Cuba đang ve vãn Mỹ để đuợc qui chế MỞ CỬA như Việt Nam, nên không thể chọc giận thằng bé con nhà giầu Mỹ lúc này.
Nếu sự việc đúng như bản tường trình mới này thì Mỹ đã cố tình chặt hết lối ra vào Nga để buộc cục xương Snowden, kẻ thù của các nhà nuớc, cho Nga, Putin phải ngậm. Mỹ có lẽ toan tính rằng Nga sẽ phải chứng tỏ sự "thuần phục" truớc mắt quốc tế bằng hành động "dẫn độ" Snowden!
Cho đến nay Nga, Putin vẫn tỏ vẻ cứng cỏi, ngay cả vấn đề Syria. Có lẽ, Putin đã học được bài học ngu ngơ của mình và đểu cáng của Âu Mỹ chăng? Có lẽ thôi, vì Nga và Putin đã trải qua từ sự ngớ ngẩn tại Afganistan, đến mức ngây ngô bỏ Iraq, và ngu xuẩn bỏ mặc Lybia cho Âu Mỹ "xây dựng khủng bố", ngay cả sau khi bị Mỹ chơi xỏ qua vụ Sarajevo, Chechen, và Georgia! Cho thấy Tỉ lệ mức độ "hiểu ra" của Putin, Nga quá thấp.
Sau khi Liên Sô sụp đổ, Nga đã không đủ khôn ngoan sáng suốt để giữ lại những hàng xóm làm an ninh vòng đai và thị trường của mình. Chủ nghĩa "dân tộc Bạch Nga Chính Thống Giáo" đánh mất toàn khối Đông Âu, Ukraine, và Georgia; đánh mất luôn những khách hàng dầu hỏa thị trường Iraq, Lybia, với mong ước rằng Âu Mỹ sẽ "mở cửa" hơn với Nga!!! Nhưng càng tương nhượng thì gọng kềm Âu Mỹ Do Thái càng xiết chặt. Thế mà Nga và Putin vẫn chưa tỉnh, vẫn khăng khăng theo đuổi chủ nghĩa "dân tộc bạch Nga Chính thống giáo", ra đạo luật qui tội đồng giới tính, chẳng khác giáo quyền Hồi Giáo Ba Tư, càng tự cô lập xã hội mình và tạo thêm cơ hội và điều kiện đối kháng từ trong ra đến ngoài!
Nga có chủ định xây dựng ảnh hưởng của mình trong hành động bênh giữ Syria, hay cũng chỉ la tạm thời dùng Syria làm vật mặc cả với Âu Mỹ?
Biến chuyển trung đông cho đến nay cho thấy Nga và Putin thiếu hẳn tầm nhìn. Ngay cả thắt chặt giao thương với Iran và các nước láng giềng hồi giáo sát nách của Nga, cũng không làm đuợc.
Chiến lược của Âu Mỹ và Do Thái sau khi phá nát và khống trị đuợc các nuớc Hồi giáo và tài nguyên khu vực, thì vấn đề khuất phục Nga chỉ còn là thời gian ngắn mà thôi. Chủ trương của nhóm quyền lực đại bản mà bản doanh đặt tại Anh Mỹ không bao giờ chấp nhận một quốc gia nào có khả năng hay tiềm năng thách thức nó, cho đến khi khuất phục trở thành chư hầu như Âu, Anh Úc hiện nay.
Cả thế giới hiện nay chỉ còn Nga có khả năng kỹ thuật và quân sự làm việc đối kháng này. Á Châu và Trung Quốc nói riêng cái bụng luôn to hơn cái đầu. Tấm gương Nhật đã đạt hơn 25 "tuyệt đỉnh kinh tế kỹ thuật" nhưng không có tầm nhìn cao và xa do tự trói mình vào "chủ nghĩa quốc gia truyền thống giống nòi" đã cho chúng ta phản ảnh thấy rõ cái tập tính Á Châu trì trệ thiển cận. Giờ đây đến Trung Quốc, cũng chỉ trở thành Công Xưởng Thế Giới với giá lao động rẻ, đã thiếu hẳn trình độ sáng tạo, và ngay cả thiếu viễn kiến về một xã hội mở rộng, mà như Nhật cũng đang dãy dụa sau 25 đạt đỉnh cao kinh tế. Tất cả vẫn cứ tự trói và tự giới hạn sức tiến của mình trong chủ nhĩa "văn hóa dân tộc truyền thống".
