The Southern Berks News

When it comes to Russia, let’s call a thug a thug

- Georgie Anne Geyer Columnist

True, it is only a small country, far away for most Americans, tucked into a beautiful but scarcely known corner of the world. It is, in fact, extraordin­arily beautiful and, as I remember from an impression­able girlhood trip there, filled with remarkably hand- some men!

Yet, you may well ask me — trying to pretend I never made that embarrassi­ng comment about the men — why should mountainou­s Montenegro, with a mere 630,000 people and lying on the Adriatic coast like a sentinel of the East suspicious­ly observing the omnipresen­t West, be of any importance to us?

Well, listen in for just a mo- ment.

While the Trump administra­tion-in-the-making has gotten itself all tied up in knots over an attraction to the thuggish Russian President Vladimir Putin and his hammer-and-hammer methodolog­y, little Montenegro has become a harbinger of the dangers Putin poses. Moscow has not hidden its totalitari­an ways in Montenegro, but has, according to all indicators, actually tried to overthrow the Montenegri­n government and install its own quisling!

In a story virtually uncovered by the Western press, Montenegri­n prosecutor­s have formally accused Russian nationalis­ts of attempting a coup in the country last October and trying to kill then-Prime Minister Milo Djukanovic. Among the co-conspirato­rs were Serbs who fought on the side of the pro-Russian sep- aratists in Eastern Ukraine, at least two members of the Russian military intelligen­ce and “nationalis­ts in Russia.” The coup was to be a “terrorist attack,” and Moscow was surely involved.

It was not difficult to figure out the purposes of the patently old-Soviet-style “criminal organizati­on.” Montenegro had been one of the six contingent parts of the former Yugoslavia before it collapsed during the 1992-’95 wars, and it has been one of the most pro-NATO and pro-European Union of the lot. It would, and hopefully will, become a full NATO member in the spring of 2017.

Moreover, as Bloomberg reported, the “move (to NATO) would put control of all ports along the Adriatic coast under the alliance’s members and constrain movement of non-allied ships.” And so, a pro-Russian Montenegro, with its beautiful — and militarily incomparab­le — Bay of Kotor, could have an enormous effect on naval activity up and down the Adriatic Sea, particular­ly since Moscow has been active in directly supporting Russian-friendly politician­s from Bulgaria to Moldova and in supporting authoritar­ian presidents and parties from Hungary to Slovakia to Western Europe.

Ah, but you say once again, Montenegro is so small!

Andrey Piontkovsk­y, long one of Russia’s most fertile and fairminded political analysts, now living in the West, pointed out recently on Radio Liberty that Putin is not and will not “struggle against Islamic terrorism together with the West.” In fact, he is “using all available resources and instrument­s” including Islamic terrorism, “to conduct to- tal hybrid war against the West.”

But the president-elect and too many of his advisers refuse to see how they are being used by Putin and Co. They refuse to see what is right before their eyes in Syria, so how can one expect them to see a more-complicate­d geopolitic­al Russian dance like that taking place along the Adriatic?

Donald Trump IS going to be president. But that is no reason for the American people to sit back like weary wimps and accept everything he says or does. We still have voices and minds. Let’s start out with something simple: Vladimir Putin is a thug.

Georgie Anne Geyer has been a foreign correspond­ent and commentato­r on internatio­nal affairs for more than 40 years. She can be reached at gigi— geyer@juno.com.

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