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Putin's vengeful plan to take back the old Russian empire

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  • Putin's vengeful plan to take back the old Russian empire

    The New York Post
    May 3 2014


    Putin's vengeful plan to take back the old Russian empire

    By Ralph Peters


    When I was a child and Soviet dinosaurs roamed the earth, a potato
    chip ad dared Americans "Bet you can't eat just one!" That about
    captures President Vladimir Putin's lip-smacking attitude toward his
    neighbors and any territorial snack that was ever "Russian." Over
    time, he'd like to devour the whole bag.

    What's often misunderstood about Putin is that, while he pines for the
    vanished image of Soviet power, he knows that Communism didn't work.
    Nor does he expect to re-establish the Soviet Union's domination over
    Europe's eastern half (as much as he'd welcome it). Putin has become a
    Great-Russian nationalist, a bigoted throwback to the days before the
    Bolsheviks arrived. His intent is to regain all the lands that once
    belonged to the czars.

    When President Obama declared in March that Putin "has no ideology,"
    he betrayed his ignorance of both history and Putin. Who's briefing
    this guy?

    Putin's ideology is nationalism, the only belief system that may have
    killed as many human beings as Marxism. And when a "post-modern"
    talk-talk America president faces a Russian leader who's a man of
    action and whose concept of nationhood refers to the late 19th
    century, our cherished negotiations merely seal the deal on what
    Putin's already taken (anyone really think he'll give back Crimea and
    flee from eastern Ukraine?).

    Obama talks, Putin kills.

    And make no mistake, Putin truly believes he's entitled to reclaim
    Ukraine and a great deal more. In his view, independent capitals from
    Warsaw (yes, Warsaw) to Bishkek are integral and natural parts of the
    Russian imperium. He regards them as property stolen from its rightful
    owner: Moscow.

    The Putin Doctrine gives Moscow the right, in his view, to intervene
    wherever ethnic Russians or merely Russian speakers are "threatened."

    Here's a look at the long-term framework in which Putin means to
    reconstitute Russia's empire with "blood and iron":

    Modal Trigger

    Photo:

    The Baltic states: Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania

    Like western Ukraine, these states are incontestably part of Europe,
    civilized, sophisticated and, incidentally, beautiful. But unlike
    Ukraine, they're NATO members, a status that still serves as a
    deterrent to Russia. Putin would love to digest them, but even he's
    reluctant to violate a NATO border -- for now. But the coastline and
    ports remain attractive, as does the highly skilled workforce (Estonia
    may be the most "wired" state on the planet).

    So what will Putin do? For now, he'll exploit any opportunities to
    further divide the region's Russian minorities from the indigenous
    majorities. And while Lithuania's population is only 6% ethnic Russian
    (the Russian boot crashed down late), over a quarter of Estonia's and
    Latvia's citizens are ethnic Russians -- and Putin's invented claims
    that they're abused.

    Moscow's playing a long game on this one, but, in the meantime, Putin
    doesn't mean to let these states get too comfortable. For their parts,
    the local populations remember and hate what the Russians did to their
    countries -- especially the Soviets.

    Belarus

    Hobbled by a dictator who knows he can't afford to annoy Putin,
    Belarus, with its ethnic and linguistic affinities to Russia, is
    Putin's when he decides he really wants it. Strategically, he owns it
    already, but without the hassle of paying its many bills. Only 8% of
    the population's Great Russian, but the White Russian majority relates
    closely ("Belorus" means "White Russia").

    Poland? Yup, Poland.

    The northeastern third, anyway, including Warsaw. The late czars ruled
    that stretch under one of the most cynical agreements ever wrought on
    the European continent. And Warsaw is, beyond question, a truly
    European city, a bridgehead to the West. Poland may be way down on
    Putin's to-do list, but it's there, NATO member or not. The bad blood
    spilled over centuries between civilized, European Poles and Russian
    barbarians (not least, the Soviet variant) has left some of the
    world's most-profound hatreds. No country has suffered more injustice
    than Poland, and Russia has been the worst perp. As with Ukraine, for
    Putin this one's personal.

