Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

May artillery prep by the US and Russia before July G8 Summit

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • May artillery prep by the US and Russia before July G8 Summit

    Regnum, Russia
    May 14 2006

    The May artillery preparation by the US and Russia before July G8
    Summit in St. Petersburg


    When during the `Common Vision of Common Neighborhood' conference in
    Vilnius on May 4 US Vice President Richard Cheney took up the burden
    to openly criticize Russia for its home and foreign policies and,
    later, US President George Bush said himself - thereby proving that
    in Vilnius Cheney was speaking `not on his own behalf' - that
    Washington was not satisfied with `the level of democracy' in Russia,
    many understood that they in the White House were beginning some kind
    of battle against Moscow. Their goal might be to get some kind of
    carte blanche before the July G8 Summit in St. Petersburg to be able
    to pressure the Kremlin in the `Iranian dossier' issue. As you may
    know, it was exactly in early May that Russia and China had once
    again rejected the UN SC's resolution on Iran, drafted by the UK and
    some western countries.

    However, the US and its allies might as well want to turn the St.
    Petersburg G8 into some kind of `public flogging' for Russia - for
    Cheney's indictment contains quite surprising charges: like, Moscow
    is allegedly `toying' with the territorial integrity of some
    neighboring states. Any unbiased observer could see that Cheney was,
    first of all, meaning Russia's official stance on the ethnic
    conflicts in the CIS, and so, through its vice president in nowhere
    but the Baltic states, the US has given a start to a process that
    will inevitably dismantle the CIS and - as the Americans believe -
    will tear away and then reshape the peacemaking formats in the CIS
    conflict zones. They believe that this all will allow them to push
    Russia out of the peace-making and -keeping operations - for example
    in the selfsame Abkhazia or South Ossetia. In this light, one can
    agree with the `forebodings' of some Azeri officials that during the
    G8 Summit the US may raise the problem of Karabakh too.

    Georgia and Ukraine have already started the CIS dismantling. We
    already know what their presidents Mikhail Saakashvili and Viktor
    Yushchenko are going to offer instead, say, to Armenia or Azerbaijan
    - `Commonwealth of Democratic Choice' - an alternative to the failed
    GUUAM-GUAM - a framework that the extra-regional forces will now use
    to `push a-la-west democracy' from `the Adriatic to the Caspian seas'
    (as they said in Vilnius). However, this is a topic for a separate
    discussion.

    Everybody understood that they in the Kremlin would not be able to
    pretend they did not see the openly anti-Russian meaning of what
    Cheney and Bush said. That's why the quick response of Russian FM
    Sergey Lavrov on May 6 made clear to the experts that in his annual
    address to the Russian parliament Russian President Vladimir Putin
    would not fail to outline his basic policy during his the G8 talks.
    Obviously, Russia began preparing for `a battle' with the US
    beforehand. One proof is the enhanced Russian-German diplomatic,
    political and business activities in January-February 2006.

    Particularly, Lavrov said: `Democracy is necessary not only inside
    the state but also on the international arena.' About Cheney's speech
    Lavrov said: `I thought that a person holding such an office is
    objectively informed of everything but his advisors or assistants
    must have let him down. For example, Cheney says: `the opponents of
    reforms in Russia are seeking to reverse the gains of the last
    decade.' I think one should not explain to the Russian people what
    gains he is talking about - the country was on the verge of breakup.'
    Lavrov said that, in fact, the Russian authorities are seeking to
    preserve Russia's unity; in the last 40 years Russia has broken no
    single oil or gas export contract; as regards the statement that
    Russia undermines the territorial integrity of its neighbors - in
    early 90 it was exactly Russian peacekeepers who gave their lives to
    stop bloodshed in Moldova and Georgia. `Not to remember this is
    blasphemy,' Lavrov noted. To clear the air Lavrov said: `One thing I
    agree with is Mr. Cheney's desire to see the world as a community of
    sovereign democracies. Russia wants to be and is becoming sovereign,
    strong and stable democracy and hopes that they in the world will
    take it as equal partner whose presence in global problem solving is
    indispensable. I think that such statements will not undermine the
    efforts we are making with the US, with Europe, with other leading
    counties to build a fair world with no conflicts and with countries
    developing stably and democratically.'

    That's why when on May 10 Putin appeared with his annual address to
    Russia's Federal Assembly, special attention was given to the
    paragraphs about Russia's foreign policy and security for the time
    being. The South Caucasus and some other CIS countries were mostly
    eager to know what Putin thinks about the changes in Russia's
    migration policy - just count how many citizens of our country are
    presently earning their living in Russia and sending home untaxed
    money transfers in freely convertible currency in order to feed their
    poor families. Still, we are inclined to first of all analyze the
    foreign policy and defense parts of Putin's address.

    It should be noted that the text of this document has made it clear
    that Russia, at least, for today is inclined to regard the West's
    policy in the CIS as an ordinary rivalry. That's exactly what Putin
    wants to say: `now that the world is being actively rebuilt we are
    facing many new problems. These challenges are less predictable and
    nobody can say how dangerous they might be. The conflict space is
    actively enlarging and, which is even more dangerous, is beginning to
    cover our vital interests.' They in the CIS and the West should
    understand the last phrase as an imperative signal to all
    extra-regional forces that Moscow will not give in `the zone of its
    vital interests' `without fight.' It is symptomatic that today the
    Russian President has `as if imperceptibly' begun to use the
    vocabulary the US administration used in early 90 when `opening up'
    the whole post-Soviet space and calling it "newly independent states
    and `zone of American vital interests.'

