Vladimir Putin’s interview with ‘Bild’: what we learn from comparative textual analysis

Cold intellectual superiority would not have had the effect on Putin’s interlocutors that his going the extra mile and reaching out to them in German did, all the more so in an area of high culture that revealed his respect. This was in counterpoint to his critical words at the start of the interview about the unconstructive role played by Bild and the German media generally

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Trump and ‘The National Review’: we are defined by our enemies

What follows is not an unqualified endorsement of Donald Trump for the November elections. But it is a call to reason among American intellectuals who are as skeptical of voting for a populist, one of the unwashed, as the Russian intelligentsia is skeptical of their country’s own populist, Vladimir Putin.

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European Values and ‘Nomenklatura’

The new confrontation over European Values between Poland and Brussels acting as the proxy for Berlin relates nominally to new Polish laws giving the government the power to appoint chiefs of civil service departments including the chiefs of the public media. It is, simply put, legalizing patronage or ‘Nomenklatura’ practices, but when the media is frankly and openly part of this patronage, official Europe gets very huffy.

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‘Foreign Affairs’ magazine editor loses his marbles: publishes call for end to sanctions

Though the latest issue of Foreign Affairs shows continuing decline in professional standards, it has upside surprises that the editors may yet regret. In a newsworthy essay, by hit or miss, the author rejects current U.S. policy on Russia for its abject failure to deliver on expectations.

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Russian Documentary Film: ‘World Order.’ Its not so hidden message and its relevance to the US presidential campaign, for those who care to pay proper attention

If ‘World Order’ is a piece of propaganda, it is sophisticated and serves certain higher values, not the interests of individuals or power for power’s sake. In effect, it is a wake-up call to avert nuclear war by reining in exceptionalism and safeguarding the principles of the UN Charter.

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Overview of German Press Reports on the Russian-Turkish Confrontation

The leading German print publications are today largely hostile in their reporting on Russian foreign policy, at best noncommittal. For mainstream, Russia is a country which invents foreign enemies to suit current domestic needs and changes them at will. Above all, there is a German confidence in its own superiority and bemusement at the follies of the barbarians at the outer limits of the EU.

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