Quần chúng các nơi vẫn cơ cực và khủng hoảng chiến tranh. Tệ hại nhất là quần chúng trung đông và khu tiểu á, bị giết như những con kiến hàng ngày, càng ngày càng tăng.
Khi cuộc cách mạng thay đổi mô thức sẽ xảy ra ở Âu Mỹ trong những thập niên đang đến, thì Á Châu và Nga vẫn đang chổng mông cầu nguyện và gào thét dân tộc giống nòi...
Ai còn dám nói rằng bọn "lãnh đạo chính trị" là "tài đức" hơn mọi người?
Chúng chỉ rặt toàn một lũ vô đạo bất nhân gian trá và bạo ngược mà thôi, cho dù toàn bộ loài nguời cũng chỉ có một hai cá nhân biệt lệ.
Cập nhật:Ngày 2808-2013, Fidel Castro lên tiếng bác bỏ bản tin này, tố cáo bào chi Nga là bịa đặt...
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Report: Cuba nixed Snowden flight from Russia to Havana
"Kommersant" newspaper says the leaker of NSA materials sought help from the Russian consulate in Hong Kong.
NSA leaker Edward Snowden got stuck at a Moscow airport after Cuba, feeling pressure from Washington, warned that it would not allow an Aeroflot flight from Russia to land in Havana if he were aboard, the respected Russian newspaper Kommersant reported Monday.
The newspaper cited unidentified sources in Snowden's circle and the Russian government for details on the twists and turns in the fate of the former defense consultant, including a report that he had visited the Russian consulate in Hong Kong to get help with his trip two days before flying to Moscow.
Citing a Russian government official, Kommersant said Snowden appeared at the Russian consulate in Hong Kong on his own initiative and and showed consulate officials his Aeroflot ticket to Havana via Moscow, He appealed for their help under the international convention on the rights of refugees.
The 30-year-old Snowden has been charged under the U.S. Treason Act for revealing information on the National Security Agency's surveillance and data-gathering networks. He has defended his action by saying he was trying to "correct this wrongdoing."
If true, the story about seeking help from Russia appears to be at odds with comments by Russian President Vladimir Putin two days after Snowden landed at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport on June 23.
Putin said at the time that Snowden's choice of travel route and his request for Russia's help had come as a "complete surprise." This was interpreted as referring to his arrival in Moscow, but Putin did not specify.
Snowden had a reservation (seat No. 17A) on an Aeroflot flight the following day to Havana. He had intended to go from there to one of the Latin American countries, Bolivia or Venezuela, who were willing to grant him asylum.
Snowden's onward travel on Cuba on June 24 seemed so certain that several reporters booked their own passage on the same flight. But Snowden never showed up.
He was left stuck in the airport transit area until Aug. 1 when Russia granted him a one-year, temporary asylum.
Kommersant, quoting several unidentified "informed" sources, said Cuba, citing U.S. pressure, warned Russia that it would not allow the Aeroflot flight from Moscow to land in Havana if Snowden were on board.
A source identified as someone "close to the State Department" confirmed to the paper that Cuba was among a number of countries that had been cautioned not to provide assistance to Snowden.
On Monday, the Russian Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment, and the U.S. Embassy in Moscow said it would have no immediate comment.
Snowden has not been seen in public since June 23, although he did appear at a closed meeting in mid-July with a group of human rights activists.
Contributing: Associated Press
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The newspaper cited unidentified sources in Snowden's circle and the Russian government for details on the twists and turns in the fate of the former defense consultant, including a report that he had visited the Russian consulate in Hong Kong to get help with his trip two days before flying to Moscow.
Citing a Russian government official, Kommersant said Snowden appeared at the Russian consulate in Hong Kong on his own initiative and and showed consulate officials his Aeroflot ticket to Havana via Moscow, He appealed for their help under the international convention on the rights of refugees.
The 30-year-old Snowden has been charged under the U.S. Treason Act for revealing information on the National Security Agency's surveillance and data-gathering networks. He has defended his action by saying he was trying to "correct this wrongdoing."
If true, the story about seeking help from Russia appears to be at odds with comments by Russian President Vladimir Putin two days after Snowden landed at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport on June 23.
Putin said at the time that Snowden's choice of travel route and his request for Russia's help had come as a "complete surprise." This was interpreted as referring to his arrival in Moscow, but Putin did not specify.
Snowden had a reservation (seat No. 17A) on an Aeroflot flight the following day to Havana. He had intended to go from there to one of the Latin American countries, Bolivia or Venezuela, who were willing to grant him asylum.
