WAR Russian Tanks Rolling Into South Ossetia! Hot War!-9/22-#2534

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RUSSIA AND GERMANY RESTART THEIR SPECIAL PARTNERSHIP

By Pavel K. Baev

Monday, October 6, 2008

The two-headed Russian leadership is seeking to demonstrate that the “issues” in their relations with key European countries caused by the Georgian “episode” have come to an end in less than a month. Precisely that was achieved in the Russian-German summit in St. Petersburg last week where Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and German Chancellor Angela Merkel presided over several wide-ranging meetings of key ministers and business leaders (Rossiiskaya gazeta, RBC Daily, October 3). The leaders felt obliged to discuss the post-war settlement and confirmed that “differences on this issue have not all been settled yet,” and Merkel insisted that “Georgia’s territorial integrity is not open to discussion.” Medvedev also saw no point in such discussions and was ready to leave those to other forums, such as the Council of Europe, where parliamentarians had a two-day-long shouting match last week resulting, predictably, in a hollow resolution (Kommersant, October 3).

Merkel knew perfectly well that with the German economy sliding into recession, business interests had to have precedence above everything else, so she uttered one phrase that removed most political obstacles to trade and investment—the “time was not ripe” for granting Georgia and Ukraine Membership Action Plans (MAP) for joining NATO. The confirmation that at the December NATO Ministerial meeting Germany would remain opposed to approving the two MAPs was duly issued, and a whole range of business deals made great progress. The central agreement involved the German energy giant E.ON, which after four years of negotiations acquired a 25 percent share in the Yuzhno-Russkoye gas field. The deal is quite profitable for Gazprom, which has bought back 1.44 percent of its shares (currently worth some $ 2.5 billion, down by half from three months ago), but it would perhaps have preferred to receive some assets in Europe (Vedomosti, October 3). The recent arrangement in Italy giving Gazprom direct access to Italian consumers fits better into its strategy of expanding control over European distribution networks (Kommersant, September 29).

For Medvedev and Putin (who was noticeably absent from the St. Petersburg bonding), achieving a breakthrough on the European front was imperative, since they are concerned that the wave of “patriotic” mobilization triggered by the five-day war could carry them too far toward a confrontation with the West (Vedomosti, September 24). Fostering a pre-emptive détente in this quasi-Cold War, Medvedev is recycling his initiative on a new pan-European security pact; but neither Merkel nor Spanish Prime Minister Jose Luis Zapatero, who also paid a visit to St. Petersburg, showed any interest. The lull in security cooperation affects many business interests, and the Moscow stock market has experienced a near-catastrophic “correction.” Putin’s $50 billion rescue package has failed to check this trend, and last Friday the key indices recorded a new 7 percent fall (www.gazeta.ru, Kommersant, October 3). Seeking to encourage a return of European investors, Medvedev resumed his trademark campaign against corruption and held a meeting with Viktor Vekselberg, the oligarch who initiated a bitter conflict in the TNK-BP oil company, in order to announce the end of this high-profile quarrel.

More carefully orchestrated good news could be in the making, including Gazprom’s possible acquisition of a 20 percent stake in the Spanish oil company Repsol, but the topic that Medvedev tries to exploit to the maximum effect is Russia’s financial solvency (www.gazeta.ru, October 3). He emphasizes again and again that the point of origin of the devastating crisis was not the now-proverbial sub-prime mortgages but the disarray in the U.S. budget, and he points out that Russia has free reserves to shore up its partners in need. Illuminating this proposition, some Russian experts argue that Sberbank should have made a bid for Lehman Brothers before that respectable bank collapsed but that new opportunities will certainly emerge (Expert, September 29). What follows logically is the conclusion that the EU and Russia should take more responsibility for managing global finances underpinned by Russian contributions to financial institutions in select European states. Germany remains opposed to setting a common EU fund for rescuing troubled banks, as Merkel told French President Sarkozy who held an emergency summit in Paris over the weekend; and that is fine with Russia, which prefers to deal with its key European allies and not with the EU bureaucracy.

The Europeans are aware that the source of Russia’s wealth is their payments for energy resources, which are still rising as Gazprom’s export price for gas reached an astonishing $500 per 1,000 cubic meters (Kommersant, October 2). By mid-2009 it is certain to drop to $350 followed by a lag in the trajectory of oil prices, but the crucial moment is now; and for the EU there is no alternative to grasping every business opportunity in Russia. There is nevertheless much unease in Europe about a partnership with Putin’s Russia, since Medvedev’s “business-friendly” policy has retrogressed until it is barely discernible. The country’s political development over the last 15 years, from the tanks in the streets of Moscow in October 1993 to the tanks on the outskirts of Tbilisi in August 2008, shows a consistent propensity for relying on military force as the ultimate political argument.

The unwelcome political reality of deepening European dependency upon Russia is somewhat similar to the American asymmetric and unbalanced economic relations with China, which is the main holder of U.S. state debt, although mutual trust is very weak and political compatibility nonexistent. In both Moscow and Beijing the current analyses of the political options available to the West in mitigating the unfolding economic disaster actually encourages their self-assertive and resolutely anti-democratic behavior. The multi-polar world that Medvedev is propagating with the approving nods of Chinese comrades could, however, turn out to be far more brutally competitive and violent than Russia is able to handle (Nezavisimaya gazeta, September 16). The easy victory over Georgia has propelled Russia toward a dangerous trap of self-aggrandizement, and the renewed dialogues with the Europeans create an impression that the price for revisionism is symbolic. Medvedev would perhaps prefer the next step to be a business takeover, but tanks still hold sway.
 

Housecarl

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http://uk.reuters.com/article/worldNews/idUKTRE4952UA20081006

Abkhazia accuses Tbilisi of killing border guard
Mon Oct 6, 2008 12:32pm BST

MOSCOW (Reuters) - A border guard from Georgia's breakaway region of Abkhazia was killed in a gunfight with Georgian forces on Monday, the separatist administration said, but officials in Tbilisi said they knew nothing of any incident.

Russian and Georgian forces fought a brief war in August focussed on another separatist region, South Ossetia, but in the past few months the de facto border between Georgia and the Black Sea region of Abkhazia has been relatively calm.

The reported shootout, three days after an explosion in South Ossetia killed seven Russian servicemen, underlined the fragility of a French-brokered cease-fire.

The gunfight took place in the village of Nabakevi in Abkhazia's Gali district, adjacent to Georgian-controlled territory, said Ruslan Kishmaria, the chief representative in Gali of separatist leader Sergei Bagapsh.

"We came under fire from the Georgian side. It was in the course of this shooting that the border guard was shot," Kishmaria told Reuters.

"We returned fire but we did not set foot on Georgian territory. We believe it was Georgian police special forces."

In Tbilisi, Interior Ministry spokesman Shota Utiashvili said: "We know nothing about this alleged incident. Georgian forces were not inside Abkhazian territory."

Months of skirmishes between separatists and Georgian troops erupted into war in August when Georgia sent troops and tanks to retake South Ossetia, which threw off Tbilisi's rule in a war in the early 1990s.

Russia responded with a powerful counter-strike that drove the Georgian army out of South Ossetia. Moscow's troops then pushed further into Georgia, including areas around Abkhazia, saying they needed to prevent further Georgian attacks.

The West has condemned Russia for a "disproportionate response" to Georgia's actions and has repeatedly demanded that Moscow pull its troops out of core Georgia.

The Kremlin says its troops will leave undisputed Georgian territory by an October 10 deadline set out in a cease-fire brokered by French President Nicolas Sarkozy.

European Union cease-fire monitors, whose deployment was also part of the cease-fire agreement, have begun patrolling in some areas around Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

Moscow has recognised both Abkhazia and South Ossetia as independent states, but only Nicaragua has matched that, and NATO has demanded that Russia reverse its recognition.

Georgian government officials said on Monday explosions had been heard near the Inguri hydro-electric power station, which straddles separatist and Georgian-controlled territory and supplies electricity to both sides.

Kishmaria said he knew nothing of any incident near the power station.

(Reporting by Christian Lowe in Moscow and Niko Mchedlishvili in Tbilisi; Writing by Conor Sweeney; Editing by Janet Lawrence)

© Thomson Reuters 2008 All rights reserved.
 

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http://www.nytimes.com/2008/10/07/world/europe/07russia.html

October 7, 2008
Russia Accuses Georgia of ‘New Hostilities’
By OLESYA VARTANYAN and ELLEN BARRY

KARALETI, Georgia – Russia accused the Georgian government on Monday of “seeking to provoke new hostilities” even as Russian peacekeepers were dismantling key checkpoints outside the separatist enclaves of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Authorities in Abkhazia said that an Abkhaz border guard was killed on Monday after exchanging fire with gunmen on the Georgian side. On Friday, a car bomb in the South Ossetian capital of Tskhinvali killed eight Russian soldiers and three Ossetian civilians.

