That the United States, UK, Australia, etc. are being hypocritical is correct.
So what?
Again, do you expect them not to be?
It's not like the Russian government is innocent of hypocrisy. It's not like any national government is. Why do you have this expectation that certain countries (and only those countries) should be adverse to hypocrisy? That seems, ironically, hypocritical.
And yet my country has far more of a say over it than yours.
That's a hell of an assumption, why would you assume that?
My country has far closer economic ties to Russia than yours does. My current government has historically been much closer to Russia than yours, largely because Russia has considerable influence in
my country's politics.
I don't think you understand the situation in Europe at all.
I criticize the structures I'm in not because of how they affect me but because of how I can potentially affect them, how I am in some small way responsible for them.
You are responsible for your support of the Russian government.
You are far, far more responsible for that than you are for any of America's actions in the world. At best, you are merely the coincidental beneficiary of those.
You are making this your business, so take responsibility.
This "Americentrism" argument seems like a favorite line of yours, but to be honest it's absolutely ludicrous from someone who seems most often to be directing bile at the State Department target du jour, if anyone.
I don't think you read my posts then, or have the slightest clue who I am.
I also don't think you realise that you are demonstrating my point for me. If you automatically believe that any country the state department doesn't like must be a peaceful victim of imperialism who must be defended and never criticized in any way, what you're actually admitting is that your entire worldview is centred on the US. The actual, real world outside of the US seems basically irrelevant to you, all that matters is the perception from the US.
Let me tell you why I don't like this. It's one thing to recognize that the US exerts a global hegemony, or that the US government likes to imagine itself as the global metropole. It is another thing to accept that this self-perception is true, that the USA is the centre of the political world, that the US government is the only agentive force on the planet, that all other nations exist only as side characters in relation to the USA, the global protagonist.
That isn't the anti-Imperialist position you think it is, it doesn't counter the idea that Imperialism works or is a desirable and natural arrangement of geopolitics, it just seems like you're mad that the existing global hegemon isn't benevolent enough. Do you think that's going to change anything? Do you think anyone cares about how mean the USA is to people
you agree don't actually matter?
The reality is, imperialism isn't bad because the USA is a bad country who is doing it wrong (unlike Russia whose imperialism is justified and benevolent as a form of self-defence against the bad imperialism) it's bad because the mechanisms of imperialism are fundamentally abusive regardless of doing them, but, perhaps even more importantly, it's bad because it represents a worldview that is simply incorrect and has never worked. The people outside the metropole are just as real, just as agentive and just as capable of action as the people within it.
You literally described them as lacking large degrees of diplomatic freedom because they lack military force.
No, I very specifically didn't.
I pointed out that these governments have their own interests, as all governments do, and that the interests of those governments align with the USA. That doesn't mean they are being forced to do anything, kind of the opposite in fact.
France, the UK, Japan, Germany all have significantly higher GDP than Russia. Even Australia has similar GDP to Russia. The relative lack of military readiness in these countries is a choice, and one that will probably change dramatically within the next decade or two thanks to what is happening now. Ironically, the US has been pushing for European countries to increase their military readiness and contribute more to their own defence for a long time, and Russia has likely created a situation in which that will happen. We are probably going to witness an era of significantly greater militarization in Europe, likely at the expense of non-military government expenditure.
But hey, at least we'll get the
FREEDOM to make our own foreign policy decisions. Service guarantees citizenship!
Yeah, you just buy what the millionaires speaking on behalf of billionaires say. Very compelling!
Unlike you, who buys what different millionaires are speaking on behalf of the same billionaires. So alternative and rebellious!
And offered debt relief from the IMF who wanted to enact harsh austerity measures like those against Greece. Are you trying to be misleading?
For someone who claims to be uniquely and especially above all the propaganda, you say a lot of things which are outright wrong.
Firstly, Russia is a member of the IMF.
Secondly, in 2014 Ukraine was seeking a
loan from the IMF. The austerity conditions you are describing were a condition of that loan. The Ukrainian government had sold billions of dollars worth of bonds to the Russian government in 2013, that was the debt being relieved.
In 2015, most foreign governments agreed to write off Ukraine's debts, citing the financial impact of the transitional period. The exception was Russia. Ukraine defaulted on its debts to Russia. Russia actually took this case to court in the UK, and it is still ongoing.
It's bad, why would you think otherwise?
How dare you! Don't you see that Russia is entitled to defend itself against the US empire and that exploiting foreign debt to maintain influence over other countries is anti-Imperialist praxis! Do you even believe in protecting countries against imperialist domination by the USA?
It's just like my favourite movie, Star Wars!