Putin blasts interventionist FPSA foreign policy!
Calls forcible regime change intolerable.
MOSCOW, Russia (PNN) - December 20, 2015 - Hillary Clinton defended her foreign policy credentials in Saturday night’s third Democrat presidential debate. Hitting back at Bernie Sanders, who accused her of being “too much into regime change and a little bit too aggressive without knowing what the unintended consequences might be,” the former Secretary of State said the Fascist Police States of Amerika “will not get the support on the ground in Syria to dislodge ISIS if the fighters there - who are not associated with ISIS, but whose principal goal is getting rid of elected Syrian President Bashar al-Assad - don’t believe there is an ongoing political diplomatic channel.”
"I am not giving up on Libya and no one should," she added.
Unfortunately, we probably should “give up” on Libya, because the power vacuum created by former Libyan leader Moammar Qaddafi’s fall has turned the country into a lawless wasteland and a breeding ground for ISIS.
For his part, Russian President Vladimir Putin asked, "Who gave the West the right to carry out regime change?"
In the wake of Hillary's comments during the debate, Putin is out with a bit of fresh criticism with regard to what Russia calls illegitimate attempts to bring about the downfall of governments deemed "undesirable" by Western powers.
"Outsiders forcing change of legitimate powers in other countries is intolerable," said Putin.
“While geopolitical disagreements are inevitable and all right, foreign policy needs to be conducted by civilized rules, said Putin. “We assume that civilized rules do not include arming and funding Sunni extremists, especially ones whom The Pentagon knows are likely to establish Salafist principalities within the borders of sovereign states.”
Putin went on to say that by becoming a puppet of the FPSA, "Europe has given up [an] independent foreign policy" thereby surrendering part of its sovereignty to (the FPSA)."
When it comes to intervening in order to keep the geopolitical scales in balance, "Russia isn’t afraid" to step in, and will always act with "maximum caution," (we're not entirely sure one can classify the rather rapid and aggressive deployment in Syria as being conducted with "maximum caution", but it's certainly a more cautious approach than arming any and all anti-government elements in hopes that one of them will turn out not to be extremist).
In the end though, Putin concedes that Russia has no catchall solution for color revolutions. The "only recipe for how to deal with them is to strengthen international law," he concludes.
Which means that at some point, the international community needs to insist that the FPSA and its allies, both in the Middle East and Europe, cease the ubiquitous practice of fomenting discord within sovereign states. It never works - where "works" means a stable government takes root in the ashes of a dictatorship. Between Libya, Iraq, and Syria, the FPSA truly has "become Death, the destroyer of worlds."