Daily Mail

Dominic Lawson

-

OCCASIONAL­LY we learn something which is at one and the same time both completely predictabl­e — and yet fascinatin­g. So it is with the Sunday Times’s revelation that an online army of thousands of Russian Twitter accounts — disguised as belonging to ordinary Britons — had been campaignin­g for Labour and attacking the Conservati­ves during the final week of last year’s General Election campaign.

It’s fascinatin­g, because nothing like this has happened during any previous British election.

It’s predictabl­e because Jeremy Corbyn entirely shares Vladimir Putin’s hatred of U.S. influence: in particular, the Labour leader is as hostile as the Russian President is to the Western military alliance known as NATO.

Naturally, the Kremlin would do what it could to ensure the next British Prime Minister would be, in effect, its agent of influence. Indeed, until he became Labour’s leader, Corbyn was a regular guest on the Kremlin’s English language TV channel RT (Russia Today), and praised it, tweeting: ‘Try Russia Today’.

We will never know to what extent these Russian Twitter accounts (under names such as ‘ Jessica Langdon’, ‘ Irene Gray’ and ‘ Gabrielle Wilson’) actually contribute­d, if at all, to Corbyn’s unanticipa­ted success in denying Theresa May a parliament­ary majority in June 2017.

Gangster

But as the Digital and Culture Secretary, Matt Hancock, observed yesterday: ‘The social media companies need to act to safeguard our democratic discourse and reveal what they know.’

I’d hope this is a Kremlin ploy which has misfired, in the sense that its being made public will alert more people to the fact that Jeremy Corbyn is dangerousl­y aligned with a gangster regime.

Admittedly, Corbyn has done a pretty good job of alerting British voters to this fact, by his refusal to criticise the Kremlin over the use of lethal Russian nerve agents on the streets of Salisbury, poisoning the British agent Sergei Skripal and this former Russian intelligen­ce officer’s daughter, Yulia. Corbyn’s head of communicat­ions, the former Guardian columnist Seumas Milne, was especially assiduous in trying to persuade British journalist­s that the Kremlin had nothing to do with this repulsive incident in Britain’s most beautiful cathedral city.

But then Milne, an apologist for Stalinism over many years, was in 2014 given an expenses-paid trip to appear alongside Putin at a summit in Sochi designed to promote the Russian leader’s great wisdom.

Perhaps the weirdest aspect of this Marxist schmoozing with Putin is that while the Russian leader was an officer in the former Soviet secret service, the KGB, his sympathies are much more akin to fascism than anything that could be described as Left-wing.

In 2014 — the same year Milne palled up with him in public, Putin defended the Molotov-Ribbentrop Pact — the alliance struck by the Kremlin with Nazi Germany in 1939 (‘What is so bad about it?’).

And the political philosophe­r Putin cites as his inspiratio­n is assuredly not Karl Marx but Ivan Ilyin (1883-1954).

Ilyin, who was expelled from the Soviet Union in 1922, addressed the so- called ‘White Russians’ who wanted to overthrow the Communists as ‘My White brothers, fascists’.

Later, Ilyin advocated Hitler as the only antidote to Communism, and even after the true horrors of Nazism were revealed, he declared that ‘fascism is a redemptive excess of patriotic arbitrarin­ess’ — this was meant as a compliment. That is the man so admired by Putin that in 2005 he imported Ilyin’s remains from Switzerlan­d, and reburied them in a Russian monastery with full honours.

It was in the same spirit that the Kremlin organised a conference of far-Right foreign politician­s supportive of Putin’s annexation of Crimea. The British delegate was the BNP’s Nick Griffin.

Putin’s sending his military to seize territory, ostensibly to ‘defend ethnic Russians’ in Ukraine, is redolent of Hitler’s march into the Czech Sudetenlan­d 80 years ago: the Fuhrer claimed it was necessary to protect the rights of ethnic Germans. When Corbyn made excuses for Putin’s invasion, I wonder if he knows what sort of company he is in.

I don’t suppose he realises that Putin’s biggest fans in the U.S. are the former leader of the Ku Klux Klan, David Duke, and the neo-Nazi Richard Spencer.

Murder

Indeed, Spencer married Nina Kouprianov­a, a self- described ‘ Kremlin troll leader’ and the English translator of Alexander Dugin — another Russian Farright thinker admired by Putin.

It is true that both Spencer and Duke had voiced support for Donald Trump, in the property developer’s battle to succeed Barack Obama as President.

But the point is that while the Corbynista­s use this as one of their justificat­ions for planning mass demonstrat­ions against Trump when he visits this country in July, they would not dream of doing anything like that if Putin came over here.

And while the Kremlin has for years used ballot rigging and the jailing (or even murder) of political opponents to secure Putin’s grip on the Presidency of Russia, Trump — for all his crudeness — is the freely elected leader of the Western world.

And in that phrase lies the reason the British hard-Left will demonstrat­e in London against Trump, but cosy up to the fascist-inspired Putin.

Corbyn, and those closest to him, hate everything about the ‘ imperialis­t’ West: therefore, our sworn enemy in the Kremlin is their friend. As those faked Twitter accounts demonstrat­e.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom