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Russia Courts Old Allies, Steps Up Defiance Of The West

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  • Russia Courts Old Allies, Steps Up Defiance Of The West

    RUSSIA COURTS OLD ALLIES, STEPS UP DEFIANCE OF THE WEST
    by Fred Weir

    Christian Science Monitor
    September 8, 2008, Monday

    Russia is groping for fresh ways to engage with the world after its
    lightning-fast summer war with Georgia chilled relations with the
    West and dismayed even some of its closest regional allies.

    "We are facing the beginning of a complete review of Russian foreign
    policy," says Fyodor Lukyanov, editor of Russia in Global Affairs,
    a leading Moscow foreign-policy journal. "Things have changed and,
    based on what Russian leaders are saying, our long effort to integrate
    with Western institutions, to become part of the Western system,
    is over. The aim now is to be an independent power in a multipolar
    world in which Russia is a major player."

    Analysts here are divided over whether a "new cold war" between Russia
    and the West is in the offing, but a growing sense of isolation is
    leading Moscow to circle the wagons closer to home and to revive
    alliances with former Soviet allies such as Syria and Cuba, and new
    partners such as Venezuela.

    At a State Council meeting with Russian regional leaders Saturday,
    President Dmitry Medvedev announced that national security will have
    to be bolstered to counteract unnamed forces "who are trying to exert
    political pressure on Russia."

    In a series of statements over the past week Mr. Medvedev has spelled
    out what amounts to a Russian version of the Monroe Doctrine, warning
    that Moscow will intervene to protect its citizens and business
    interests, particularly in the "near abroad," meaning the former
    Soviet Union. "The events in [Georgia's breakaway province of South
    Ossetia] showed that Russia will not allow anyone to infringe upon
    the lives and dignity of its citizens, that Russia is a state to be,
    from now on, reckoned with," he told the regional leaders.

    The basic message to the West is "don't even think of parking here,"
    says Natalya Narochnitskaya, former deputy chair of the State Duma's
    foreign relations commission and now an executive of the Moscow-based
    Institute for Democracy and Cooperation, which is funded by Russian
    business interests.

    After a decade that has seen NATO - a 26-nation Western military
    alliance - absorb all the former USSR's allies and move to the
    borders of Russia itself, and the US move to install strategic
    antimissile weapons in Poland and the Czech Republic, Moscow has had
    enough. "There is a red line, where Russia cannot accept further
    pressure on its borders in its traditional geopolitical arena,"
    Ms. Narochnitskaya says.

    Multipolar era emerging?

    Russian policy-makers say the world order has shifted from the
    bipolar arrangement of the four-decade-long standoff between the
    US and the USSR, to a brief period of American preeminence, to an
    emerging multi-polar era in which many powerful players will have to
    learn to work out their differences.

    "We need new mechanisms for strategic security cooperation, because
    the old ones are not working," says Andrei Klimov, a member of the
    State Duma's international affairs committee. "There is a new reality
    in the world, and we need to discuss it openly."

    At the center of the current storm are Georgia and Ukraine, both NATO
    aspirants that Vice President Dick Cheney visited last week with a
    message of support that is bound to further antagonize Moscow.

    Ukraine, a nation deeply divided between pro-Western and Russified
    parts that is currently sliding into a renewed political crisis, could
    face intense Russian pressure if it presses on with its bid for NATO
    membership. "In many Western countries there are already protests
    against this crazy idea of getting Georgia and Ukraine into NATO,"
    says Mr. Klimov. "It's a formula for crisis inside NATO."

    Narochnitskaya, like many other Russian experts, insists that Moscow
    probably wouldn't attempt to break up or annex Ukraine if it declared
    neutrality and became a kind of buffer state between East and West,
    akin to Finland's unique status during the cold war. They insist that
    Moscow's objection is to Ukraine joining a military alliance, and not
    to its economic or political cooperation with the West in general. "The
    majority of Ukrainians identify themselves as an independent Slavic
    nation," Narochnitskaya says. "But they don't need to build their
    national identity on hostility to Russia."

    Moscow has been putting out feelers to former Soviet allies, such as
    Syria and Cuba, as well as emerging partners like Venezuela. A Russian
    delegation led by Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin visited Havana
    in early July to explore rebuilding Soviet-era economic and security
    ties. Medvedev discussed sophisticated arms sales and the possibility
    of the Russian Navy using former Soviet port facilities at Tartus,
    on the Mediterranean, when Syrian President Bashar al-Assad visited
    Moscow in late August. The Russian Foreign Ministry expressed "deep
    satisfaction" last week when another old Soviet crony, Nicaraguan
    President Daniel Ortega, became the first foreign leader to extend
    diplomatic recognition to South Ossetia and the other breakaway
    Georgian territory, Abkhazia.

    New contacts a warning to the US

    But any talk of reviving the USSR's alliance system may be deliberate
    disinformation intended to remind Washington of its own regional
    sensitivities. "Russia doesn't have any resources [to match the US
    around the world], and no desire to do so anymore," says Mikhail
    Delyagin, director of the independent Institute of Globalization
    Problems in Moscow.

    But even in its own backyard, Moscow is finding its tough new stance
    a hard sell. On Friday, at a summit of the Moscow-led, seven-member
    Collective Security Treaty Organization (which includes Armenia,
    Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Russia, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan),
    Medvedev won backing for Russia's crushing military rebuff of Georgia's
    attempt to retake South Ossetia, but found not one ally willing to
    follow Moscow's lead in establishing diplomatic ties with the tiny
    pro-Moscow enclave.

    Experts say Medvedev has received an even cooler response from
    Russia's traditional Asian friends, China and India. Both nations
    generously supported Moscow's decade-long effort to suppress its own
    separatist challenge in Chechnya and backed its angry opposition to
    Western recognition of Kosovo's self-declared independence earlier
    this year. At a summit of the influential Shanghai Cooperation
    Organization last week, where China is a leading member and India
    an observer, participants would only agree to a tepid statement that
    expressed "support [for] Russia's active role in facilitating peace
    and cooperation" in the Caucasus region.

    But being a neighbor of Russia has just gotten harder, say experts.

    "Russia has demonstrated that it's ready to use force outside its own
    borders, and this means countries of the region are going to have to
    take note and choose whom they listen to," on big geopolitical issues,
    says Mr. Lukyanov.

    "The space for maneuvering between East and West [for Russia's
    neighbors] is definitely shrinking," he says.

    French President Nicolas Sarkozy travels to Moscow on Monday with
    European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso and European Union
    foreign-policy chief Javier Solana to encourage Medvedev to comply
    with a month-old peace plan for Georgia. Meanwhile, Georgia seeks a
    ruling from The Hague over its claims of human rights abuses against
    ethnic Georgians in South Ossetia and Abkhazia.
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