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  • U.S. policy on Russia depends on conduct

    Honolulu Star-Bulletin, HI

    U.S. policy on Russia depends on conduct

    Vol. 13, Issue 230 - Sunday, August 17, 2008

    THE ISSUE

    Defense Secretary Robert Gates said Russia's assault on Georgia will
    have repercussions for years to come.

    Consequences that Defense Secretary Robert Gates said would occur from
    the Russia-Georgia war already have begun as the United States
    struggles to deal with the crisis. President Bush has been careful to
    avoid the particulars of subsequent repercussions, which should depend
    on Russia's conduct in the days and months ahead.

    The hostility appears to have resulted in agreement, following lengthy
    negotiations, on an American anti- missile system in Poland. In
    announcing it, Polish Foreign Minister Radoslaw Sikorski said, "Only
    people of ill intent should fear this agreement."

    The war resulted in cancellation of joint military exercises of Russia
    and the U.S. and is likely to block congressional action to allow a
    Russian spacecraft to transport American and other astronauts to and
    from an international space station.

    Russia's intervention in separating the enclaves of South Ossetia and
    Abkhazia from Georgia is causing concern that similar assaults might
    follow in the Nagorno-Karabakh enclave of Azerbaijan, Transnistria in
    Moldova and Crimea in Ukraine.

    The Bush administration should have wide latitude in dealing with such
    issues but is not helped by the intrusion of Sen. John McCain, who was
    quick to call for Russia's expulsion from the G-8 group of industrial
    democracies and rejection of Russia's application to join the World
    Trade Organization.

    In past election years, presidential candidates have deferred to the
    sitting president during developing crises. Both McCain and
    Sen. Barack Obama, vacationing here last week, placed appropriately
    supportive phone calls to the White House and to Georgia's President
    Mikheil Saakashvili.

    McCain, whose top foreign policy adviser was a lobbyist for Georgia
    before joining the campaign, went a step further. "We are all
    Georgians," McCain declared, play-acting as president. He has been
    calling Saakashvili, a friend since his days as a student at George
    Washington University, several times a day, and brazenly announced
    that two of his supporters, Sen. Lindsey O. Graham, R-S.C., and Joseph
    I. Lieberman, I-Conn., would travel to Georgia's capital on his
    behalf.
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