But I don’t believe the leaders of Western corporations. And this despite the fact that my sympathy is certainly not on the side of Asian cars, since I am an unconditional and unshakable fan of Bavarian cars. Complaints about the logistical ties being cut from the navel of the earth to the devil from the Koreans, which we reasonably consider our own, arouse sympathy. And the nagging of Europeans on the same subject may be bewilderment and even some disgust. What kind of chains can’t they build because they’re under our side? It is indeed ridiculous to even speak on this topic.
Of the multitude of examples of strange behavior by Western companies, we only remember two. Transparent hints were initially given from the highest peak of the French government that it was not worth tearing your claws head over heels and ruining a company that had been established over the years. However, Renault decided to follow in the footsteps of America and flew out of Russia before its own screams, in a panic, giving for pennies everything that had been acquired here by overwork. Or here Volkswagen, pulling no one’s tongue to make earth-shattering statements, suddenly mentioned that he “has a clear desire to leave the country completely”, that is, from Russia.
The Koreans, like all other automakers, faced an unpleasant alternative: toss their Russian assets into a landfill or mothball them until better times. Hyundai, unlike our Western “partners”, has so far opted for the second path. Russia turns slowly, with creaks, groans and obscenities, to the southeast. And it is likely that during this course she will soon find a common language with the Asian world. For with Europe, which has long flattered our country, but never bothered to receive an invitation to step over the threshold, relations, it seems, have been seriously and for a long time broken.