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Atlantic Eye: Putin's Bush-Whack

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  • Atlantic Eye: Putin's Bush-Whack

    ATLANTIC EYE: PUTIN'S BUSH-WHACK
    By Marc S. Ellenbogen - UPI International Columnist

    United Press International
    June 14 2007

    PRAGUE, Czech Republic, June 14 (UPI) -- Last week in the German
    resort town of Heiligendamm, U.S. President George W. Bush had a key
    anchor of his strategic security policy submitted to a reality check.

    At the Group of Eight Summit, Russian President Vladimir Putin
    proposed a joint U.S.-Russia anti-missile shield be placed at an
    existing radar station in Azerbaijan, instead of the Czech Republic
    and Poland. Caught off-guard by the Russian leader's offer, Bush
    mustered a confused look into the cameras.

    Putin's offer is not just a brilliant tactical maneuver; it is a
    proposal that merits serious consideration.

    Putin's proposal would put the radar warning and control system for
    the missile defense in Azerbaijan. Azerbaijan was part of the Soviet
    Union and shares a 268-mile (432 kilometer) border with Iran. The
    idea is to use an existing radar facility installed by the old Soviet
    government in Gabala, Azerbaijan. The facility is still being used
    by the Russian armed forces in accordance with a special agreement
    with Azerbaijan. According to Putin's offer, the Gabala radar would
    now be under the joint control of the U.S. and Russian military.

    Oil-rich Azerbaijan gained independence in 1991 amid political turmoil
    and against a backdrop of violence in Nagorno-Karabakh. It has been
    famed for its oil springs and natural gas sources since ancient
    times, when Zoroastrians, for whom fire is an important symbol,
    erected temples around burning gas vents in the ground. It borders
    the Caspian Sea.

    Azerbaijan has a population of 8.4 million people, and is about the
    size of Illinois, and somewhat larger than Austria. Its capital is
    Baku and the main languages are Azeri and Russian. The major religion
    is Islam. Per capita income is $1,240 (compared to the United States'
    $44,200). At the beginning of the 20th century, Azerbaijan supplied
    almost half of the world's oil. Azerbaijan has vast gas reserves,
    but still imports from Russia. There have been tensions with Russia
    over pricing and direct transfer to the West. Azerbaijan is becoming
    an alternative energy hub for Europe and is the third-largest oil
    producer in the former Soviet Union. It opened oil and gas pipelines
    that circumvent Russia during the past year.

    Azerbaijan became a member of the Council of Europe in 2001. Ilham
    Aliyev took over as president from his father, Heydar, in 2003. Often
    accused of corruption and election-rigging, ruling circles walk a
    tightrope between Russian and Western regional geo-strategic interests.

    As the Soviet Union collapsed, the predominantly Armenian population
    of the Nagorno-Karabakh region stated their intention to secede
    from Azerbaijan. War broke out. Backed by troops and resources from
    Armenia, the Armenians of Nagorno-Karabakh took control of the region
    and surrounding territory. In 1994 a cease-fire was signed.

    About one-seventh of Azerbaijan's territory remains occupied, while
    800,000 refugees and internally displaced persons are scattered around
    the country. It is still an unsettled political issue that receives all
    too little attention from the international political agenda. There's
    an urgent imperative to resolve the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict before
    it flares up the southern Caucasus at the very same time the need
    for stability -- crucial for the development of Azerbaijan's energy
    resources -- is of paramount importance for the West. The deputy
    speaker of the House of Lords, Baroness Cox, is well known for taking
    up the plight of Nagorno-Karabakh.

    I remember a meeting one year ago with Czech Deputy Prime Minister
    Alexandr Vondra, who was foreign minister-designate at the time. He
    asked me what I thought of the missile shield. Sasha is an old
    Washington hand -- he had been Vaclav Havel's ambassador and a young
    dissident during the communist period. I told him I supported the
    concept, but felt the United States had done a bad job of briefing
    the alliance, never mind the Russians. I also told him I thought the
    shield should be in Romania.

    He gave me one of his wry grins -- something he is famous for --
    and asked me what I would do if the Democrats got elected in 2008. I
    stated that he was making a bold presumption that I would have anything
    to say -- never mind the power to influence. He gave me his wry grin
    again. I promised him that I would support the stationing of the system
    in the Czech Republic because I am a supporter of the country and
    its vested interests, not because I felt it was the best strategic
    decision. For the Czechs, the shield is a good thing economically
    and geo-politically.

    Sasha, I would still uphold my promise, but the Azerbaijan proposal
    is a good one. It brings the Russians into the fold. You and I both
    agree that this is important. It places the shield in a location that
    is perfect to strike at the heart of Islamists and terrorism. It would
    bring a new dynamic to the relationship between the United States and
    Russia, which is important and has been seriously deteriorating. But
    most importantly, it makes absolute and complete strategic sense.

    As I sat with UPI's Editor Emeritus Martin Walker and Seffi Bodansky of
    the Congressional Task Force on Terrorism and Unconventional Warfare
    last week in Washington, we of course got to the topic of the Putin
    proposal. We noted that it was Bush who voided the 1972 Anti-Ballistic
    Missile Treaty, which allowed the United States and the Soviet Union
    a limited number of defense installations.

    Yet another presidential miscalculation; this one opened the door to
    the Russians' more aggressive economic and security parlance.

    It was Walker who noted, "Yes, the president got Bush-whacked in
    Prague." And so he did indeed.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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