The recent festival of big Western politics – which began with a meeting of the European Council, continued with the G7 Summit, and ended with a major NATO gathering – provides plenty of food for thought about the fate of the world.

On the surface, what we have seen is impressive: The West is showing unprecedented unity in the face of the Russian campaign in Ukraine. America has gathered almost all of its allies.

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Right now, from Australia to Norway, from Singapore to Portugal, and from Japan to Iceland, the agenda is the same – to prevent the success of Russian President Vladimir Putin, who represents a rejection of the so-called ‘rules-based order’.

The brutality and irreversibility of what is happening in Ukraine gives the situation the character of a moral choice.

Almost all statements from Western leaders refer to a confrontation between civilization and barbarism. Accordingly, they believe, there should be no doubt about which side to take.

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The Western community has now reached maximum capacity – its European flank (EU and NATO members plus Ukraine and Moldova), its Asian club (South Korea, Japan, and Singapore stopped wavering and took the ‘right’ side), the Oceania pairing, and of course, North America. The ‘free world’ has never been so vast.

In fact, the topic of the limits of Western influence stems from the notorious concept of the ‘end of history’, which is already so worn out that it is even inconvenient to bring it up.

How things actually played out after the collapse of the USSR is well known, and despite the fact that numerous crises in developed countries have dimmed the view of the expected path of development, the system has been preserved – and no one has yet come close to the Western world in terms of well-being and comfort.

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And the Western media still has a near-monopoly on determining the picture of what is happening on a global scale. This means it has a huge head start. But the limit seems to have been reached.

The non-Western world knows perfectly well that wars on the planet have never stopped, including in the last 30 years, and statements from the EU states about the era of ‘harmony and prosperity’ that Putin interrupted are perceived as both selfishness and hypocrisy.

Telling people in the Middle East, for example, that Russia has violated every conceivable moral standard is, to put it mildly, difficult in light of what the region has experienced since the Cold War ended.

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The reaction of the majority of the planet illustrates their irritation with the West as a whole. It is perceived as a hegemony with a colonial history which is always abusing its powers.

The reason is not support for Russia’s actions, but opposition to the West’s attempts to impose its will on others, which often harms their own interests.

Also, schadenfreude over America’s failed attempts to impose its will compensates for any doubts about the legitimacy of Moscow’s actions. In other words, it’s not about sympathy for Russia, but antipathy to the West.

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Western leaders are both surprised and alarmed by this situation. If the initial calls to join the boycott of Russia amounted to orders, now the demands have been replaced by exhortations and attempts to promise something in return.

The selection of the G7 Summit guests – the presidents of India, Indonesia, Senegal, Argentina, and South Africa – is indicative. The invited parties were warmly welcomed. Everyone was in a hurry to tap Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi on the shoulder and give him attention.

But apart from general statements, nothing happened. And almost in parallel with the events in Europe, Modi participated in a virtual BRICS summit, and Argentina, it seems, together with Iran, has applied to join this emerging association.

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The position of non-Western states is dictated not only by anti-colonial instincts, although they do exist. More importantly, in the new conditions, it is difficult for the West to offer the leading countries of the rest of the world anything that would force them to radically change their positions.

There are now alternative sources of resources for development – ​​a number of members of the former third world today have money, skills, and to some extent, technology.

The West is still ahead of them in many ways, but – and this is fundamentally important – it has now completely lost the desire to share its advantages.

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Simply because it now fears competition from them – the experience of American support for the development of China is considered a mistake by the current elites.

Developing countries are of course interested in Western investment, but the nature of interaction is also changing.

To put it mildly, the former third world is becoming more demanding and picky, and the West’s ability to impose its own conditions has weakened amid large-scale global changes.

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The series of meetings in Europe was intended to show that the West is still the undisputed vanguard of the world, which has both the right and responsibility to lead others.

For instance, NATO is once again attempting to become a global organization rather than regional. The bloc’s most recent experience of this kind – in Afghanistan – ended in embarrassment. But now the approach is more natural – opposition to Russia.

As a consequence, the broad refusal to recognize the right of the West to lead means there will no longer be a world order based on Western rules.

RT. com / ABC Flash Point News 2022.

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Black Hole Bomb
Black Hole Bomb
Member
05-07-22 13:08

Those who control the media are steering politicians against Russia. A couple of years ago their message was “Russian meddling” now replaced by “Russian invasion”. In almost all the anti-Russia countries the media is dominated by a network of cohesive elites who are imposing their agenda on the population. If they want to win over more countries they will have to control more media.

Hostages
Hostages
Member
Reply to  Black Hole Bomb
05-07-22 13:10

As someone said, the US doesn’t have allies, it has hostages. I would argue, and/or vassals. It doesn’t seem to have occurred to the former colonial powers of Europe – Britain, the Netherlands, France, Spain, Italy, Belgium or to the reigning hegemony that other people don’t like to be conquered, ordered about, and have their wealth stolen. Who knew? I also think there’s a fundamental difference between “The West” and the rest of the world who actually think that countries shouldn’t be interfering in the internal affairs of other countries and trying to over throw their governments via subterfuge. We… Read more »

El Gustador
El Gustador
Member
05-07-22 13:09

Maybe they prefer not being forced to paint rainbows…? Go figure…

Valkry
Valkry
Member
Reply to  El Gustador
05-07-22 13:10

comment image?fit=3000%2C1997&ssl=1

Donnchadh
Donnchadh
Guest
06-07-22 10:55

There is another US strategy – split up Germany from Russia – makes Germany weak but stops Germany from competing with the USA -stop the EU as a competitor -make it reliant on the US – import US FRACKED gas- so much for the German “green party ” backing this -Winter in Europe is going to be the death of many poor people. Preserve US hegemony at Europe’s poor expense – does the US care ?- not a chance.