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COLD WAR II: From The Balkans To Central Asia: U.S.-NATO Prepare For

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  • COLD WAR II: From The Balkans To Central Asia: U.S.-NATO Prepare For

    COLD WAR II: FROM THE BALKANS TO CENTRAL ASIA: U.S.-NATO PREPARE FOR NEW COLD WAR
    by Rick Rozoff

    Global Research
    May 1, 2012
    Stop NATO

    Though infrequently acknowledged if even given consideration, the
    current historical period remains what it has been for a quarter
    century, the post-Cold War era.

    Beginning in earnest in 1991 with the near simultaneous disintegration
    of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics and the Socialist Federal
    Republic of Yugoslavia - instantaneous in the first case, comparatively
    slower in the second, only complete with the independence of Montenegro
    in 2008 - the bipolar world ended with the demise of the Soviet Union
    and the Warsaw Pact and the nonaligned one with the fragmentation of
    Yugoslavia, a founder of the Non-Aligned Movement.

    The dissolution of the two nations, the only both multi-ethnic and
    multi-confessional countries in Europe, was accompanied by violent
    ethnic conflicts often reinforced by religious differences. In Croatia,
    Bosnia, Kosovo, the South Caucasus, the Russian North Caucasus and
    on the east bank of the Dniester River.

    In many instances, in Serbian-majority areas of Croatia and Bosnia and
    in Transdniester, memories of World War II gave rise to legitimate
    fears of revanchism among populations that recalled the death camps
    and pogroms of Adolf Hitler's allies in the early 1940s and witnessed
    the recrudescence of the ideologies, the irredentism and the political
    trappings that gave rise to them.

    Transdniester refused to become part of post-Soviet Moldova as
    it foresaw both states being reabsorbed into Romania. Abkhazia,
    South Ossetia and Adjara, parts of the Georgian Soviet Socialist
    Republic, didn't desire to be included in the Republic of Georgia
    and majority-Armenian Nagorno-Karabakh adopted a similar approach to
    post-Soviet Azerbaijan. The above are collectively known in certain
    circles as the frozen conflicts in former Soviet space.

    The centrifugal dynamic reached more dangerous proportions when armed
    secessionist movements went beyond federal republics - the Leninist
    constitutions of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia formally allowed
    for their independence under the proper conditions - and arose in
    autonomous and former autonomous republics: Chechnya and Dagestan
    in Russia and Kosovo and the Presevo Valley in Serbia. Northwestern
    Macedonia was the site of the same destabilization in 2001, the direct
    - and inevitable - result of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization'
    s air war against Yugoslavia two years earlier on behalf of Kosovo
    separatists.

    The area collectively assailed by the above violence and national
    vivisection stretches from the Adriatic Sea to the Caspian Sea,
    north of the Broader (or Greater or New) Middle East which in turn
    begins in Mauritania and ends in Kazakhstan, from Africa's Atlantic
    coast to China's western border.

    The ever more extensive breakup of the Soviet Union and Yugoslavia, and
    the former Soviet Union and former Yugoslavia, correlated with - and
    more than correlated with - the development of NATO as an expansionist,
    aggressive and bellicose regional and global military force.

    Twenty-one nations and five smaller breakaway states (including
    Kosovo) where earlier there had been only two created that many more
    opportunities for the West to expand southward and eastward from Cold
    War-era NATO territory. Every one of the 21 former Soviet and Yugoslav
    federal republics is now either a full member of NATO or engaged in a
    partnership program. Thirteen of them have troops serving under NATO
    command in Afghanistan.

    Two recent announcements demonstrate the constantly increasing
    penetration and domination of the area that begins in Slovenia and
    ends in Azerbaijan, a swathe of land that on its eastern extreme
    borders Russia to its north and Iran to its south.

    Recently NATO's Allied Command Operations website announced the
    resumption of what had been annual military exercises employed to
    integrate partners in the Balkans, the former Soviet Union, the
    Eastern Mediterranean and the Persian Gulf.

