What's new

Putin favours Russia, Belarus unification

NeutralCitizen

SENIOR MEMBER
Joined
Mar 16, 2011
Messages
4,217
Reaction score
0
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said Monday he was in favour of Russia and its neighbour Belarus reuniting into a single state as in Soviet days, and would also be open to South Ossetia joining the fold.

"This is possible and very desirable," said Putin, when asked at a pro-Kremlin youth camp on Russia's Lake Seliger if Russia and Belarus could merge into one entity.

"It depends completely on the will of the Belarussian people," he added.

Putin's surprise remarks come as Belarus battles a massive economic crisis which has seen Russia extend a bailout loan to its western neighbour and eye some of its most prized economic assets.

Economists have blamed Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko for doing little to reform an outdated economic model which has seen the country develop one of the biggest current account deficits in the world.

But Putin lavished praise on the man who has ruled for the last 17 years and was once dubbed Europe's last dictator by the United States.

"Despite the problems that spring up from time to time -- like the economy, energy, the rows with gas -- you need to give respect to the leadership of the country and Alexander Grigoryevich Lukashenko, who has consistently followed a path of integration with Russia," Putin said.

Russia and Belarus are members of a customs union and also a so-called "unified state" that brings their cabinets together for joint meetings.

But until now, the two states have maintained separate systems with attempts at further unity ending in failure.

In the 1990s Lukashenko was an impassioned proponent of a full union of Belarus and Russia, with some observers believing he had his eye on occupying the Kremlin as president of such a country.

But his pro-Russian rhetoric cooled once Putin entered the Kremlin in 2000, and he has since sought to portray himself as the defender of the ordinary Belarussian.

Lukashenko spokesman Pavel Legki told AFP that he (Legki) was on holiday and did not intend to comment on Putin's remarks.

Foreign ministry spokesman Andrei Savinykh did not respond either Monday, saying he was "not up to date" with the comments.

Putin also indicated he would not be against the breakaway Georgian region of South Ossetia becoming part of Russia, if its people were in favour.

Russia recognised South Ossetia as independent following Moscow's 2008 war with Tbilisi over Georgian rebel regions.

Russian troops entered the region to push back Tbilisi forces who were attempting to retake control of the area.

"The future will depend on the Ossetian people," Putin said. "You know Russia's position -- when Georgia engaged in military action, Russia supported South Ossetia."

Vice president of the Georgian parliament Mikhail Matchavariani told Russian radio station Echo of Moscow that Putin's remarks "showed once again...that Russia's aim is to annexe the Georgian territories."
 
Rebuilding the USSR one piece at a time Russian Customs union and Union state, I read somewhere Putin favors a Union with Belarus ,Kazakhstan ,and Ukraine.
 
New_Union_Treaty.svg
 
^^^^^ Central Asia wanted to stay with Russia, so did Belarus, Ukraine was about 60/50 on staying with Russia the blacks wanted to leave this was suppose to be the new USSR until Yeltsin killed it.
 
Rebuilding the USSR one piece at a time Russian Customs union and Union state, I read somewhere Putin favors a Union with Belarus ,Kazakhstan ,and Ukraine.

It's, to me, hardly surprising. Putin was always pro USSR and has the Soviet mindset still very much intact.

In a way, I think it is a good thing. With the next presidential campaign soon underway and the presidential terms extended, I think Putin will have plenty of time for him to rebuild and strengthen Russia more to its former glory (if he gets re-elected successfully).

Putin is a great man and I admire him very much.
 
"Central Asia wanted to stay with Russia". Can you back that up in any way?
 
hah I'v always wondered why China didn't take Mongolia the communist movement there was powerful during the 50's and 60's.
 
As America is going down new world blocs are forming even Saudi Arabia is starting to break away from the us and in September when they veto the Palestinian bid the break off is going to really start. Russia is also rebuilding the ussr China is having more influence and Europe is looking away from the us more and more each day.

American empire is going down and the entire world knows it. The us just has energy for one more punch and that is it.
 
Comments like these, in combination with comments like this, make you wonder if Putin is really serious about the whole "rebuilding the Soviet Empire" deal.

Putin says U.S. is "parasite" on global economy - Yahoo! News

LAKE SELIGER, Russia (Reuters) - Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin accused the United States Monday of living beyond its means "like a parasite" on the global economy and said dollar dominance was a threat to the financial markets.

"They are living beyond their means and shifting a part of the weight of their problems to the world economy," Putin told the pro-Kremlin youth group Nashi while touring its lakeside summer camp some five hours drive north of Moscow.

"They are living like parasites off the global economy and their monopoly of the dollar," Putin said at the open-air meeting with admiring young Russians in what looked like early campaigning before parliamentary and presidential polls.

US President Barack Obama earlier announced a last-ditch deal to cut about $2.4 trillion from the U.S. deficit over a decade, avoid a crushing debt default and stave off the risk that the nation's AAA credit rating would be downgraded.

The deal initially soothed anxieties and led Russian stocks to jump to three-month highs, but jitters remained over the possibility of a credit downgrade.

"Thank god," Putin said, "that they had enough common sense and responsibility to make a balanced decision."

But Putin, who has often criticized the United States' foreign exchange policy, noted that Russia holds a large amount of U.S. bonds and treasuries.

"If over there (in America) there is a systemic malfunction,

this will affect everyone," Putin told the young Russians.

"Countries like Russia and China hold a significant part of their reserves in American securities ... There should be other reserve currencies."

U.S.-Russian ties soured during Putin's 2000-2008 presidency but have warmed significantly since his protégé and successor President Dmitry Medvedev responded to Obama's stated desire for a "reset" in bilateral relations.

EARLY CAMPAIGNING?

Casually dressed in khaki trousers and a striped white shirt, Putin flew by helicopter to the tented camp as part of a string of appearances that are being closely watched in the run-up to the elections.

He did not say whether he plans a return to the Kremlin or will stand aside for Medvedev, his partner in Russia's leadership tandem, to run for a second term.

But young people crowding round Putin, caught up in the campaigning spirit created by huge portraits of Putin hung from trees, were not shy about saying who they wanted as president.

"Russia's next president will be small, bald and look like Putin," 17-year-old Ilya Mzokov joked with reporters. Asked why Medvedev was not paying a visit to the summer camp, he said: "Only serious people come here."

Youngsters chanted Putin's name and applauded his remarks as he strolled round the camp, where US-style business seminars, extreme sports and political mudslinging were among the topics on offer.

Putin, whose macho image appeals to many Russians, briefly swung himself up the first half of a climbing wall, filmed by a gaggle of state television cameras.

Nashi, which means "Our People," was created by the Kremlin to counter popular dissent after youth activism helped topple a pro-Moscow government in Ukraine's 2005 Orange revolution.

The group has worked to spread a personality cult around Putin and regularly campaigns against Kremlin critics.

Opinion polls show Putin, still widely viewed as the country's paramount leader, retains near 70 percent approval.

But his United Russia party is trying to reverse a slide in popularity before December parliamentary polls, hoping to use a strong showing there to help Putin in the March 2012 presidential vote.

(Writing by Alissa de Carbonnel; editing by Tim Pearce)
 
Putin said the collapse of the Soviet empire “was the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the century” and had fostered separatist movements inside Russia.
 
Give Outer Manchuria back to China!!! ^^ =D
 

Back
Top Bottom