strategic-culture | One
has to ask why there is a crisis in US-Russia relations since
Washington and Moscow have much more in common than not, to include
confronting international terrorism, stabilizing Syria and other parts
of the world that are in turmoil, and preventing the proliferation of
nuclear weapons. In spite of all that, the US and Russia are currently
locked in a tit-for-tat unfriendly relationship somewhat reminiscent of
the Cold War.
Apart from search for a scapegoat to explain the Hillary Clinton defeat, how did it happen? Israel Shamir, a keen observer of the American-Russian relationship, and celebrated American journalist Robert Parry both think that
one man deserves much of the credit for the new Cold War and that man
is William Browder, a hedge fund operator who made his fortune in the
corrupt 1990s world of Russian commodities trading.
Browder
is also symptomatic of why the United States government is so poorly
informed about international developments as he is the source of much of
the Congressional “expert testimony” contributing to the current
impasse. He has somehow emerged as a trusted source in spite of the fact
that he has self-interest in cultivating a certain outcome. Also
ignored is his renunciation of American citizenship in 1998, reportedly
to avoid taxes. He is now a British citizen.
Browder
is notoriously the man behind the 2012 Magnitsky Act, which exploited
Congressional willingness to demonize Russia and has done so much to
poison relations between Washington and Moscow. The Act sanctioned
individual Russian officials, which Moscow has rightly seen as
unwarranted interference in the operation of its judicial system.
Browder,
a media favorite who self-promotes as “Putin’s enemy #1,” portrays
himself as a selfless human rights advocate, but is he? He has used his
fortune to threaten lawsuits for anyone who challenges his version of
events, effectively silencing many critics. He claims that his
accountant Sergei Magnitsky was a crusading "lawyer" who discovered a
$230 million tax-fraud scheme that involved the Browder business
interest Hermitage Capital but was, in fact, engineered by corrupt
Russian police officers who arrested Magnitsky and enabled his death in a
Russian jail.
Many
have been skeptical of the Browder narrative, suspecting that the fraud
was in fact concocted by Browder and his accountant Magnitsky. A
Russian court recently supported that
alternative narrative, ruling in late December that Browder had
deliberately bankrupted his company and engaged in tax evasion. He was
sentenced to nine years prison in absentia.
Browder is again in the news recently in connection with testimony
related to Russiagate. On December 16th Senator Diane Feinstein of the
Senate Judiciary Committee released the transcript of the testimony provided by Glenn Simpson, founder of Fusion GPS. According to James Carden, Browder
was mentioned 50 times, but the repeated citations apparently did not
merit inclusion in media coverage of the story by the New York Times,
Washington Post and Politico.
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