| 
			 
			
			 
			 
			 
			
			  
			
			
			by Brian Preston 
			 September 2014 
			from 
			Viewzone Website 
			
			
			
			
			Spanish version 
			 
  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			 
			With his stand against 
			an attack on Syria,  
			
			Vladimir Putin has emerged
			 
			
			as the moral leader of the free 
			world. 
			 
			  
			
			  
			
			It may be just the latest global chess 
			move to further push the world's population into war but I've 
			noticed 
			the mainstream media's coverage of
			Vladimir Putin has taken an undeserved bad turn. 
			 
			Back in 2013 Putin single handedly defused an impending invasion of 
			Syria and a confrontation with Russia when he suggested that the 
			Assad regime give up their chemical weapons to a team of 
			international inspectors. This ingenious and successful solution 
			probably saved us all from a nuclear confrontation and was 
			recognized by giving credit (and the Nobel Peace Prize) to the 
			international inspectors - totally ignoring Putin's role. 
			 
			Lately, Vladimir Putin has been portrayed in the propaganda style of 
			the Cold War era. Despite over 75% popularity in Russia, the West 
			seems bent on making him look bad and downplaying any peace efforts 
			he attempts. 
			 
			And, as I write this report, Mr. Putin has just brokered a ceasefire 
			between the pro-Moscow militants and the Ukraine government, ending 
			months of conflict and thousands of lives just as NATO was about to 
			send 10,000 troops to the battle lines with Russia.  
			
			  
			
			Whew! Thank you again, Mr. Putin. 
			 
			As you will read below, Putin has demonstrated morality and the 
			drive towards peace in his post-Soviet leadership career. In reading 
			the truth about Vladimir Putin, you will hopefully see the real 
			enemy of civilization. The enemy that wants a global war. 
			 
			Just recently, August 29, Russian President Vladimir Putin called on 
			pro-Moscow separatists in Ukraine to open a "humanitarian corridor" 
			to allow and estimated 700 Ukrainian troops to escape from their 
			positions where they are surrounded in the eastern town of 
			Novoazovsk. 
			
				
				"I call on the rebel forces to open 
				a humanitarian corridor for the Ukrainian troops who are 
				surrounded, so as to avoid unnecessary casualties and to give 
				them the opportunity to withdraw from the zone of operations," 
				Putin said in a statement.  
			 
			
			This was agreed upon by the rebel leader 
			and the troops are moving home. 
			 
			You didn't read about this 
			
			on CNN or Fox. You also likely don't know 
			that the US now believes that Ukraine jets 
			
			downed the Malaysian 
			airline - not the pro-separatists militia.  
			
			  
			
			The state sponsored news media were too 
			busy telling us that Russia had "invaded" Ukraine and justifying 
			this report to muster 10,000 NATO troops to confront the 20,000 
			Russian troops that will face off at the border. 
			 
			And so the game begins... a dangerous game. 
  
			
			  
			
			 
			* * * 
  
			
			  
			
			 
			In a scene even more vile than The Godfather,
			
			Saudi Prince 
			Bandar, in a face-to-face meeting with Vladimir Putin 
			in July (2013), secretly recorded and leaked to a British newspaper, 
			tried to emulate the Temptation of 'Christ' by offering 
			Russia a partnership in the OPEC oil cartel. 
			
				
				"All this I will give you, if you 
				will let the Assad regime fall." 
				
				
				
				Source 
			 
			
			But Mr. Putin had more integrity and 
			morality than the Saudi.  
			
			  
			
			Even more than the bankers and investors 
			salivating to use Syria for their
			
			natural gas pipeline from Qatar to Turkey 
			and on to the European market. Even more than the Zionists bent on 
			moving LNG (liquid natural gas) from the huge off-shore
			
			Laviathan gas field, (claimed by 
			Lebanon) through Syria over Assad's objections. (Yes. It's really 
			all about gas this time.) 
			 
			Frustrated by his integrity and motivated by psychopathic greed and 
			money lust, the threats were next. 
			
				
				"I can give you a guarantee to 
				protect the Winter Olympics next year. The Chechen groups that 
				threaten the security of the games are controlled by us." 
				(hint-hint) 
			 
			
			Speaking of the Chechen rebels, a kin to 
			al Qaeda, the Saudi Prince added, 
			
				
				"These groups do not scare us. We 
				use them in the face of the Syrian regime but they will have no 
				role in Syria's political future." 
				