Snowden's onward travel on Cuba on June 24 seemed so certain that several reporters booked their own passage on the same flight. But Snowden never showed up.
He was left stuck in the airport transit area until Aug. 1 when Russia granted him a one-year, temporary asylum.
Kommersant, quoting several unidentified "informed" sources, said Cuba, citing U.S. pressure, warned Russia that it would not allow the Aeroflot flight from Moscow to land in Havana if Snowden were on board.
A source identified as someone "close to the State Department" confirmed to the paper that Cuba was among a number of countries that had been cautioned not to provide assistance to Snowden.
On Monday, the Russian Foreign Ministry did not immediately respond to a request for comment, and the U.S. Embassy in Moscow said it would have no immediate comment.
Snowden has not been seen in public since June 23, although he did appear at a closed meeting in mid-July with a group of human rights activists.
Contributing: Associated Press
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Fidel Castro denies Russian claim that Cuba snubbed Edward Snowden
Former president responds to reports in Kommersant newspaper that Cuba bowed to US pressure over NSA leaks
Fidel Castro has criticised a claim in a Russian newspaper that his country buckled to US pressure and blocked the former NSA contractor Edward Snowden from travelling through Cuba to exile in Latin America.
Castro, who ceded the Cuban presidency to his brother, Raúl, in 2006, and is rarely seen or heard from in public, said the article in the Kommersant newspaper on Monday was a lie and libell
Castro, in a column carried by official media on various international issues, from Syria and Egypt to robots doing police work and Snowden, praised Snowden and out condemned US spying as repugnant.
"It is obvious that the United States will always try to pressure Cuba ... but not for nothing has (Cuba) resisted and defended itself without a truce for 54 years and will continue to do so for as long as necessary," Castro wrote.
Snowden, who is wanted in the US for leaking details of US government surveillance programmes, had planned to fly to Havana from Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport a day after arriving from Hong Kong, on 23 June.
But Snowden, who eventually accepted a year's asylum in Russia after spending nearly six weeks at Sheremetyevo, did not show up for the flight, although he had been allocated a seat.
Citing several sources, including one close to the US state department, Kommersant said the reason was that at the last minute Cuba had told officials to stop Snowden from boarding the Aeroflot flight.
It said Cuba had changed its mind after pressure by the US, which wants to try Snowden on espionage charges.
Castro, in his column, criticised Kommersant as a well-known "counter-revolutionary" and "mercenary" newspaper.
"I admire the courageous and just declarations of Snowden," Castro wrote.
"In my opinion, he has rendered a service to the world, having revealed the repugnantly dishonest policy of the powerful empire that is lying and deceiving the world," Castro continued.
According to the Russian newspaper, Havana informed Moscow that it would refuse to let the Aeroflot plane land if Snowden was on board.
Castro did not speculate as to why Snowden skipped the Aeroflot flight.
Castro, who ceded the Cuban presidency to his brother, Raúl, in 2006, and is rarely seen or heard from in public, said the article in the Kommersant newspaper on Monday was a lie and libell
Castro, in a column carried by official media on various international issues, from Syria and Egypt to robots doing police work and Snowden, praised Snowden and out condemned US spying as repugnant.
"It is obvious that the United States will always try to pressure Cuba ... but not for nothing has (Cuba) resisted and defended itself without a truce for 54 years and will continue to do so for as long as necessary," Castro wrote.
Snowden, who is wanted in the US for leaking details of US government surveillance programmes, had planned to fly to Havana from Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport a day after arriving from Hong Kong, on 23 June.
But Snowden, who eventually accepted a year's asylum in Russia after spending nearly six weeks at Sheremetyevo, did not show up for the flight, although he had been allocated a seat.
Citing several sources, including one close to the US state department, Kommersant said the reason was that at the last minute Cuba had told officials to stop Snowden from boarding the Aeroflot flight.
It said Cuba had changed its mind after pressure by the US, which wants to try Snowden on espionage charges.
Castro, in his column, criticised Kommersant as a well-known "counter-revolutionary" and "mercenary" newspaper.
"I admire the courageous and just declarations of Snowden," Castro wrote.
"In my opinion, he has rendered a service to the world, having revealed the repugnantly dishonest policy of the powerful empire that is lying and deceiving the world," Castro continued.
According to the Russian newspaper, Havana informed Moscow that it would refuse to let the Aeroflot plane land if Snowden was on board.
Castro did not speculate as to why Snowden skipped the Aeroflot flight.
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