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Newspapers Online 09-24-2013 | ScienceTechno

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09-24-2013 |

Science&Technology
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09-24-2013 Science&Technology

Microsoft revamps Surface tablets to challenge Apple

Microsoft Corp unveiled faster, more powerful versions of its Surface tablet computer on Monday in an effort to boost poor sales of its flagship hardware product and mount a stronger challenge to Apple Inc's iPad.

The Surface is key to Microsoft's plan to reinvent itself as a devices and services company, but the revamp comes less than a year after it brought out its own computers for the first time and failed to put a dent in the market. It has racked up only $853 million in sales while generating a $900 million charge for unsold inventory.


At an event in New York, Microsoft unveiled two new machines and a range of accessories promising faster processing, better battery life and more apps.


The new Surface 2, which runs on a low-power chip designed by ARM Holdings Plc, starts at $449 for the 32 GB version, not including a snap-on keyboard starting at $120. That is slightly less than Apple's latest wifi-only 32GB iPad, which costs $599.


The new Surface Pro 2, which runs on an Intel Corp chip and is aimed more at the lightweight laptop market, starts at $899 for the 64 GB version, not including keyboard. Apple's cheapest 128 GB MacBook Air costs $999.


Initial reaction was tepid.


"I don't see much incentive for people to buy these devices. Yes, they are cheaper than the iPads, but is that enough reason?" said Jack Gold, a technology analyst at J. Gold Associates. "It seems like Microsoft is just maintaining the traditional PC mantra - keep upgrading the chip and hardware a little bit every year at a slightly lower price. I think they needed to do something that was innovative beyond the first generation, and I don't see that in these devices."


Microsoft shares were steady at $32.82 on Nasdaq, while Apple shares rose 4 percent after reporting strong sales of its new iPhone 5s and 5c models and offering a more optimistic financial forecast.


As an added incentive, Microsoft is taking advantage of its other products, offering customers free Skype calling to landlines in more than 60 countries for one year and 200 GB of free storage for two years on SkyDrive, its online 'cloud' storage product that competes with Google Drive and Dropbox.


The Surface 2 comes preloaded with a stripped-down version of Office, including Outlook email. Surface Pro 2 can run the full, standard version of Office, but the software must be bought separately.



The hugely popular Office suite is the Surface's one unique selling point over Apple, as Microsoft has not released full, custom-designed Office apps for the iPad.

Read full story

Source: Reuters

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09-24-2013 Science&Technology

Why space telescope mirror is most complex ever built

"You will not be touching anything.” It is clear from the tone of the technician’s voice that this is a command, rather than a suggestion, and that it requires a response. “No,” I reply emphatically, “I will not be touching anything.”

I am dressed in a white smock, hairnet, gloves and overshoes; my audio recorder swabbed down with wipes and my notebook dusted. I am as clean as I am ever likely to be.


All this preparation has made me slightly paranoid and for good reason. I am about to enter the large clean room at Ball Aerospace in Boulder, Colorado where the mirrors for the $8.7 billion James Webb Space Telescope (JWST) are being built and tested. These will enable us to look back in time 13.6 billion years to the immediate aftermath of the Big Bang. They will be precise enough to capture single photons. And the slightest speck of dust or greasy fingerprint could ruin them.


The room is around the size of an American football pitch and pumped full of filtered air. Within it are several tent-like structures – clean rooms within the clean room. On tables inside these, sit some of the 18 individual hexagonal mirrors that make up the massive 21ft (6.5m) diameter primary mirror of this new space telescope.


“On that table is a mirror segment,” explains Allison Barto, JWST Program Manager at Ball, as we peer through a window into one of the super-clean clean rooms. “Each of these is made of solid beryllium and then we put a bunch of stuff on the backside to allow us to move it around in space.”


Beryllium is a metal chosen for its light weight, strength and durability under a wide range of temperatures, and the “stuff” she is referring to is a collection of extremely precise actuators that allow the individual 5ft (1.5m) diameter mirrors to be precisely adjusted, relative to each other, to act together as one single mirror. “A piece of paper is about 100,000 nanometres thick,” says Barto. “We need to move those mirrors about five nanometres at a time.” It’s like adjusting the wing mirrors on a car. The actuators allow the mirrors to be tipped and tilted, only these ones can also adjust the curvature of the surface.


