Posted By Joshua Keating Share

The Russian Prime Minister has made global headlines again this week (not by frolicking with a snow leopard, though he did that too) with some highly-charged comments about the international intervention in Libya:

"The resolution is defective and flawed," said Russia's Putin, whose country did not use its power to veto the resolution at the United Nations. "It allows everything. It resembles medieval calls for crusades," Putin added.

President Bush was blasted for using the word 'crusade' in reference to the war on terrorism, so the remark seems like a pretty pointed shot at the Obama administration on the eve of Defense Secretary Robert Gates' visit to Moscow. President Dmitry Medvedev has distanced himself from Putin with a rare rebuke, calling the comments "unacceptable."

But remarks like these are something of a specialty for Putin, who seems to relish the opportunity to pour cold water on the ambitious initiatives of other world powers, particularly when their senior officials are within earshot. 

For instance, in a 2003 joint press conference with Tony Blair shortly after the invasion of Iraq, Putin mocked the U.S.-British coalition's failure to find WMDs:

“Two weeks later they still have not been found,” he told a press conference. “The question is, where is Saddam Hussein? Where are those weapons of mass destruction, if they were ever in existence? Is Saddam Hussein in a bunker sitting on cases containing weapons of mass destruction, preparing to blow the whole place up?”

In 2007, as more U.S. troops "surged" into Iraq, Putin attacked U.S. foreign policy at a Munich Security Conference audience with both Gates and John McCain in attendance:


In a presumed reference mainly to the war in Iraq, Mr Putin said, “unilateral illegal actions have not resolved any single problem,” emphasising the many more people who had been killed as a result of US military action.He added: “We don’t have enough force to resolve anything comprehensively.” He said that only the United Nations – not Nato or the European Union - could authorise the use of military force around the world, and even then it should be as a last resort.

At the 2009 World Economic Forum in Davos, he compared western financial rescue packages to Soviet economic planning:

“Interference of the State, the belief in the omnipotence of the State: that is a reaction to market failures,” Mr Putin said in his keynote address at the opening of the four-day meeting. “There is a temptation to expand direct interference of state in economy. In the Soviet Union that became an absolute. We paid a very dear price for that.”

He also singled out the U.S. for economic arrogance: 

"I just want to remind you that, just a year ago, American delegates speaking from this rostrum emphasised the US economy's fundamental stability and its cloudless prospects," he said in his speech.

"Today, investment banks, the pride of Wall Street, have virtually ceased to exist. In just twelve months, they have posted losses exceeding the profits they made in the last 25 years. This example alone reflects the real situation better than any criticism," Putin scoffed.

In Oct. 2009, Putin took a parting shot at Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, following her Moscow trip, describing efforts to tighten sanctions on Iran as "counterproductive": 

"If we speak about some kind of sanctions now, before we take concrete steps, we will fail to create favorable conditions for negotiations," Putin said. "That is why we consider such talk premature."

If the Libyan engagement does extend into a quagmire, as many fear, Cameron, Sarkozy, and Obama can expect some hearty I-told-you-sos from the Russian prime minister's office. 

 

ALEKSEY DRUZHININ/AFP/Getty Images

 

DCCU

4:13 PM ET

March 21, 2011

Staying in the picture or trying to stand apart?

Putin's consistent series of pointed comments and criticisms cited here are unfortunately not always completely off the mark. The UN does not seem to have defined the boundaries of its intervention in Lybia and the lack of WMD in Iraq may forever remain a sore point for Putin to come back to

On the other hand, Russia has its own experiences with unilateral intervention backed by Putin (Georgia). Unfortunately, Putin's comments are not very constructive either. Other comments such as the economic arrogance seem like little more than opportunistic bashing. They also lack weight given that they're often from Putin independently and not a unified Russian position.

All in all, this begs the question of whether this critical stance (valid or no) is an:
- attempt to create an independent Russia foreign policy that stands apart as it recovers its standing from the Cold War
- or whether this is Putin asserting and maintaining his place in Russia

 

LUCKYBARKER

6:40 AM ET

March 22, 2011

Putin's opinion is very important.

