It doesnât take much in our media system to be labeled a âPutin apologistâ or âpro-Russia.â In this New Cold War, even suggesting that the official enemy is not Hitlerian or completely irrational could earn ridicule and attack.
After the largely stalled Ukrainian counteroffensive against the Russian occupation, conditions on the front have hardened into what many observers describe as a âstalemate.â Like virtually all wars, the Russo-Ukrainian War will end with a negotiated settlement, and the quicker it happens, the quicker the bodies will stop piling up.
Despite this, anyone who advocates actually pursuing negotiations is immediately attacked. The New York Times (8/27/23) did this in an article about former French President Nicolas Sarkozy, in an article that argued he âgives a voice to obstinate Russian sympathies.â The Times wrote:
In interviews coinciding with the publication of a memoir, Mr. Sarkozy, who was president from 2007 to 2012, said that reversing Russiaâs annexation of Crimea was âillusory,â ruled out Ukraine joining the European Union or NATO because it must remain âneutral,â and insisted that Russia and France âneed each other.â
âPeople tell me Vladimir Putin isnât the same man that I met. I donât find that convincing. Iâve had tens of conversations with him. He is not irrational,â he told Le Figaro. âEuropean interests arenât aligned with American interests this time,â he added.
To Times writer Roger Cohen, Sarkozyâs remarks âunderscored the strength of the lingering pockets of pro-Putin sympathy that persist in Europe,â which persist despite Europeâs âunified stand against Russia.â Cohen didnât challenge or rebut anything the former president saidâhe merely quoted the words, labeled them âpro-Putin,â and moved on.
The New Cold War mentality has encouraged a new wave of McCarthyite attacks against anyone who dissents against the establishment status quo. Merely pointing out that Putin is ânot irrationalâ flies in the face of the accepted conventional wisdom that Putin is a Hitler-like madman hell bent on conquering Eastern Europe. That conventional wisdom is what allows calls for negotiation to be dismissed without any serious discussion, and challenging that wisdom elicits harsh reactions from establishment voices.
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Source: Popularresistance.org











