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The Bad Old Days Return

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  • The Bad Old Days Return

    THE BAD OLD DAYS RETURN

    Strategy Page
    http://www.strategypage.com/qnd/russia/articl es/20081113.aspx
    Nov 13 2008

    November 13, 2008: The November 8 submarine accident off the Pacific
    coast occurred once before, in the 1990s, when a submarine that
    had been refurbished, had the fire extinguisher system go off
    in a compartment because shipyard workers had rewired a control
    panel incorrectly. This sort of sloppiness is all too common, and
    Russians have long ago learned to live (or die) with it. Things are
    changing, however, as more and more Russian manufacturers adopt
    higher international standards for quality control. Otherwise,
    Russian exports could not compete. Even the military manufacturing
    industries are slowly moving in this direction. Meanwhile,
    Russians have this inferiority complex which is often expressed by
    aggressive behavior. It's nothing new. During the communist period,
    the bad behavior was hidden by a facade of communist revolutionary
    rhetoric. But now we're back to where we were a century ago, when the
    czar was in charge. Go read some of old newspaper stories from back
    in the day, and you'll find that the Russians are picking up where
    they left off. The communists came and went, but Russian paranoia
    and threats prevail.

    November 11, 2008: Off the coast of Somalia, a Russian and British
    frigates cooperated to drive away pirates who were trying to capture
    a Danish merchant ship. Both warships sent an armed helicopter to
    the scene, once they received the distress call from the Danish ship.

    November 9, 2008: In Chechnya, someone attacked a police station,
    killing one policeman and wounding two others.

    November 8, 2008: Off the Pacific coast, 20 people died when the
    fire extinguishing system was accidentally set off in the forward
    compartment of a new Akula II submarine undergoing sea trials. A
    sailor who survived the incident later admitted he had set off the
    fire extinguishing system. This process removes most of the oxygen in
    the compartment, and sailors are trained to reach for breathing masks
    when this happens. But most of the people in the compartment were
    civilian shipyard workers and technicians. In addition to the dead
    (most of them civilians), 21 people were injured.

    November 6, 2008: In another paranoid outburst, the government said
    it was sending five brigades (60 launchers) of Iskander ballistic
    missiles to Kaliningrad (on the Polish border) to neutralize the
    American anti-missile system being built there (to protect Europe
    from Iranian missiles.) Russia insists the anti-missile system is
    actually there to neutralize Russian missiles that might be used
    against Europe. Or something like that.

    Another terrorist bomb went off in North Ossetia, killing eleven
    people in a market. A female suicide bomber was involved. No one took
    responsibility for the attack.

    November 5, 2008: A small bomb (about three pounds of dynamite)
    went off on railroad tracks on the outskirts of Moscow. There were
    no injuries and no one took responsibility.

    November 4, 2008: In Georgia, the head of the armed forces
    was replaced, as part of reforms to make the military more
    effective. Georgia believes that Russia may invade again, and new
    military leadership is needed to improve Georgian defenses. Russia
    now defends its invasion of Georgia with the "Rwanda Defense." This
    doctrine was developed by the UN to justify invading another nation
    to halt atrocities against civilians. About a hundred civilians died
    when Georgian troops moved into their province of South Ossetia,
    which the Russians now say qualifies as genocide, and justifies an
    invasion of Georgia.

    November 1, 2008: Russia has offered to mediate the dispute between
    Armenia and Azerbaijan (both parts of the former Soviet Union). In
    the early 1990s, Armenia went to war with Azerbaijan to annex an
    Armenian majority district (Nagorno-Karabakh) that was separated
    from Armenia by a strip of Azerbaijan territory (populated largely
    by Azeris). Although Azerbaijan is larger than Armenia, and has oil,
    the Armenians are better fighters, and the conflict festers, despite
    a 1994 ceasefire.

    October 30, 2008: The Russian president has removed the head of
    the south Caucasus province of Ingushetia (which is adjacent to
    Chechnya). Both provinces are run by corrupt officials, who stay
    in power by catering to their cronies, and Russia, and screwing
    everyone else. Russia will tolerate this, as long as the local guy
    keeps things under control. Murat Zyazikov was not doing that, and is
    now the former boss of Ingushetia. He was given a new job in Moscow,
    just in case he is needed again in the future.
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