Business Day

Navalny is no hero

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Earlier this week (May 13) you published a frontpage photo of Yulia Navalny, widow of activist Alexei Navalny, collecting the Dresden Peace Award in Germany.

John Pilger, the acclaimed journalist and film maker, wrote shortly before he died that the propaganda being perpetrate­d by the Western press regarding the “proxy war” in Ukraine is “unpreceden­ted in history”. Unfortunat­ely, holding Navalny up as a paragon of virtue and a hero is not only an untrue false flag but a carefully orchestrat­ed psyops campaign designed by Washington to advance the cause and case for aggressive Western imperialis­m. (And $61bn of US taxpayers’ money going to more weapons.)

Scott Ritter, the UN chief weapons investigat­or who blew the whistle on claims of weapons of mass destructio­n in Iraq, recently described Navalny as “a controlled CIA asset”.

In a war where madness is prevailing over sanity, and the avarice of the military industrial­ists in the US and UK is trumping diplomacy, a simple agreement to neutrality by Ukraine would end the conflict tomorrow.

Cheap propaganda stunts aimed at drumming up support for a longer war with Russia are not serving global peace, and threatenin­g the security of the country with more nuclear warheads than any other is plain stupid.

Alexei Navalny’s death in prison was regrettabl­e. But considerin­g he is only supported by 2%-4% of the Russian population — and independen­t research by the Levada Foundation puts Vladimir Putin’s popularity among Russians at 85% — any sober political analyst knows that the only people to gain anything from his death are Western military hawks.

Russia is a sophistica­ted, cultured and proud country, and Putin has said repeatedly that he is open to dialogue and negotiatio­n, and ending the war — as long as Ukraine agrees to neutrality and no Nato. It is perfectly reasonable for Russia to expect that, and nothing less.

The longer the war goes on, Ukraine is going to be left with less and less.

Peace and dialogue are the only viable options. If not now, when?

Jonny Cohen Via email

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