Election fraud allegations will erode Putin’s legitimacy | Russia | Al Jazeera
https://www.aljazeera.com/opinions/2021/9/22/election-fraud-allegations-will-erode-putins-legitimacy
@kravietz Perhaps you are right, but Navalny seems like a right-wing CIA/MI6 puppet like Juan Guaidó. A tool in the regime change warfare.
If there was a slightest hint of Navalny being controlled by a foreign power, you'd have Russian state media all over it for the last year. Instead, they sentenced him based on a decade-old economic case where his and his brother's crime was making profit on sales of wood. And the direct pretext for his jailing this time was that he wasn't present at the probation office while he was unconscious in a hospital due to poisoning by FSB.
@modrobert Murad Gazdiev and RT just recently published a video of alleged ODIHR "training for Russian opposition" that was set up so lame that even pro-government journalists were embarrassed. A couple of years ago they also produced an "intercept of CIA agents planning MH17 bombing" that resulted in similar facepalms (and even there they managed to include Navalny). So you should definitely take whatever RT posts with a pinch of salt.
@kravietz I have no doubt Putin go after his political opponents, but have serious doubts about Navalny. Perhaps I'm biased due to his neo-nazi background.
But he has no neo-nazi background. Once again, this is something that has been invented relatively recently by RT - they inflated a few of his comments from >10 years ago where he was critical of immigrants from Caucasus. His views back then could have been described as "nationalist" but even that would be a far stretch. You could say Dmitry Rogozin, a prominent Kremlin politicians and head of Roscosmos, has way more "neo-nazi" background than Navalny but somehow RT doesn't care.
And then you have Margarita Simonyan, head of RT, accusing Navalny of being "neo-nazi" because of his 2011 comments, while she makes rather disgusting and openly racist comments on regular basis - her husband made a whole racist sketch about Obama, she defended him and argued about "criminal negroes" being a plague in the US.
@kravietz I'm pretty sure the reason for leaking the footage of Navalny's organization taking money from MI6 was to hang him out and make him look bad, but all the persons involved are named, so it's pretty hard to dismiss as evidence, regardless of what you think about RT.
Then you have Ashurkov who is asking for money, and you have Ford barely saying anything apart from "yes, yes".
And that's it - there's *nothing* else in the video, all the rest is RT narrative.
Can you now see how you were manipulated into believing what you saw was:
> footage of Navalny's organization taking money from MI6
@kravietz No, I don't see any manipulation except story bias, if this video leak was fake it would have been debunked all over western mainstream media, but it was not mentioned anywhere except RT and perhaps push back (or grayzone).
@kravietz Think I found the reason Navalny was initially being considered "useful" to the US: https://wikileaks.org/plusd/cables/08MOSCOW2632_a.html
"The West" doesn't care - US and Europe happily trade with Kremlin and buy their oil and gas. Germany just completed a new pipeline from Gazprom, Poland imports most of its coal from Russia, so someone lied to you.
The point Navalny was investigating in all of his publications was specifically that the massive amounts of money generated by Russian gas and oil industry is being stolen and turned into luxurious mansions, yachts and lavish lifestyle by people close to Kremlin.
@kravietz Yes, I did read the article, and Navalny is a perfect pawn for the NATO agenda to undermine Russia, regardless of his own intentions being pure or not. Since when did NATO ever care about what happens to the people of countries after their regime change efforts? Recent examples are Afghanistan, Syria, Libya and Iraq.
Which Russia you think he's "undermining" exactly?
Because your logic seems to assume anything good for Putin is good for everyone in Russia, and any criticism of Putin is criticism of Russia as a whole.
Did that apply to Trump as well? Was criticism of Trump "undermining of USA"? Why not? And why are you then not applying the same standards to Putin and Russia?
@kravietz On the contrary, I'm hoping the Russian people get whatever president they vote for, ideally without corruption. I also hope that the candidate who gets elected is disliked by the west, because that means the Russian people have a chance of not getting their country taken over and destroyed.
@kravietz I do agree with you on this point about the oil industry investigation, and changed my views slightly about his background, but it also reinforced the case for him being used by the west.
If you like any of my comments you're free to quote them and use them for your own purposes, aren't you? But this doesn't mean you control me or made me post these comments. So yes, those in Russia and Europe who don't like Putin are naturally quoting Navalny and others, but it doesn't mean they control him. They may even make donations to FBK, as thousands of people did, but then — so what? If donate to FBK I'm not event free to tell him what to investigate next.
@kravietz I'm not trying to control you, or make you post anything. I was under the impression we had a discussion. We agree about some things, and also disagree, feels normal.
That was figurative, not statement of fact. I don't mean you control me — I'm giving an example, if you liked my comments and quoted them, it wouldn't be you controlling me. Same story with Navalny & Western media.
@kravietz Lets say Navalny gets out of prison, he continues his political goals and finally become president of Russia. Now what? The Russian oligarchs will be replaced by Western oligarchs (corporations) as the free market opens up more, but people in general will remain poor.
This again assumes Navalny is the only opposition politician in Russia, and that he will be somehow automatically made president to replace Putin.
He won't. Or he will, we don't know. In most countries this is decided in elections, and the most fierce fight for presidency we just saw recently in the US.
But there *was* that fight in the US. And the problem of Russia is not Putin or Navalny, but that after 1999 there was no way to tell any of them "you're wrong, go away".
@kravietz Interesting you brought up the election in USA, because if they really had democracy there it would most likely be a peaceful and prosperous country, but they have been controlled by the MIC (Military Industrial Complex) for several decades, maybe even longer, through lobbying and campaign donations (legalized corruption). Without war the only traditional industry they have left, defense/military with domestic production can't survive, so they will have to find new countries to invade and more military bases (besides the 800 based they currently have abroad).
Nonetheless, Americans had the freedom of first electing Trump and then removing him in elections. They changed their Congress completely as well. Russians didn't have this freedom since 1999.
@kravietz The president doesn't have much power in USA, that's one of the reasons not much changes between elections. If you want to know where the power is, follow the money. A good read on the subject is 'Giants' by Peter Phillips. The permanent state is controlled by oligarchs.
@modrobert
I can only say it's rather inconsistent for someone who quotes World Socialist Website to then engage in a fierce defence of current Kremlin oligarchs.
Go and *actually* read the WSWS article you referenced - they are equally critical of Navalny as the Kremlin oligarchic rule that exploits Russian resources and leads to massive income inequality.
Wikileaks cable actually describes Navalny inquiry into *exactly* the same issues - the corruption and theft in largest oil companies.