalists, exploded into exultation as this nasty putsch unfolded.

Neighbours who I’d previously thought of as sweet old pensioners stiffened their spines, grew several inches taller, donned crimson armbands, and set up a propaganda stall in the lobby.

The horrible thing, which I had thought was dying, was coming back to life.

These were the people I hated and had seen defeated in Prague, Bucharest, Budapest and Berlin.

People and governments who now claim to despise Vladimir Putin for his aggression, for his suppression of freedom and for his corruption did not seem to be bothered by these things when his forerunner, Boris Yeltsin, did them

People and governments who now claim to despise Vladimir Putin for his aggression, for his suppression of freedom and for his corruption did not seem to be bothered by these things when his forerunner, Boris Yeltsin, did them

I had thought they were done for. Was it possible they were on their way back, as their fellow Communists were in China?

Would they, like their Chinese comrades, use their tanks to massacre the people in Red Square and re-establish the iron rule of the Party? That day it all seemed terribly possible.

Then, equally swiftly, the tanks turned round and vanished, the putschists lost their nerve and scattered in a haze of vodka and panic, and it was all over.

It was bliss to be alive in that dawn, as someone once wrongly said of another momentous event. I have never got over it.

The black beating heart of an evil empire had stopped. A black sun had been removed from the sky.

All the filthy lies and repressions which I had witnessed in the vast zone of tyranny that stretched from the heart of Germany to the heart of Korea had lost their life force.

I do not think the world has had such an opportunity since 1945. In fact, it was better, for in 1991 there was no Stalin, no Soviet Communist Party.

Like a knight dead inside its armour, the once-mighty Soviet armed forces might look from a distance like a menace, but they were rotten and done for, and in a matter of months would keel over and fall to the ground.

Yeltsin (left), a former Communist machine politician with a far from perfect past, ordered tanks to shell his own parliament, while his police shot down demonstrators

Yeltsin (left), a former Communist machine politician with a far from perfect past, ordered tanks to shell his own parliament, while his police shot down demonstrators

In fact the problem quickly be-came trying to find any way to govern that vast country at all, as the spells and incantations which had kept it together no longer worked.

What an opportunity this was for the rich, stable, well-governed West to come to the rescue.

Had not Marshall Plan aid revived and rebuilt a ruined Western Europe after World War Two?

Had Britain and the other occupying powers not vowed to bring democracy, freedom and the rule of law to a prostrate Germany?

Was this not a moment for an equally unique act of generosity and far sight?

No it wasn’t. What was unleashed instead was an army of carpetbaggers from the West, shouting about the free market, who quickly found their match in the crooks and corruption experts, many of them high Communist officials, who rushed to exploit and fool them.

At the same time formal ‘democracy’ was introduced – that is to say, there were some elections, which were of course rigged by big money.

And in the minds of Russians whose savings were vaporised, who were turned out of their homes by thugs, who lost their jobs and pensions, democracy became a swear word.

People and governments who now claim to despise Vladimir Putin for his aggression, for his suppression of freedom and for his corruption did not seem to be bothered by these things when his forerunner, Boris Yeltsin, did them.

It is a fascinating contrast.

Yeltsin, a former Communist machine politician with a far from perfect past, ordered tanks to shell his own parliament, while his police shot down demonstrators.

He savaged Chechnya. His own re-election to the presidency stank of money.

Corruption under his rule was so flagrant and grotesque that, when he quit, many Russians welcomed with relief the return of what the film-maker Stanislav Govoryukin called ‘normal corruption’.

Yeltsin, often paralysed with drink, was a welcome guest in the West, even the White House, despite his embarrassing and crude behaviour.

But Yeltsin, unlike Putin, did nothing to control the oligarchs, allowed the West to continue its rape of Russia’s economy, and – above all – made no protest against the humiliation of his country by the continued expansion of Nato eastwards across Europe.

This was by then a more or less openly anti-Russian alliance (who else is it directed against?).

It wasn’t just that the West had promised not to do this, as numerous documents now show beyond doubt.

It was that it was stupid, and created the very crisis it claimed to be protecting us against.

