Is Wiley Putin Really Like Hitler?
Updated: 12:46pm UK, Wednesday 21 May 2014
By Sam Kiley, Foreign Affairs Editor
It's an opportunity for a brief snigger, a moment of international schadenfreude, the moment of guilty pleasure at someone else's misfortune - and it came all in one sentence.
In reaction to Prince Charles' comparison of Vladimir Putin to Adolf Hitler the Russian president's spokesman said: "I don't know anything about it. I can't really trust the Daily Mail as a source."
This offhand dismissal signals both that the heir to the British throne is irrelevant to Russia - and that the Kremlin is not to be moved, as British politicians very often are, by headlines in the UK's most powerful tabloid.
Charles' comment was made in private. It was controversial only because he said it.
His father, Prince Philip, has form for making off-the-cuff comments about foreigners that have been intended as jokes but taken too seriously.
"And now Putin is doing just about the same as Hitler," the Prince of Wales is reported to have said.
Hillary Clinton said much the same not long ago.
The former US Secretary of State told an audience: "The claims by president Putin and other Russians that they had to go into Crimea and maybe further into Ukraine because they had to protect Russian minorities is reminiscent of claims made back in the 1930s when Germany under the Nazis kept talking about how they had to protect German minorities in Poland, Czechoslovakia and elsewhere throughout Europe."
Prince Charles and Clinton are simply showing that they know their history.
Hitler's unopposed annexation of the Sudetenland, a German speaking part of Czechoslovakia, happened on the pretext of protecting ethnic Germans there after deliberately fomenting unrest, riots, and violent secessionist movements.
Putin has done exactly the same thing in Ukraine.
The issue is whether Russia wants to annex the vast central European country.
He needs to work out whether he has gone far enough or wants to go for broke - and he risks just that, going broke.
So his main focus this week has been on a state visit to China where he had hoped to sign a 30-year, $456bn, deal to export gas and other petrochemicals to China.
He needed this deal to offset the inevitable strategic shift by European national consumers of Russian gas to alternative supplies because Russia is no longer trusted following the annexation of the Crimea.
And Putin got it.
He landed the deal, according to the Chinese state news agency, on Wednesday.
Some 88% of Russia's total oil exports, 70% of its gas exports and 50% of its coal exports go to Europe.
They all face sanctions if Russia keeps the pressure on Ukraine with more of the destabilising tactics used by Hitler.
The Chinese deal is roughly the equivalent of Russia's current oil exports to Germany.
But he'll still be feeling smug.
Russia's play for Ukrainian territory has been as much about a land grab as it has been about weakening the European Union and the bloc's flirtation with Kiev.
He has designs on greater influence over 'Eurasia' and will be watching the EU-wide elections with great interest.
He'll be rooting for the anti-European right - for UKIP, the National Front in France, Austria's Freedom Party - all determined to leave the European Union.
A weakened EU is what Putin wants, so if anti-Europeans do well then Russia's president will enjoy yet another moment of shadenfreude - taking pleasure at the EU's misfortune.
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