Saturday, 31 December 2022

Russian Armed Forces' Victory Inevitable, Russian Defense Minister Shoigu Says

Russian Armed Forces' Victory Inevitable, Russian Defense Minister Shoigu Says

Russian Armed Forces' Victory Inevitable, Russian Defense Minister Shoigu Says




©Sputnik / Russian Defense Ministry / Go to the mediabank






In his New Year message to Russian servicemen on Saturday, Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu, in particular, signaled Moscow's readiness to fight for the right to speak Russian.







In his New Year message to the Russian servicemen, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu thanked them for their courage and heroism in the performance of military duty during Russia's special military operation in Ukraine, and wished them clear skies.


Shoigu also pointed to "serious trials that have changed the usual course of time" in 2022.


"The outgoing year will forever go down in the military chronicles of the Fatherland, filled with your immortal deeds, selfless courage and heroism in the fight against neo-Nazism and terrorism. I thank you all for your service and loyalty to the oath!" the Russian defense minister stressed.


"The outgoing year will forever go down in the military chronicles of the Fatherland, filled with your immortal deeds, selfless courage and heroism in the fight against neo-Nazism and terrorism. I thank you all for your service and loyalty to the oath!" the Russian defense minister stressed.







He recalled that external forces are now trying to cross out the glorious history and great achievements of Russia as they demolish monuments to the winners over fascism and place war criminals on pedestals. According to Shoigu, everything that is related to Russia is canceled and defiled.


Under such circumstances, Shoigu stressed, the New Year remains not only a good tradition, but also acquires a deep meaning, becoming a symbol of hope for a peaceful future.


He also praised Russian soldiers for “heroically fulfilling combat missions to protect the national interests and security of Russia,” adding that they are celebrating the coming New Year away from their relatives as they resolve “the most difficult tasks in the course of the special military operation.”


"In the coming year, I want to wish everyone good health, fortitude, reliable and devoted comrades and, of course, clear skies! Our victory, like the New Year, is inevitable!" Shoigu emphasized.







Earlier this month, he said that the main task for 2023 is the continuation of the special operation in Ukraine until the full implementation of all its tasks.


The beginning of the operation was announced by Russian President Vladimir Putin on February 24, after the Donbass republics appealed for help in defending themselves against Kiev's attacks.



How the USSR Changed the Face of the World



On December 30, 2022, Russians and others across the globe commemorated the 100th anniversary of the formation of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). How did the 70 years of the USSR change the world?


"It was the world’s first socialist country, a system based on public ownership, state planning, social welfare and egalitarianism," Geoffrey Roberts, professor of history at University College Cork, Ireland, and a leading scholar on Soviet diplomatic and military history, said.








"It showed that such a system was not utopian but a practical possibility; indeed, at times the Soviet system threatened to economically outperform even the most advanced capitalist countries."


©Sputnik / Vladimir Rodionov / Go to the mediabank


"The Bolsheviks succeeded in building a world industrial power, one that defeated Nazi Germany and then fought the United States to a standstill during the Cold War: a system that created the military, economic, scientific, technical and cultural power that underpins the strength of contemporary Russia," the professor continued.


The USSR was formed following the end of the Russian Civil War (1918-1922) and accompanying foreign intervention. On December 30, 1922, the Russian, Ukrainian, Belarusian, and Transcaucasian Soviet Socialist Republics united into one state with a single political body in the capital of Moscow. Other Soviet republics which used to be parts of the Russian Empire joined the USSR in the coming years. The USSR established control over the territory the Russian Empire had amassed by 1917 (excluding Finland, part of the Polish kingdom and some other territories).


The young Soviet state was founded in a highly contested and hostile environment. Western nations refused to recognize the USSR for years. As a Canadian historian told Sputnik in 2015, the European and US elites sought to overthrow the Soviet government "from day one," as the latter promoted an alternative to capitalism and western hegemony. Western countries subsidized and armed the anti-Soviet White movement; dispatched sizable military forces to thwart the Soviets during the Civil War; and waged a broad economic war against Moscow.







Nonetheless, the USSR continued to develop and increase its industrial production by almost 13 times during the first 30 years of the country's existence. By the time of the Second World War, 9,000 large industrial enterprises had been built in the USSR. New industries were created from scratch including machine tool building, tractor building, chemical industry, and aircraft building.


The Soviet collectivization ensured modernization and mechanization of agricultural labor, improved food supplies across the country and solved the famine problem, which haunted Russia since the end of the 19th century. Strategic food reserves were also created in the country.


In addition, the USSR applied vast social reforms by promoting gender equality; ensuring eight-hour working days and annual paid leave; institutionalizing the right to free general and vocational education, the right to work and the right to free medical care for all citizens, to name but a few. Some of these reforms were implemented for the first time in history.


Nostalgia: Soviet Pioneers' Day in the USSR.
©Sputnik / Mikhail Ozerskiy / Go to the mediabank


When it comes to the USSR's foreign policy, its contribution to global decolonization could hardly be overestimated: the peoples of the Middle East, Asia, Africa, and Latin America cooperated with the USSR and received humanitarian and military aid from Moscow. Besides that, it was the USSR that helped







Turkey leader Mustafa Kemal Ataturk to counter the advance of the Greek, British, French, and Italian interventionists in 1920-1922. Therefore, the 11-meter-high Republic Monument (Cumhuriyet Aniti) at Taksim Square, Istanbul, portrays Semyon Aralov, ambassador of the Russian SFSR in Ankara during the Turkish War of Independence, behind Ataturk. Also on display are the two high-ranking Soviet officers Marshal Kliment Voroshilov and General Mikhail Frunze. The monument was erected to honor the foundation of the Turkish Republic in 1923.


