On February 8, President Vladimir Putin of Russia made an
extraordinary speech at the Expanded Meeting of the State Council. The 13-page
speech was titled Russia�s Development
Strategy to 2020.
The document is a template, a guide for the creation of the
21st Century Flex-State. A state with strong, even aggressive leadership that
seeks to keep its story, its history, its people alive and prosperous in an era
of competitive globalization where information about any organization, any
individual, in any country is nearly impossible to hide. It is a bold, even
historical document about Russia�s experience with a method of US economic
torture called The Shock Doctrine (see Naomi Klein�s book of the same name),
and its trials and tribulations with low birth rates and dismal healthcare. It
is astonishingly open.
More than anything, though, it�s about the long-term. It is
about country and national interest coming first, agency second.
Putin recognizes that only the state has the authority to
wield power to protect the national interest, play referee when financial
markets convulse, and ensure that a nation�s infrastructure, its culture, its
people and its security come first. After all, those are the critical
components of the state. It is vital that, as much as possible, The state
should attempt to remain unincorporated.
�We have rid the country of the harmful practice that saw
state decisions taken under pressure from commodities and financial monopolies,
media magnates, foreign political circles and shameless populists, a practice
that was not only detrimental to our national interests but that cynically
ignored the basic needs of millions of people,� said Putin.
According to Goldman Sachs, Russia has become a �remarkable�
performing member of the BRIC (Brazil, Russia, India, and China) with its
economy growing at an annual rate of 6.8 percent. Even so, according to Putin,
much remains to be done and Russia can�t borrow and spend its way to national
prosperity and security. In short, Putin�s �non-democratic� plan, much maligned
in the world�s mainstream media, is working.
Putin�s way
The American people would do themselves a big favor by
reading his speech. The entire US economic, political, military, and diplomatic
apparatus -- presidential candidates included -- would do their country a great
service by taking the time to understand and heed the message behind the words.
That message is clear: The state exists to serve the interests of the people.
The state will not fade away, it can�t. Indeed, evolutionary psychology teaches
that human beings are hierarchical creatures that in groups need structure,
discipline, and unitary purpose. The state should be the guardian of the
national psyche and not the captains of industry.
According to Putin, �Our children will no longer have to pay
our old debts. The state foreign debt has shrunk to 3 percent of GDP -- one of
the lowest ratios in the world. What choice can there be between the
opportunity to become a leader in economic and social development, a leader in
ensuring our national security, and the threat of losing our economic standing,
losing our security and ultimately even losing our sovereignty? Russia must
become the country offering the best life, and I am sure that we can achieve
this goal, not by sacrificing the present
for some radiant future, but by working day by day to improve people�s lives.
"The transition to an innovative development path calls
above all for large-scale investment in human capital. Human development is the
main goal and essential condition for progress in modern society. This is our
absolute national priority now and in the future. Russia�s future and our
success depend on people�s education and health and their desire to improve
themselves and make use of their skills and talents. I am not saying this
because presidential elections are just around the corner. This is not a
campaign slogan. This is vital for our country�s development. Russia�s future
depends on our citizens� enthusiasm for innovation and on the fruit of the
labors of each and every individual.
"Political
parties must not forget their immense responsibility for Russia�s future, for
the nation�s unity and for our country�s stable development. No matter how
fierce the political battles and no matter how irreconcilable the differences
between parties might be, they are never worth so much as to bring the country
to the brink of chaos. Irresponsible demagogy and attempts to divide society
and use foreign help or intervention in domestic political struggles are not
only immoral but are illegal. They belittle our people�s dignity and undermine
our democratic state. Russia�s political system must not only be in accordance
with our national political culture but should develop together with it. Then
it will be both flexible and stable.�
Rice-minded arrogance
Much of the world�s mainstream media outlets focused their
attention on the last two pages of Putin�s remarks in which he bluntly, but not
surprisingly, indicated that Russia would respond to further military
encroachments by the United States -- and its NATO partners -- by
re-engineering its national security apparatus to counter US/NATO plans to
encircle the Russian Federation with a ring of tripwire military bases. With
its hand forced, Putin said that �Russia has a response to these new challenges
and it always will.� He went on to say, �The use of new technology calls for a rethinking
of strategy in the way our Armed Forces are organized. After all, new
breakthroughs in bio-, nano-, and information technology could lead to
revolutionary changes in weapons and defense.�
Officials from the US State Department, the Pentagon, US
defense industry -- and the many think tanks/interest groups they rely on --
have carefully deconstructed and reconstructed President Putin's comments on
national defense.
Their considered -- and predictable -- recommendations on
Putin's remarks reads something like this: The US national security strategy of
provoking Russia, and much of the rest of the planet, has been successful. Said
provocation has produced additional and in some cases unforeseen threats, as
the Putin speech demonstrates. Therefore, the out-year budget planning is
already dated and inadequate for the previously anticipated threat scenario. To
meet new and as yet undefined threats posed by the Russians -- and the world --
an increase in funding requests next year is an absolute certainty. We must
lobby the US Congress and convince the US public that an increase in program
funding for all the US military services and their contractors is essential to
counter this new Russian belligerency and other threats we cannot at this time
predict.
Right on schedule, the marketing campaign kicked-off. Last
Wednesday, US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had this to say about Putin.
�The unhelpful [remarks] and really, I will use a different word, reprehensible
rhetoric that is coming out of Moscow is unacceptable.�
Unacceptable? Who does she think she�s talking to?
Soviet model or Chinese
Communist model
Rice�s flippant statement is yet another example of the F***! You! US national security policy
-- an in-your-face mandate to corporatize and militarize the state for
neocolonialist ends. This incendiary national policy has been wonderful for
those who want to turn the state into a for-profit enterprise. As such, when
Putin talks tough -- because US national security strategy compels him to -- he
ends up providing the rationale for US corporatists/militarists who want to
perpetually develop and market new weapons platforms, increase the
centralization of national security systems to monitor public opposition, and
use the state to justify shady practices (retroactively too!) from preemptive
intervention and torture to US central bank policies that sanction Wall
Street�s appetite for the roulette wheel.
It�s tough to gauge whether those in power in the USA -- and
the many who are now seeking elected and appointed office -- want to turn the
US state into a capitalist version of the former Soviet Union or today�s
Communist China with its capitalist face. Perhaps they want the best of both.
Whatever designs they have, this much is certain: 1) the continued corporate
takeover -- encourage by the three branches of the US government -- of the
state�s social, education, infrastructure and security functions, to include
resource assets; 2) increased militarization of the US economy; 3) bigger
defense budgets for kinetic overkill platforms for land, sea, space that ignore
William Lind�s Nth Generation Warfare principles and take up a greater
percentage of US GDP; 4) unprecedented expansion and centralization of domestic
surveillance and homeland security activities; 5) widening income disparity and
cost-of-living; 6) ignorance of America�s story -- its good, bad, and ugly
history -- as it has struggled to live up to the ideals embodied in the US
Declaration of Independence and US Constitution; 7) loss of national and global
identity; 8) painful economic collapse/financial insolvency -- a dramatic
replay of the Soviet Union�s end -- that terminates the American Nation State;
9) violent anarchy as the state fails, the population disburses and pledges
allegiance to whatever group or individual can provide food, shelter, clothing
and security.
Putin offers a sensible means to avoid a nasty end.
John
Stanton is a Virginia based writer specializing in national security and
political affairs. His most recent book is "Talking Politics with God
and the Devil in Washington, DC." Reach him at cioran123@yahoo.com.