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tv   Politicking  RT  December 27, 2019 5:30pm-6:01pm EST

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in russia itself in the and i'm speaking now the people me very the people in russia who study the united states they're my counterparts russia they study the united states they interpret these charges against trump as being logged because trump ran and he was elected on a program of quote cooperating with russia in fact i recall vividly you and i doing an interview together and we were both struck by trump's promise that he would cooperate with russia at that time i guess it was 216 the cold war was heating up and that was unusual and i took the position with you know i was not a trump person that that was a good thing but in russia today and i follow this de lay on the on the television and in the newspapers there is this belief among the people who care about american
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russian relations that all this grief and all these charges against trump originated because he wanted to cooperate with russia in other words that these it originated with the enemies of what our generation mary used to call detente there is substantial truth in that i don't think it's the whole truth but that's the way it's viewed in russia there's one other thing i'll mention to you and then i'll stop among young people i mean people that say 18 to 35 from my point of view that's young. there's a disillusionment because these people many of whom were very pro-american they wanted russia to become more like america but now they read every day about allegations that our intelligence agencies have been off the reservation have been manipulating american politics have been doing bad things well they grew up in a system where that's what the russian intelligence agencies do so they had thought
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unlike in russia. since agencies don't do that in america now they're being told not by russia but by american news reports which are broadcast in russia that that's happening here so the reaction in russia is i would say very profound. steven cohen feel about the debate that was held in congress when john murtha veteran republican told his colleagues that someone resurrect now president putin is laughing at us you do that no it's an absolute profound misunderstanding of who putin is and what he wants and i can speak with some authority on this because for quite a long time i've made putin and his leadership a special topic of my study putin came to power in 2000. in a country that had been ruined by the worst peacetime depression in history russia
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was in an economic ruin nation and putin's mission and he spoke about this often was to preside over russia's recovery at home. a men were dying of 57 years old at that time larry you and i would be pushing the daisies by now to restore to russia at home a lifestyle a a stability that had been lost in the 1990 s. and thereby reposition russia it's true as a great power which it's always been on the world stage that is been prudence mission to achieve that mission he has said repeatedly he wants and i use his words modernizing partnerships with the west he wants a stable west that is trading with russia. 1st and foremost he has in mind europe because putin is a european man in europe particularly germany has enormous trade with russia but he
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also had in mind the united states therefore instability in american russian relations the accusations that putin is attacking america which is utter nonsense this is an authentic role it's the opposite of how putin sees his own mission and it's been a serious setback for him as he tries to formulate policy at home and abroad so he doesn't like any of this is stephen cohen in andy trumpery. boy that's a hard question one i can remember it must have been in 216 that you and i did this interview where trump and said he wanted to cooperate with russia and i said gosh that's interesting nobody else is saying that that's a good thing but it's going to bring trump a lot of grief and of course he has. i didn't vote for president trump and i would have to see who the democratic candidate is to know who i vote for in
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2020 but i 100 percent support trump's ongoing continuing 3 year policy of cooperating with russia which for some reason because there's nothing to these russia gate charges i mean nothing's been there was all fiction from the beginning i support trump's persistence and you got to get you got to admit that he's taken a lot of blows he's been caught it's been called treasonous but he persists i mean he had a lover off the soviet foreign minister in the white house in the oval office who was a week ago i think and the press was horrible called it treason but trump is just determined to have this cooperative relationship with russia and that in that regard i support president trump and other regards probably not how do you wash it is the question is here's the problem for people such as you and me we grew up
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knowing we should be one issue political voters right don't just take one issue but i am fixated on the dangers in american russian relations i think are very dangerous so that to the extent that she appears to be determined to reduce those dangers i support him in that regard how do you explain that from putin the relationship. well you know this is very funny because last night i read in a newspaper that trump has said all these remarkably affectionate i think they use those words affectionate words about putin and i have a file at home which is called trump on putin putin on trumped you know things they said about each other the only thing that i can find that trump everest's had in a really positive way about putin was and i remember when he said it he said putin is a strong leader well that's true what is he supposed to say putin's a weak leader that would be untrue i don't find that pandering or subversive or
