The Russian poet Yevgeny Yevtushenko died on April 1 at the age of 84. In April 1987, exactly 30 years ago, The Progressive published this interview with Yevtushenko by Katrina vanden Huevel (at the time assistant editor, and now editor and publisher of The Nation).
Analysis
Stephen Cohen: The US and NATO Are Escalating Their Assault on John Kerry’s Diplomacy at Sochi
ACEWA Founding Board Member Stephen F. Cohen and John Batchelor continue their weekly discussion of the broadening US-Russian cold war and confrontation over Ukraine. The main focus is on escalating challenges to the agreement reached by Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian President Vladimir Putin, in Sochi in May to implement the Minsk plan for ending the Ukrainian civil war through negotiations.
Top Ten Origins: The Best Moments in U.S.-Russian Relations (Pietro Shakarian)
Have the U.S. and Russia always been “enemies” as American political and media elites contend? History tells us otherwise.
Amb. Jack Matlock on The Ukrainian Crisis: Reflections on Power in Today’s World
On June 11, Ambassador Jack Matlock delivered the 2015 Fulbright Lecture at the University of Edinburgh. In it the Ambassador and ACEWA Founding Board Member observes that the Cold War ended by negotiation, not by the victory of one side. Nevertheless, the unfounded triumphalism by the “West,” and the exaggerated Russian reaction to it has produced a new, cold-war-type confrontation over the governance and orientation of Ukraine.
VIDEO: Stephen F. Cohen Talks To Tucker Carlson About The Senate’s Hearings On Russian Interference (FOX News)
Professor Emeritus of Russian Studies at Princeton and NYU, Stephen F. Cohen, talks to Tucker Carlson about the largely evidence free allegations made by witnesses who appeared before the Senate Permanent Select Intelligence Committee on Thursday, March 30.
American Hawks Should Stop Flattering Themselves: They’re Not Playing A Great Game With Putin
Days before his death on February 8, 1725, Tsar Peter the Great gave his last will and testament. He exhorted his successors to fulfill Russia’s destiny and conquer the world. The keys to this great endeavor were Constantinople and India, the former for its symbolism and the latter for its wealth.
Neither the actual records nor documentation of Peter’s instructions have ever been found. It is likely that he never issued those deathbed commands. Yet, the legend has endured.
Conspiracy Theorists Welcome in Corporate Media–if They Have the Right Targets (Adam Johnson)
With her rise to prominence as a commentator on the Trump/Russia story, and seemingly dozens of editors and producers giving her their tacit approval, one is compelled to ask: What exactly would Louise Mensch have to say to be discredited?
In Europe’s Other ‘Divorce,’ Ukraine Loses To Russia … Again (Forbes)
As the world focuses on the “divorce” between the U.K. and E.U., another divorce court hearing for two other former partners was handed down today in London. In Ukraine vs. Russia on Wednesday, a U.K. court said Kiev still owes the Russians a cool $3 billion.
The UN’s Nuclear Weapon Talks May Be The Most Important Thing Nobody’s Paying Attention To (Huffington Post)
Over protests from the U.S. and other nuclear powers, more than 120 countries began work on a treaty at the United Nations this week with the aim of banishing nuclear weapons from the face and the oceans of the earth.
The blockade of separatist-held Donbas
The desire of many Ukrainian politicians to “seal off” rebel-held territories in the Donbas may be coming to pass. The head of Poroshenko’s bloc in parliament, Yury Lutsenko, has declared that the president desires to extend the present automotive blockade of the so-called Luhansk Peoples Republic to all separatist held territories. Passage into them will be possible only by foot or compact car.
PODCAST: The Sovietization of the American Political-Media Establishment? (Stephen F. Cohen)
Nation contributing editor Stephen F. Cohen and John Batchelor continue their weekly discussions of the new US-Russian Cold War. (Previous installments, now in their fourth year, are at TheNation.com.) Batchelor begins by recalling the early 1950s, when President Eisenhower finally ended Senator Joseph McCarthy’s hunt for Communists in the US government.
The Surveillance State Behind Russia-gate (William Binney, Ray McGovern)
Amid the frenzy over the Trump team’s talks with Russians, are we missing a darker story, how the Deep State’s surveillance powers control the nation’s leaders, ask U.S. intelligence veterans Ray McGovern and Bill Binney.
Why Arming Ukraine Is a Really Bad Idea
Renewed fighting in Ukraine has in turn renewed calls to arm Ukraine, including in the United States Congress. Yet there is an enormous and largely unacknowledged flaw in the argument to provide the Kiev government with lethal weapons
We Can’t Afford to Lose U.S.-Russian Nuclear Cooperation (Nicolai Petro, Josh Cohen)
In the rancorous aftermath of the 2016 presidential election, Russia is often depicted as the greatest national-security threat facing the United States. The intense heat generated by the current scandals, however, is blinding us to the fact that cooperation with Russia on nuclear issues is still very much in America’s interests.
Confronting Russia Holds Peril for U.S.
It could have been President Obama issuing a firm warning — measured, devoid of bellicose threats — to President Vladimir V. Putin that the West would keep the pressure on as long as Russia interfered with Ukraine’s sovereignty. Instead, it was Jeb Bush, the former Florida governor and a leading 2016 Republican presidential aspirant, speaking at a news conference in Berlin on Wednesday.
Bill Bradley: 5 Steps for Peace in Ukraine
As the West pursues renewed negotiations with Russia over the Ukraine crisis, these negotiations should not be expected to produce simply a series of Russian concessions. To this suggestion hard-liners in the West will inevitably characterize such thinking as “appeasement.” But compromise is not the same thing as appeasement, especially considering that Putin appears more a tactical opportunist than a strategic warmonger. Providing Russia a sense of territorial security by promising not to expand NATO to Ukraine or Georgia will eliminate the major excuse for expansionist aggression that Putin offers to his people.
Does Russia Have a Future?
The break-up of the Soviet Union smashes the mold of conceptualization of empire. It is the only case I can think of where the nation supposedly running the show was among the first to abandon ship and opt for sovereignty….
Don’t Fight Their Lies With Lies of Your Own (Masha Gessen)
This past Monday, Adam Schiff, the ranking Democrat on the House Intelligence Committee, opened a hearing on Russian interference in the election with a speech that seamlessly mixed verified information with rumor and exaggeration
Arrests and Accountability (Paul Robinson)
As might be expected, the arrest of about 900 protestors in Moscow on Sunday is being used to paint the Russian authorities as particularly authoritarian. This accusation is missing the point. Mass arrests of protestors aren’t a uniquely Russian phenomenon
CNN’s Special Report On Putin Uses Media Echo Chamber To Attack Trump (Paul Saunders)
Ultimately, the program’s treatment of Clinton and Trump (and Bush, for that matter), makes it difficult to escape the conclusion that Zakaria himself is the source of the superficiality and bias in “The Most Powerful Man in the World.”