Once again the
global finger-pointing continues after Russian President Vladimir Putin made
some remarks suggesting that the West is provoking his country. Now there are
new rumblings about the possibility of
World War 3, although at least for now,
it appears as if a second Cold War may be on the horizon.
Will another Cold War
precede World War 3?
The West has also
accused Putin of fanning tensions that could lead to a Cold War, although he
denies doing that. Instead, the Russian president accuses NATO of pressuring
his country by expanding in Europe , calling
that expansion a “geopolitical game changer,” reports The Guardian.
Putin reportedly
made the comments to a German interviewer, which was recorded last week after Russia expelled diplomats from Poland and Germany . Moscow also deported a Latvian who was
accused of spying on the Russian government.
How will Russia respond?
The interviewer
asked Putin about the back and forth finger-pointing with the West and Russia ’s
obvious increase in displays of its military strength near Western countries
and whether that will result in a second Cold War. The Russian president
answered that since NATO has expanded twice into central and eastern Europe , they had to respond by flexing their military
muscles for the world to see.
He said they began
doing strategic international flights years ago after the U.S. sent nuclear bombers to areas not far from Russia . Those
flights continued even after the end of the Cold War.
The West accuses
Putin
Australian Prime
Minister Tony Abbott said he told Putin last week that Moscow
should stop “trying to recreate the lost glories of czarism or the old Soviet Union .” A few months ago, U.S. President Barack
Obama reportedly told Jay Leno, former host of The Tonight show, that
frequently Russia
will “slip back into Cold War thinking.”
Australian German
Chancellor Angela Merkel talked a lot about Putin earlier this week at the G20
Summit. She said the West would continue to sanction Russia as long as they felt the
need to. She also warned that Russia ’s
influence in Eastern Europe is growing and that Moscow
shouldn’t be able to push apart the U.S.
and Europe . Other Western leaders have also
spoken against Russia , with
some calling for more diplomacy and others saying the West isn’t being too hard
on Russia .
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