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treasonous i mean what do we want i mean it's almost as though we're no longer grown up do we want the president of the united states to curse at the occupant of the kremlin the other superpower i mean ever since the advent of atomic weapons and president eisenhower every american president has attempted to do diplomacy with whoever sits in the kremlin to keep us safe from war conceivably nuclear war and we applauded that and by the way larry here's an interesting thing. the biggest episodes of what we call detente that is cooperating with the kremlin were presided over by republican presidents right eisenhower correct nixon and finally ronald reagan who had the biggest cooperation detente of all so you could argue though i'm not sure trump's aware of this but he ought to say something about it he
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is squarely in the republican tradition of cooperating with what has what has food and said publicly about. not very much meaning he gets a kind of smirk and wicked grin on his face when reporters ask him questions about whether he and trump have some secret relationship based on collusion i mean i think putin thinks it's preposterous because the he knows there's no secret diplomacy or i should say secret diplomacy because there has to be secret diplomacy let me give you an example that happened just just this week so there is this demand that trump print publish make known the notes of his conversation with putin the last time they met correct i think it was in helsinki you know this scandal they're now demanding in on television in congress that they publish these notes but this is impossible private diplomacy between the leaders of
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the united states and russia have kept us safe since the advent of nuclear weapons they have to be able to have private conversations why because always always there are the enemies of detente in moscow and washington who will attack will leader for doing cooperation so i find it preposterous i find it not in america's national interest i find it childish this notion that everything putin trump say to each other should be published we don't demand that when when the president talked to the president of france mccraw on and mccraw as i am you are pushing now for a soft policy where you are were you appalled at russia's invasion of the ukraine you know that the problem with this being that i wasn't appalled no i think that they had choices that they decided not to take but
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b we got to remember good we have to remember back what is it 5 almost 6 years now . 2014. the elected const he may have been a bad guy janak overage what he was constitutionally legally elected president of ukraine and he was overthrown by a mob i don't care what democratic slogans were on their banners it was a mob he fled they were storming his residence he fled to russia it appeared at that point that ukraine would renege on it on russia's lease of its most important naval base of a stop all that was a dire threat the russian national security so russia's reaction to that did not surprise me now i know from people who know because they have friends who work in the kremlin that putin had options and he debated him but he thought it was an
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accidental decision he had to protect the russian naval bases of a stoppel and i think i mean it's not a question of whether i approve of it question is do i understand it and i do understand it and i think any russian leader even the ones we like and think are democrats would have had no chose choice but to do or putin did you tell us steve professor emeritus of politics at princeton we're discussing russia the united states the ukraine and we'll be right back after this break.
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aeroflot russian and lights. you know world a big part of the lot and conspiracy it's time to wake up to dig deeper to hit the stories that mainstream media refuses to tell more than ever we need to be smarter we need to stop slamming the door on the bad shouting past each other it's time for critical thinking it's time to fight for the middle for the truth the time is now we're watching closely watching the hawks.
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aeroflot russian and lights. go close to something to see the silver. blows. soon you will. join me every thursday on the alex salmond show and i'll be speaking to guest of the world of politics sports business i'm showbusiness i'll see that.
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today there are good terrorists and bad editors the bad news in yemen the united states deems to be a threat the good those who work in syria the cia and the u.s. military were engaged in covert actions really throughout the world. where they were assassinating populist leaders they were backing up right wing military juntas funding an army just was there's no anymore because there's always a small country or a really good. for profit. pakistan in brazil and the rio de janeiro it's awesome it's beautiful it's gorgeous hey if you are running a country that is an amazing pristine rain forest what would you do if.
