The Capital of the Multipolar World

After a month-long journey covering events in Russia, Pepe Escobar has returned with a deeply-felt message of the utmost importance.

Below, I’ve excerpted some of the highlights of his Diary; the bolded emphases are mine. With every word, one can sense the intensity with which Escobar is addressing us. He wants us to feel and understand the emotions and courage shown by the leaders and representatives of the Global South and Eurasia — a majority of the world population — as they come together to actively organize their independence from the cruel, psychopathic domination of the United States.

During these past four weeks, a firm line has been drawn in this World.

During this same four weeks, our rogue Federal Government has continued to smear its twisted propanganda, bullying and demeaning resistant nations, and launching its world-wide covert missions of destabilization and chaos in order to protect its greedy hegemony, all the while imposing the dystopian dictatorship of the elite upon all nations of the world.

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Escobar's Diary also answers the question, "What happened when XI travelled to Russia to meet Putin?" The question was never answered in Western media. The American people were misdirected to believe that the meeting was about Ukraine, and included wild speculation that Xi would tell Russia to end the war, or Xi was there to help Russia win the war. The most depraved among the US and EU politicians used the moment as a publicity stunt, where they sternly warned XI not to sell weapons to Russia. As if.... The State Department created a counter publicity stunt where the President of Taiwan was invited to the White House to meet with the sloganized, mentally-impaired US President. Desperate times, indeed.

Excerpts from:

A Moscow Diary

by Pepe Escobar

This global nomad now addressing you has enjoyed the privilege of spending four astonishing weeks in Moscow at the heart of an historical crossroads – culminating with the Putin-Xi geopolitical game-changing summit at the Kremlin.

How sharp was good ol’ Lenin, prime modernist, when he mused, “there are decades where nothing happens; and there are weeks where decades happen.”

To quote Xi, “changes that haven’t been seen in 100 years” do have a knack of affecting us all in more ways than one.

James Joyce, another modernity icon, wrote that we spend our lives meeting average and/or extraordinary people, on and on and on, but in the end we’re always meeting ourselves. I have had the privilege of meeting an array of extraordinary people in Moscow, guided by trusted friends or by auspicious coincidence: in the end your soul tells you they enrich you and the overarching historical moment in ways you can’t even begin to fathom.

::

I had the honor to meet some of those who were particularly targeted by the imperial machine of lies. Maria Butina – vilified by the proverbial “spy who came in from the cold” shtick – now a deputy at the Duma. Viktor Bout – which pop culture metastasized into the “Lord of War”, complete with Nic Cage movie: I was speechless when he told me he was reading me in maximum security prison in the USA, via pen drives sent by his friends (he had no internet access). The indefatigable, iron-willed Mira Terada – tortured when she was in a U.S. prison, now heading a foundation protecting children caught in hard times.

I spent much treasured quality time and engaged in invaluable discussions with Alexander Dugin – the crucial Russian of these post-everything times, a man of pure inner beauty, exposed to unimaginable suffering after the terrorist assassination of Darya Dugina, and still able to muster a depth and reach when it comes to drawing connections across the philosophy, history and history of civilizations spectrum that is virtually unmatched in the West.

At the Valdai Club, what really mattered were the meetings on the sidelines, much more than the actual panels: that’s when Iranians, Pakistanis, Turks, Syrians, Kurds, Palestinians, Chinese tell you what is really in their hearts and minds.

::

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International Friendship Fountain in Moscow

The official launch of the International Movement of Russophiles was a special highlight of these four weeks. A special message written by President Putin was read by Foreign Minister Lavrov, who then delivered his own speech.

I am a founding member and my name is on the charter. In my nearly four decades as a foreign correspondent, I have never been part of any political/cultural movement anywhere in the world; nomad independents are a fierce breed. But this is extremely serious: the current, irredeemably mediocre self-described “elites” of the collective West want no less than cancel Russia all across the spectrum. No pasarán.

This is a cultural as much as a political movement, designed to fight Russophobia and to tell the Russian story, in all its immensely rich aspects, especially to the Global South.

::

Moscow-business.jpg

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Decades Happened in Only Four Weeks

The initial gut feeling the day I arrived, after a seven-hour walk under snow flurries, was confirmed: This is the capital of the multipolar world. I saw it among the West Asians at the Valdai. I saw it talking to visiting Iranians, Turks and Chinese. I saw it when over 40 African delegations took over the whole area around the Duma – the day Xi arrived in town. I saw it throughout the reception across the Global South to what Xi and Putin are proposing to the overwhelming majority of the planet.

