January: UK Defence Secretary Gavin Williamson warns that Russia could cause ‘thousands and thousands and thousands of deaths' by targeting Britain's infrastructure. "The plan for the Russians won't be for landing craft to appear in the South Bay in Scarborough and of Brighton Beach. "They are going to be thinking, ‘How can we just cause so much pain to Britain?' The Russian Defence Ministry said Williamson had 'lost his grasp on reason'.
Which begs the question: did he have any in the first place?
"Russia is ripping up the rule book by undermining democracy, wrecking livelihoods by targeting critical infrastructure, and weaponising information", the UK defence secretary declares.
We believe you, Gavin.
March: Russophobia is ratched-up several notches in Britain after former Intelligence officer Sergei Skripal and his daughter Yulia are hospitalised in Salisbury after an apparent poisoning which is blamed- even before the police have started a proper investigation- on Russia.
READ MORE: Skripal Case, Brexit Chaos & Meghan Markle: Highlights of UK's 2018
April: Russia is cast as the boo-hiss baddie again as there are claims that its Syrian Government ally used sarin gas against ‘rebels' in Eastern Ghouta. This leads to air strikes on Grand National weekend by the US, France and Britain, and lots of moral grandstanding by ‘liberal interventionists'in the media. Months later (in August) Defence Secretary James ‘Mad Dog' Mattis admitted that the US had no evidence that Assad did use sarin gas.
Don’t forget the US has clear commercial interest in promoting Russophobia through the various ‘think-tanks’ it funds. (1) It means more arms sales to countries ‘threatened’ in Eastern Europe (2) Helps ´persuade’ European countries to buy US LNG instead of cheaper Russian gas.
— Neil Clark (@NeilClark66) 8 ноября 2018 г.
May: Tom Rogan, a columnist for the neocon Washington Examiner, calls for the new Crimean bridge, which opened earlier in the month, and which links Crimea to the rest of Russia, to be bombed. He more or less admits that would mean casualties, but says that the length of the bridge would "mitigate the risk" to those traversing it at the time.
In a follow-up piece, he says "I could have been a little clearer in arguing that this action could (and of course ought to be) carried out with zero casualties".
So that's alright then.
Neocon Nick Cohen tries his best to spoil the party by asking in the Observer: ‘Why isn't there greater outrage about Russia's involvement in Brexit'
July: England make it to the World Cup semi-finals, their best performance since 1990, but Russophobia means there's no ‘official‘ representatives there from back home to see them. If the neocons had got their way, Gareth Southgate's boys wouldn't have even been there in the first place.
READ MORE: Croatian Footballer Explains Why He Passed Up Putin Handshake at 2018 World Cup
Russia's heroic quarter-final defeat to Croatia on penalties saddens many neutrals. But not Sathnam Sanghera, a writer from the Times.
'Never has a country deserved the pain more. Good' he tweets.
Not a big deal. It's a normal reaction from butthurt people. For this @Sathnam guy, a football game is his "fool's consolation." 😂
— Martinus (@martinus_nllm) 8 июля 2018 г.
August: Russophobia goes a bit quiet because everyone who normally promotes it is on holiday.
September: Louise Bagshawe aka Louise Mensch, tweets that she hopes I am arrested along with what she describes as the ‘whole cell', including George Galloway, the former British Ambassador to Uzbekistan Craig Murray and Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn.
‘One thing about America, it's zero tolerance for collusion with Russia now‘, she says.
They’re coming to take her away ha ha….
— George Galloway (@georgegalloway) 1 сентября 2018 г.
October: Tom Watson (that's the Labour' Deputy Leader and not the veteran American golfer and five-times Open Championship winner), calls for the UK government to conduct a ‘Mueller-style inquiry' into the allegations of Russian interference in the Brexit referendum. The notion that Brexit was a cunning Russian plot to 'divide the west', is increasingly promoted in pro-Remain media. It's one tin-foil hat conspiracy theory that will get you top journalistic awards for peddling.
November: The prospect of a Russian being elected as the new President of Interpol horrifies the hawks. Unsubstantiated claims are made that Alexander Prokopchuk is ex-KGB. The Russophobic smear campaign works and Prokopchuk is defeated. Dmitry Peskov, Kremlin press secretary, condemns "interference in the electoral process of an international organization". Of course, as it was interference from the UK and the US it doesn't really count.
Don’t forget the US has clear commercial interest in promoting Russophobia through the various ‘think-tanks’ it funds. (1) It means more arms sales to countries ‘threatened’ in Eastern Europe (2) Helps ´persuade’ European countries to buy US LNG instead of cheaper Russian gas.
— Neil Clark (@NeilClark66) 8 ноября 2018 г.
December: France is hit by its largest anti-government street protests since 1968 and guess what? Russia is blamed for them. Vladimir Putin is seen, stripped to the waist, and on horse-back among Les Gilets Jaunes.
OMG is Vladimir Putin leading the Yellow vest protests in Paris? #GiletsJaunes pic.twitter.com/LnP9ePyKRK
— Travel True (Jason) 🍌 (@J_H_5) 9 декабря 2018 г.
In a move the late Senator Joe McCarthy would have been proud of The Sunday Times doxes journalists working for Sputnik in the UK, just two days before Christmas.
The year ends with still no sight or sound of Sergei Skripal. Which is rather strange because if anyone knew what really happened on the 4th March 2018, it would be him.
What, I wonder, will 2019 hold in the Russophobia stakes? Watch this space.
The views expressed in this article are solely those of the contributor and do not necessarily reflect the official position of Sputnik.
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