By John Helmer, Moscow
A bad smell is emitted by those who go about their business claiming to be more virtuous than others when they are not. Take Keith (Konstantin) Gessen’s (lead image) newly published autobiography cum novel about his time in Moscow. The word for the book is a cross between the noun fart and the adjective virtuous; that’s to say, fatuous.
Six blurb endorsements covering the dust-jacket can’t improve on this because the endorsers have no expertise or experience of Russia, and are obligated to Gessen personally, institutionally or commercially, by way of Harvard University, Columbia University, the New Yorker, and Gessen’s personal magazine N+1. In short, they are back-scratchers, log-rollers.
In New York Yiddish, the term for them is mishpocha. That means the family of people who understand what the word means; for them it’s a mitzvah (good deed required by religious duty) to help each other make money. If you know the meaning of both words, you are ready for the Woody Allen world in which Gessen makes his money. Make that the Woody-Allen-world-before-the-sex-and #MeToo-scandals.
If there’s a difference between that world and the Russia which Gessen’s book claims to be about, this doesn’t matter to him, and especially not to the mishpocha, whose mitzvah it is to tell you to buy this book. If you are resisting, there’s a reason for those of you who don’t belong to the mishpocha and who don’t come from New York, to continue reading this review. That’s because Gessen, Russian born and Russian taught though he is, is a perfect example of the American inability to understand two vital lessons for American-Russian relations for the foreseeable future.
Lesson No. 1: Americans, the alt-right, alt-left, Clintonites, Trumpies, CIA, FBI and Pentagon — all of them have failed to understand Vladimir Putin, particularly his weaknesses. Lesson No. 2 follows: the war the US has launched against Russia, a war no American is capable of stopping now, or even slowing down, will produce the very opposite of its regime-changing goal. This opposite, this outcome, is the Stavka – a military regime which has the capital, the force multiple, the intelligence, and the relative lack of corruption to defeat whatever Russia’s enemies throw at it, and enjoy popular approval for doing so. By the way, the Stavka will have an articulate civilian for spokesman – that’s Vladimir Putin. (more…)