				[example]
				
				 
			 
			
			These are the same people, remember, who 
			did 9-11 [see
			new evidence implicating the Saudis:
			
			Syrian Parliament Letter to the U.S. House of 
			Representatives - The Main Factor of 9/11 Attacks was the Hatred 
			Wahhabi Jihadist Ideology adopted and financed by Saudis]. 
			
			  
			
			Vladimir Putin, the 60 year old leader of Russia, was unmoved. 
			
				
				"Our stance on Assad will never 
				change. We believe that the Syrian regime is the best speaker on 
				behalf of the Syrian people, and not those liver eaters." 
			 
			
			He made reference to YouTube footage 
			showing the barbaric act of a Jihadist rebel cutting open the body of 
			a Syrian soldier and eating his heart and liver. 
			 
			After all the insanity, false-flag propaganda and scripted speeches 
			about morality by leaders guilty of the same atrocities, Russia's 
			Vladimir Putin has emerged without being diminished. By being 
			himself he has risen to the role of a global peacemaker and all eyes 
			are upon him now for sanity and moral direction.  
			
			  
			
			He stands alone. 
			 
			Recently, September 4th, 2013, Vladimir Putin 
			stated his strong condemnation of the use of sarin gas against 
			civilians of Syria, no matter who is to blame. He let it be known 
			that, if strong evidence indicates the Assad regime was indeed 
			responsible for this, he would throttle back his support for the 
			leader and might support a UN sanctioned attack to prevent further 
			abuse.  
			
			  
			
			But he wants to see the proof. 
			 
			On September 9th, 2013, Putin approached Syrian leader 
			Assad with a 
			plan:  
			
				
				Surrender all your chemical weapons to an international group 
			and avoid the start of WW3.  
			 
			
			Assad agreed and, later on, Obama also 
			agreed that this was a good solution.  
			
			  
			
			Bravo, Mr. Putin! This is 
			truly worthy of a Peace Prize. 
			 
			As Americans, we know little about this man. Decades of hatred and 
			propaganda against the Soviet Union have tainted our view of all 
			Russian leaders, save maybe Mikhail Gorbachev. They have become the 
			mental equivalent of Stalin. But Mr. Putin is different.  
			
			  
			
			Here, he shares stories about his 
			birthplace and early years (something we cannot say for 
			America's 
			current 'leader') and gives us an opportunity to see the moral 
			development of this remarkable leader, whose time is ripe. 
  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			 
			Putin's 
			childhood - An ordinary family 
			 
			Russia is a sparsely populated country with only 8 people for every 
			20 square miles. Most of its 160 plus ethnicities are unassuming 
			people who value their own culture and have learned to accept 
			diversity and focus on the practical things of life. 
			 
			Vladimir Putin was born in Leningrad (now St. Petersburg) on October 
			7, 1952. 
			
				
				"I come from an ordinary family, and 
				this is how I lived for a long time, nearly my whole life. I 
				lived as an average, normal person and I have always maintained 
				that connection." 
			 
			
			  
			
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			Putin's mother was known to be a kind 
			person who cooked the ethnic Russian food that Vladimir still enjoys 
			today. 
			
				
				"We lived simply - cabbage soup, 
				cutlets, pancakes, but on Sundays and holidays my Mom would bake 
				very delicious stuffed buns [pirozhki] with cabbage, meat and 
				rice, and curd tarts [vatrushki]." 
			 
			
			His mom was a bit over-protective of him 
			as a child.  
			
			  
			
			When young Vladimir took up Judo at school, she let her 
			disapproval be known until the school's coach made a personal visit 
			to tell her that her son was an "exceptional athlete". Then her 
			attitude changed to pride. 
			 
			His Dad, also named Vladimir, struggled to keep his family alive in 
			the 1950s and moved them out of the impoverished city of St. 
			Petersburg (Leningrad) to a country town and a more simple life in 
			the Tiver Region where his grandmother lived.  
			
			  
			
			Mr. Putin likes to admit that he still 
			owns that small house where they all lived, and his family often 
			vacations there.  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			
			  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			As a teen, Vladimir was bored and became a troublemaker but this was 
			attributed to his intelligence combined with a lack of stimulation. 
			 
			
			  
			
			His 6th grade teacher, 
			Vera Gurevich, recalls,  
			
				
				"In the fifth grade, he still hadn't 
				found himself yet, but I could feel the potential, the energy 
				and the character in him. I saw that he had a great deal of 
				interest in language; he picked it up easily. He had a very good 
				memory and an agile mind." 
			 