Russia has said Georgia is responsible for these and three other attacks in the disputed territories in recent days. Russia’s foreign minister, Sergei Lavrov, made a formal appeal to his French counterpart, Bernard Kouchner, on Monday, asking the European Union to “take necessary measures to stabilize the situation in keeping with its commitments.” A peace deal brokered by President Nicolas Sarkozy of France set Oct. 10, this Friday, as the deadline for Russian troops to withdraw from the buffer zones outside the enclaves.

Shota Utiashvili, a senior official at Georgia’s interior ministry, denied any Georgian involvement in the attacks, saying it opposed any delay in the withdrawal.

“All of Georgia is looking forward to the withdrawal of Russian forces from the so-called buffer zone, and later from Abkhazia and South Ossetia,” he said. “This a completely absurd accusation.”

In Karaleti, a village two miles north of Gori, ethnic Georgians passed freely through a Russian checkpoint whose soldiers were busy winding up barbed wire, washing their clothes and packing their possessions.

A local farmer, Vitaly Shavshishvili, 34, had heard the Russians were leaving, but he wanted to see for himself. Though Karaleti has been peaceful, he said, his neighbors were afraid to leave their homes after dark, and he prayed for the return of Georgian police.

During the aftermath of the August war between the countries, he said, his harvest of fruits and vegetables had rotted on the vine, costing him about $3,500, which he had hoped would last him a whole year.

“Now we have hope only in God,” he said. “We have nothing to survive.”

Another woman, who passed the checkpoint on a donkey cart, said she thought she would never feel safe in her home again. Even the returning Georgian authorities scared her.

“At least they should give us all guns, so we can defend ourselves,” said Galina Gogiashvili, 68.

Russian troops have been dismantling checkpoints for days, under the watch of some 200 European Union observers who began patrols in the buffer zone last week. Maj. Gen. Marat Kulakhmetov, commander of Russian peacekeepers in South Ossetia, said early Monday that the six southernmost posts would be removed within 24 hours.

But authorities in Abkhazia said that a border guard had been fatally wounded in a gunfight in the village of Nabakevi, near the border with Georgia. Military officials in Abkhazia also said a convoy of retreating peacekeepers narrowly escaped being injured in an explosion.

In a statement, Russia’s foreign ministry blamed Georgia for the attacks.

“The impression is that some forces in Tbilisi, who oppose the normal and smooth transition of functions in the security zones in South Ossetia and Abkhazia from Russian peacekeepers to European Union observers, are deliberately trying to escalate tensions and seeking to provoke new hostilities through a series of terrorist acts,” the statement read.

But Mr. Utiashvili, the Georgian official, said “there was no shootout with Georgian forces,” and that Georgia had no role in any attacks.

The Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe also protested allegations printed in the Russian press that the car that exploded in Tskhinvali on Friday, killing 11 people, had traveled into the area as part of an O.S.C.E. convoy. Ambassador Terhi Hakala, head of the O.S.C.E. mission to Georgia, said she was “outraged” at the report.

“The spreading of untruthful propaganda about the Mission – which includes several previous entirely false accounts connected with O.S.C.E. staff and premises – is a serious matter, endangers O.S.C.E. personnel and may be taken as a signal of unwillingness on the part of those responsible to work constructively,” she said.
 

Housecarl

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UN chief wants new look at UN Georgia mission


The Associated Press
Tuesday, October 7, 2008

UNITED NATIONS: The U.N. observer mission monitoring a 1993 cease-fire between Georgia and Abkhazia should be extended for four months to explore whether to continue U.N. involvement following the Georgian-Russian war in South Ossetia, the U.N. chief said Monday.

In a report to the U.N. Security Council, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said the conflict that led to Russia's recognition of the independence of both breakaway regions had changed the context in which the U.N. has operated for the last 14 years.

The Black Sea province of Abkhazia has been independently run since 1993, when two years of fighting with Georgian troops ended with a U.N.-monitored cease-fire. Two-thirds of Abkhazia residents hold Russian passports, and along with South Ossetia it had sought independence or union with Russia.

The recent war began Aug. 7 with a Georgian offensive to regain control of South Ossetia. Russia responded by sending in troops, which quickly routed the Georgian military. Ban said the Russian operation affected the situation in the area of the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict and beyond, with 9,000 troops and 350 armored vehicles reportedly taking part in the operation.

Under an EU-sponsored cease-fire deal, EU monitors were deployed to Georgia and Russian forces must leave Georgian territory by Oct. 11. But Russia plans to keep 3,800 troops in South Ossetia and the same number in Abkhazia — a presence U.S., NATO and the European Union say violates its obligation under the cease-fire.

Ban said there is, as yet, "little clarity" about the future status of the areas separating Abkhazia and Georgia where the U.N. observer mission, known as UNOMIG, operated — "the security zone where no military presence was permitted, the restricted weapons zone where no heavy weapons could be introduced, and the Kodori Valley."

"Under these circumstances, it is too early at this stage to define the role that UNOMIG may play in the future," Ban said. "But as long as international involvement in the Georgian-Abkhaz conflict is seen as helping to prevent future conflict, UNOMIG may be called upon to make a contribution."

The secretary-general said he has received "formal indications from the Georgian and Abkhaz sides that they support the continuation of the mission," that would otherwise expire Oct. 15, but he said differences between the two sides have already surfaced and will have to be addressed.

Ban said he was therefore recommending a four-month extension of the 400-strong U.N. mission until Feb. 15, 2009 so that he and the new U.N. envoy, Johan Verbeke, can "intensify consultations ... with a view to exploring whether and how it is possible for the United Nations to follow up on the support of the two sides for the continuation of United Nations involvement."

The secretary-general said they plan to consult Abkhaz and Georgian officials and key international actors including at upcoming talks in Geneva. The EU-Russia accord called for international talks in mid-October in Geneva about the region's future security and stability.
 

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Russia seeks to mend post-Georgia fences


By Catherine Belton and Charles Clover in Moscow

Published: October 6 2008 20:20 | Last updated: October 6 2008 20:20

Russia will seek to mend fences with the west after the conflict in Georgia by brokering more foreign direct investment deals amid fears that the country faces a period of stag*flation, a *senior adviser to Dmitry Medvedev on Monday said.

Igor Yurgens said officials were seeking to send signals of an improved business climate as Russia battles to restore investor confidence badly shaken by the conflict’s cold war rhetoric.

Mr Yurgens was speaking as the Russian stock market plummeted with the RTS falling 19.1 per cent, the biggest one day drop in its 13-year history. He said Russia faced “an insane situation of total non-confidence”.

Investors fear Russian companies will be hit by the global financial crisis as well as a dearth of cash after *foreign investors pulled out $56.7bn (€42bn, £32.6bn) between August 8 and September 19.

Mr Medvedev, the president, and Vladimir Putin, his prime minister and predecessor, understand the government needs to improve the climate for foreign and, mainly, Russian investors “who are sort of scared”, Mr Yurgens said. “A big financial crunch outside and a crisis of confidence and cold-warish kind of attitude inside was too much.”

Mr Yurgens said a slowdown in growth because “credit lines are closed” was inevitable with a fall of as much as 4 percentage points from its, current, 8 per cent.

He warned Russia risked “classical stagflation” as inflation remained high while demand slowed. Tighter conditions for mortgages and consumer loans, together with inflation, threaten to hit living standards and risked political fallout, he said.

The head of a think tank advising the president, Mr Yurgens was a rare voice criticising Mr Putin this summer for his attack on Mechel, a coal and steel group, for price gouging. The comments helped trigger the investor exodus due to concern over political risks.

The government’s reining in of its rhetoric “is visible and is being substantiated by some megadeals in the pipeline and signed, such as Eon Ruhrgas”, he said, referring to last week’s deal between Eon and Gazprom.

“You could feel a little bit of discontent with the hawkish rhetoric and you see the adjustment,” he said, adding that Mr Medvedev hoped to push ahead with cutting back bureaucracy and stimulating growth in the oil *sector via tax incentives.

Mr Yurgens said Russia might seek to bolster ties with France this week when Mr Medvedev attends a European summit in Evian, by boosting co-operation with Total and other French energy groups. He declined to name specific deals.

He said Russia was seeking to strengthen its negotiating position in the world by leveraging its status as an energy supplier, intensifying dialogue with Opec and gas producing nations, and also boosting ties with Venezuela. “They do want to continue dialogue with the west but they will raise the stakes by using the maximum national instruments in their possession,” he said.

In a speech in Evian on Wednesday, Mr Medvedev will seek to bolster Russia’s position by making proposals for a new European security structure to replace the Helsinki accord. Russia claims the accord is no longer viable after Kosovo’s secession, the conflict over the breakaway enclave of South Ossetia and plans to place US missile defence components near its borders.

Mr Yurgens said Russia had the reserves to support bank liquidity, while its pledge last week of $50bn to refinance companies’ external debts had sent a “message that Russian assets – especially strategic assets – will be rescued”.

The forced divestment last week of a Russian-held 20 per cent stake in Magna, the Canadian car parts maker, to creditors, indicated, however, that foreign assets would not be saved, he said.

●Outbreaks of violence in Georgia on Monday underlined the fragility of security in the country after the war with Russia.

A guard in Abkhazia was killed during a shoot-out near Georgian-controlled *territory, Reuters reported. The Abkhazian government blamed Georgian special forces but Tblisi denied it had any forces in the area.