    Ukraine

    Even in the three easternmost provinces currently under contention,
    ethnic Russians are not in the majority. But Putin is re-teaching the
    world the old lesson -- which we've done our best to forget -- that the
    fate of nations often isn't decided by majorities, but by a determined
    handful of men with guns. Having seized Crimea with eye-popping ease,
    Putin is now beginning to gnaw at the rest of Ukraine.

    He'll take those eastern provinces when he's ready, then expand along
    the Black Sea coast, building a strategic bridge to Crimea.

    At his leisure, perhaps over years, he'll snag the rest of Ukraine,
    too -- including the far west that never belonged to Russia's empire
    until raped by the Bolsheviks.

    A key to understanding Putin is that he's vengeful, a fiercely
    emotional man beneath his icy exterior, and he wants to punish Ukraine
    for derailing his initial plans. And we'll let him do it.

    Moldova

    Putin will eventually want to connect Ukraine territory to the
    nuthouse pro-Russian separatists in Moldova's breakaway "republic" of
    Transdniestria. Ukraine's the main course, Moldova is dessert.

    Armenia

    Threatened by Muslim neighbors (yes, it was a genocide!), tiny
    Armenia, a fraction of what it was in its glory days, has long looked
    to Moscow as its protector and ally. If the dominos start falling in
    the Caucasus, Armenia will associate with Russia voluntarily -- and
    gain territory from Azerbaijan for its loyalty. Few Russians, but
    plenty of ties.

    Azerbaijan

    Gas. Oil. Pipelines. Plus, Muslim (if liberally so). Azerbaijan serves
    as a pass-through for Islamist terrorists active in Russia's
    neighboring and troubled state of Dagestan. Putin does not see yet
    just how to get it, but he certainly wants it -- along with its
    southern border with Iran. Would the West stop him?

    Georgia

    Putin still has Georgia on his mind. When wrested from the Ottoman
    Turks over two centuries ago, Georgia became not only a vital outpost
    on Russia's frontier but a loyal ally (and the birthplace of Josef
    Stalin). Outraged by Georgia's new taste for independence, Putin has
    already dismantled part of the country through military action (and
    learned, in the process, that the West would do nothing but chatter).
    He'll get around to the rest. Not many Russians left there, but Putin
    won't care.

    Uzbekistan

    Putin would like to have it, but he just may decide it would be more
    trouble than it's worth. As long as Uzbekistan toes the line and
    serves as a buffer north of Afghanistan, Putin may forego a second
    conquest. That said, Putin's appetite could prove insatiable, and
    there's a lot of history here. The daring, heroic Russian conquest of
    the savage emirates of Bukhara and Samarkand still resonates with
    Russians who know their history. Just when we were taming our Wild
    West, Russia was subduing its Wild East. And these are lands that
    conquerors have always found hard to resist.

    Russians are under 10% of the population -- and disliked, as I can
    personally attest, having been mistaken for one in a marketplace.

    Kazakhstan

    Even before he swallows the last of Ukraine, Putin is likely to turn
    east to Kazakhstan (before sparring with NATO over the Baltics).
    Almost a quarter of this vast country's population is ethnic Russian,
    providing justification under the Putin doctrine -- requiring only a
    few staged provocations -- as well as a fifth column of agitators such
    as Moscow employs in Ukraine. Kazakhstan's a tremendous prize, given
    its natural resources, the Baikonur space-testing ground, other
    defense facilities and a position that all but divides Russia's west
    from its East. Kazakhstan will have even less capacity to resist than
    Ukraine, while the West will take even less interest in its fate.

    Turkmenistan, Tajikistan & Kyrgyzstan

    Turkmenistan has massive gas reserves, frontage on the Caspian, a
    border with Iran and 7% of the population is Russian --no doubt
    "endangered" in Putin's mind. Look for Vlad to stir up trouble.
    Kyrgyzstan, also with 7% Russian population, already does Moscow's
    bidding in important matters, so it might do as a mere satellite.
    Tajikistan is backward, raw, but useful if you have to deal with
    Afghanistan and parts south. Low priority for Putin, but he'll keep an
    eye on it.

    Ralph Peters is Fox News' strategic analyst and a retired US Army
    officer who specialized in Russian affairs.

    http://nypost.com/2014/05/03/putins-vengeful-plan-to-recapture-the-old-russian-empire/


    From: Baghdasarian
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