The fact that the mirrors can be tweaked so precisely means that, like the Hubble space telescope, the JWST will be launched into space with its mirror out of focus. Only this time, unlike when Hubble was launched, this will be deliberate.



“The mirror unfolds like a drop-leaf table and, when we first deploy, these 18 mirrors are going to be all over the place,” Barto explains. “So, we will have to find the 18 fuzzy spots in our images and from those fuzzy images figure out where to move each of these mirrors to have them line up into a single well-focused image.” That laborious and painstaking process is expected to take at least six months.

Read full story

Source: BBC

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09-24-2013 Science&Technology

Apple Touch ID fingerprint tech 'broken', hackers say

Hackers claim to have broken Apple's iPhone 5S Touch ID fingerprint recognition system just a day after the phone was launched.

Germany's Chaos Computer Club claims it "successfully bypassed the biometric security of Apple's Touch ID using easy everyday means".


By photographing a fingerprint left on a glass surface and creating a fake finger they were able to unlock the phone, the hackers claim.


But Apple maintains Touch ID is secure.


On its website the iPhone maker says there is a one in 50,000 chance of two separate fingerprints being alike and the technology provides "a very high level of security".


Karsten Nohl, chief scientist at SRLabs, a German hacking think tank, told the BBC: "It would have been incredible if Apple had managed to do something the rest of the biometrics industry has failed to achieve after decades of trying, so I'm not surprised it was hacked after just one day.


"Claiming this system offers a high level of security is just ridiculous," he added.


Convenience


Apple does not suggest that Touch ID is a total replacement for traditional passcode security, simply a more convenient way of unlocking the phone. "Touch ID is designed to minimise the input of your passcode; but your passcode will be needed for additional security validation," Apple says.


But it does not address the ability of hackers lifting individual prints and creating fake fingers, as the Chaos Computer Club claims to have done.


Mr Nohl says a five-digit password would be more secure than a fingerprint and believes Apple should have focused on convenience rather than security in its marketing of the Touch ID feature.


On Friday, an influential US senator called for Apple to answer "substantial privacy questions" arising from the technology.



Apple did not respond to the BBC's request for a comment.

Source: BBC

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09-24-2013 Science&Technology

BlackBerry in $4.7 billion takeover deal with Fairfax group

Smartphone maker BlackBerry Ltd said on Monday it agreed in principle to be acquired by a consortium led by its biggest shareholder, Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd, for $4.7 billion.

Fairfax, led by Canadian investor Prem Watsa, owns 10 percent of BlackBerry. It has offered to pay $9 a share in cash for the Canadian company, which last week said it expected to report a quarterly loss of nearly $1 billion, along with far weaker sales than analysts had expected.


"We can deliver immediate value to shareholders, while we continue the execution of a long-term strategy in a private company with a focus on delivering superior and secure enterprise solutions to BlackBerry customers around the world." Watsa said in a statement.


Shares in BlackBerry had plunged since Friday, when the company warned of a sharp drop in revenue and massive job cuts. The group has until November 4 to conduct due diligence.



The stock was trading up 27 cents at about $9 on Nasdaq after being halted earlier on Monday.

Source: Reuters

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09-24-2013 Politics

Iran takes charm offensive to U.N., agrees to nuclear talks

Iran's new government took its diplomatic charm offensive to the United Nations on Monday and agreed to new talks with six world powers - including the United States - on its nuclear program during this week's gathering of world leaders in New York.

That meeting with Iran's new Foreign Minister Mohammad Zarif will involve U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry, which is highly unusual given that the United States has not maintained diplomatic relations with Iran since 1980.


The announcement of the planned talks, after a meeting between EU foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton and Zarif, raised hopes that the annual United Nations General Assembly could bring a thaw in relations between arch-enemies Iran and the United States.


Ashton told reporters that Zarif would join the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council and Germany at a meeting that has been scheduled for Thursday to discuss the Iranian nuclear program, which is at the heart of tensions between Tehran and the West.