Interestingly the leading protesters against this Nato expansion were not Russian nationalists but highly intelligent and experienced independent figures.

One was the Russian liberal politician Yegor Gaidar, a man Western leaders claim to have admired.

He prophesied with total accuracy that the policy would strengthen hardliners and nationalists in the Kremlin.

Then came the brilliant American diplomat George F. Kennan, a man nobody could accuse of being soft on Communism.

But, unlike so many others, he could tell the new transformed Russia apart from the old USSR.

Kennan had been architect of the USA’s policy of containment of the USSR. He came out of retirement to deplore Bill Clinton’s support for pushing Nato east. I quote his prediction at length because he was so right.

‘I think it is the beginning of a new Cold War,’ said Mr Kennan. ‘I think the Russians will gradually react quite adversely and it will affect their policies.

‘I think it is a tragic mistake. There was no reason for this whatsoever. No one was threatening anybody else.

‘This expansion would make the Founding Fathers of this country turn over in their graves.

‘We have signed up to protect a whole series of countries, even though we have neither the resources nor the intention to do so in any serious way.

‘[Nato expansion] was simply a light-hearted action by a Senate that has no real interest in foreign affairs.

‘What bothers me is how superficial and ill-informed the whole Senate debate was.’

He added: ‘I was particularly bothered by the references to Russia as a country dying to attack Western Europe.

‘Don’t people understand? Our differences in the Cold War were with the Soviet Communist regime.’ Exactly.

After 1991 Russia had, for the first time since the Bolshevik putsch of 1917, got the chance to build a new and free society.

As Mr Kennan put it, Nato expansion was an insult to Russian democrats.

‘We are turning our backs on the very people who mounted the greatest bloodless revolution in history to remove that Soviet regime.’

He asked why East-West relations should ‘become centred on the question of who would be allied with whom – and by implication against whom – in some fanciful, totally unforeseeable and most improbable future military conflict’.

These questions demanded an answer, and never got one.

It is my unflinching view, amid all the current anti-Putin hysteria, that the leaders of the West have made the crisis we now face today out of thin air.

I also happen to think that many of them, for varying reasons, are such lightweights that they enjoy the chance to posture and threaten – and do not realise this is deadly serious.

In hints, in pleas, in public speeches and private approaches, Russia has begged us for years to show it the most basic respect.

Our response has been to react with mistrust and abuse, and with blatant attempts to worsen the situation in Ukraine and Georgia, two incredibly dangerous flashpoints where real war might all too easily begin.

Having been there when everything was possible, on that Moscow summer’s day in 1991, I cannot forgive or forget this great missed opportunity to bring Russia into the free and lawful world.

And I think the peoples of the West should think very carefully before they follow the path to a new and bitter division of Europe.

It is wholly avoidable. It gains us nothing. And it might lose us everything.

-----------------------------------------------------
It is my sincere desire to provide readers of this site with the best unbiased information available, and a forum where it can be discussed openly, as our Founders intended. But it is not easy nor inexpensive to do so, especially when those who wish to prevent us from making the truth known, attack us without mercy on all fronts on a daily basis. So each time you visit the site, I would ask that you consider the value that you receive and have received from The Burning Platform and the community of which you are a vital part. I can't do it all alone, and I need your help and support to keep it alive. Please consider contributing an amount commensurate to the value that you receive from this site and community, or even by becoming a sustaining supporter through periodic contributions. [Burning Platform LLC - PO Box 1520 Kulpsville, PA 19443] or Paypal

-----------------------------------------------------
To donate via Stripe, click here.
-----------------------------------------------------
Use promo code ILMF2, and save up to 66% on all MyPillow purchases. (The Burning Platform benefits when you use this promo code.)
Click to visit the TBP Store for Great TBP Merchandise
Subscribe
Notify of
guest
21 Comments
hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
February 25, 2022 7:55 am

What’s with all this “us” and “we” language?

“We” have no say in our governance. We are the dispossessed majority that Wilmot Robertson wrote about.

Ghost
Ghost
  hardscrabble farmer
February 25, 2022 8:13 am

Mouse in his pocket.

