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NATO moved eastward, upping
the ante yet again with Russia
Eric Walberg
Online
Journal
Friday, April 11, 2008
The big news at the recent NATO meeting in Romania is that Croatia
and Albania are now happy members of the family of peace-loving
nations conducting a brutal war in Afghanistan. The bad news is
that Ukraine, Georgia and Macedonia didn’t get the green light,
with Russian and Greek revanchism the culprit -- clearly a great
setback to the cause of world peace.
US President George W Bush wanted to “lay down a marker”
for his legacy, and not “lose faith” with the Ukrainian
and Georgian peoples and all those other juicy ex-Soviet tidbits,
so he threw the usual stage-managed NATO script to the winds,
ignoring a behind-the-scenes deal with Germany and France, to
try to slip their application in next year -- NATO’s 60th
anniversary -- when Russia isn’t looking, and loudly demanded
they be allowed to join.
“It would send a signal throughout the region that these
two nations are, and will remain, sovereign and independent states,”
he opined. So, by implication, at present they are not? Is independence
something that is reserved for this Skull and Bones fraternity?
There is certainly no love lost between Chancellor Angela Merkel,
President Nicolas Sarkozy and President Vladimir Putin, but Germany
and France have no interest in provoking Russia, something that
the US seems to take delight in doing these days. And it’s
not only the two biggies; Spain and Italy, among others, have
also had enough.
(Article continues below)
Wolfgang Ischinger, the German ambassador to London, stated the
obvious: a so-called Membership Action Plan (MAP) offer to a divided
Ukraine could destabilise the new government there, and not enough
diplomacy had taken place beforehand with Russia. German Marshall
Fund Director Ronald Asmus said that Bush leaves “a legacy
of divisiveness” over Ukraine and Georgia. “It was
a classic example of bad diplomacy -- waiting too long to decide,
then going public and then trying to roll people, and only getting
half a loaf." As for Greece vetoing Macedonia, he said, “Only
Washington could have taken Greece to the woodshed on this issue,
and it didn’t do so."
No one even bothered to comment on the explosive situation that
would result from offering Georgia a MAP. Such a made-in-USA “roadmap”
would be sure to lead right over a political cliff. As a hint
of how dangerous some of the new drivers in the “Atlantic”
alliance are, Georgian Foreign Minister David Bakradze said, “A
no for Georgia will show those people in the Kremlin that by a
policy of blackmail, arrogance and aggression, they can influence
NATO decisions." Referring to a speech by Putin at a Munich
peace conference last year warning about US warmongering, Hungarian
political analyst Istvan Gyarmati said Putin “will say that
the policy of brutality we started in Munich has worked. This
is the result of a Western appeasement policy and the Russians
will be extremely proud of it." So, Putin is by implication
the new Hitler? Will someone please rescind this guy’s learner’s
permit?
The other huge bone of contention is of course the US missile
bases in the Czech Republic and Poland. Bush got a NATO endorsement
for this bald provocation of Russia. During a conference organised
on the sidelines of the NATO summit by the German Marshall Fund
of the United States, Konstantin Kosachev, chairman of the international
affairs committee of the Russian Duma, said, “We still do
not have a proper explanation of this project. It is not about
the number of interceptors. It is about undermining mutual confidence
and trust."
“NATO cannot guarantee its security at the expense of other
countries’ security,” Putin said, complaining that
some NATO members “went as far as total demonisation of
Russia and can’t get away from this even now."
Poland is still negotiating with the US over the terms for deploying
10 interceptors. “We are not close to a final agreement,”
said Bogdan Klich, Poland ’s defence minister. “It
is difficult to predict the conclusion of talks with the Americans."
Clearly sensing the US can’t afford to back down and seeing
the chance for a huge financial windfall, Prime Minister Donald
Tusk has insisted on security guarantees from the US, including
new air defences as well as US financing and protection of the
system. The Czech Republic foolishly only asked that its defence
companies be involved in building the system and that its scientists
and security officials get US training.
The promise by France to boost troop numbers in Afghanistan did
not include a commitment to put them in the line of fire alongside
the Canadians in Kandahar. Sarkozy did manage to bury General
de Gaulle’s legacy of keeping aloof from NATO’s command
structure. “Let Europe ’s defence pole advance and
we will continue to advance towards NATO,” he huffed. “I
repeat, these are two things that go together." Just why
Europe needs three levels of defence -- national, European and
NATO -- is not clear. Nor why all defence concerns among these
supposedly peace-loving nations can’t be fulfilled through,
say, the United Nations.
This makes two failed NATO conferences in a row, after the February
shouting match in Lithuania which, along with Romania, is one
of the lucky new members of this “Atlantic” alliance.
And the bases are very much a case of the US cutting off its nose
to spite its face. Putin has made it clear numerous times that
Moscow wants to cooperate with NATO on joint security problems
like Afghanistan and terrorism. But then the stated reason to
invade Afghanistan was to catch Osama bin Laden, which has been
shown to hold as much water as US claims of invading Iraq to find
weapons of mass destruction. So it is safe to conclude that the
machinations to expand this very un-Atlantic organisation and
to install US missiles in eastern Europe is more smoke and mirrors.
This was Putin’s first visit to a NATO summit meeting as
Russia ’s president, and his last, and he was treated with
kid gloves and even praised by purported foes. An American official
noted that Putin’s opening and closing remarks -- which
were not broadcast, in favour of Ukrainian President Viktor Yushchenko’s
-- were “very classy.” Spanish Foreign Minister Miguel
Ángel Moratinos said that Putin “showed a willingness
for dialogue," that Russia would be willing to return to
the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe treaty if Western nations
were willing to compromise on the treaty limits. Explaining Germany
’s veto of Ukraine and Georgia ’s MAPs, Foreign Minister
Frank-Walter Steinmeier said that after Russian anger over Kosovo’s
independence, “we could see no convincing reason to create
more tension.
There seems little chance that Ukraine or Georgia will ever join
this club of Atlantic peaceniks. It’s far more likely that
it will first collapse under the weight of its many contradictions.
But whatever the outcome of the Polish missile deal, it must be
observed that Russia ’s checkered relations with the Poles,
Czechs, Hungarians, Lithuanians et al, and their collective long-term
love affair with things American are continuing to haunt Russia.
So far, rational voices are few and far between, but the light
of day continues to shine every 24 hours. For the present, that,
and Russia ’s new-found vigour, will have to be our beacon.
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