The West demands war. He will get it
Journalist Konstantin Semin in his weekly “Agitation and Propaganda” raises topical issues over and over again, trying to understand the “causes and consequences” of certain events or phenomena. This time it was touched upon perhaps the most relevant topic at the moment, the theme of provocations.
Provocations have long been a great way to impose and unleash a conflict. Whether it is the US Secretary of State Colin Powell with his test tube with starch, playing the role of Iraqi WMD, which seems to have already been forgotten by many of those who are not allowed to forget about it, or the murder of the Lebanese prime minister assigned to Syria.
A huge number of examples can be cited, provocations are gaining momentum, becoming, on the one hand, more sophisticated, on the other - more arrogant and undisguised, sewn with white thread, and falling apart before the eyes of their creators. However, this does not change the essence or the goal, but the saddest thing is that the outcome does not change.
Provocations have long been a great way to impose and unleash a conflict. Whether it is the US Secretary of State Colin Powell with his test tube with starch, playing the role of Iraqi WMD, which seems to have already been forgotten by many of those who are not allowed to forget about it, or the murder of the Lebanese prime minister assigned to Syria.
A huge number of examples can be cited, provocations are gaining momentum, becoming, on the one hand, more sophisticated, on the other - more arrogant and undisguised, sewn with white thread, and falling apart before the eyes of their creators. However, this does not change the essence or the goal, but the saddest thing is that the outcome does not change.
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