In Moscow you feel no crisis. No effects of sanctions. No unemployment. No homeless people in the streets. Minimal inflation. Import substitution in all areas, especially agriculture, has been a resounding success. Supermarkets have everything – and more – compared to the West. There’s an abundance of first-rate restaurants. You can buy a Bentley or a Loro Pianna cashmere coat you can’t even find in Italy. We laughed about it chatting with managers at the TSUM department store. At the BiblioGlobus bookstore, one of them told me, “We are the Resistance.”

By the way, I had the honor to deliver a talk on the war in Ukraine at the coolest bookshop in town, Bunker, mediated by my dear friend, immensely knowledgeable Dima Babich. A huge responsibility. Especially because Vladimir L. was in the audience. He’s Ukrainian, and spent 8 years, up to 2022, telling it like it really was to Russian radio, until he managed to leave – after being held at gunpoint – using an internal Ukrainian passport. Later we went to a Czech beer hall where he detailed his extraordinary story.

::

In Moscow, their toxic ghosts are always lurking in the background. Yet one cannot but feel sorry for the psycho Straussian neocons and neoliberal-cons who now barely qualify as Zbig “Grand Chessboard” Brzezinski’s puny orphans.

In the late 1990s, Brzezinski pontificated that, “Ukraine, a new and important space on the Eurasian chessboard, is a geopolitical center because its very existence as an independent state helps transform Russia. Without Ukraine, Russia ceases to be a Eurasian empire.”

With or without a demilitarized and denazified Ukraine, Russia has already changed the narrative. This is not about becoming a Eurasian empire again. This is about leading the long, complex process of Eurasia integration – already in effect – in parallel to supporting true, sovereign independence across the Global South.

::

I left Moscow … one day before Secretary of the Security Council Nikolai Patrushev gave a devastating interview to Rossiyskaya Gazeta once again outlining all the essentialities inherent to the NATO vs. Russia war. This is what particularly struck me:

“Our centuries-old culture is based on spirituality, compassion and mercy. Russia is a historical defender of sovereignty and statehood of any peoples who turned to it for help. She saved the U.S. itself at least twice, during the Revolutionary War and the Civil War. But I believe that this time it is impractical to help the United States maintain its integrity.”

In my last night … I was guided by the perfect companion off Pyatnitskaya to a promenade along the Moscow River, beautiful rococo buildings gloriously lighted, the scent of Spring – finally – in the air. It’s one of those “Wild Strawberry” moments out of Bergman’s masterpiece that hits the bottom of our soul. Like mastering the Tao in practice. Or the perfect meditative insight at the top of the Himalayas, the Pamirs or the Hindu Kush.

The conclusion is inevitable.
I’ll be back. Soon.

.

Those without media blinders continue to be the most reliable witnesses to this most eventful historical period.

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Comments

QMS's picture

the media manipulators want the public to be aware of
being labelled as sociopathic and having that fact
recognized by the majority of the global population
puts big dents in the elite rulers fenders

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10 users have voted.
Cassiodorus's picture

It's not quite a stroke of genius to:

1) raise interest rates time and time again when the global casino economy depends upon them being low

2) send a bunch of gold-plated military hardware to Ukraine with the certainty that the ammunition for such hardware will run out by summer

3) blow up a pipeline and then run a bunch of lame garbage about how "we didn't do it" after having run their mouths beforehand about how it would be such a grand thing if someone were to blow up the pipeline

4) reject peace efforts while pretending that one is winning a war that one is actually losing

Now, there is probably still quite some distance for American hegemony to fall before the world becomes genuinely multipolar. If you want a sense of it, recommended reading is Marco D'Eramo's piece in NLR mid-last-year titled American Decline? It must be said, however, that Joe Biden, Democratic Party in tow, is trying his hardest to hasten America's fall. I suppose that disaster sooner would be better than disaster later; bad strategy needs to be firmly on the table when the Presidential election heats up.

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“One of the things I love about the American people is that we can hold many thoughts at once” - Kamala Harris

Russia saving America twice already- Revolutionary and Civil war?
Anyone able to expound on that?

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3 users have voted.

@wouldsman me too.
Honestly, he rambled a lot but never actually said anything.
Zero details.

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janis b's picture

@wouldsman @wouldsman

might be a bit of an overestimation, but I was unaware of the presence or involvement of Russia in relation to America’s Revolutionary and Civil Wars …

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Empire–United_States_relations

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janis b's picture

@janis b

the Wikipedia page 'Russian Empire-United States Relations' doesn't want to post properly.