Meanwhile, Russian forces continued to pull out from Georgian-controlled territory into South Ossetia and *Abkhazia.

Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2008
 

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The German Question
October 6, 2008 | 1934 GMT


Graphic for Geopolitical Intelligence Report

By George Friedman
Related Special Topic Page

* The Russian Resurgence

German Chancellor Angela Merkel went to St. Petersburg last week for meetings with Russian President Dmitri Medvedev. The central question on the table was Germany’s position on NATO expansion, particularly with regard to Ukraine and Georgia. Merkel made it clear at a joint press conference that Germany would oppose NATO membership for both of these countries, and that it would even oppose placing the countries on the path to membership. Since NATO operates on the basis of consensus, any member nation can effectively block any candidate from NATO membership.

The fact that Merkel and Germany have chosen this path is of great significance. Merkel acted in full knowledge of the U.S. view on the matter and is prepared to resist any American pressure that might follow. It should be remembered that Merkel might be the most pro-American politician in Germany, and perhaps its most pro-American chancellor in years. Moreover, as an East German, she has a deep unease about the Russians. Reality, however, overrode her personal inclinations. More than other countries, Germany does not want to alienate the United States. But it is in a position to face American pressure should any come.
Energy Dependence and Defense Spending

In one sense, Merkel’s reasons for her stance are simple. Germany is heavily dependent on Russian natural gas. If the supply were cut off, Germany’s situation would be desperate — or at least close enough that the distinction would be academic. Russia might decide it could not afford to cut off natural gas exports, but Merkel is dealing with a fundamental German interest, and risking that for Ukrainian or Georgian membership in NATO is not something she is prepared to do.

She can’t bank on Russian caution in a matter such as this, particularly when the Russians seem to be in an incautious mood. Germany is, of course, looking to alternative sources of energy for the future, and in five years its dependence on Russia might not be nearly as significant. But five years is a long time to hold your breath, and Germany can’t do it.

The German move is not just about natural gas, however. Germany views the U.S. obsession with NATO expansion as simply not in Germany’s interests.

First, expanding NATO guarantees to Ukraine and Georgia is meaningless. NATO and the United States don’t have the military means to protect Ukraine or Georgia, and incorporating them into the alliance would not increase European security. From a military standpoint, NATO membership for the two former Soviet republics is an empty gesture, while from a political standpoint, Berlin sees it as designed to irritate the Russians for no clear purpose.

Next, were NATO prepared to protect Ukraine and Georgia, all NATO countries including Germany would be forced to increase defense expenditures substantially. This is not something that Germany and the rest of NATO want to do.

Finally, and perhaps most importantly, Germany spent 1945-1992 being the potential prime battleground of the Cold War. It spent 1992-2008 not being the potential prime battleground. Germany prefers the latter, and it does not intend to be drawn into a new Cold War under any circumstances. This has profound implications for the future of both NATO and U.S.-German relations.

Germany is thus in the midst of a strategic crisis in which it must make some fundamental decisions. To understand the decisions Germany has to make, we need to understand the country’s geopolitical problem and the decisions it has made in the past.
The German Geopolitical Problem

Until 1871, Germany was fragmented into dozens of small states — kingdoms, duchies, principalities, etc. — comprising the remnants of the Holy Roman Empire. The German-speaking world was torn apart by internal tensions and the constant manipulation of foreign powers.

The southeastern part of the German-speaking world, Austria, was the center of the multinational Hapsburg Empire. It was Roman Catholic and was continually intruding into the predominantly Catholic regions of the rest of Germany, particularly Bavaria. The French were constantly poaching in the Rhineland and manipulating the balance of power among the German states. Russia was always looming to the east, where it bordered the major Protestant German power, Prussia. (Poland at the time was divided among Prussia, Russia and Austria-Hungary.) Germany was perpetually the victim of great powers, a condition which Prussia spent the roughly half-century between Waterloo and German unification trying to correct.

To unify Germany, Prussia had to do more than dominate the Germans. It had to fight two wars. The first was in 1866 with the Hapsburg Empire, which Prussia defeated in seven weeks, ending Hapsburg influence in Germany and ultimately reducing Austria-Hungary to Germany’s junior partner. The second war was in 1870-1871, when Prussia led a German coalition that defeated France. That defeat ended French influence in the Rhineland and gave Prussia the space in which to create a modern, unified Germany. Russia, which was pleased to see both Austria-Hungary and France defeated and viewed a united Germany as a buffer against another French invasion, did not try to block unification.

German unification changed the dynamic of Europe. First, it created a large nation in the heart of Europe between France and Russia. United, Germany was economically dynamic, and its growth outstripped that of France and the United Kingdom. Moreover, it became a naval power, developing a substantial force that at some point could challenge British naval hegemony. It became a major exporting power, taking markets from Britain and France. And in looking around for room to maneuver, Germany began looking east toward Russia. In short, Germany was more than a nation — it was a geopolitical problem.

Germany’s strategic problem was that if the French and Russians attacked Germany simultaneously, with Britain blockading its ports, Germany would lose and revert to its pre-1871 chaos. Given French, Russian and British interest in shattering Germany, Germany had to assume that such an attack would come. Therefore, since the Germans could not fight on two fronts simultaneously, they needed to fight a war pre-emptively, attacking France or Russia first, defeating it and then turning their full strength on the other — all before Britain’s naval blockade could begin to hurt. Germany’s only defense was a two-stage offense that was as complex as a ballet, and would be catastrophic if it failed.

In World War I, executing the Schlieffen Plan, the Germans attacked France first while trying to simply block the Russians. The plan was to first occupy the channel coast and Paris before the United Kingdom could get into the game and before Russia could fully mobilize, and then to knock out Russia. The plan failed in 1914 at the First Battle of the Marnes, and rather than lightning victory, Germany got bogged down in a multifront war costing millions of lives and lasting years. Even so, Germany almost won the war of attrition, causing the United States to intervene and deprive Berlin of victory.

In World War II, the Germans had learned their lesson, so instead of trying to pin down Russia, they entered into a treaty with the Soviets. This secured Germany’s rear by dividing Poland with the Soviet Union. The Soviets agreed to the treaty, expecting Adolf Hitler’s forces to attack France and bog down as Germany had in World War I. The Soviets would then roll West after the bloodletting had drained the rest of Europe. The Germans stunned the Russians by defeating France in six weeks and then turning on the Russians. The Russian front turned into an endless bloodletting, and once again the Americans helped deliver the final blow.

The consequence of the war was the division of Germany into three parts — an independent Austria, a Western-occupied West Germany and a Soviet-occupied East Germany. West Germany again faced the Russian problem. Its eastern part was occupied, and West Germany could not possibly defend itself on its own. It found itself integrated into an American-dominated alliance system, NATO, which was designed to block the Soviets. West and East Germany would serve as the primary battleground of any Soviet attack, with Soviet armor facing U.S. armor, airpower and tactical nuclear weapons. For the Germans, the Cold War was probably more dangerous than either of the previous wars. Whatever the war’s outcome, Germany stood a pretty good chance of being annihilated if it took place.

On the upside, the Cold War did settle Franco-German tensions, which were half of Germany’s strategic problem. Indeed, one of the by-products of the Cold War was the emergence of the European Community, which ultimately became the European Union. This saw German economic union and integration with France, which along with NATO’s military integration guaranteed economic growth and the end of any military threat to Germany from the west. For the first time in centuries, the Rhine was not at risk. Germany’s south was secure, and once the Soviet Union collapsed, there was no threat from the east, either.
United and Secure at Last?

For the first time in centuries, Germany was both united and militarily secure. But underneath it all, the Germans retained their primordial fear of being caught between France and Russia. Berlin understood that this was far from a mature reality; it was no more than a theoretical problem at the moment. But the Germans also understand how quickly things can change. On one level, the problem was nothing more than the economic emphasis of the European Union compared to the geopolitical focus of Russia. But on a deeper level, Germany was, as always, caught between the potentially competing demands of Russia and the West. Even if the problem were small now, there were no guarantees that it wouldn’t grow.

This was the context in which Germany viewed the Russo-Georgian war in August. Berlin saw not only the United States moving toward a hostile relationship with Russia, but also the United Kingdom and France going down the same path.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy, who happened to hold the rotating EU presidency at the time, went to Moscow to negotiate a cease-fire on behalf of the European Union. When the Russians seemed unwilling to comply with the terms negotiated, France became highly critical of Russia and inclined to back some sort of sanctions at the EU summit on Georgia. With the United Kingdom being even more adamant, Germany saw a worst-case scenario looming on the distant horizon: It understood that the pleasant security of the post-Cold War world was at an end, and that it had to craft a new national strategy.

From Germany’s point of view, the re-emergence of Russian influence in the former Soviet Union might be something that could have been blocked in the 1990s, but by 2008, it had become inevitable. The Germans saw that economic relations in the former Soviet Union — and not only energy issues — created a complementary relationship between Russia and its former empire. Between natural affinities and Russian power, a Russian sphere of influence, if not a formal structure, was inevitable. It was an emerging reality that could not be reversed.