    The dual exercise, Cooperative Longbow and Cooperative Lancer,
    respectively a command and a field exercise, will occur this year
    in Macedonia from May 21-29 with the participation of several NATO
    members - if the preceding versions are an indication, the U.S.

    Britain, Canada, Greece, Hungary, Poland, Turkey and others - and
    perhaps twice as many partnership adjuncts from the Partnership for
    Peace, Mediterranean Dialogue and Istanbul Cooperation Initiative
    programs. The exercise, like its predecessors, is based on a "crisis
    response" scenario and a United Nations mandate. Like Libya last year,
    for instance.

    In the last Cooperative Longbow/Cooperative Lancer exercises, in
    Georgia in 2009, NATO members the U.S., Britain, Canada, Spain,
    Greece, Hungary, Turkey, the Czech Republic, Croatia and Albania
    participated. Longbow/Lancer 2009 was held less than eight months
    after the five-day war between Georgia and Russia in August 2008 and
    was also to have included NATO members Estonia and Latvia and twelve
    partnership nations.

    This year's version is slated to involve the largest number of
    Partnership for Peace states in any Longbow/Lancer exercises,
    thirteen: Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Bosnia, Georgia,
    Kazakhstan, Macedonia, Moldova, Montenegro, Serbia, Switzerland and
    Ukraine. NATO hasn't yet disclosed which Mediterranean Dialogue and
    Istanbul Cooperation Initiative partners will participate this year.

    The first Longbow/Lancer exercises were held in Moldova in 2006 with
    seven NATO members, twelve Partnership for Peace nations (all of the
    above-mentioned except for Serbia, which joined the Partnership for
    Peace in that year) and Mediterranean Dialogue partner Israel.

    Mediterranean Dialogue member Morocco and Istanbul Cooperation
    Initiative members Qatar and the United Arab Emirates sent observers.

    Cooperative Longbow/Lancer 2007 was conducted in Albania and the
    following year's exercise in Armenia. All five nations - Moldova,
    Albania, Armenia, Georgia and Macedonia - are deeply involved, either
    on their own territory or in neighboring nations, in one or more of
    the conflicts discussed above. In 2009 Armenia, Kazakhstan, Moldova
    and Serbia withdrew beforehand because of the Georgia-Russian war of
    a few months earlier and Estonia and Latvia did also because of an
    anti-government mutiny staged the day before the almost month-long
    exercise began.

    What role the NATO and partnership troops may have played had the
    military uprising progressed further than it did can be easily
    imagined.

    The U.S. Marine Corps' Black Sea Rotational Force posted on its
    Facebook account (and to date nowhere else) that its six-month
    rotation for this year will "build enduring partnerships with 19
    nations throughout Eastern Europe." More accurately, as the Marine
    program formed two years ago identifies as its mission, in "the Black
    Sea, Balkan and Caucasus regions."

    Two years ago twelve nations were involved, by last year there were
    thirteen - Albania, Azerbaijan, Bosnia, Bulgaria, Croatia, Georgia,
    Greece, Macedonia, Moldova, Montenegro, Romania, Serbia and Ukraine
    - and this year nineteen. The six new participating nations were
    not named.

    Black Sea Rotational Force 2012 began its half-year-long deployment in
    Georgia by joining Agile Spirit 2012 in March at the Vaziani Training
    Area where the last Cooperative Longbow/Lancer exercises took place.

    Serbia may host its first military exercises with the force as well.

    The U.S. Marine Corps is not only building bilateral and multilateral
    ties with nineteen countries in the Balkans, the Black Sea region and
    the Caucasus and other parts of the former Soviet Union, it is also
    consolidating NATO's expansion into those areas with the ultimate aim
    of full Alliance membership for those not already among the bloc's
    28 member states.

    It can be argued that the Cold War didn't end, that the U.S. and NATO
    continue to wage it with wars and preparations for wars.

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