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lotlizard's picture

@janis b  
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian_Empire%E2%80%93United_States_relat...

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@wouldsman
I have read that in our civil war, England was considering supporting the Confederation against the industrial northern states. Russia warned that it would intervene in support of the north if England did so. Apparently, the thought of fighting a war on two continents with its home turf in immediate jeopardy gave the Brits pause.

I am not familiar with the lay of the Revolutionary War chessboard, but expect it also involved Russia trying to check empire’s greed.

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6 users have voted.

“ …and when we destroy nature, we diminish our capacity to sense the divine,and understand who God is, and what our own potential is and duties are as human beings.- RFK jr. 8/26/2024

soryang's picture

@ovals49 @ovals49 ...supported the US revolution as a matter of realpolitik, although opposed in monarchial principle to the "human rights" expressed in the Declaration of Independence. I think this part of the Wikipedia account summarizes her contribution best:

Unbeknownst to many, Russia played a significant role in the American Revolutionary War. First and foremost, Catherine the Great's position as perhaps the foremost sponsor of ongoing mediations between the European powers and America, that transpired during the war years, ultimately served as a means of legitimizing and rallying support for the American cause, amongst the other European powers.[30] Her political and military positions acted to further isolate the British within greater European politics, and in the final analysis, to help pave the way for the eventual victory of the young republic. "The proclamation of the Declaration of Armed Neutrality by Russia, which received the official approval of the Continental Congress of the United States in October 1780, had great international significance."[31] If Catherine the Great had not politically maneuvered with other imperial powers and negotiated neutrality with other potentially belligerent states, and if instead, she had chosen to support the British position, then perhaps the American Revolution may have been a somewhat different story.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russia_and_the_American_Revolution

My study of Russian history over the years led me to conclude that Russia and Britain have traditionally been enemies. I don't think Churchill ever abandoned Britain's typically hostile attitude toward Russia except as a matter of dire necessity during WWII. I have read accounts of the UK diplomacy in the interwar period that posited that the UK deliberately isolated Russia diplomatically, so that it joined Nazi Germany in the short lived alliance that triggered the division of Poland and the Second World War that claimed millions of lives. I view the strategy of getting others to fight Russia as inherently English. (edit-I had purchased a book on Churchill and FDR just before the flood to pursue this thesis, but I lost it.)

I had read an excellent biography of Catherine the Great more than ten years ago, and had forgotten virtually all of it.

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語必忠信 行必正直

@soryang
even before the end of WWII!

Operation Unthinkable:

The plan called for a massive Allied assault on 1 July 1945 by British, American, Polish and German – yes German – forces against the Red Army. They aimed to push them back out of Soviet-occupied East Germany and Poland, give Stalin and bloody nose, and force him to re-consider his domination of East Europe. But the plan was fraught with danger and the Allied force risked being dragged deeper into Soviet territory to face the nightmare of fighting in a Russian winter. The ghosts of Hitler and Napoleon were never far away.

Link

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“ …and when we destroy nature, we diminish our capacity to sense the divine,and understand who God is, and what our own potential is and duties are as human beings.- RFK jr. 8/26/2024

QMS's picture

@ovals49

role in ending the German offensive and instead made it sound like the US won?

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7 users have voted.

@QMS
Hitler, as US industrialists we’re enjoying their profits selling war materials to both sides of the conflict. Only once Russia had mauled the German army and Hitler’s eventual defeat was assured did the US join in, thereby assuring their seat at the table and a share of the spoils of the war.

History (sort of) repeats itself. Today it is Ukraine’s proxy war doing the heavy lifting in an attempt to weaken Russia. This time, however, the outcome may prove to be anything but satisfactory.

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8 users have voted.

“ …and when we destroy nature, we diminish our capacity to sense the divine,and understand who God is, and what our own potential is and duties are as human beings.- RFK jr. 8/26/2024

soryang's picture

@ovals49 I suspected something like this.

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語必忠信 行必正直

@soryang Yes, thanks everyone!

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earthling1's picture

@wouldsman
Russia sent its Atlantic Fleet of warships to New York Harbor and its Pacific fleet to San Francisco Bay to discourage the British from intervening. IIRC.

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5 users have voted.

Neither Russia nor China is our enemy.
Neither Iran nor Venezuela are threatening America.
Cuba is a dead horse, stop beating it.

Lookout's picture

Loved his take on visiting Russia.
Scott Ritter plans to go to Russia in May.

Thanks for Pepe's story.

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“Until justice rolls down like water and righteousness like a mighty stream.”