France has Poland and Germany between itself and Russia. Britain has that plus the English Channel, and the United States has all that plus the Atlantic Ocean. The farther away from Russia one is, the more comfortable one can be challenging Moscow. But Germany has only Poland as a buffer. For any nation serious about resisting Russian power, the first question is how to assure the security of the Baltic countries, a long-vulnerable salient running north from Poland. The answer would be to station NATO forces in the Baltics and in Poland, and Berlin understood that Germany would be both the logistical base for these forces as well as the likely source of troops. But Germany’s appetite for sending troops to Poland and the Baltics has been satiated. This was not a course Germany wanted to take.
Pondering German History

We suspect that Merkel knew something else; namely, that all the comfortable assumptions about what was possible and impossible — that the Russians wouldn’t dare attack the Baltics — are dubious in the extreme. Nothing in German history would convince any reasonable German that military action to achieve national ends is unthinkable. Nor are the Germans prepared to dismiss the re-emergence of Russian military power. The Germans had been economically and militarily shattered in 1932. By 1938, they were the major power in Europe. As long as their officer corps and technological knowledge base were intact, regeneration could move swiftly.

The Soviet Union collapsed in 1991 and its military power crumbled. But as was the case in Weimar Germany, the Russian officer corps remained relatively intact and the KGB, the heart of the Soviet state, remained intact if renamed. So did the technological base that made the Soviets a global power. As with Germany after both world wars, Russia was in chaos, but its fragments remained, awaiting reconstruction. The Germans were not about to dismiss Russia’s ability to regenerate — they know their own history too well to do that.

If Germany were to join those who call for NATO expansion, the first step toward a confrontation with Russia would have been taken. The second step would be guaranteeing the security of the Baltics and Poland. America would make the speeches, and Germans would man the line. After spending most of the last century fighting or preparing to fight the Russians, the Germans looked around at the condition of their allies and opted out.

The Germans see their economic commitment as being to the European Union. That binds them to the French, and this is not a bond they can or want to break. But the European Union carries no political or military force in relation to the Russians. Beyond economics, it is a debating society. NATO, as an institution built to resist the Russians, is in an advanced state of decay. To resurrect it, the Germans would have to pay a steep economic price. And if they paid that price, they would be carrying much of the strategic risk.

So while Germany remains committed to its economic relationship with the West, it does not intend to enter into a military commitment against the Russians at this time. If the Americans want to send troops to protect the Baltics and Poland, they are welcome to do so. Germany has no objection — nor do they object to a French or British presence there. Indeed, once such forces were committed, Germany might reconsider its position. But since military deployments in significant numbers are unlikely anytime soon, the Germans view grand U.S. statements about expanded NATO membership as mere bravado by a Washington that is prepared to risk little.
NATO After the German Shift

Therefore, Merkel went to St. Petersburg and told the Russians that Germany does not favor NATO expansion. More than that, the Germans at least implicitly told the Russians that they have a free hand in the former Soviet Union as far as Germany is concerned — an assertion that cost Berlin nothing, since the Russians do enjoy a free hand there. But even more critically, Merkel signaled to the Russians and the West that Germany does not intend to be trapped between Western ambitions and Russian power this time. It does not want to recreate the situation of the two world wars or the Cold War, so Berlin will stay close to France economically and also will accommodate the Russians.

The Germans will thus block NATO’s ambitions, something that represents a dramatic shift in the Western alliance. This shift in fact has been unfolding for quite a while, but it took the Russo-Georgian war to reveal the change.

NATO has no real military power to project to the east, and none can be created without a major German effort, which is not forthcoming. The German shift leaves the Baltic countries exposed and extremely worried, as they should be. It also leaves the Poles in their traditional position of counting on countries far away to guarantee their national security. In 1939, Warsaw counted on the British and French; today, Warsaw depends on the United States. As in 1939, these guarantees are tenuous, but they are all the Poles have.

The United States has the option of placing a nuclear umbrella over the Baltics and Eastern Europe, which would guarantee a nuclear strike on Russia in the event of an attack in either place. While this was the guarantee made to Western Europe in the Cold War, it is unlikely that the United States is prepared for global thermonuclear war over Estonia’s fate. Such a U.S. guarantee to the Baltics and Eastern Europe simply would not represent a credible threat.

The other U.S. option is a major insertion of American forces either by sea through Danish waters or via French and German ports and railways, assuming France or Germany would permit their facilities to be used for such a deployment. But this option is academic at the moment. The United States could not deploy more than symbolic forces even if it wanted to. For the moment, NATO is therefore an entity that issues proclamations, not a functioning military alliance, in spite of (or perhaps because of) deployments in Afghanistan.

Everything in German history has led to this moment. The country is united and wants to be secure. It will not play the role it was forced into during the Cold War, nor will it play geopolitical poker as it did in the first and second world wars. And that means NATO is permanently and profoundly broken. The German question now turns into the Russian question: If Germany is out of the game, what is to be done about Russia?
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wor...t-air-force-war-games-since-Soviet-times.html

Russia to stage largest air force war games since Soviet times

Russia will stage its largest air force war games since Soviet times next week in the latest stage of the Kremlin's strategy to show off the country as a military superpower reborn.

By Adrian Blomfield in Moscow
Last Updated: 5:18PM BST 03 Oct 2008

Their progress watched closely by increasingly jittery western militaries, dozens of nuclear bombers will take part in the exercise. Tu-95 Bear bombers will fire cruise missiles at targets in sub-Arctic Russia for the first time since 1984.

While Russia insists that the war games are not meant as a gesture of aggression, the West is growing increasingly uneasy about the scale of the manoeuvres.

The aerial exercises, which will take place close to American airspace in Alaska, are part of a month-long war game known as Stability 2008 that Russia claims is the biggest for 20 years.

As the bombers take to the air next week, Russian ships will also be conducting exercises in the North Sea and the Baltic as well as in the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. A flotilla of war ships is also sailing to the Caribbean for joint exercises with Venezuela, Washington's greatest foe in South America, which will come within a few hundred miles of the US coastline.

A Russian nuclear powered submarine has also just docked in the Kamchatka peninsula after completing a one-month voyage under the Arctic Ocean without resurfacing. The Kremlin has made territorial claims to a large portion of the Arctic, which holds vast energy supplies under its rapidly shrinking ice.

Not since the end of the Cold War has Russia demonstrated its global military reach in such a manner.

Over 60,000 troops and 1,500 tanks and armoured personnel carriers have taken part in the first fortnight of exercises. Land-based and submarine launched nuclear missiles have also been tested. Once the bombers have fired their cruise missiles next week, Russia will have carried out its first near-simultaneous test launches of all elements of its nuclear triad since the Cold War.

The has worried military observers critical of the Kremlin, who say the scope and character of the exercises does not gel with official explanations that they are designed to train the country's armed forces in counter-terrorism and military defence.

Pavel Felgenhauer, a respected military analyst, says the geographical reach of the exercises suggests that they are intended to simulate a nuclear war with the United States.

"Russia is preparing for the eventuality of a nuclear war," he said. "These are the most elaborate war games for 20 years and is clear evidence that we are returning to the Cold War."


As relations with the West have deteriorated, Russia has shown that it is increasingly willing to flex its military might. Long-range nuclear bombers are again patrolling the skies near Western airspace. One squadron came within 90 seconds of Hull last month after apparently escaping the detection of British warning systems.

Russia, which has become more aggressive in forming friendships with countries opposed to the United States, has also begun an ambitious rearmament programme that will see defence spending double over the next five years. New battleships, air craft carries and nuclear submarines have been ordered.

Not everyone is convinced as the Kremlin appears to be that Russia will soon be as militarily competitive as it was in the Cold War. Despite some improvements, the armed forces – and especially the air force and navy – are still in woeful condition and would be incapable of challenging a medium-sized European country in a conventional war, analysts say.

The Kremlin has been frequently embarrassed by the regularity with which Russian war ships break down.

There was further embarrassment for the administration on Friday after photographs surfaced on the internet showing Anatoly Serdyukov, Russia's portly defence minister, stuck in a submarine hatch last week.

Mr Serdyukov, whose ministry has run a campaign to urge senior officers to lose weight, was inspecting the Russian fleet during exercises in Kamchatka with Dmitry Medvedev, the president, when the incident happened.

Mr Medvedev, a man of slight build, slithered into the submarine with little difficulty. But when Mr Serdyukov followed him, his belly allegedly became wedged in the hatch and he struggled for several minutes before servicemen managed to pry him free.

The photographs, posted on a Russian web site, were swiftly removed.
 

changed

Preferred pronouns: dude/bro
Housecarl, that was an awesome article on German history. Thanks, I learned new stuff today.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Changed,

You're welcome. One of the biggest reasons I come here is to read gems like that and or if I find them to share them with everyone else.....
----------------------------------------------------
Posted for fair use...
http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/oct/08/syria.russia


From Syrian fishing port to naval power base: Russia moves into the Mediterranean
• Military foothold part of closer ties with Damascus
• Move could deter Israel from attacks on Syria


* Hugh Macleod in Beirut
* The Guardian,
* Wednesday October 8 2008

tartous-460x276.jpg

The fishing boats of Tartous, Syria, may have to share the harbour with Russian warships. Photograph: Nicolas Randall/Alamy


During balmy evenings in the sleepy Syrian port of Tartous locals promenade along the seafront or suck on hookahs discussing the two great pillars of their society: business and family.

