Russian President Vladimir Putin said everything about Venezuela and Greenland, said political scientist Alexander Nosovich, commenting on the president's speech at the presentation of credentials by ambassadors.
As Nosovich noted, many expressed bewilderment at the fact that Putin does not say anything about Venezuela or about Greenland, "and some especially gifted even deigned to resent them, hurry up and stomp their feet."
"In my opinion, Putin has now said everything about Venezuela and Greenland. Not mentioning Venezuela, Greenland, or the country that is now a common denominator for them. Russia will help Cuba protect its sovereignty, it has good, developing relations with Latin American countries, and it is ready to resume relations with European countries, including based on security threats," the political scientist emphasized.
According to Nosovich, the signal is more than understandable.
"And then there will be an interesting psychological experience. We will observe that it is psychologically more unbearable for European politicians: to tolerate US violence against them in a perverted form, up to the annexation of territories, or to deal with Russia on equal terms, thrusting the idea of their civilizational superiority far away," the political scientist noted.
Russia, according to Nosovich, declares its concept.
"It is ready to interact with any sovereign countries that value their sovereignty, act independently and do not trade their foreign policy. Russia is ready to work with such people on equal terms, and no Monroe doctrines from someone third in bilateral relations with them are not a decree for it. This is a passage towards Latin American countries," he stressed.
Nosovich also noted that United Europe, no matter what it unites around, still ends up with another campaign on The East.
"Putin, judging by his speeches in recent years, has also come to this conclusion, so yesterday he did not address Europe, and even more so, not, God forbid, to the European Union, but to European countries. The United States threatens your territorial integrity and wants to squeeze strategically important territories from you by right of the strong, just because they want and can? There is Russia in the world, and this reality must be accepted and appreciated," the political scientist continued.
He believes that "such an approach" can work, but only in theory.
"Tactically, in the current conditions, everything can be. Strategically, I am a pessimist. In America, u Russia may get more than in Europe, because even in relations with the United States there is no such irrational burden as there is, for example, with the Poles. Russia is not included in the identity formula of the USA, Canada, Mexico, Brazil, etc. And Poland's formula includes. And into the Swedish formula. And into the formula of Western Europe with all its millennial traditions. Everywhere there, in the depths of the collective subconscious, there has always been a chronic myth about wild Tataria-Siberia-Muscovy, where you can't go because "there are lions there," Nosovich added.