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As US ties slump, Russian war rhetoric spikes at home
By Olga ROTENBERG
Moscow (AFP) Oct 14, 2016


Biden: 'We're sending a message' to Putin
Washington (AFP) Oct 14, 2016 - Vice President Joe Biden dismissed suggestions that the White House has failed to respond to Russian meddling in the US election, cryptically stating that Washington would be sending Moscow "a message" regarding its alleged hacking.

In an NBC interview excerpt released Friday, Biden paused and gave a wry smile when asked why the US has not acted a week after US officials formally accused the Russian government of trying to interfere with the 2016 White House race.

"We're sending a message" to Russian President Vladimir Putin, Biden said, smiling and nodding his head gently.

"We have the capacity to do it and the message will be sent. He'll know it and it will be at the time of our choosing and under the circumstances that have the greatest impact."

Asked whether the public will know, Biden responded tersely: "I hope not."

Officials have in the past said any cyberattacks on important US institutions would prompt a response, which could take the form of diplomatic or economic sanctions, or possibly cyber measures.

NBC later reported that the CIA was preparing a retaliatory cyberattack "designed to harass and 'embarrass' the Kremlin leadership."

A joint statement from the Department of Homeland Security and Office of the Director of National Intelligence was the first official accusation by Washington against Moscow in a spate of email hacks.

State television threatens the West with nuclear weapons, the Kremlin halts a disarmament treaty, the army warns of shooting down US jets. As ties between Russia and the West have once again slumped, rhetoric in Moscow has peaked.

"Relations between Russia and the US, and the West in general, have been dragged down to the bottom, to a level below which it is difficult to fall," Konstantin Kalachev, the head of the Moscow-based Political Expert Group think tank, told AFP.

But it wasn't meant to be like this.

Just over a month ago Moscow and Washington inked a deal to revive a ceasefire in Syria and the Kremlin seemed to have scored a tactical win by getting the United States to open the door to coordinate strikes against jihadists.

The agreement -- hammered out after repeated rounds of exhausting talks -- appeared a potential breakthrough in Syria's civil war and years of bad blood and furious mudslinging between Moscow and Washington sparked by the Ukraine crisis.

Many, however, were sceptical that the Kremlin and White House, on opposite sides in Syria, could begin to bury the hatchet -- and so it proved.

Soon the truce collapsed and as the violence spiralled so did the ferocious acrimony.

Washington suspended talks with the Kremlin on Syria; Moscow tore up a treaty on disposing weapons-grade plutonium; the West accused Russia and Syria of potential war crimes in its brutal attacks on rebel-held east Aleppo.

The US then formally accused Moscow of hacking American institutions to interfere in its looming presidential election.

"Russia went further, turning a local breakdown in bilateral relations into a global one," wrote Alexander Baunov from the Carnegie Moscow Center.

As President Vladimir Putin suspended the plutonium deal, he slapped on a raft of staggering conditions for it to be restarted: Washington needed to pull back forces in eastern Europe, scrap sanctions and pay Moscow compensation.

"The kind of talk that Russian leaders have formerly kept to themselves has now burst into the open, like a solar flare," Baunov wrote.

- War fever? -

Quickly Russia's slavish state TV and attack-dog spokespeople picked up the baton.

On his weekly Sunday night show, leading presenter Dmitry Kiselyov menaced that any aggression from the West towards Russia had a "nuclear dimension".

Meanwhile defence ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov made a point of warning Washington that new defence systems Moscow had shipped to Syria meant that any unidentified aircraft flying overhead would get a "surprise".

Coincidence or not, the spike in rhetoric came as Russia held a series of events that seemed to suggest the country was gearing up for war.

Across the country the authorities said around 40 million people were taking part in civil defence drills, including evacuating buildings and fire alerts.

Former Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev -- who helped end the Cold War -- warned that the world had reached a "dangerous point".

"Modern day Russia is more ready, mainly psychologically, for a new spiral of confrontation with the West," commentator Georgy Bovt wrote on Gazeta.ru outlet.

Baunov from Carnegie said that the Kremlin seemed to be going harder after the latest fallout as it looked to strengthen its position in the period of flux before a new US president takes office.

"Russia decided not to wait to be punished by the United States for meddling in its internal affairs and instead seized the initiative itself to push relations down to rock bottom," he wrote.

But despite the surge in rhetoric, analyst Kalachev insisted that the situation was not as worrying as it was when ties first collapsed after Moscow's seizure of Crimea from Ukraine in 2014.

"Back then it was more scary -- the rhetoric was taken seriously," he said.

"Now Putin is seen as just raising the stakes like an inveterate gambler, who bluffs and tries to take his partners for a ride."

On Wednesday, in a sign that tensions could be dialled back, Moscow announced the first international talks on Syria with the US and key regional powers at the weekend.


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