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American democracy is “limping on both feet,” a senior Russian lawmaker said Thursday — a day after a violent mob loyal to President Trump stormed the US Capitol in a last-ditch effort to overturn the election.

Konstantin Kosachyov, chairman of the Russian upper house’s foreign affairs committee, said the chaos that unfolded in Washington, DC, showed that the US had no right to lecture other countries on democracy, Agence France-Presse reported.

“The losing side has more than enough grounds to accuse the winner of falsifications — it is clear that American democracy is limping on both feet,” Kosachyov wrote on Facebook.

“The celebration of democracy has ended. It has, unfortunately, hit rock bottom, and I say this without a hint of gloating,” he added. “America no longer charts the course and so has lost all right to set it. And, even more so, to impose it on others.”

Russian state media showed images of rioters breaking down barricades and swarming the building, as security forces fired tear gas and law enforcement officers drew guns inside.

Moscow has long bristled at criticism from the US about the state of Russian democracy under strongman Vladimir Putin, accusing Washington of hypocrisy and condescension.

With Russians celebrating Orthodox Christmas on Thursday, there was no immediate reaction from the Kremlin or Foreign Ministry, but pro-Kremlin lawmakers jumped on the violent unrest.

“The United States certainly cannot now impose electoral standards on other countries and claim to be the world’s ‘beacon of democracy,’” Leonid Slutsky, the foreign affairs chief in the lower house, told local news outlets.

Meanwhile, Iranian President Hassan Rouhani said the chaos unleashed on the Capitol exposed the fragility of Western democracy.

“What we saw in the United States yesterday (Wednesday) evening and today shows above all how fragile and vulnerable Western democracy is,” Rouhani said Thursday in a speech broadcast by state TV, Agence France-Presse reported.

“We saw that unfortunately the ground is fertile for populism, despite the advances in science and industry,” he added. “A populist has arrived and he has led his country to disaster over these past four years. I hope the whole world and the next occupants of the White House will learn from it.”

Rouhani urged the incoming administration “to make up (for the past) and restore the country to a position worthy of the American nation, because the American nation is a great nation.”

The semiofficial Iranian Fars news agency called the US a “fragmented democracy,” while pro-government Twitter accounts gloated, circulating photos of the mob with hashtags that included #DownfalloftheUS.

In China, Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hua Chunying slammed the US for the way it has described demonstrators in Hong Kong compared to the scenes that occurred at the Capitol, Fox News reported.

“Everyone may remember how some US politicians and media described the riots in Hong Kong, but look at their choice of words today,” she told reporters, according to the network, which cited a translation from the state-affiliated Global Times newspaper.

 “The US mainstream media have unanimously condemned today’s event, called it violent and shameful and described the protesters as rioters, extremists and thugs,” she added. “But do you remember what they said about Hong Kong rioters?” 

“As you said, they called it a ‘beautiful sight to behold,’ beautifying the city’s rioters as ‘heroes of democracy’ and claiming that Americans would stand with them,” she said. 

The Communist Youth League ran a photo montage of the violence in the nation’s capital on its Twitter-like Weibo microblog with the caption: “On the sixth, the US Congress, a most beautiful site to behold.”

That appeared to mock House Speaker Nancy Pelosi for her June 2019 comments in praise of sometimes violent anti-government protests in Hong Kong.

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Protesters in support of President Donald Trump are pictured outside the US Capitol building.
Protesters in support of Donald Trump are pictured outside the US Capitol building.Stephen Yang
MAGA protesters storm the US Capitol
MAGA protesters storm the US CapitolStephen Yang
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And Venezuela, which is under American sanctions, said the events in Washington show that the US “is suffering what it has generated in other countries with its politics of aggression.”

President Nicolás Maduro has survived US-backed opposition efforts to oust him despite allegations of human rights abuses, civil unrest and a humanitarian crisis that has forced millions to flee the oil-rich country.

And the top U.S. military commander for Africa issued a message of assurance to his forces, saying that America, its Constitution and system of government remain strong despite the violent events at the U.S. Capitol.

Army Gen. Stephen Townsend tweeted Thursday that America has “withstood much greater and graver challenges in the past” and Africa Command remains focused on its mission.

“The American people expect, and need, us to stay steady and keep clear eyes on our duty — and we will,” said Townsend in a statement with his senior enlisted leader, Sgt. Maj. Richard Thresher.

While the statement appears to be directed to his Africa Command forces, it clearly serves as a message across Europe and Africa to America’s allies who watched in horror as armed and angry protestors took over the U.S. Capitol on Wednesday. Africa Command is based in Germany.

With Post wires


  Protesters in support of Donald Trump gather outside the US Capitol building. REUTERS Protesters in support of Donald Trump gather outside the US Capitol building. REUTERS
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