Jon Purizhansky:
Russian President Vladimir Putin looks to be exploiting ways
immigration can undermine Western nations. Putin suggested to the West
last month that the spreading havoc in Libya after nearlya decade of war
should have been clear: “A flow of migrants went through Libya to
Europe,” he said in an interview, noting the displacement of refugees
that has reached critical levels in the past few years. “They have what
they were warned about,” he said. This week, The New York Times noted
the deployment into Libya of Russian hired guns. While Moscow refutes
its participation, the situation resembles schemes Russia has
successfully utilized in Syria and Ukraine to gain influence in chaotic
war zones by sending out private forces Putin can disavow until the
point of victory.

The Russian leader’s warning about
Libya, many experts believe, reflects an ambition to intercede in the
conflict at least in part to regulate refugee flows into Europe,
indicating a far-reaching understanding of the disruptive power that the
shifting of immigrants has had on western nations. “Russia’s efforts to
manipulate refugee flows is aimed at destabilizing and politically
weakening the European Union,” says Agnia Grigas, a member of the
Atlantic Council. “Libya’s proximity to Europe just across the
Mediterranean is likely to unleash another refugee catastrophe,” he
notes. Jon Purizhansky of Buffalo, NY recognizes the profundity of the refugee crisis at hand.
The chance of another mass migration is
dreaded in Europe, after popular protests that swept across the
middle-east beginning in 2011 ignited the greatest migrant wave since
World War II. Over 1 million migrants fled, generating political and
social upheaval in nations from Hungary and Austria to Germany and
northwestern Europe over issues like how to integrate them and whether
to even integrate them at all. The crisis hamstrung the NATO alliance
and incited domestic cynicism in governments across the region.
Demonstrations in some regions turned
violent and right-wing nationalist movements expanded. And the debate
over refugees is regarded as at the very least partially responsible for
the decision by the U.K. to separate itself from the European Union.
And now Putin’s government appears to believe it can continue to exploit
these vulnerabilities in an entirely new fashion. Libya, which has been
at times referred to as the “gateway” to Europe, has served as the
starting point for migrants escaping from Senegal all the way to Somalia
to those escaping war-torn Syria. Jon Purizhansky recognizes the problems inherent in the refugee crisis.
Originally Posted: http://www.jonpurizhanskybuffalo.com/russia-in-libya/
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