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Russia Pushing NATO, CSTO Cooperation

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  • Russia Pushing NATO, CSTO Cooperation

    RUSSIA PUSHING NATO, CSTO COOPERATION

    RIA Novosti
    28.06.2005

    MOSCOW (RIA Novosti military commentator Viktor Litovkin). Few people
    noted the unusually optimistic conclusion to NATO General Secretary
    Jaap de Hoop Scheffer's recent official visit to Moscow.

    Why the optimism if, as the Moscow media wrote, Scheffer got nothing
    good from Moscow? But the NATO head was satisfied with the positive
    development of relations with Russia, which he described as mature
    partnership.

    The only justification for this optimism can be the assistance that
    the Kremlin offered to NATO in Central Asia. This will be a genuine
    partnership that calls for mature relations between NATO and the
    Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO), comprising Russia,
    Belarus, Armenia, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Kazakhstan.

    In Moscow Scheffer was briefed on terrorist bases and increased
    production of narcotics in Afghanistan, problems of concern to both
    NATO and the CSTO. Coordinated efforts could make NATO's operations
    in the region much easier.

    In addition, President Vladimir Putin offered Scheffer a pilot
    project to train narcotics specialists for Afghanistan and Central
    Asia. Russia and its partners have more experience and capabilities
    in the area than NATO. In short, this is about a real contribution
    to the war on terror and drugs in the region.

    Scheffer promised to relay the Russian offer to NATO headquarters in
    Brussels. If other partners agree, the bloc would join in this effort,
    he said. Does this mean that the Russia-NATO partnership in the joint
    war against terrorism has exceeded all expectations?

    Some achievements have been made. Moscow has granted NATO transport
    corridors to deliver troops and cargoes to bases in Central Asia
    and Afghanistan for operations to stabilize the region, and has also
    shared vital intelligence information on the situation in Afghanistan's
    provinces and paramilitary groups there.

    This intelligence information continues to grow, in particular about
    terrorist-training bases in Afghanistan and neighboring Pakistan and
    secret terrorist channels into Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan.
    The terrorists' aims are to destabilize both the region and other
    areas. The Kremlin also provided information about the production
    and delivery of drugs from Afghanistan, although we have yet to see
    any produced positive results.

    "Terrorists are trained in Afghanistan and adjacent Pakistan by the
    Taliban and teachers who train them for terrorist acts in Russia,"
    Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said at a meeting with Scheffer. "Our
    information shows that these people are periodically infiltrated into
    the Ferghana Valley."

    But the leaders of NATO's anti-terrorist operation in Afghanistan
    appear not to notice this. Is it because they focused their attention
    on democratic elections in the provinces, thus neglecting the main
    goal of the operation?

    Russia-NATO cooperation includes regular meetings and political
    consultations within the Russia-NATO Council, practical work of
    joint anti-terrorism groups and combat compatibility, and even joint
    command post exercises (CPX) on land and sea. The sides have also held
    CPXs to check the effectiveness of air defense and theater missile
    defense systems. Russian warships participated in NATO exercises in
    the Mediterranean on combatting illegal migration and movement of
    terrorists, drugs and weapons of mass destruction.

    But careful analysis of these achievements shows that the situation is
    not as positive as the NATO leadership tries to make out. Cooperation
    programs alone cannot remove Moscow's concerns on several key issues.

    For example, Moscow is seriously worried over the presence of U.S.
    tactical nuclear weapons at NATO bases in Europe. Robin Cook,
    the former foreign secretary of Britain, and the former Pentagon
    chief Robert McNamara wrote about this in the Financial Times the
    other day. The U.S. has some 150 to 500 B61 nuclear free-fall bombs
    in Europe.

    "Against what terrorists can these weapons be used?" I asked Scheffer,
    who at first said he did not know what weapons I meant. But then he
    described them as political deterrents that would not be used against
    anyone. Why then keep this relic of the Cold War in Europe, which
    NATO prefers not to notice, as the answer of its general secretary
    demonstrated?
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