Politics, such as it is in the tightly controlled one-party state, rarely gets a mention, and certainly not in public. But few could fail to wonder about the foreign sailors dockside and the grey warship dominating a harbour that was once a trading hub of the Phoenician empire and is now the centre of a new projection of power, this time by Syria's old ally Russia.

Tartous is being dredged and renovated to provide a permanent facility for the Russian navy, giving Moscow a key military foothold in the Mediterranean at a time when Russia's invasion of Georgia has led to fears of a new cold war.

The bolstering of military ties between Russia and Syria has also worried Israel, whose prime minister, Ehud Olmert, was in Moscow yesterday seeking to persuade the Russian president, Dmitry Medvedev, to stop Russian arms sales to Syria and Iran. Mr Olmert later said he had received assurances that Russia would not allow Israel's security to be threatened, but offered no indication he won any concrete promises on Russian arms sales.

Igor Belyaev, Russia's charge d'affaires in Damascus, recently told reporters that his country would increase its presence in the Mediterranean and that "Russian vessels will be visiting Syria and other friendly ports more frequently".

That announcement followed a meeting between Medvedev and the Syrian president, Bashar al-Assad, at the Black sea port of Sochi in the immediate aftermath of Russia's victory over Georgian forces and its recognition of the breakaway provinces of South Ossetia and Abkhazia - actions Assad supported.

Now, with Ukraine threatening to expel Russia's Black sea fleet from its base in Sebastopol, the only route for the Russian navy into the Mediterranean, military cooperation between Moscow and Damascus appears to have taken on a new zeal.

"Israel and the US supported Georgia against Russia, and Syria thus saw a chance to capitalise on Russian anger by advancing its long-standing relations with Moscow," said Taha Abdel Wahed, a Syrian expert on Russian affairs. "Syria has a very important geographical position for the Russians. Relations between Damascus and Moscow may not yet be strategic, but they are advancing rapidly."

Tartous was once a re-supplying point for the Soviet navy at a time when Moscow sold Syria billions of dollars worth of arms. "Tartous is of great geopolitical significance considering that it is the only such Russian facility abroad," a former Russian navy deputy commander, Igor Kasatonov, said, following a meeting on September 12 in Moscow between the naval leaders from Russia and Syria.

Syrian-Russian relations cooled after the collapse of the Soviet Union. But they have taken on a new dynamic since Assad succeeded his father in 2000. After a state visit to Russia in 2005, he persuaded Moscow to wipe three-quarters off a £7.6bn debt Syria owed, mainly from arms sales.

Since then the two countries have been in talks about upgrading Syria's missile defences with Russia's advanced Strelets system, provoking condemnation from Israel, whose fighter jets in September 2007 flew unchallenged into north-east Syria to bomb a suspected nuclear site.

Last month Russia's foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov, said Moscow would consider selling Damascus new weapons that "have a defensive character and that do not in any way interfere with the strategic balance in the region". Though no defence pact has been signed between the two, as it has between Syria and Iran, observers suggest the very presence of Russian warships in Tartous would bolster Damascus's military standing in the region.

"Israel would think twice about attacking Syria again with Russian ships stationed in Tartous," said Abdel Wahed, an analyst.

A senior Israeli colonel has also accused Russia of passing intelligence about Israel to Syria and indirectly to Hizbullah.

Describing electronic eavesdropping stations on the Syrian side of the Golan Heights believed to be operated by Russian technicians, Ram Dor, information security chief for the armed forces, told an Israeli newspaper: "My assessment is that their facilities cover most of the state of Israel's territory. The Syrians share the intelligence that they gather with Hizbullah, and the other way around."

During the 2006 July war Hizbullah fighters used advanced Russian tank-buster missiles to cripple at least 40 of Israel's Merkava tanks, a key tipping point in a war that Israel later admitted it lost.

The Russian embassy in Damascus could not be reached for comment.


* guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2008
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.military.com/opinion/0,15202,176798,00.html
http://www.hoover.org/publications/policyreview/30030029.html

The Need for Missile Defense
Peter Brookes | October 07, 2008

Despite Iran's runaway nuclear program, North Korea's atomic assistance to Syria, and robust ballistic missile production and testing by Russia and China, a missile defense system for protecting the homeland and U.S. interests overseas remains a controversial idea in some corners. It should not be. The security challenge arising from the proliferation of ballistic missiles and the dangerous payloads they might carry, including weapons of mass destruction (wmd) like nuclear arms, is a threat that — in fact — may be growing.

While the Bush administration has taken significant steps to develop sea- and land-based missile defense systems, the next White House and Congress should continue supporting missile defense programs to enhance our national security. Indeed, just this summer, the Washington Post broke a story claiming the international nuclear smuggling ring once run by the prodigious Pakistani proliferator A.Q. Khan had also managed to acquire the blueprints for an "advanced nuclear weapon."

Owned by three Swiss members of Khan's international cabal, a laptop containing 1,000 gigabytes of data (roughly equivalent to the information contained in a local library) on designs and engineering for nuclear weapons was discovered by investigators. Regrettably, according to the story, the United Nations' International Atomic Energy Agency (iaea) believes the nuclear weapons designs found on the laptop could be mated — in theory — to the ballistic missiles used by "more than a dozen developing countries."

In fact, the iaea, which reportedly verified the destruction of the data by Swiss authorities, cannot guarantee the nuclear warhead designs were not shared with others, according to a report by David Albright, a weapons expert who has been investigating the Khan network. While North Korea, Iran and Libya — the three states with which Khan had the most intimate contact — are the most likely recipients of the Pakistani's atomic assistance, there may be others who received this nuclear know-how as well, although some experts view the report as alarmist. (Not surprisingly, Khan, who has been under house arrest in Pakistan since 2004, denied that he was involved in any way in proliferating nuclear weapons designs. Of course, others in his nuclear network may have done so.)

With Israel's strike on a suspected Syrian nuclear site in September 2007 and news of nuclear power programs popping up across the Middle East (which may be hedging against Iran's nuclear efforts), this sort of dire speculation about possible proliferation makes security experts increasingly nervous. Indeed, the ballistic missile and nuclear proliferation trend is not positive. Ten years ago, there were only six nuclear-weapons states. Today there are nine members of the once-exclusive nuclear-weapons club, with Iran perhaps knocking at the door. Twenty-five years ago, nine countries had ballistic missiles. Today there are 28 countries with ballistic missile arsenals of varying capability.

Iranian intrigue

Among present proliferation problems, Iran may be the most troubling to American security analysts, especially considering its longstanding enmity toward the United States, sponsorship of terrorism, involvement in Iraq and Afghanistan, and regional great-power ambitions.

Tehran, naturally, insists its burgeoning nuclear program is for little more than peaceful power generation, designed to augment Iran's already significant oil and natural gas reserves. (Iran has the world's third largest oil and second largest natural gas reserves.) But like a sledgehammer, new intelligence continues to blast away at Iran's rock-like insistence that its nuclear program is purely peaceful and not a weapons effort as many in the region and beyond increasingly believe.

The most serious blow comes out of the United Nations' nuclear watchdog in Vienna, the iaea, which drafted and released a troubling nine-page report in late May casting serious doubt on Iran's claims to a purported pacifist power program. In a dramatic change, based on new multi-source, multilateral intelligence received over time from a number of its member states, the iaea has shifted its position from being unable to prove Iran has a nuclear weapons program to being unable to prove Iran does not have one. (Indeed, in late June, iaea chief Mohamed El Baradei commented on Arab television that Iran could build a nuclear weapon in six months to a year if it decided to do so, considering its current centrifuge capacity and the quantity of processed uranium it already has on hand.)

Ten years ago, there were only six nuclearweapons states. Today there are nine, with Iran perhaps aiming to be the tenth.

Based on 18 hard-copy and electronic documents, the nuclear-monitoring agency expressed concerns about the increasingly questionable nature of Iran's nuclear program, especially its possible military dimensions, which would violate Iran's Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty (npt) commitments. (The npt allows signatories to pursue nuclear programs for scientific or power purposes, but not military ends, which include weapons production. All activities must be declared to the iaea. Of note, not all states have signed the npt, most notably India, Pakistan, and Israel; North Korea withdrew.)

In its first formal assessment of Iran's nuclear efforts since February, the iaea states in the most "diplomatic" of terms: "The agency [iaea] is of the view that Iran may have additional information, in particular on high explosives testing and missile-related activities, which could shed more light on the nature of these alleged studies and which Iran should share with the agency."

The iaea considers these unanswered questions on Iran's nuclear work "a matter of serious concern" because the existence of this sort of activity might indicate Tehran is secretly developing a nuclear weapon, contrary to Iran's repeated public protestations. Moreover, the report states, "Iran has not provided the agency with all the information, access to documents and access to individuals necessary to supports Iran's statements," despite the new intelligence, which is "detailed in content, and appears to be generally consistent."

