It Takes Guts: This is Why Putin is West's Most Indispensable Ally

© Sputnik / Sergey Guneev / Go to the mediabankRussian President Vladimir Putin
Russian President Vladimir Putin - Sputnik International
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In the face of a "war of a thousand cuts" unleashed by Islamists does the West truly have any viable alternative to cooperation with Putin's Russia?

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Vladimir Putin is certainly one of a kind, writes G. Murphy Donovan, a former American intelligence officer, in his opinion piece for US conservative daily The American Thinker. Not only did Putin wave good-bye to the Communist past to boost democracy in Russia, but he also literally and figuratively restored Christianity and Orthodox churches across the land. As if that wasn't enough, the Russian President also rides Harley Davidson bike in his spare time.

To ensure the country's security in the face of today's threats, Putin rehabilitated and modernized the Russian armed forces, making the Army agile, flexible and capable of dealing with whatever comes.

Under Putin, Russia continues to conduct its famous space program. Furthermore, the Russian space taxi still carries American astronauts into space, while Russia's powerful and reliable RD-180 engines remain indispensable for the Pentagon's Atlas V rockets.

At the same time, the Kremlin's pushback against NATO's expansion and regime change spree is hardly surprising: it is a "predictable, if not understandable," reaction, the intelligence officer notes.

However, what might really puzzle an independent observer is why the West is aggravating further tensions with Russia amid the Daesh blitzkrieg and ongoing refugee crisis in Europe.

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"[It] is a mystery to tacticians, strategists, and veteran diplomats alike," Donovan notes.

Make no mistake: it is Russia who dealt a heavy blow to Daesh in Syria by cutting off its supply routes and upsetting the applecart of Recep Tayyip Erdogan's illicit oil business with terrorists.

"The Russian president recently exposed Turkey, too, as NATO's Achilles' heel, a terrorist fifth column between East and West. NATO turned a blind eye to the Erdogan-Baghdadi oil cartel until the Russian Air Force began destroying northbound convoys," Donovan stresses, adding that in contrast to the European and American establishment, Vladimir Putin has no illusions about Islamism, fascism and radical extremism.

What lies at the root of Russia's conventional wisdom?

The crux of the matter is that the Russians "never forget" the lessons of the past. They remember how their grandparents fought in the Second World War and what price Russia paid for the victory over Nazism and for the liberation of Europe. Indeed, the Russians sacrificed the most among the other anti-Hitler coalition members to defeat Nazi Germany.

© Sputnik / Ilya Pitalev / Go to the mediabankRussian President Vladimir Putin taking part in the 'Immortal Regiment' march in central Moscow
Russian President Vladimir Putin taking part in the 'Immortal Regiment' march in central Moscow - Sputnik International
Russian President Vladimir Putin taking part in the 'Immortal Regiment' march in central Moscow

"Victory Day, celebrating Soviet success in World War II, has become the most significant holiday on the Russian calendar under Putin. Unlike America and Europe, victory, success, and the need to oppose fascism, including the religious variety, are mainstays of contemporary Russian vigilance," Donovan underscores.

And what about US President Barack Obama?

"While the Russian president cultivates "a never forget" ethic, the American president seems to never remember," the intelligence officer writes, referring to Obama's refusal to attend the Victory Day celebrations in Russia.

It seems that the American and European establishment don't fully realize who their real enemy is, Donovan emphasizes: they are imposing economic sanctions on Russia and beefing up NATO's military presence on its borders, while flirting with absolutist and Daesh-loving Ankara and turning a blind eye to decades-long fuelling of Islamist Frankenstein by generous Gulf donors.

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The former intelligence officer believes that on the doorstep of a "war of a thousand cuts" — Osama bin Laden's infamous strategy aimed at "smaller, but more frequent" attacks across the world — Russia, China and United States might become a new "big three," similar to the "Big Three" of the USSR, the US and Great Britain of the WW2 times.

Putin's Russia is the West's most obvious ally in the war against terrorism.

Donovan warns: "Time is not a European or American ally when conflict is a war of a thousand cuts."

"Russia may have to rescue Europe from itself again in the 21st Century," he stresses.

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