Tensions between US, Russia rise over military involvement in Kazakhstan

TR_123456

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Tensions between the U.S. and Russia rose on Saturday as the Kremlin delivered a strong rebuke to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, who a day prior said, “it’s sometimes very difficult to get” Russians to leave “once [they] are in your house.”

Speaking before reporters on Friday, Blinken said of the recent unrest in Kazakhstan, “There are very particular drivers of what’s happening in Kazakhstan right now.”

“And what’s happening in there is different from what’s happening on Ukraine’s borders. Having said that, I think one lesson in recent history is that once Russians are in your house, it’s sometimes very difficult to get them to leave,” Blinken added.

ERTISEMENT
Blinken’s comments were an apparent jab at Russia, after the Collective Security Treaty Organization — compromised of five former Soviet allies and Russia — sent troops into Kazakhstan as the country remains embroiled in political unrest.

"If Antony Blinken loves history lessons so much, then he should take the following into account: when Americans are in your house, it can be difficult to stay alive and not be robbed or raped," Russia’s foreign ministry said on Telegram, saying the secretary of State's comment was “typically offensive,” Reuters reported.

The foreign ministry, in its searing message, said that it had been “taught this” not by the United States’s recent past, but “by all 300 years of American statehood."

The Hill has reached out to the State Department for comment.


Protests have ensued in Kazakhstan, first spurred by rising fuel prices and enduring as a broader rebuke to former longtime President Nursultan Nazarbayev, who some believe is still influential within the country.

The State Department issued an update to its travel advisory for the country on Friday, saying that it was allowing nonemergency U.S. government employees and families of all U.S. staff from the U.S. Consulate General in Almaty to leave if they want to.

“Demonstrations, protests, and strikes may occur. These events can develop quickly and without prior notification, often interrupting traffic, transportation, communication, and other services; such events have the potential to turn violent,” according to the State Department’s travel advisory. “U.S. citizens in Kazakhstan should be aware that violent protests may severely impact the U.S. Embassy’s ability to provide consular services, including assistance to U.S. citizens departing Kazakhstan.”

 

RogerRanger

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Get the hell out of Western Europe then Blinked guy, get out and never come back. Nobody wants you here.
 

RogerRanger

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Dalit

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Has the US bitten off more than it can chew? A laundry list of adversaries and challanges. I predict a very tough year for the Western bloc.

Chinese and Russian bloc is expected to solidify. We can expect more cooperation between both. The European bloc is getting weaker. After the Afghanistan debacle the European trust has diminished on all-out US dependence. Internal rifts and disagreements among European nations on a host of issues are clearly visible. Now the US has shifted its focus from defeating so-called Islamic terrorism to tackling China and Russia.

The US orchestrated Central Asian spring has failed as Russia stepped in took control of matters within a matter of days. US frustration is visible.
 
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RogerRanger

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Has the US bitten off more than it can chew? A laundry list of adversaries and challanges. I predict a very tough year for the Western bloc.

Chinese and Russian bloc is expected to solidify. We can expect more cooperation between both. The European bloc is getting weaker. After the Afghanistan debacle the European trust has diminished on all-out US dependence. Internal rifts and disagreements among European nations on a host of issues are clearly visible. Now the US has shifted its focus from defeating so-called Islamic terrorism to tackling China and Russia.

The US orchestrated Central Asian spring has failed as Russia stepped in took control of matters within a matter of days. US frustration is visible.
Also the US are putting massive pressure on Turkey and Britain as well. So basically all the powerful nations in Eur-Asia are now actively opposed to the US or have problems with American pressure. Its basically the European Union and the US against the world at this point. If the British shift positions, as I expect, the whole American system will collapse.
 

Dalit

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Also the US are putting massive pressure on Turkey and Britain as well. So basically all the powerful nations in Eur-Asia are now actively opposed to the US or have problems with American pressure. Its basically the European Union and the US against the world at this point. If the British shift positions, as I expect, the whole American system will collapse.

Very tough proposition for the US. It has only created more challenges for itself.
 

xizhimen

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US is becoming irrelevant in this central Asia region after they fled Afghanistan, central Asian states are more politically influenced by Russia and economically by China now.
 

blackjack

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