			
			In an interview, Gurevich said,  
			
				
				"I thought, something good will come 
				of this boy, so I decided to give him more attention, to 
				distract him from the boys on the streets." 
			 
			
			It was at this point in his life that 
			Putin decided to take control of his destiny, to become serious 
			about his studies, and made goals for himself. 
			
				
				"It became clear that street smarts 
				were not enough, so I began doing sports. But even that was not 
				enough for maintaining my status, so to speak, for very long.  
				
				  
				
				I realized that I also needed to study well." 
			 
			
			  
			
			 
			 
			Leningrad 
			State University and KGB school 
			
				
				"Even before I finished high school, 
				I wanted to work in intelligence. Granted, soon after, I decided 
				I wanted to be a sailor, but then I wanted to do intelligence 
				again. In the very beginning, I wanted to be a pilot." 
			 
			
			Putin went to a public reception office 
			of the KGB Directorate to find out how to become an intelligence 
			officer.  
			
			  
			
			There, he was told that first, he would have to either 
			serve in the army or complete college, preferably with a degree in 
			law.
			In 1970, Vladimir Putin became a student of the law department at 
			Leningrad State University, earning his Law degree in 1975.  
			
			  
			
			In the late 1970s and early 1980s, Mr. 
			Putin studied at KGB School No.1 in Moscow - quite an honor. 
			
				
				"We had a class of 100 people, and 
				only 10 of them entered immediately after high school, the rest 
				had already completed military service.  
				  
				
				So for us, the high-school 
				graduates, only one out of 40 was admitted. I got four out of 
				five for the essay, but top marks for everything else, so I 
				passed." 
				 
				"When I began studying at the university, new goals and new 
				values emerged. I mainly focused on studies, and began seeing 
				sports as secondary.  
				  
				
				But, of course, I trained on a 
				regular basis and participated in nation-wide competitions, 
				almost out of habit." 
			 
			
			After graduating from Leningrad State 
			University, Putin was assigned to work in the state security 
			agencies.  
			
			  
			
			He was first appointed to the 
			Directorate secretariat, then the counter-intelligence division, 
			where he worked for about five months. Half a year later, he was 
			sent to operations personnel retraining courses.  
			
			  
			
			He spent another six months working in 
			the counterintelligence division. 
  
			
			  
			
			  
			
			 
			Putin's 
			intellect and integrity caught the attention of his superiors 
			
				
				"Fairly quickly, I left for special 
				training in Moscow, where I spent a year. Then I returned again 
				to Leningrad, worked there in the First Main Directorate - the 
				intelligence service.  
				
				  
				
				That directorate had branches in major 
				cities of the Soviet Union, including Leningrad. I worked there 
				for about four and a half years." 
			 
			
			Then Mr. Putin returned again to Moscow 
			to study at the Andropov Red Banner Institute, where he was trained 
			prior to his assignment in Germany. 
			 
			Vladimir met Lyudmila on a date. They became close friends first, 
			then love and marriage followed in 1983. In 1985, before their 
			departure for Germany, Vladimir and Lyudmila Putin welcomed their 
			first daughter, Maria. Their second daughter, Katerina, was 
			born in 1986, in Dresden.  
			
			  
			
			Both girls were named in honor of their 
			grandmothers, Maria Putina and Yekaterina Shkrebneva. 
			  
			
			  
			
			
			
			  
			
			  
			
			
			 
			In 1985-1990, Vladimir Putin worked in East Germany at the local 
			intelligence office in Dresden. Over the course, he was promoted to 
			the rank of lieutenant colonel and to the position of senior 
			assistant to the head of the department.  
			
			  
			
			In 1989, he was awarded the bronze medal 
			issued in the German Democratic Republic, For Faithful Service to 
			the National People's Army. 
			
				
				"My work was going well. It was a 
				normal thing to be promoted just once while working abroad. I 
				was promoted twice." 
			 
			
			After returning to Leningrad from 
			Germany in 1990, Vladimir Putin became assistant to the rector of 
			Leningrad State University in charge of international relations. In 
			1996, he and his family moved to Moscow, where his political career 
			began.  
			
			  
			
			  
			
				
				Putin's leadership history 
				 
				Following the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Putin 
				retired from the KGB with the rank of colonel, and returned to 
				Leningrad as a supporter of Anatoly Sobchak (1937-2000), 
				a liberal politician.  
				  