Putin - following president of Russia.
Spring 2012... it is fast
Remember it.

 

SAMUIL

7:11 AM ET

March 22, 2011

Punin

? ? ??? ????? ???????? ?? ????? ??? ? ?????. ??? ????? ? ????? ???, ?? ? ???, ??? ??? ?????????????, ? ? ??? ??? ?? ?????????? ??????????? ? ?? ???, ????????????? ? ????????, ????? - ??? ??????? ???. ? ???? ??? ????? ???????????????? ??? ??????????. ? ??? ????? ??????, ??? ?????????? ???: "?? ???? ??????? ?? ???? ??????? ????".

 

SAMUIL

7:11 AM ET

March 22, 2011

Punin

? ? ??? ????? ???????? ?? ????? ??? ? ?????. ??? ????? ? ????? ???, ?? ? ???, ??? ??? ?????????????, ? ? ??? ??? ?? ?????????? ??????????? ? ?? ???, ????????????? ? ????????, ????? - ??? ??????? ???. ? ???? ??? ????? ???????????????? ??? ??????????. ? ??? ????? ??????, ??? ?????????? ???: "?? ???? ??????? ?? ???? ??????? ????".

 

NAKEDTRUTHISEVERYWHERE

8:18 AM ET

March 22, 2011

next

Putin all has correctly told!!! This western "shitcracy" should listen! Truth is the strongest thing. I won't understand the author of whom criticizes Putin which in this case the rights or the West which makes a mistake behind an error, kills people and continues it to do further?

i did not understand comment- "On the other hand, Russia has its own experiences with unilateral intervention backed by Putin (Georgia)"

DCCU you should check the historical facts.The Georgians started the war by the way.

 

DCCU

5:12 AM ET

March 23, 2011

Response to Nakedtruthiseverywhere re: Georgia

Nakedtruthiseverywhere, it seems you might have misunderstood part of the content of my post because you're so set on defending Putin with a less than substantive argument. In fact, I suggested that Putin may not get *enough* credit for his pointed comments and criticisms (considering some are indeed valid) because his remarks are not complemented with constructive talk or action.

The comment about Russian intervention and Georgia was simply to suggest an example where Russian intervention was also questionable (given that Putin's quotes in Mr. Keating's original post refer to Lybia and Iraq). I believe you are correct that Georgia attacked South Ossetia first in Aug 2008. The point, however, is not who attacked first, but rather that it was not clear whether Russia was justified in some of the actions it took in Georgia. For instance, Russia sided with South Ossetia and Abkhazia diplomatically and militarily although:
a) Russia was involved as a facilitator of negotiations (so neutrality) and
b) although its force was a 'peacekeeping force,' which is also traditionally neutral and limited to self-defense (vs the counter-attacking that it did).
This suggests that Russia was perhaps not officially justified or mandated to counter-attack when Georgian forces attacked South Ossetia in Aug 2008. Georgia did not attack Russia soil itself, nor was there a UN resolution on punitive force against Georgia.

Again, my argument here is that Putin's criticisms have varying validity and utility, and yes, perhaps a bit of hypocrisy too. I'm certainly not saying it has none any of these characteristics though.

 

VADIM FROM RUSSIA

8:23 AM ET

March 22, 2011

 

NAKEDTRUTHISEVERYWHERE

11:01 AM ET

March 22, 2011

Let's discuss. Tell me what

Let's discuss. Tell me what did he said that finally wasn't truth? Tell me if you are right? Why Obamy didn't close the Guantanamo while he promised to do it during election.

 

NAKEDTRUTHISEVERYWHERE

11:51 AM ET

March 22, 2011

it's better to say USA spent

it's better to say USA spent years and dollars trying to provoke Georgia to attack own people and when they did Moscow affectively protected territory from uncle Sam

 

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