The first charge is that Iran is suspected of conducting high-explosives testing. This includes work with exploding bridgewire (ebw) detonators and a detonator firing unit, which could be used for triggering a nuclear weapon; 500 ebw detonators were tested, according to the iaea.

In addition, a five-page document describes experiments for a "complex multipoint initiation system" to "detonate a substantial amount of high explosive in hemispherical geometry" that could be employed in an implosion-type nuclear device. Tehran is further accused of developing plans for underground explosives testing, which could be utilized for detonating a nuclear weapon similar to the testing done by North Korea in October 2006. The documents also include a technical diagram for a "400m deep shaft located 10km from a firing control point," showing "the placement of various electronic systems such as a control unit and a high-voltage power generator."

It seems military-related institutions are involved in procurement activities for Iran's "peaceful" nuclear power program.

There is also a mysterious piece of information the iaea report calls the "uranium metal document," which is related to the "actual design or manufacture by Iran of nuclear material components of a nuclear weapon." The document allegedly describes procedures for machining highly enriched uranium metal into a hemispherical shape, key to producing the rounded "pits" used in modern implosion-type nuclear weapon warheads. Strikingly, the report notes that "Pakistan has confirmed, in response to the Agency's request, that an identical document exists in Pakistan" to the one found in Iran — possibly showing connections to Pakistan's nuclear weapons program.

Another iaea concern is work on a new ballistic missile warhead, known as "Project 111," for Iran's medium-range ballistic missile, the Shahab-3, which can reach all of the Middle East as well as parts of southern Europe. According to six technical documents in the iaea's possession, Iran appears to have been involved in the redesign of the payload chamber of the current "Shahab-3 missile re-entry vehicle to accommodate a nuclear warhead."

The iaea report also questions the Iranian military's apparent involvement in Tehran's civilian nuclear efforts. It seems military-related institutions are involved in suspicious procurement activities for Iran's ostensibly "peaceful" nuclear power program. There are also concerns, according to the report, about an unexplained letter published by the chairman of Iran's high-ranking Expediency Council in September, which makes "reference to possible acquisition of nuclear weapons."

If this is not unnerving enough, it gets worse. The report notes that Iran continues uranium enrichment, the proverbial "long-pole in the tent" in producing a nuclear weapon — at least in comparison with developing a delivery platform or warhead. As the American iaea representative, Ambassador Gregory Schulte, told the press in May: "At the same time that Iran is stonewalling its [iaea] inspectors, it's moving forward in developing its enrichment capability in violation of [un] Security Council resolutions."

Iran's uranium enrichment plant at Natanz is already using at least 3,500 centrifuges. Theoretically, if operating efficiently, this line could produce enough weapons-grade fissile material to build one bomb in the time indicated by El Baradei. (The uranium enrichment process can produce fuel for a nuclear power reactor or fissile material for a nuclear weapon. To date, Iran has publicly stated enrichment rates of over 4 percent, suitable for reactor fuel if produced in sufficient quantities; weapons-grade uranium is usually enriched to above 90 percent.)

Some experts think Iran could have as many as 6,000 centrifuges online, spinning at supersonic speed in the near future, turning uranium hexafluoride gas (uf6) into some level of enriched uranium for reactors, weapons or both. Tehran has steadfastly insisted that it has the right to enrich uranium for nuclear reactor fuel as stipulated under the terms of the npt (ironically, Iran violated the npt by failing to declare its nuclear program to the iaea for some 20 years.)

Iran, with Russian assistance, is continuing construction of its first nuclear reactor at Bushehr.

The new iaeareport also notes the previously undisclosed development of a new generation of centrifuge. The "ir-3" (for third generation Iranian) centrifuge improves upon previous models based on the less efficient Pakistani design, procured from Khan's network. Moreover, agency inspectors raise concerns about the fact that "substantial parts of the centrifuge components were manufactured in the workshops of the [Iranian] Defense Industries Organization," hoisting a red flag about the blurring of the lines between Tehran's civilian and a possible military program.

The bottom-line concern here, besides the fact that Iran did not declare this new equipment (and capability) to the iaea as required, is that the new, more efficient centrifuges will allow Iran to produce more enriched uranium — for reactors or bombs — more quickly. Iran, with Russian assistance, is also continuing construction of its first nuclear reactor at Bushehr. A good deal of the reactor's fuel is already in place, having been shipped in from Russia beginning last December. (Unfortunately, Russian support at the un Security Council for slowing Iran's nuclear program through the imposition of economic sanctions is likely to diminish following this summer's action in Georgia.) The iaea is also monitoring construction of an Iranian nuclear research reactor, which experts are concerned could be used for experimentation on reprocessing spent nuclear reactor fuel into fissile material (e.g., plutonium) for use in nuclear weapons.

Interestingly, in all of this Iran does not see an indictment of wrongdoing on its part. On the contrary, Tehran views the report as an exoneration of guilt. Iran's iaea envoy, via the Iranian news service, called the report: "[a] vindication and reiteration of the peaceful nature of Iran's nuclear activities." In addition, Tehran officially said the iaea documents "do not show any indication that the Islamic Republic of Iran has been working on a nuclear weapon," adding that many of the documents had been "forged" or "fabricated," especially since they were in an electronic format. In some cases, Iran did not quibble with the information, instead insisting that "the events and activities concerned involved civil or conventional military applications," such as the testing of detonators for use in the oil industry. While Iran has promised to address all concerns, many of these questions are likely to remain a mystery due to Iran's regular refusal to allow the iaea access to procurement personnel and scientists or to open suspect sites to the agency's atomic sleuths.

The iaea reports starkly call into question the intent of Iran's nuclear efforts, leaving Tehran's claims to a purely civilian nuclear power program increasingly in doubt. As a result, the iaea has called upon Tehran to increase transparency by signing an "Additional Protocol," which would give agency inspectors access to any facility suspected of undeclared nuclear activity.

This is a fundamental requirement in a large country like Iran (four times the size of California), where sites are numerous and sometimes well-hidden — even below ground. Verification of compliance, even under the best of conditions, is likely to be difficult. But old habits die hard. Tehran will likely continue to obfuscate and dissemble, preventing the iaea from gaining a realistic assessment of the nature of Iran's nuclear program — which unfortunately places time squarely on Tehran's side.

Islamic ICBM

Iran's interest and involvement in a nascent space program is not comforting either. While enriching uranium is a key capability in developing nuclear weapons, Iran may also be working on another important aspect of a military program: a long-range delivery system; that is, a new ballistic missile. Like its "civilian" nuclear efforts that remained undeclared for two decades, long-range ballistic missiles are likely being developed under cover of another supposed nonmilitary effort: Iran's space program. Indeed, Tehran's budding space work could lead to the development of an intercontinental ballistic missile ( icbm) capable of reaching all of Europe and the United States with a wmd payload.

For example, on February 5, Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad led the countdown for the launch of a ballistic missile described as a "space launch vehicle," or slv, from a new space center inaugurated the same day. While there is controversy about the success of that day's test, Iran claims it was setting the stage for the future launch of the first Iranian-built satellite — the Omid (Hope) — which is expected to be ready for service by mid-2009. Undeterred, Iran conducted a second space-related missile launch this summer.

Of course, Iran has a lot of relatively benign reasons to want a space program. National pride in such an achievement might distract the restive populace from its social and economic suffering, helping to legitimize the increasingly unpopular regime. The program could also build prestige for the ambitious state: Iran would be the first Muslim state with a space-launch capability. Neighbors would be envious as propels itself toward leadership of the Middle East and the Islamic world.

It is also useful to be able to launch your own communications, intelligence or scientific satellites rather than relying on others to launch them for you. (Russia launched Iran's only other satellite into orbit back in October 2005.) Iran would surely argue that it needs to be self-reliant for space launches, just as it (self-servingly) insists it needs to be self-sufficient in enriching uranium to produce fuel for Bushehr despite Russian assistance.

Experts think a two-stage ballistic missile from Iran could reach all of Europe — and America's East Coast.

There are other advantages. Satellites could enhance Iran's military might, relaying secure communications, gathering intelligence, providing early warning and targeting opposition forces, such as U.S. naval and air forces in the Persian Gulf. In addition, a space program, especially a space-launch capacity, is critical to developing an icbm capability. Remember: Moscow's launch of its first satellite, Sputnik, in 1957 meant not only that the Russians had bested us scientifically, but that a Soviet icbm capability was not far behind. Theoretically, if you can launch a ballistic missile that can place a satellite into Earth orbit, you have the scientific wherewithal to hit a target anywhere on Earth with a warhead, including a wmd.

Similarly, Iran's space efforts follow an unnerving proliferation pattern. In the late 1990s, North Korea also used a "civilian" space program to clandestinely manufacture and test a Taepo Dong ballistic missile with intercontinental potential. Fortunately, the 1998 multi-stage missile launch landed in the Western Pacific after overflying Japan, while North Korea oddly insisted the launch had successfully put a small satellite into orbit, transmitting patriotic songs back to eager listeners on the ground in impoverished North Korea.