CCRider
CCRider
  hardscrabble farmer
February 25, 2022 8:45 am

That’s exactly the point and THEY aren’t the slightest bit interested in what American voters care about. That’s how they can defend Ukraine’s precious borders while neglecting our own with straight faces, even passion (cue in Kinzinger to start whimpering). We’re all along for the ride.

jew york times
jew york times
  CCRider
February 25, 2022 1:24 pm

And why should they care? We never make them suffer any consequences for their betrayal of US citizens. we vote them right back in- over and over. Why is Speaker Nazi Pelosi and the top 60 Congressman on another AIPAC bribery all expenses paid trip to ISRAEL since 2/20? Why arent these Epstein-blackmailed pimps home in DC running the country as we send more troops to E Europe for another Zionist War?? Look to the citizens for the state of their country, because yes they are responsible

J.
J.
  jew york times
February 25, 2022 3:31 pm

Try to understand this reality…ALL VOTING IS RIGGED EVERYWHERE.

Mr Anon
Mr Anon
February 25, 2022 9:39 am

We have Obozo to thank for installing a puppet government in Ukraine. And of course Poopy pants the sleepy one is beholden to that regime since they were the source of the early majority of his family’s wealth. Bear in mind this is before Poopy pants cozied up to the CCP for even bigger gains. We don’t have a President, we have an imposter and Obozo controls him. Poopy pants entire White House staff is Obozo’s old staff. Obozo was a Kenyan with a transvestite partner and also a fraud. So at the end of Poopy pants term the United states will have had two complete frauds and imposters acting as President of the United States for 12 of the last 16 years.

TN Patriot
TN Patriot
February 25, 2022 11:44 am

Not many expensive weapons systems sold when there is peace in the world.

Balbinus
Balbinus
February 25, 2022 11:54 am

The world destroyed by politics! We are being run by a group of demon possessed pedophiles. Simply put, the Devil himself is running the Western world.

August
August
  Balbinus
February 25, 2022 4:43 pm

The West has contributed mightily to human advancement, but I have the strong feeling that at this point “we” of the West have nothing more to offer anyone, beyond lies and favorable financing.

I could be wrong – the shock treatnment the average Western schmuck is about to receive might just, possibly, maybe, revive the patient. But I doubt it.

Jablonski's And Gablonski's
Jablonski's And Gablonski's
February 25, 2022 12:54 pm

I learned to distinguish between what was Russian and what was Communist.

People are people and tyrants are tyrants. Everywhere.

However, that is not the point.

The point is: We are playing a game of worldwide Risk at the Command And Control level. None of the peasants have ANY say in the moves made on the board.

Putin just took a territory and got a card (tech advancement). The U.S. has been doing it for 30+ years. That’s what you do when the Risk game narrows down to just a few players. You try to minimize resource use/loss, each turn, while trying to increase technology/military by taking a small territory and getting a “card” (tech advance). Eventually, you have enough cards for a “match” and you gain a, potentially huge, advantage over the other players in form of sudden increases in military strength.

This concept is what no one seems to grasp: PLAYERS. RISK. LATE STAGES OF GAME. (throw a fourth turning in on top of it at the same time!). That’s where we are.

The ultimate goal of EVERY player is: WIN. At any cost.

To believe the major players – Russians, Chinese, Europeans, etc. – are not all playing for World Domination is naive. They are, regardless of public statements of denial.

Not only are the playing for World Domination, they are playing in ways that show they have varying appetites for violence and loss that seem to inversely correlate to their probability of winning. That observation will, ultimately, affect the outcome and winner.

So, it really doesn’t matter if I can tell the difference between non-communist Chinese and Russians or communist party members. The communist party members are in control for today (in every country – US included; read the planks). Their ultimate goals are to win the game of global RISK in any way possible (barring self-defeatism) – same as the U.S. and all other players. There is no right or wrong in the minds of those in charge of the movements of this game, regardlesss of whether they call themselves CCP, Republicans or Democrats, liberals, moderates, etc.. There is a game and the indivduals that are truly in control are out to WIN.