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that was stephen cohen russians galo whose latest book war with russia from putin and ukraine to trump the gate he is in new york city ok you sound to me steve as a strong strong maybe a strong. supporter of i've been with putin twice you've never met him. correct. what attracts you to him. it's not i mean it's not my job i mean i've bad been at this larry almost 50 years as a scholar who studies russia it's not never been my job to support one russian leader over another it's been my job to study him comment on him try to
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understand him i will admit there is one exception i came to know me heigho gorbachev and i became very fond of him and he was very kind to me and our families became friends so much so that my then 13 year old daughter thought that gorbachev was his her godfather he wasn't but she got it in her head that this was her godfather because we saw so much of gorbachev and he was so affectionate but apart from the relationship of corba trough i don't support one russian leader or another i have many friends in the russian political class and if i was a russian i might vote for one of them not putin. but it it it's what i do to try to understand russian politics and i have to say that that once venerable profession of studying russian politics has been lost in this country in fact i would submit to you larry think about this then all in all this nonsense about
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russia gate russia itself has been lost i mean we have very few news stories about what's going on in russia itself an enormously important country it's all about the russia gate and the secret ties to trump or somebody else but what's going on in russia do you believe that putin once trumped reelected. you know. i don't know it's. in a in a perfect world trumps cooperate with russia as i said before is the american policy that putin wants on the other hand putin and his advisors on america are absolutely astonished and demoralized by all the scandals that have dragged russia into american politics i guess putin would have to see what the alternative is to see if he preferred somebody else do you then i
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don't think he feels personally wedded to trump do you think he interfered with lection what is interfering metal using. unorthodox unwarranted criminal means to affect how they voted in iowa or no i was living in moscow i'm going to take you back larry because i think we actually did an interview when i was in moscow and talked about it i was living in moscow in 1996 boris yeltsin in the president of russia was up for reelection as he was at about 3 percent and positive approval polls he appeared to have no chance of winning whatsoever that the american government under bill clinton launched a massive financial and on site campaign to get russia reelected to get yeltsin reelected i witnessed that i didn't like it but i was fascinated by
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this this legion of american advisors in american money that descended on moscow compared to that what russia did in the in the 216 election was jaywalking. oh run of the mill stuff i mean we've meddled in each other's politics since the russian revolution i mean after our president woodrow wilson center american troops to fight the russians civil war in 190-1001 thing is that nettle and of course it is we've tried to be involved in iran and russian and in soviet politics for decades usually unsuccessfully it's something both sides do they meddle i don't think what happened in 216 was anything out of the ordinary how you characterize the current state of u.s. ukraine relations.
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the problem here is which ukraine i mean you've got powerful political forces in ukraine. trying to deal both with russia and the united states and it's become an unholy mess. what strikes me and it's kind of it's not yet tragic it may become tragic but it's sad that this rather vaguely new and relatively young president of ukraine zelinsky wright who everybody points out had once been a t.v. comedian becomes elected a pump elected president of ukraine now he ran larry on a program with ending the war with russia he ran on a peace program he was kind of a george mcgovern candidate except that he won. it is his mission it's his political mandate it's what his anyone with about 71 percent of the vote it's what
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his supporters wanted was an end of the war with russia and then to the fighting in dun boss and elsewhere but he has been thwarted primarily because he's been dragged into american politics this is the bad thing so my view is is that all of us including trump including those people who are against trump really should withdraw from ukraine and let zelinsky make his peace with russia he has cards to play he could negotiate putin is ready and waiting we now have this big fight over shipping military more military about 400000000000 i think $380000000000.00 worth of military equipment to ukraine why. why 'd barack obama was pressured do that and he refuse one of the wise decisions obama made as president 1st of all you don't know whose hands those weapons are going to end up with ukraine's one big black market secondly why risk an escalation of the
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fighting what we should want is alinsky to do is to continue this peace process sometimes known as the minsk accord with russia to settle this dispute what's the point of sending more weapons to ukraine which by the way and it's warehouses has plenty of weapons. do you support the. no no no no i don't support the a preacher in trouble for a whole lot of reasons but i think that at the end particularly with elections what 910 months away this is not something that i don't see any crime for which. you know it's compelling to make an impeachment case i've looked at all this stuff in russian here i mean it may have been bad form he had a couple phone calls was a lesbian which could have been better i don't think it got great advisers in the white house some of the people he brought in the white house he didn't like but he brought him in to get the russia gate accusations he brought in hard liners like fiona and john bolton to make it look like he was tough i don't think it's good