The West believes Iran has been trying to develop nuclear weapons and is determined to stop this, imposing tough economic sanctions. Iran says it is not trying to produce a bomb but has insisted on its right to enrich uranium for the purpose of peaceful energy production.


High-level contacts between both the United States and Iran are extremely rare. The last time that a U.S. secretary of state and an Iranian foreign minister spoke face-to-face appears to have been more than six years ago.


In May 2007, then-U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice made clear she was open to talking to her Iranian counterpart, Manouchehr Mottaki, at an international conference in Egypt, but the encounter amounted to pleasantries over ice cream.


U.S. officials have said a meeting is also possible on the sidelines of the U.N. assembly between President Barack Obama and Iran's newly elected centrist President Hassan Rouhani, who has shown an apparent desire to take a more conciliatory approach towards the West since taking office last month.


If it happens, it would be the first between U.S. and Iranian government heads since before the 1979 Islamic revolution that toppled the U.S.-backed Shah, and could help ease tensions in the Middle East that have been worsening given the crisis in Syria.


Iran is a key ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, a U.S. foe whose country has been torn by civil war since 2011.



U.S. State Department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the United States is ready to work with Rouhani if his government engages seriously in efforts to resolve the standoff over Iran's nuclear program.

Read full story

Source: Reuters

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09-24-2013 Politics

Triumphant Merkel starts tough task of seeking coalition

Germany's Angela Merkel began trying to persuade her centre-left rivals to keep her in power on Monday, after her conservatives notched up their best election result in more than two decades but fell short of an absolute majority.

Even the chancellor's political foes acknowledged she was the big winner of the first German vote since the start of the euro crisis in 2010 thrust the pastor's daughter from East Germany into the role of Europe's dominant leader.


But despite leading her conservatives to their best result since 1990, with 41.5 percent of votes putting them five seats short of the first absolute majority in parliament in over half a century, the 59-year-old Merkel had little time to celebrate.


"We are, of course, open for talks and I have already had initial contact with the SPD (Social Democratic Party) chairman, who said the SPD must first hold a meeting of its leaders on Friday," Merkel told a news conference, adding that she did not rule out talks with other potential coalition partners.


Analysts say coalition building could take as long as two months given signs Merkel's SPD arch-rivals would play hardball over repeating the 'grand coalition' she led from 2005-2009. That coalition worked well for Merkel in her first term but cost the SPD millions of leftist votes.


"It will be an extremely long road," said Ralf Stegner, head of the left wing of the SPD which has major reservations about becoming junior partners again to Merkel's Christian Democrats (CDU) and her Bavarian the Christian Social Union (CSU) allies.


The 150-year-old SPD may have finished a poor second with their second-worst post-war result, but they know Merkel has to come knocking after her current centre-right coalition partners, the Free Democrats (FDP), failed to get back into parliament.


One SPD leader, speaking on condition of anonymity, half-joked that it would have been better if Merkel had got her own slim majority: "That would have been the worst punishment for her - to bear responsibility for everything on her own."


TOUGH BARGAINING AHEAD


But in German politics, where only one post-war chancellor has won an absolute majority - conservative patriarch Konrad Adenauer, in 1957 - complex coalition-building is par for the course and few politicians build consensus better than Merkel.



Her calm leadership through the euro crisis has reinforced her status as "Mutti" (mother) of the nation, but she counted on the SPD and Greens' support on all the euro zone bailout votes.

Read full story

Source: Reuters

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09-24-2013 Politics

Egyptian court bans Muslim Brotherhood

An Egyptian court on Monday banned deposed President Mohamed Mursi's Muslim Brotherhood and ordered its funds seized, a crippling strike in the campaign to crush the Islamist movement.

The case was brought by a lawyer from the leftist Tagammu party on the grounds of protecting Egyptians from violence.


It was not stated if he was acting at the instigation of the army-backed government, which has launched one of the fiercest crackdowns against the group in decades.


"The court bans the activities of the Muslim Brotherhood organization and its non-governmental organization and all the activities that it participates in and any organization derived from it," presiding Judge Mohammed al-Sayed said in a ruling.


He also ordered the government to seize the Brotherhood's funds and administer its frozen assets.


The ruling did not specifically mention the Brotherhood's political wing, the Freedom and Justice Party.


