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  • The Russians Are Coming!

    THE RUSSIANS ARE COMING!
    By Rafe Mair

    TheTyee.ca
    Today: Monday, September 17, 2007
    Canada

    And we'd better take them damn seriously.

    The shocking news is that Russian scientists have returned from a
    six-week mission on a nuclear ice-breaker to claim that the 1,220-mile
    long underwater Lomonosov Ridge is geologically linked to the Siberian
    continental platform, and similar in structure. In short they claim
    land that has hitherto been recognized as being owned by Canada and
    the United States

    If you've ever been "Down Under" or to South America you'll have seen
    world maps which for us are upside down making the point that what's
    up or down is a matter of ancient prejudice. To see what is really
    happening in the world one must stand on the North Pole (figuratively
    of course) and look at where Russia is.

    We always think, with our Mercator map mentality, that Russia is
    that faraway place with the beautiful former capital St. Petersburg
    and the intriguing Moscow. But what if we look at the map and see
    Russia from the North Pole? The result is astonishing -- and not
    a little scary. The following countries, former Russian republics
    and satellites, border this massive country: Finland, Norway,
    Denmark (through Greenland), Ukraine, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus,
    Estonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Latvia, Lithuania, Moldova,
    Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Georgia, China, North Korea,
    Mongolia, Turkey, Iran, Pakistan via Tajikistan, Afghanistan, China
    -- and (are you ready for this?) the United States and Canada. Now I
    realize (the lash marks still show on my back) that some of you are
    pretty picky about fact checking so let me say that while I pored
    over an atlas with a magnifying glass for an hour I may have missed a
    "-stan" somewhere so let's just say that Russia, taking into account
    former republics and latter-day satellites, borders on a hell of a
    lot of places.

    What's amazing about this is that the "west" has treated Russia with
    indifference, and an air of triumphalism since the U.S.S.R. broke
    up. It was almost as if the world's largest country, endowed with
    riches throughout, became some sort of Ruritania, which might make
    a nuisance of itself from time to time but a patronizing "tut, tut,
    there, there" would soon whisk the problem away.

    'Father of all bombs'

    We seemed to forget that Russia still has a huge nuclear arsenal,
    which doesn't lose its scariness just because the weapons are old.

    And now the Russian military announces it has tested the air-delivered
    "father of all bombs" -- the world's most powerful non-nuclear weapon.

    ADVERTISEMENT It's not just because we patronized them during their
    troubles, at the break-up, that has angered Russians but that we
    actually goaded them by encouraging so many of Russia's former "buffer"
    states not just to apply for membership in the European Community but
    NATO as well. Why the hell would we want former satellites as NATO
    partners when NATO's raison d'etre was and presumably still is to
    stand ready to fight Russia if that became necessary. How else is the
    Kremlin to see this new NATO but as a flinging down of the gauntlet
    when it seemed Russia was too helpless to do anything about it.

    I don't suggest that Russia is spoiling for a war but simply that
    a proud nation, one once powerful and able to be powerful again,
    was bound to take this NATO move as an insult.

    Return to world power

    This behaviour comes at a time when Russia is led by a very ambitious
    and dedicated man, Vladimir Putin, who is determined to re-establish
    Russia as a world power.

    Unless he gets a change in the constitution allowing him to succeed
    himself, there will be a new president next year who'll probably be a
    "Putin man" or perhaps even more ambitious yet.

    What this has done is move Russia and China back into a closer
    relationship within the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) formed
    in 2001 by the leaders of China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan,
    Tajikistan and Uzbekistan, with India, Pakistan, Mongolia and Iran
    having observer status. Mongolia, Pakistan and Iran have also applied
    for its full membership. The SCO isn't the equivalent of NATO -- yet.

    Looking at maps and atlases from the equator up and down,
    thus seeing two hemispheres forbiddingly cold at the top and
    bottom and the rest livable, has caused us to always assume our
    sovereignty of the Arctic right up to the North Pole. It was an
    easy assumption to make - I mean who the hell cared about a bunch of
    ice, polar bears, walruses, some narwhals and what do we call those
    people? Eskimos? Inuit? Whatever. Because there didn't seem to be any
    reason to see things differently, we looked at the Canadian North
    as that part populated by a few people that needed our patronizing
    generosity from time to time. Oil and natural gas changed all that.

    Oil and ice

    Not that the interest in Arctic petroleum and gas is new.

    On May 9, 1977, my classmate Tom Berger filed his Mackenzie
    Pipeline Report and we've been debating northern oil and gas issues
    since. What's different is that we have a new player, big time:
    Russia who claims jurisdiction under the North Pole and has stuck a
    flag under it to make her point. Now that global warming is making a
    reality out of the fabled Northwest Passage, that part of the world is
    "in play." No longer is the Arctic the land of the midnight sun dappled
    with neat little igloos and little economic importance. Nobody cared
    very much who claimed ownership. Suddenly, that's not longer true.

    Russia, a recovering power, seething with anger at the West generally
    but especially at the United States, has laid claim to what we've
    always seen as ours.

    Since we neither want an armed struggle over this land, nor could we
    win one, the time as come to do two things. Act respectfully not to
    say obsequiously towards Russia. And open talks.
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