    Let's put aside Putin's clear remarks that despite their lagging
    financing, Russia's defense complex and armed forces can give worthy
    rebuff to any persons or countries who will try to `scare' Moscow.
    Obviously, Russia's key strategy before the St. Petersburg G8 is that
    it links nonproliferation of mass destruction weapon (which first of
    all refers to nuclear weapon - and this is a subtle hint at the
    `Iranian nuclear dossier') with the new turn of arms race, including
    the US' deepening activities to create a national anti-missile
    system. Let's give a couple of quotations: `...today it's early to
    speak about the end of the arms race... the race is just unfolding and
    it is going up to a new technological level to produce a threatening
    arsenal of destabilizing arms (he obviously means non-conventional
    arms).

    Experts are already discussing the plans of use of intercontinental
    ballistic missiles with non-nuclear warheads. But nuclear powers may
    inadequately react to the launch of such a missile - they may
    counter-act in a large-scale nuclear strike. Not everybody in the
    world has given up its stereotypes and prejudice...' In our view, by
    saying this Putin just reminded the West that Russia's national
    security concept has a point that allows Russia to deal response or
    even preventive nuclear strikes in case of a war or a threat of war.
    Well, this is all but `a declaration of war' against the West. Let's
    remind once again - `the war was declared' against Russia at the
    Vilnius conference by Mr. Cheney, who made an ultimatum: either you
    break up yourself and we call it `the deepening of the western
    standard democracy' or...

    Even the Western media called Cheney's speech `a new Fulton speech,'
    `cold war ghost,' etc, while Putin's address is just a reminder that
    the challenge can be accepted. In other words, this is an ordinary
    strategic game until the G8 presidents dot their `i's' by themselves.

    The US CIS `democratization' policy also got it from Putin. True,
    again indirectly: "Today the percentage of our defense expenses in
    GDP are comparable or a bit smaller than in big nuclear powers like
    France or the UK... but only absolute figures matter, in absolute
    figures they are just half of what those countries have and are in no
    way comparable to the expenses of the US. Their absolute military
    budget is 25 times as big as that of Russia. That's what they in the
    military call `their home, their fortress. They did it well. Well
    done! But this does not mean that we must not build our own strong
    home. Because we see what is going on in the world. We do see. As
    they say `comrade wolf knows whom to eat.' He is eating and is not
    listening to anybody and seems not to be going to. What becomes of
    their pathos about the necessity to fight for human rights and
    democracy when it comes to the necessity to push their own interests?
    It turns out that here everything is possible with no restrictions.'
    In our view, this is what the Kremlin actually thinks about `the
    fruits' of the `color revolutions' in the CIS, designed by US
    political technologists.

    And the last point of the defensive-preventive part of Putin's
    address. He said that Russia has means that can overcome air defense
    systems and will allow Moscow to fulfill its key task - to guarantee
    stable peace in the world and to preserve the strategic balance of
    forces. Putin also made clear that the Russian army will shortly have
    maneuverable warheads - units that make missile flight path
    unpredictable for potential enemy.

    Only after that did Putin announce the cardinal tasks of Russia's
    foreign policy - which will obviously be valid for not only this year
    but the whole period till the next presidential election of 2008.
    Here Putin said that the CIS is still a priority for Russia's FM.
    True, the CIS as such has already fulfilled its historical mission
    and should be reformed. This might be a hint that the Kremlin's
    political technologists are already working to transform the CIS into
    one or even several new organizations, which would reintegrate the
    actions and efforts of all the present CIS states. We have already
    heard their names and not once - CSTO, Russia-Belarus Union, EurAsEC,
    CES (common economic space).

    The other key task of Moscow's foreign policy is to harmonize
    relations with the EU, Russia's biggest partner. There is nothing new
    here - the Russian President still trusts the Russian-EU bilateral
    agreement for creating `four common spaces.' On two of the four the
    sides have actually been actively working in the last months. We can
    certainly add to this `the fifth common space' between Russia and the
    EU - the quickly ongoing Russian-German project of Northern gas
    pipeline.

    As regards the US, it seems that Russia has decided to make it known
    beforehand that, once its major partner in the West (especially in
    politics and fight with terrorism), Washington, is no longer a
    priority in Russia's foreign policy. The US has got into the class of
    Russia's `special partners' along with China, India, some
    Asia-Pacific, Latin American and African countries. And if many
    experts believed that by Cheney's Vilnius speech President Bush made
    clear to Russia that in St. Petersburg they would have an unpleasant
    talks, by his speech Putin made even more clear to Bush that today
    they have nothing special to talk about - let's say once again: `the
    wolf is eating and is not listening to anybody and seems not to be
    going to...'

    And the last task of Moscow's foreign policy is to promote the UN
    reforms so that it can further be `the carcass of the modern world
    order' - `a regulator allowing to jointly develop a new up-to-date
    code of behavior in the world.' But, at the same time, the UN should
    become as efficient as possible. We can try to go deep into this
    problem, but it is too is a topic for separate discussion...

    It's not a secret that the reason for this `attack' on Russia and
    those CIS countries who reject the `anti-Russian' democracy is that
    some of the G-8 and, primarily, the US are very much eager to get new
    levers of control over Moscow - at least, some new ways of political
    and other pressure on it. This might also be due to Russia's plans to
    repay its debts to the `Paris Club' ahead of time or to the US' plans
    to stop Russia's impartiality in the `Iranian problem?' - this may
    even be some complex task Russia's international enemies are trying
    to solve. One thing is clear: the West (the US) fears lest it might
    lose not only the strings that help it to manipulate Russia but also
    any `control' over the actions of Russian leaders - present or
    future. And this is quite possible. That's probably why after Putin's
    address Russia's Federal Assembly was told that starting from July 1,
    2006 Russia will be ready to convert its ruble...

    Sergey Shakaryants - expert of the Caucasus Analytical Center
Working...
X