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Edward Snowden is the least of America’s problems with Russia

I can think of several reasons why Barack Obama might have been reluctant to go ahead with a Moscow summit meeting with Russia’s Vladimir Putin. Moscow’s refusal to repatriate Edward Snowden, the former National Security Agency contractor responsible for leaking some of Washington’s most closely held secrets, comes well down the list.

There is nothing good to be said about the present regime in the Kremlin. Deeply repressive and corrupt at home, it is habitually disruptive if not destructive in its approach to international relations. Russia is a great power on the cusp of serious decline, kept afloat for now on a sea of hydrocarbons. It is in thrall to a kleptocracy unable or unwilling to separate the national interest from personal gain. Mr Putin’s answer is to alternate between playing the victim of western perfidy and pretending, ridiculous though it seems, that Russia remains a superpower on a par with the US.

So you can see the reasoning in the White House. Russia continues to sustain the murderous regime of Bashar al-Assad in Syria, has refused to seriously engage about further nuclear weapons reductions and acts for much of the time as if the world is still living through the cold war. With the fall of the Berlin Wall and the collapse of Soviet communism, Russia lost an empire. Mr Putin has never got over it. Sergei Lavrov, his foreign minister, often seems to inhabit a fantasy where Nato is plotting war against Russia.

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菲利普•斯蒂芬斯

菲利普•斯蒂芬斯(Philip Stephens)目前担任英国《金融时报》的副主编。作为FT的首席政治评论员,他的专栏每两周更新一次,评论manbetx app苹果 和英国的事务。他著述甚丰,曾经为英国前首相托尼-布莱尔写传记。斯蒂芬斯毕业于牛津大学,目前和家人住在伦敦。

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