But the state news agency quoted Freedom and Justice Party spokesman Hamza Zawbaa as saying the party rejected the ruling and would appeal.


"What is happening to the Brotherhood translates to a return of the police state after having removed it through the January 25 revolution," he said, describing the revolt that toppled autocrat Hosni Mubarak in 2011.


The movement has seen hundreds of its members killed and thousands arrested since the army overthrew Mursi in July. The ruling may force the Brotherhood to go underground, especially as public support for it has dropped.


The court's decision also raises the possibility that some Brotherhood members will lose faith in peaceful resistance and take up arms against the government.


"How the Brotherhood responds to this verdict depends on the individual decisions of rank-and-file members, because the broader structure has largely ceased to function," said Eric Trager, an expert on the Muslim Brotherhood at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy.


Mohamed Ali, a Brotherhood official, said: "The ruling will not prevent us from continuing our peaceful resistance to the coup".


The Brotherhood emerged from the shadows to win parliamentary and presidential elections after Mubarak was overthrown.


But many Egyptians became disillusioned with Mursi after he gave himself sweeping powers and mismanaged the economy, taking to the streets in protest and prompting the army move.


Following Mursi's overthrow, the Brotherhood organized rallies demanding his reinstatement, bringing on the fiercest campaign against it by security forces in decades.



The government accuses the Brotherhood of inciting violence and terrorism and has put forward its own plan for new elections. Egypt's state and private media now portray the Brotherhood as a terrorist group and an enemy of the state.

Read full story

Source: Reuters

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09-24-2013 Politics

Putin says Syria violence could hit ex-Soviet bloc

Russian President Vladimir Putin warned ex-Soviet allies on Monday that Islamist militancy fuelling the war in Syria could reach their countries, some of which have Muslim majorities.

He said Russia and its allies would provide "additional collective assistance" to Tajikistan to guard its border with Afghanistan after the pullout of most foreign combat troops in 2014.


Russia, which has a large Muslim minority of its own and is fighting an Islamist insurgency, has accused the West of helping militants by seeking Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's removal without paying enough attention to the potential consequences.


Putin told leaders of the six-nation Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) that militants fighting Assad could eventually expand attacks beyond Syria and the Middle East.


"The militant groups (in Syria) did not come out of nowhere, and they will not vanish into thin air," Putin said.


"The problem of terrorism spilling from one country to another is absolutely real and could directly affect the interests of any one of our countries," he said, citing the deadly attack on a shopping mall in Nairobi as an example.


"We are now witnessing a terrible tragedy unfold in Kenya. The militants came from another country, as far as we can judge, and are committing horrendous, bloody crimes," Putin said at a CSTO summit in the Russian Black Sea resort city of Sochi.


His words appeared to be a warning about violence spreading from both Syria and Afghanistan, which shares a long border with CSTO member Tajikistan in Central Asia.


BORDER ASSISTANCE


Reiterating concerns violence could spread to former Soviet Central Asia and Russia after the pullout of most foreign combat troops from Afghanistan by the end of 2014, he said CSTO nations agreed to draft a plan to protect the border.


"We will provide additional collective assistance to Tajikistan to strengthen the Tajik-Afghan state border," Putin said. He gave no details.


Russian border guards used to patrol the Tajik frontier with Afghanistan but left in 2005.


The CSTO security alliance also includes Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Armenia and Belarus. Tajikistan, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan all have mostly Muslim populations. Central Asian states Uzbekistan and Turkmenistan, neither members of CSTO, also have frontiers with Afghanistan.


Russian officials have expressed concern that Russian-born militants fighting in Syria could return to Russia's North Caucasus and join an insurgency that claims lives almost daily.



Russia has been one of Syria's strongest backers in a conflict that has killed more than 100,000 people since it began in March 2011, delivering arms to Assad's forces and joining China in blocking Western-backed initiatives in the U.N. Security Council.

Source: Reuters

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09-23-2013 Science&Technology

Autumn brings a chill for BlackBerry

With the fall of Nokia looming over him, this weekend will be an uncomfortable one for Thorsten Heins, chief executive of BlackBerry. While the Finnish firm sold its mobile phone business to Microsoft for €5.4bn (£4.5bn) this month, questions are swirling as to how long BlackBerry – which signalled its distress in August by putting itself up for sale – can survive, and in what form.

