Democracy and Class Struggle has long warned that the market economy was Russia's Achilles heel and we have even found a number of Russian Commentators who agree with us.
Dmitry Medvedev is a market liberal and responsible for making Russia vulnerable to Western blackmail - Putin on occassion has recognized the problem but quickly re- affirmed his commitment to the market - that is why we have said he has passed his sale by date - he cannot take Russia to it next necessary stage a Self Reliant Socialist Economy without Capitalist Oligarchs the Profit Patriots - Communists are Russia's Real Patriots.
Prime Minister
Dmitry Medvedev has warned the US that any sanctions targeting Russian banking
operations and currency trade will be treated as a declaration of economic war
and retaliated against by any means necessary.
“If they
introduce something like a ban on banking operations or the use of any
currency, we will treat it as a declaration of economic war. And we’ll have to
respond to it accordingly – economically, politically, or in any other way, if
required,” Medvedev said during a trip to the Kamchatka region.
"Our
American friends should make no mistake about it,” he emphasized.
Medvedev noted
that Russia has a long history of surviving economic restrictions and never
caved in to the pressure in the past. “Our country had been living under
constant pressure through sanctions for the last hundred years,” Medvedev
said, accusing the US and its allies of employing sanctions to undercut global competition. “Nothing has changed.”
The prime
minister said that by targeting Russia’s gas exports to Europe, Washington
wants to push its own LNG shipments to the continent. “It’s an absolutely
nonmarket anti-competition measure aimed at strangling our capabilities.”
Medvedev pointed
out that the US is simultaneously imposing tariffs on China. “The Chinese,
obviously, don’t like it. No one does. And our goal is to resist all these
measures.”
On Wednesday, the
US State Department announced a new round of sanctions targeting Russian
exports of dual-purpose electronics and other national security-controlled
equipment, which will come into effect on August 22.
The stated
reasoning behind latest punitive actions are accusations levelled against
Russia over the Sergei and Yulia Skripal poisoning back in March, which the UK
and its allies pinned on Moscow without due investigation. Washington
subsequently accused Moscow of breaking the 1991 international law against
chemical and biological warfare.
The Kremlin has
repeatedly denied the allegations, while the UK authorities have provided no
proof of Russia’s involvement in the case. Furthermore, Moscow eliminated all
stockpiles of its chemical weapons under international obligations, unlike the
US, which has still to honor its commitment.
While Russia
reserved the right to retaliate against new trade restrictions, the US
threatened to intensify sanctions within three months, by potentially cutting
off nearly all exports and imports and banning the Russian airline Aeroflot
from flying to the US.
To avoid further
pressure, Washington demands that Moscow confess and provide “reliable
assurances” that Russia will not use chemical weapons in the future. The
US also seeks to have “on-site inspections” of alleged chemical
production facilities, which Russia has already shut down.
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