When the average joe controls the goverments of China, Russia, U.S., Euro, and India we can start thinking about the planet from a different point of view. You could do that now too, but expect the other players to take FULL advantage of your “naive stupidity” (what the evil leaders otherwise must refer to as “humanity” – a “vice” if you are out to win at all costs).

conner
conner
February 25, 2022 12:55 pm

America was over a long time ago.

Jablonski's And Gablonski's
Jablonski's And Gablonski's
  conner
February 25, 2022 1:07 pm

Russia was over a long time ago.

China was over a long time ago.

Europe was over a long time ago.

See how easy it is to just throw shit on the TBP board? I love the open format (thank you Admin!!!), but it makes it easy to spout without backing.

Only a fool would count any single player out of this game yet.

YOU don’t have enough good information to predict anything accurately. Just like the rest of us. We all guess.

The U.S. could raise rates to 15% tomorrow,bail out the few special cases that are strategic, let all other dead-wood go under, and suck up all of the worlds spare capital for years.

They did that before. Our position was better then, but they could do it IF the will/necessity becomes apparent or the “best move”. Maybe another country will do that.

Point is: Predictions are hard. Especially about the future. Even if you’re smarter than the average Berra.

August
August
  Jablonski's And Gablonski's
February 25, 2022 4:51 pm

And if wishes were horses, pigs would fly.

Leethal
Leethal
February 25, 2022 2:39 pm

I already knew this a long time ago. Just look who is in charge now? A complete bumpkin worthy of the rope as well as all the sheriffs, police, Congogress that woudn’t prevent this.

I will be glad when they are nuked but not happy they could not be hanged but only vaporized for their stupidity the rest of US have to live with.

Stephen Morgan
Stephen Morgan
  Leethal
February 26, 2022 6:26 am

I agree and I suspect that alot more Americans would be willing to sacrifice Washington D.C. if all that were there would be silenced forever. I’m sure that the cockroaches (politicians) would all scurry away to their underground bunkers at which time we should seal them in for eternity.

kfg
kfg
February 25, 2022 4:42 pm

“We have been utter fools.”

Well hey, it’s worked so well up until now, why do anything different?

Stucky
Stucky
February 25, 2022 4:52 pm

I wonder how many Americans understand this? One percent?

—– Soviet Union was all about JEWS

—– Russia is all about CHRISTIANITY

One is demonic. The other is doing God’s work.

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Stucky
February 25, 2022 5:28 pm

Jews still hold power in Russia, it’s just a different group of jews than those holding power in the West..

mongoos
mongoos
February 25, 2022 6:28 pm

Paul Craig Roberts feels much the same way. Western leaders are paralyzingly stupid.

“They Didn’t Hear What We Told Them. They Had Better Hear This Time.” — Vladimir Putin

Lumpy Choad
Lumpy Choad
February 25, 2022 8:37 pm

J-O-O-S

Jarza
Jarza
February 26, 2022 7:07 am

And I’ll say it again,
Russia is not my enemy are they yours?
Because the Deep State, Dem/Libs have a quarrel with Russia it means nothing to me.
Russia is the enemy of the people who get involved with Russian interests.
We have few if nothing in America that says “Made in Russia”
I don’t’ believe Russia wants to rule the world, for that matter China
either, both keep each other in check.
Both are against the NWO.
My Oh My how the MSM have made the American people an enemy of Russia
through their lies, deceit and propaganda.
The MSM have even conditioned the American people to think of the 3rd
world countries as less than human.
Instead of compassion, disgust is shown.
You can’t do that with a Super Power so you make them your enemy.
Only the real Churches ordained by God are there to help the 3rd world
with water, food, clothing and shelter.
Listen very carefully when politicians try to speak for you using words
such as We, Us, Together, The American People want/does not want, etc, more so when you are against their policies!
Why would any sane person want to be any enemy of a Nuclear Super Power?
Unless you’re insane like the Democratic/Leftist/Socialist Party.
I THINK IT’S A DAMN GOOD IDEA THAT THE US GETS ALONG WITH PUTIN!
I THINK PUTIN SHOULD REMOVE THE ENEMIES WHO STAND IN THE WAY OF
FRIENDSHIP.
But all in all, Father God’s will be done.