Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Vladimir Putin Is No Saint, But G20 Is A Club Full Of Sinners

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Vladimir Putin Is No Saint, But G20 Is A Club Full Of Sinners

    VLADIMIR PUTIN IS NO SAINT, BUT G20 IS A CLUB FULL OF SINNERS

    The Sydney Morning Herald (Australia)
    October 13, 2014 Monday 11:11 AM GMT

    by Michael Pascoe

    The Brisbane G20 meeting is primarily an economic summit, not a
    political or human rights convention. Australia's Prime Minister is
    correct to welcome Vladimir Putin to attend - if he bothers to come.

    The sundry politicians trying to score points over Putin being allowed
    to visit Brisbane are merely highlighting their relevance deprivation.

    On this, the federal opposition leader and the Queensland premier
    are fish on bicycles, tits on a bull.

    If Bill Shorten was somehow Prime Minister next month, he would be
    admitting Putin. Presumably he knows that. As for Campbell Newman,
    we may as well canvas the opinion of the Brisbane Lord Mayor, or any
    man or woman in the street.

    But while Abbott is doing what he has to do as the host Prime Minister,
    it would be helpful if he dropped his own political grandstanding:
    his repeated description of the tragic deaths of those on board MH17 as
    "murder".

    Either that or he should be consistent by calling out the murder
    committed by several other G20 members.

    If the states responsible for genuine murders and those that have
    carried out killings equivalent to the MH17 deaths were excluded,
    the Brisbane meeting would be a much smaller affair.

    It's a fair bet very few people know who makes up the G20.

    Among its least savoury members is a feudal state that regularly
    murders people. Saudi Arabia beheads individuals for the crime of
    sorcery, among other things. Don't try to hold a church service there
    unless it's of the approved variety - the Saudis officially go in for
    a medieval, hard-line interpretation of Islam. It's the country that
    won't even let women drive cars. Adultery? Compared with Saudi Arabia,
    Russia is a bastion of democracy, a beacon of equality, a paragon of
    human rights.

    In some ways, Russia also looks good compared with China, or at
    least rather similar. There is an opposition in Russia. Beijing
    doesn't allow such decadence. China officially kills (as in the death
    sentence) more people than the rest of the world combined - and then
    some. China is only slowly and partially repealing its appalling
    (and economically damaging) one-child policy. You don't have to be
    a Right-to-Lifer to consider cases of near-full-term abortion to be
    murder. Best not mention the occupation of Tibet or the oppression
    of the Uyghur minority. When it comes to encroaching on borders and
    unilaterally taking liberties, ask Vietnam and the Philippines what
    they think of China's South China Sea behaviour.

    Turkey is another G20 member, a wonderful and interesting country,
    a NATO member and, unlike the three already mentioned, a genuine
    democracy. It's in a very tricky position with some extremely
    difficult neighbours, but if you want to start fingering countries
    being responsible for ghastly deaths, it's the one that has not been
    permitting reinforcements for Kobane to cross its border as Daesh
    attacks the city with murderous intent. Turkish tanks stand mute. And
    Turkey is actively supporting some of the worse elements of the Libyan
    anarchy as President Erdogan takes an increasingly interventionist
    and apparently religion-based world view. Turkey also has never shown
    the maturity required to face up to the Armenian genocide. But with
    the 100th anniversary coming up of our failed attempt to invade the
    country, absolutely none of that is to be mentioned.

    Among the democracies (and fifth overall in the world), the greatest
    perpetrator of official killing is the United States, but when it
    comes to terrible deaths similar to the MH17 victims, the US is the
    unchallenged leader this century with a figure well into six figures
    and still rising. I haven't heard an Australian Prime Minister suggest
    an American President was responsible for "murder".

    This is where it's necessary to spell out why the MH17 victims weren't
    "murdered", as Tony Abbott keeps claiming - or agree that the US,
    UK, Australia and others are guilty of the same crime.

    No-one has suggested the pro-Russian side of the Ukrainian war
    intended to shoot down a neutral civilian airliner. They thought
    they were targeting a Ukrainian plane. It was an accident. The MH17
    victims were, to use the cold American euphemism that's now universal,
    collateral damage.

    It was a mistake - and an expensive mistake for Russia as it focussed
    attention for a while on a war that most nations gave little attention
    to. Sanctions were strengthened a touch, in the generally hypocritical
    way such sanctions are imposed .

    When American drones and planes accidentally kill civilians - totally
    innocent children among them - our Prime Minister does not call that
    murder. When Israel, with far greater knowledge of who was on the
    ground, killed children in Gaza, our Prime Minister and did not call
    it murder.

    When the "Coalition of the Willing" rained artillery down on Iraqi
    cities in 2003, the four nations that contributed personnel to the
    invasion knew they were killing innocent civilians. Some would have
    been citizens of other countries. Those four nations were the US,
    UK, Poland and Australia.

    The total civilian death toll in Iraq from the war and the subsequent
    and now increasing mayhem it unleashed is greater than the total number
    of Australians killed in all wars. It has been a most dreadful accident
    based on intelligence as bad or worse than that which led someone to
    fire a missile at a plane that turned out to be a Malaysian airliner.

    So please drop the cheap "murder" rhetoric. It might play well in the
    domestic polls and sound heroic - "we warn the Tsar" - but it's wrong.

    The Russian leadership is dreadful, a paranoid, corrupt and brutal
    kleptocracy that betrays and kills its own people, never mind the
    neighbours. It unconscionably throws its weight around in its perceived
    sphere of influence, the way major powers have always done.

    If Australia enjoyed independent foreign policy based on principle
    and we didn't rush to join wrong wars (Vietnam, Iraq 2), we would be
    free to condemn all such behaviour without the taint of hypocrisy.

    But the G20 meeting is not about the great and good, about justice
    and the human rights.

    It's about collective economic self-interest. And that, if it's
    successful, will make life better for billions of people.

    Thus the occasional thug and despot has to be accepted in the mix for
    the greater good. Exclude them and the nations that have made fatal
    mistakes, there would be no meeting.

    Michael Pascoe is a BusinessDay contributing editor

    http://www.smh.com.au/business/comment-and-analysis/vladimir-putin-is-no-saint-but-g20-is-a-club-full-of-sinners-20141013-1155yz.html

Working...
X