It was likewise the USSR that helped China end the infamous "century of humiliation" – a term used in the country to describe the period of intervention and subjugation of the Qing dynasty and the Republic of China by western powers and Japan from 1839 to 1949. The Soviet Union also backed the Chinese Communist Party's struggle and the foundation of the People's Republic of China.


Meeting of American and Soviet soldiers on April 25, 1945 near the city of Torgau.
©Sputnik / Arkady Shaikhet


It was the USSR that defeated Nazism in 1945, together with its allies, and lost around 27 million people in the Second World War to liberate the continent from this monstrous ideology and its military machine.


Despite some western experts' claims that the USSR always sought to foment global revolution, Vladimir Lenin's successor, Joseph Stalin, abandoned the idea of the "world revolution" in the 1920s, promoting instead the concept of "socialism in a single country" within the boundaries of the USSR. His vision became the official doctrine after the XIV Congress of the CPSU (b) in 1925.







According to Roberts, the USSR's indisputable achievements included "multinationalism, internationalism, and anti-imperialism; its idealism and egalitarian aspirations; above all, its valorization of peaceful coexistence between different peoples, systems and values."



USSR's Disintegration



However, following 70 years of its rise and development, the USSR collapsed. What was behind this and was it inevitable? The Soviet people had grown disenchanted with the Communist idea because of the party's "nomenclature" corruption, rigid command economy, and lack of freedoms, according to Edward Lozansky, president of the American University in Moscow.


"The Soviet Union managed to survive for 69 years, despite huge human and material losses and devastation caused by WW2," Lozansky said. "Actually, it could continue to exist for some time but several factors like an arms race with the West, economic inefficiency and the Gorbachev factor who naively tried to combine communism with freedom, ended this experiment."


"The West, and first of all the United States, had a unique chance to turn free-from-communist Russia into its most important ally. [Mikhail] Gorbachev, and all Russian leaders who followed him, including [Vladimir] Putin, plus the overwhelming majority of Russian people, were ready for integration with the West, but Washington was not interested. Instead, it had chosen the role of the world's hegemonic leader - thus squandering the historical opportunity for US-Russia, and more broadly, East-West win-win cooperation, and here we are - on the edge of the abyss," the academic continued.







The collapse of the USSR was not inevitable, let alone its swift defragmentation, believes Roberts. "Not long before the USSR collapsed, Gorbachev staged a referendum on the continuation of a multinational Soviet state – a goal that was endorsed by the great majority of voters," he emphasized.


Official visit of the General Secretary of the Central Committee of the CPSU Mikhail Sergeevich Gorbachev to the United States of America
©Sputnik / Yuri Abramochkin


However, the country was largely exhausted by the arms race, initiated by the US-led NATO bloc. The resulting imbalances and wastefulness of the Soviet economy demanded new approaches and flexibility.


At that time, prominent US economist and Nobel Prize Laureate in Economics Wassily Leontief (1906-1999) compared the USSR's economy to a yacht that was unable to catch the wind. The Soviet economy was doomed to further recession, restrained by excessive government interference and regulation, he suggested in his essays.


The US economy, however, was not in its best shape either. In January 1989, the famous Trilateral Commission's leaders undertook a mission to Moscow to meet Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev. The group and Gorbachev discussed the issue of coexistence as well as a roadmap of the USSR's integration into the world economy.







"We are all at a crucial stage — both capitalism and socialism," Gorbachev noted at that time. "The two systems should show they can adapt to new conditions," he added. According to western media, Gorbachev’s eschewal of the use of force helped end the decades-long Cold War.


FILE - In this Sept. 9, 1990 file photo U.S. President George Bush shakes hands with Soviet President Mikhail Gorbachev at the conclusion of their joint news conference ending the one day summit in Helsinki, Finland.
©AP Photo / Liu Heung Shin


Eventually, the two nuclear powers voluntarily agreed to stop the arms race and end the standoff. It was the time when major western leaders promised Gorbachev and other Soviet officials that NATO would not further expand eastward. The Washington-based non-profit, the National Security Archive, published in December 2017 declassified bombshell documents that indicated that US Secretary of State James Baker and leaders of the UK, France, and Germany indeed provided that pledge.


Nonetheless, the subsequent geopolitical changes and defragmentation of the USSR, caused by internal separatism and economic crisis, prompted the West to reconsider its approach. US President George H.W. Bush claimed in January 1992 that "by the grace of God, America won the Cold War," while President Bill Clinton "okayed" the expansion of NATO in 1997 despite 50 prominent foreign policy experts warning the US president in June 1997 that the expansion of NATO would eventually "unsettle European stability".


Russia's President Vladimir Putin delivers his speech at the Security Conference in Munich, southern Germany, Saturday, Feb. 10, 2007.
©AP Photo / DIETHER ENDLICHER


Instead of integrating Russia into the world's economy on an equal basis, the West has seen it as just "raw-material appendage" and an open market for the past 30 years. Hence, Russia's attempt to secure its borders and national interests in February 2022 prompted a fierce backlash from the West in the form of sweeping sanctions and a NATO proxy war in Ukraine.







Nonetheless, Russia, as it did 100 years ago, is set to withstand the pressure. The Soviet experiment and its best practices proved that Russia could not only be self-sustainable but is also able to maintain vast international alliances across the world.


"Another measure of the deep roots of Soviet patriotism is its continuation in contemporary Russia," said Roberts. "As a multinational state, the Russian Federation is the direct successor of the USSR – a Russia that is headed by a president – Vladimir Putin – who continues to promote citizenship and patriotism as the foundation of the system, albeit one that is also conservative and capitalist."


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