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advice but you know i don't i don't you think putin is the most of all men in the world. i mean that would take us to what we mean by powerful. let's change the word to influence will ok in world politics i was certain to say that he's one of and here's what's interesting. partly because of trump's but hey if you're. but partly because putin has been an advocate of negotiating conflicts all the way from syria to ukraine and beyond putin has emerged for european leaders i'm not talking about american as one of the preeminent european statesman now when putin came to power that's what he wanted as i mentioned before so putin's reputation his role in europe is very
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different from what it is here i mean for example i mentioned that trump had the the russian foreign minister sergei lavrov in the white house a perfectly normal playing and there was a big scandal how dare he have the russian foreign minister in the white house or what should we do with the russian foreign minister snub him shoot him the poor name i mean foreign ministers are supposed to negotiate diplomacy in peace so there's now seen as a mainstay of european security that is something new we haven't seen that maybe not the 20th century. that role being played by russia a lot of it has to do with russia's back on its feet but it lot of it has to do with putin and love rauf who is probably the number one foreign minister in the world i mean they're pretty good at what they do diplomacy wise personally stephen . in all the years i've known you to what what what draws you to prove.
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you are fascinated with him what draws you to him. well i don't like the word draw but i am fascinated by them and again it comes back to what happened in russia in the 1990 s. the collapse of the country and when i see the country i mean the lives the professions of my personal friends so many people i know lost their professions so many people had to sell their household belongings because they weren't being paid the reason and i'm going to turn your question around a little bit here putin remains remarkably popular in russia even though inflation even though pensions have been reformed in a way not to the benefit of people even though putin's ratings have dropped he remains remarkably popular people see him. why is he so popular
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one is people don't see an alternative so you understand if they don't have a plausible alternative in front of him then they say yeah i'm proposing but i think it's just lasting gratitude that putin presided over russia's rise from the disaster of the 1990 s. because almost every family in russia including young kids and their grandparents lived through a catastrophe in the 1990 s. and it wasn't putin personally and alone but he built a team of economist and of. people who knew what they were doing and he got russia stabilized back on its feet at home for that every russian i know including ones who don't like putin remain grateful to him. thanks so much for your time to their oars in jail talking thank you very deep in the book is war with russia a question mark from putin in ukraine to trump and russia gates. and that concludes
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this edition of politicking well number you can join the conversation on my facebook page or tweet me kings things and don't forget to use the politicking hash tag and that's all for this edition of fallen sick game. there of russian airlines. you know world a big part of new digs a lot for us and conspiracy it's time to wake up to dig deeper to hit the stories that mainstream media refuses to tell more than ever we need to be smart or we need
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to stop slamming the door on the bath shouting past each other it's time for critical thinking it's time to fight for the middle for the truth the time is now for watching closely watching the hawks. tariff long russian airline it's.
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same here. i can use to snare someone's head is the same camera can use to build them a home but that's a human choosing what to do with that's me expressing my values for the tool and that's what we need to do with artificial intelligence as well. taxes are not going to do it you have to go right to the root of things its assets and debts at the balance sheet balance sheets is what they should talk about and that's where we can be clever because taxation is the dumb why of trying to get the wealth back from the from the wealthy. the washington consensus led by the united states says the liberal world order must be defended at almost all costs said differently the foreign policy blog demands the post cold war you know polar moment to be preserved but alas it would seem a multiple world has already arrived.
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and. wiki leaks cough further down to me please find a report of the alleged chemical attack in the syrian city of duma last year releasing internal documents that suggest a cover up may have taken place. the russian military state to be a missile system meant to combat duty. and 12 people are killed in a plane crash in kazakstan thousands more are being treated in hospital. from a moscow studio where it's just past 2 am you're watching our team to national thank you for joy.

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