				
				After Sobchak won election as mayor 
				of Leningrad (1991), Putin became his head of external 
				relations; in 1994, Putin became Sobchak's first deputy mayor. 
				 
				After Sobchak's defeat in 1996, Putin resigned his post and 
				moved to Moscow. In 1998, Putin was appointed deputy head of 
				management under Boris Yeltsin's presidential administration. In 
				that position, he was in charge of the Kremlin's relations with 
				the regional governments. 
				 
				Shortly afterward, Putin was appointed head of the Federal 
				Security, an arm of the former KGB, as well as head of Yeltsin's 
				Security Council. 
				 
				In 1999, recognizing his integrity, Russian president Boris 
				Yeltsin dismissed his prime minister and promoted former KGB 
				officer Vladimir Putin in his place. In December 1999, Yeltsin 
				resigned, appointing Putin president. He was easily re-elected 
				in 2004. 
				 
				In April 2005, Putin made a historic visit to Israel - he first 
				visit there by any Kremlin leader. Putin could not run for the 
				presidency again in 2008, but was appointed prime minister by 
				his successor, Dmitry Medvedev. 
				 
				In March 2012, Putin was re-elected to the presidency, where he 
				currently is embarking on uniting his country's people, 
				restoring their religion and culture, and forging "peace through 
				diplomacy" with the rest of the world. 
				 
				His moral opposition to conflict, regime change and war - as a 
				means to achieve peace - became evident with the attack on 
				America's WTC and Pentagon by alleged al Qaeda. 
				 
				In September 2001, in response to the terrorist attacks on the 
				United States, he announced Russia's stance as a U.S. ally.
				 
				  
				
				Soon after, however, he announced 
				his opposition - along with the French and German governments - 
				to the U.S. "war on terror," which focused on ridding Iraq of 
				its then-leader, Saddam Hussein. 
				 
				Always a Christian and family man, in December 2012 Putin signed 
				into a law a ban on the U.S. adoption of Russian children.
				 
				  
				
				According to Putin, the legislation 
				- taking effect on January 1, 2013 - aims to make it easier for 
				Russians to adopt native orphans. Many Americans, hoping to 
				adopt a Russian orphan, misunderstood his good intentions. 
				 
				Putin further strained relations with the United States by 
				granting asylum to 
				
				Edward Snowden who is 
				wanted by the United States for leaking classified information 
				from the National Security Agency on that agency's global (and 
				illegal) spying activities. 
				  
				  
				
				
				  
  
				  
				
				 
				Vladimir Putin's Personal Life 
				 
				In 1980, Putin met his future wife, Lyudmila, who was working as 
				a flight attendant at the time.  
				  
				
				The couple married in 1983 and had 
				two daughters: Maria, born in 1985, and Yekaterina, born in 
				1986.  
				  
				
				In early June 2013, after nearly 30 
				years of marriage, Russia's first couple announced that they 
				were getting a divorce, providing little explanation for the 
				decision, but assuring that they came to it mutually and 
				amicably. 
				
					
					"There are people who just 
					cannot put up with it," Putin stated. "Lyudmila Alexandrovna 
					has stood watch for eight, almost nine years."  
				 
				
				Providing more context to the 
				decision, Lyudmila added,  
				
					
					"Our marriage is over because we 
					hardly ever see each other. Vladimir Vladimirovich is 
					immersed in his work, our children have grown and are living 
					their own lives." 
				 
				
				An Orthodox Christian, Putin is open 
				about his faith. 
				
					
					"This is a very special place 
					for Orthodox Christians and the whole Christian world. In 
					Russia, we always held the monks who lived here in great 
					admiration and respect." 
				 
				
				Religious practice, which was 
				outlawed under the Soviet Union's regime, has been restored. The 
				most popular form is the Russian Orthodox Church, to which 
				Vladimir Putin belongs.  
			 
			
			 
			A life-long athlete, family man, devoted patriot and Christian, 
			Vladimir Putin is a man whose time has come.  
			
			  
			
			While other leaders fester in 
			corruption, broken promises and political stench, Putin has risen 
			above the mire and stands tall as the world's (perhaps only) hope 
			for rational, sane and humanistic guidance.  
			
			  
			
			He stands alone... 
			
			  
			
			  
			
			
			
			  
			
			 
  
			
			  
			
			 
			  |