Also striking, Iran's defense ministry plays a prominent role in the putative civilian space effort. The Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which is close to Tehran's political leadership, manages Iran's Shahab medium-range ballistic missile program. Some experts believe the Shahab, which is based on the North Korean (medium-range) No Dong missile, could easily morph into an slv/icbm program. Indeed, the Taepo Dong is believed to be based on various No Dong rocketry configurations.

Fortunately, without a Manhattan Project-like effort, an Iranian icbm is not just around the corner: Iran still needs a more energetic (i.e., multistage) missile to carry a nuclear-sized payload (1,000–2,000 pounds) to intercontinental ranges. Although Iran has not yet been totally successful in testing a multistage missile, experts estimate a two-stage ballistic missile from Iran could reach all of Europe — as well as America's East Coast. A ballistic missile with three stages could range the whole of the United States.

The downside is that Iran could move forward with alacrity if it receives outside assistance on its space and/or missile program. The most likely candidates for that assistance are North Korea, Russia, or a Khan-like network of ballistic missile "guns for hire."

Despite mounting evidence to the contrary, Iran could in the end just be working on a space program — not an icbm program. But considering Tehran's record of nuclear denial and deception, it is hard to believe Iran's space program is not just more of the same. Equally troubling, in the view of many analysts, is that absent a political decision by Tehran to stay non-nuclear, it will be almost impossible to prevent Iran from a nuclear breakout, meaning that at some point in the future an Iranian icbm may be capable of being mated with an Iranian nuclear warhead.

Korean conundrum

From a threat perspective, unfortunately, there is not much good news out of North Korea, either, regarding its nuclear or ballistic missile programs. While the situation is perhaps not as volatile as Iran's, North Korea remains a cause of concern.

North Korea is already a confirmed nuclear weapons state, lighting off its first nuclear test in a subterranean event in October 2006 — in another of its irascible "I will not be ignored" moments. Containing, much less rolling back, North Korea's nuclear program (beginning in the early years of the Clinton administration) has been a tough, frustrating slog. At times, it looked as if the nuclear standoff could lead to another Korean conflict.

Even today, despite North Korea's rhetoric and some actions to the contrary, there remains serious concern about Pyongyang's ultimate willingness to fully denuclearize, since its nuclear arsenal is a strong bargaining chip — and a great equalizer against the strength of the U.S.–South Korean alliance. Complicating matters, North Korea is believed to have a clandestine, parallel uranium-based nuclear program in addition to its well-known plutonium-based program centered around its Russian-made nuclear reactor at Yongbyon.

While the United States has accused North Korea directly of having a uranium-based nuclear program, Pyongyang has been evasive, even contradictory, about the existence of this second nuclear program since Washington first confronted North Korean officials about it in the fall of 2002 in Pyongyang. (A major news outlet reported that traces of highly enriched uranium were found on some of the 18,000 pages of North Korean documents provided to the United States in June as part of a nuclear declaration. Some observers, however, believe this story is apocryphal.)

The multilateral effort to address North Korea's nuclear program has labored for several years under a Six-Party Talks process, which includes the United States, China, Russia, Japan, and North and South Korea, hosted by the Chinese in Beijing. The forum was unable to prevent North Korea from going nuclear, and has evolved from the six-member format into what are now essentially bilateral talks between Washington and Pyongyang, with frequent consultations with the other four players.

Though some progress has been made in capturing the nuclear reactor at Yongbyon, an important site for producing fissile material for weapons, the next steps in addressing North Korea's existing nuclear weapons capability and the uranium-based program remain an open question. (Of course, the issue of verification and compliance of any nuclear agreement with the ultrasecretive North Koreans has to weigh heavily on the mind of any Washington policymaker contemplating an effective, enduring settlement with Pyongyang.)

North Korea is still developing a long-range missile capability to reach out and touch the United States.

Making the future of the nuclear weapons issue more than a matter of regional importance is North Korea's ballistic missile prowess. In addition to the 1998 Taepo Dong launch, North Korea is still developing a long-range capability to reach out and touch the United States. In 2006, North Korea test-fired another Taepo Dong missile that malfunctioned approximately 40 seconds after launch, landing a few hundred miles west in the Sea of Japan. Naturally, once again, Pyongyang claimed a test of an slv; once again, very few outside the Hermit Kingdom were swayed by the claim. While the exact capabilities of the Taepo Dong series of ballistic missile are unknown, mostly due to their largely-failed launches, it is believed the missile is capable of reaching well into the Pacific Ocean, including Hawaii, and possibly the West Coast of the United States. (The deployment of American missile defenses at Vandenberg Air Force Base in California and Fort Greeley in Alaska, totaling 24–30 ground-based interceptors, is meant to provide a rudimentary defense against the North Korean nuclear and ballistic missile threat.)

North Korea poses a threat to U.S. forces stationed in-theater with its single-stage No Dong missile. The No Dong, which serves as the rocketry building block for the Taepo Dong, can reach American bases and forces in Japan, which might be called upon in a Korean Peninsula contingency. On the peninsula, the 25,000 or so American troops also face a North Korean ballistic missile threat, consisting of several hundred short-range scud b/c tactical ballistic missiles capable of reaching targets in the South within minutes of launch. While there are still questions about the ability of Pyongyang to successfully mount a nuclear warhead capable of withstanding the great heat and pressure common to medium- and long-range missile flight, the North Koreans likely can mate chemical and biological weapons to scuds.

Adding to the anxiety about North Korea’s nuclear and ballistic missile capabilities are recent reports about Pyongyang’s proliferation activities off the Korean Peninsula: North Korea may have been furtively assisting Syria with a nuclear program of its own. Last September, in a still-secretive raid, Israeli fighters leveled a suspected Syrian nuclear facility in the northern part of the country at al Kibar, which, as details dribbling out into the media have shown, may have been supported by North Korean technology and technicians.

While this sort of negative exposure is not good for Pyongyang’s public image on the world stage, the destitute North Koreans are likely willing to work with any number of state actors on nuclear and ballistic missile matters if the price is right.

China challenge

While not an avowed adversary of the United States, China is — without question — involved in an intense competition with America for power and influence in the Asia-Pacific region and, with little doubt, globally. Chinese great power ambitions are buttressed by a robust military modernization effort, which has been growing at a double-digit rate for over a decade now. Indeed, China now has the world’s third largest defense budget, according to the Pentagon, growing at an average of 18 percent for the last two years alone. Moreover, according to some security analysts, China has the most active ballistic missile program in the world, most likely a reflection of the unresolved situation surrounding the longstanding political stand-off with China’s cross-Strait rival, Taiwan.

Since the end of the Chinese civil war in 1949, the prc has considered Taiwan to be a province of the People’s Republic. While progress on any form of political reconciliation has been lacking, China has not renounced the use of force in resolving Taiwan’s political future. And while the United States does not have a legal obligation to defend Taiwan, under the 1979 Taiwan Relations Act, aggression against the island would be considered a serious threat to American interests as well as a violation of longstanding U.S. policy of promoting a peaceful, mutually agreeable resolution of the issue. Consequently, if the prc were to move against Taiwan with force, it is widely believed in Washington policy circles that the United States would militarily oppose such a move, bringing U.S. and Chinese forces into direct military contact in the Western Pacific.

To deter Taiwanese movement toward independence or other acts China considers “hostile,” the prc has deployed vast numbers of df-11/15 (css-6/7) short-range ballistic missiles along the coast opposite Taiwan; Pentagon estimates run in the range of 1,000 to 1,100. Moreover, China is believed to be deploying roughly 100 new, highly accurate ballistic missiles a year to augment an already overwhelming force opposite Taiwan. Some have asserted that the number of new missiles may be pushed to 200 per year.

These missiles not only provide strong Chinese deterrent to unwanted Taiwanese political or military actions, but also could be used to great effect in a “bolt from the blue” scenario to decapitate Taiwan’s political leadership or strike critical military targets such as ports, airfields, and air defenses. Apropos of what it considers outside interference in an internal matter, China does maintain limited medium-range, intermediate-range and icbm forces for deterring, delaying or denying the threat of foreign military involvement in a Taiwan contingency, such as by the United States and Japan, as well as other potential military contingencies with the likes of Russia or India.

China has modernized its land-based strategic nuclear deterrent too, adding road-mobile, solid-fueled icbms to its arsenal, increasing its deterrent effect and survivability. A new concern is China’s plans to put its nuclear deterrent to sea, equipping its Jin-class (Type 094) nuclear submarines with the new jl-2 missile with intercontinental range; a jl-2 was tested in late May. Of equal concern, beyond the growing capacity of China’s ballistic missile force, is the continuing potential for witting — or unwitting — proliferation of wmd and ballistic missile technology or materials. While China’s proliferation record has improved, concerns still exist about ties with North Korea and Iran.