Things are so bad that on Friday night, market rumours forced Heins to announce the top-line quarterly results a week early. And they are grim: an operating loss of up to $995m (£620m), including $960m of inventory writedowns on its new Z10 handsets released in January, a net loss of more than $250m, revenues half what analysts expected at $1.6bn, and phone shipments of 3.7m – which Apple will comfortably exceed with its new iPhones this weekend alone.


For a company that once dismissed the iPhone for having no keyboard (a key selling point for BlackBerry phones), it's a humiliation. The low shipment figure exposes Heins's claim in April that the new Q10 phone – the first keyboard-equipped model using its new BB10 software – would sell "tens of millions". It might have sold a million.


Now the question is turning to how long BlackBerry has to go. On Friday, the company said it will cut 4,500 jobs, roughly 40% of its 11,000 total worldwide, adding to 7,000 jobs cut in the two previous financial years. It will reduce its future phone portfolio from six to four.


One former insider asks: "How would BlackBerry win? There's no answer to that at the moment. A buyer? I don't see how they would make the case."


This weekend was meant to be a new start for the company, with an attempt to turn back the clock to when it was the star of the tech world by offering its famous BlackBerry Messenger (BBM) software free for iPhones and Android phones. But rivals such as WhatsApp are already on both, with more users, while BlackBerry's base is dwindling both among consumers and businesses. BBM's arrival on the other platforms is two years too late, says the insider.


Friday's bad news drove the stock down by 20%, to a market cap of just $4.5bn. Broken up, BlackBerry might be worth more: last quarter, it valued its patent portfolio at $3bn, and says it has $2.6bn of cash and no debt. The services business has around 35m business customers, who could fetch up to $4.5bn.



But who would buy it now? Silver Lake, the private equity company that facilitated the recent $24.8bn buyout of Dell, appears uninterested – and Michael Dell has said his company won't go back into smartphones. Reuters reported last week that while Canada's Fairfax Financial Holdings, a 10% shareholder, might try to stage a buyout, interest from other private equity players is muted.

Read full story

Source: TheGuardian

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09-23-2013 Science&Technology

David Cameron in Twitter gaffe no 2

Prime minister David Cameron appears to have blundered again on Twitter, marking a highly offensive tweet as a "favourite" on his official account on the social networking site.

The error occurred after the account, run by the prime minister and Tory aides, posted a message offering Cameron's condolences to Kenya's president Uhuru Kenyatta in the wake of the Nairobi terror attack. It added that the foreign secretary, William Hague, would make a statement.


A tweet was then posted in reply, saying: "David-Cameron please call off WilliamHague, hasn't Kenya suffered enough today?" The user's profile coupled an offensive username with an image of Lord Tebbit in the aftermath of the Brighton bombing. But Cameron's account then "favourited" the tweet.


The Mail Online website said the error was made overnight by one of the aides running the Tory leader's Twitter account.


A spokesman said: "This is a deeply offensive account that the prime minister would never want to be associated with. Clearly, the tweet was favourited by mistake and was removed as soon as it was realised."


Cameron warned about the danger of Twitter before he signed up to the website, and it is the second time his account has been involved in an embarrassing mistake. In July he posted a message in support of work and pensions secretary Iain Duncan Smith's welfare reforms, but blundered by listing the name of a spoof account for the Cabinet minister.


A quick check would have revealed that the IDS-MP account included such messages as: "I've always supported a Mansion Tax. Your Tax buys my Mansion. Chin chin!"



Cameron was a latecomer to Twitter, having previously said he was worried that "too many tweets might make a twat".

Source: TheGuardian

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09-23-2013 Religion

Pope attacks global economics for worshipping 'god of money'

Pope Francis made one of his strongest attacks on the global economic system on Sunday, saying it could no longer be based on a "god called money" and urged the unemployed to fight for work.

Francis, at the start of a day-long trip to the Sardinian capital, Cagliari, put aside his prepared text at a meeting with unemployed workers, including miners in hard hats who told him of their situation, and improvised for nearly 20 minutes.


"I find suffering here ... It weakens you and robs you of hope," he said. "Excuse me if I use strong words, but where there is no work there is no dignity."


He discarded his prepared speech after listening to Francesco Mattana, a 45-year-old married father of three who lost his job with an alternative energy company four years ago.


Mattana, his voice trembling, told the pope that unemployment "oppresses you and wears you out to the depths of your soul".


The crowd of about 20,000 people in a square near the city port chanted what Francis called a prayer for "work, work, work". They cheered each time he spoke of the rights of workers and the personal devastation caused by joblessness.


The pope, who later celebrated Mass for some 300,000 people outside the city's cathedral, told them: "We don't want this globalised economic system which does us so much harm. Men and women have to be at the centre (of an economic system) as God wants, not money."


"The world has become an idolator of this god called money," he said.


Sardinia's coast is famous for its idyllic beaches, exclusive resorts and seaside palatial residences of some of the world's richest people, including former Italian prime minister Silvio Berlusconi and a host of Hollywood actors.


But much of the island, particularly its large cities and the vast agricultural and industrial interior, has been blighted by the economic crisis, with factories closed and mines operating at low capacity.


YOUTH UNEMPLOYMENT, CLOSING MINES


Cagliari has a youth unemployment rate of about 51 percent. The Sulcis area in the southwest of the island is threatened with more unemployment from the looming closures of the Carbosulcis coal mine and an aluminum smelter.


The pope made clear that his assessment was not limited to the local situation.


"It is not a problem of Italy and Europe ... It is the consequence of a world choice, of an economic system that brings about this tragedy, an economic system that has at its centre an idol which is called money," he said to the cheers of the crowd.



While Francis's predecessor Benedict also called for changes to economic systems, he was more likely to use dense intellectual language.

Read full story

Source: Reuters

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09-23-2013 Politics

Inside the mind of Vladimir Putin

Sociologist Olga Kryshtanovskaya is used to getting into people’s heads.

She’s an expert on Russia’s elites and its political system. For 23 years she headed the Department of Elite Studies at the Russian Academy of Sciences and now is director general of the research center “Kryshtanovskaya Laboratory.”


When Kryshtanovskaya looks at Russian President Vladimir Putin, she sees an “average Joe” - make that an “average Ivan.”


“Putin,” she says, “reflects the middle statistical opinion of the average Russian, and what he says is sometimes contradictory, but that is what the majority of Russians think.”


In his first term, she recalls, Putin said the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century was the dissolution of the Soviet Union.


“Every resident of Russia would subscribe to that,” she says.


It’s not that Russians want Communism back, although some do, but the whole structure of life and secure social programs fell apart along with the USSR. So, when people in the West reacted with horror to Putin’s statement, many Russians were surprised, Kryshtanovskaya says, “Everything Putin says is very understandable to us, but not very understandable to you – and vice versa,” she says. “What the American president does, when he starts a war, when he sends troops, when Vietnam begins, Afghanistan, Iraq, etc., we can’t understand it.”


Russians who lived during the Soviet Union grew up with government-inspired anti-Americanism. “It’s one of the pillars of our country’s ideology,” she says. “It was formed a long time ago and was carefully instilled in people by the Soviet leaders. Why are there problems? ‘It’s those people, the evil Americans, who are at fault, who make things worse for us.’ It’s an ideological cliché.”


Now, Kryshtanovskaya says, “When Putin thinks of how he can justify his policies, it’s faster to recall this old enemy than to create a new one. This external enemy is a factor of the internal politics of Russia, as strange as that may seem.”


Russian presidents that Americans like are the ones Russians don’t like, she says. “Gorbachev, whom the whole world loved, Russians didn’t like. It’s the mentality. Putin acts according to our traditional mentality which is to respect only strength. That one has to be quite aggressive, that you have to demonstrate crude power so that people will respect you. We even have that expression – “when people fear you it means people respect you.”


Putin’s way of behaving, she says, is an attempt to say “’We are a great power, you have to fear us, we have nuclear weapons, etc.’ That is our mentality.”



Vladimir Putin’s recent op-ed in the New York Times was addressed to the American people, but Kryshtanovskaya believes he was talking to Russians, too.

Read full story

Source: CNN

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