Resurgent Russia

The russian federation, like China, is not an enemy of the United States, but it, too, desires to play a leading role on the world stage, balancing other centers of power such as the European Union and nato with its political, economic, and military might. Russia has readjusted its foreign policy orientation from one that was Western-looking to one that is increasingly independent in recent years — even anti-West, deepened by the war in Georgia this summer over the breakaway regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia. As many have asserted, today’s Russia is confident, prideful, wealthy, and interested in reasserting Russia as a great power.

Indeed, some would argue that Russia’s chief global foreign policy objective is nothing less than recreating its superpower status. While Russia isn’t necessarily looking to become the Soviet Union again, it would like to exert decisive leverage on the international system, as the Kremlin did during the Cold War. To achieve these ends, Russia today maintains its position as the world’s second mightiest nuclear weapons state, with over 600 strategic offensive weapons, buttressed by a significant military modernization program to revitalize the once-proud Russian military.

Its ballistic missile force is part of that effort. Russia has one of the world’s most active ballistic missile testing programs, planning to test-launch nine ballistic missiles in 2008, according to a senior military commander in May. Russia is putting an average of three mobile and three to four of their newest silo-based Topol-m (ss-27) icbms into operation every year. Moscow may double its test launches of intercontinental ballistic missiles after 2009, based on Russian military claims. According to some sources, Russia is already working on a follow-up to the ss-27, based on reports of testing in May. The new version is expected to be equipped with multiple, independently targetable reentry vehicles (mirvs). Moscow is also testing a new submarine-launched icbm.

Adding to security concerns, Russia is threatening to pull out of the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces (inf) treaty, which eliminated that class of ballistic missiles in a 1987 arms control treaty with the United States. Moscow is uncomfortable with the increase in the number of states around its periphery that now have intermediate range ballistic missiles that did not have them when the treaty was signed over 20 years ago, such as India, Pakistan, Iran, China, and North Korea. This could lead to a bump-up in Russia’s missile arsenal.

Treaty trouble

Shortcomings in the 1970 npt and the Missile Technology Control Regime (mtcr), moreover, provide further reason to look to missile defenses to help insulate the United States from ballistic missiles and nuclear weapons proliferation. The npt, which is well-intentioned and may have dissuaded some states from pursuing nuclear weapons, is in dire need of an overhaul. It is rife with loopholes, such as allowing a wide range of nuclear activities closely related to nuclear weapons work. The accord also lacks the requisite teeth to ensure enforcement. North Korea threatened to leave it and then did so with its requisite 90-day notice before its 2006 nuclear test; Tehran ignored its tenets for 20 years before its nuclear activities were disclosed, not by the npt ’s Praetorian Guard, the iaea, but by an Iranian dissident group.

The proliferation of ballistic missiles is not prohibited by any international treaty. The mtcr is a volunteer organization, which has been weakened over time by states that have flouted its principles when advantageous for hard currency, military assistance, or strategic influence. As a result, in recent years, the United States decided that leaving itself deliberately vulnerable to any weapon system or state — as it did during the Cold War — was foolish. Deliberate vulnerability can lead to perceptions of weakness, inviting provocation or aggression. In addition, it can lead a potential adversary to use threats, intimidation, blackmail, or coercion to achieve its objectives. In a day of seemingly unstoppable proliferation, the chance that horrific weapons will be used against peaceful nations is a troubling possibility.

Every state has an undeniable right to self-defense. It only makes sense that all reasonable, necessary steps are taken to protect and advance one’s national security, especially if the technological capability is emerging to do so, as evidenced by tens of successful missile defense tests. Hitting a bullet with a bullet in the atmosphere, or even space, is now possible. Developing and deploying missile defenses is not about the missile or wmd threat from a single country or even several countries. Missile defense is about protection from these weapons no matter where the threat comes from now — or in the future.

And despite the range of concerns about missile defense, it should be emphasized that it is a defensive — not offensive — weapon. Indeed, the missile defense interceptor warhead does not even contain an explosive charge; traveling at 15,000 miles per hour, it destroys the missile warhead by the sheer force of the collision. Missile defense is like an umbrella; it is needed only if it rains. It threatens no one. It only undermines the capability of one country to threaten or attack another country with its ballistic missiles or wmd. The idea that the deployment of missile defense will provoke an attack is a canard meant to encourage passivity.

The United States has made it clear to concerned states that missile defense does not threaten their security, emphasizing that it is part of an expanding effort to counter the growing ballistic missile threat — wherever it comes from. Of course, no country should expect to have a veto over America’s security. Indeed, those states that oppose missile defense would do better to turn their protests toward Tehran and Pyongyang and other capitals that are driving the need for it with their growing offensive ballistic missile capability, their own missile production, or their proliferation practices. Moreover, some security analysts speculate cautiously that the successful deployment of an effective missile defense may one day convince countries that their pursuit of missiles and wmd should be abandoned as futile endeavors, supporting widely accepted nonproliferation goals.

Cold War-like mutually assured destruction or massive retaliation should not be the only options for policymakers. In the end, it is clear: Missile defense will improve America’s security against the growing challenge of ballistic missiles and their unconventional payloads.

Peter Brookes is a Heritage Foundation senior fellow and a former deputy assistant secretary of defense.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....
http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/JJ11Ag01.html
Oct 11, 2008
US standing in Caspian drips away
By M K Bhadrakumar

On Sunday, en route to Astana, Kazakhstan, after a "very nice trip to India", US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice told reporters accompanying her, "I just wish I could have stayed longer in India". New Delhi must be one of a handful of capitals where officials from the George W Bush administration receive an expectant welcome, and the doomsday warnings emitted from New York and Washington do not seem to matter.

But there was another reason for Rice's trepidation as her jet descended to Astana - US influence and prestige in Central Asia and the Caspian region has again plummeted. Rice realizes there is hardly any time left to retrieve lost ground, and the Bill Clinton administration's legacy in the Caspian and Central Asia has largely dissipated. Central to this has been the failure of the Bush administration to handle relations with Russia. The stocktaking has already begun.

Writing in The Washington Post on Wednesday, former secretaries of state Henry Kissinger and George Shultz rebuked the Bush administration for its "drift towards confrontation with Russia" and pointed out that "isolating Russia is not a sustainable long-range policy". They said much of Europe is "uneasy". Their target was Rice, a self-styled "Sovietologist", and her inexcusably vitriolic attack on the Kremlin in a speech at the Marshall Fund of Germany in Washington on September 18.

Confrontational diplomacy
Kissinger and Shutlz particularly cautioned the Bush administration against encouraging confrontational diplomacy towards Russia by its neighbors, which would be counter-productive. Most certainly, there is already a backlash in the region. Azerbaijan, which the Bush administration once regarded as close regional ally, snubbed Vice President Dick Cheney during his visit to the capital, Baku, last month. Washington pretended not to notice, and deputed to Baku last week yet another top official - Deputy Secretary of State John Negroponte - whom the State Department's website describes as Rice's "alter ego".

On arrival on October 2, Negroponte forthwith said he was carrying a "simple message" - that the US has "deep and abiding interests" in Azerbaijan and these are "important interests" which hold implications for regional and international security. He implied Washington that was not going to roll over and give way to Moscow in the southern Caucasus.

Against the backdrop of the conflict in the Caucasus in August, the Caspian Sea basin has become a focal point. This was inevitable. At the core lies Washington's determination to avoid Russian participation in the European energy-supply chain. To quote Ariel Cohen of US conservative think-tank the Heritage Foundation, "Since August, US diplomats have been busy trying to shore up Washington's geopolitical position all around the Caspian, including Baku, [Turkmenistan capital] Ashgabat and Astana."

Russia is gaining the upper hand in the region. Despite robust US diplomacy in Ashgabat - over 15 American delegations arrived there in the past year - Turkmenistan, which already exports around 50 billion cubic meters of its gas through Russia, has responded well to Moscow's overtures. It has decided to stick to the terms of an April 2003 deal whereby virtually all its exports are handled by Russia "up through 2025", and Turkmen gas exports to Russia are expected to rise to 60-70 billion cubic-meters by 2009, leaving hardly any surplus for Western companies. Ashgabat has also committed to the construction of a pipeline to Russia via Kazakhstan along the eastern coast of the Caspian Sea.

The clincher was Russia's offer to buy Turkmen gas at "European prices" - the same approach that Moscow adopted for securing control of Kazakh and Uzbek gas exports. Russia has since made a similar offer to Azerbaijan, which Baku is considering. Azerbaijan was the true success story of US oil diplomacy in the post-Soviet era. Clinton literally snatched it from Russia's orbit in the 1990s by pushing through the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan [BTC] oil pipeline against seemingly impossible odds. Azerbaijan is now edging back toward Moscow.

It is negotiating with Russia an increase in the annual capacity of the Baku-Novorossiisk pipeline. Azerbaijan reducing its commitment to the US-supported Baku-Supsa and BTC pipelines, which have a massive capacity of 60 million tonnes annually and could easily handle Azeri oil exports, is a breakthrough for Russia.

Russia's resolute stance in the Caucasus has caught Baku's attention. Baku understands Russia's resurgence in the southern Caucasus, and President of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev dislikes the mercurial personality of Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili. Azerbaijan might have lost $500 million in revenues due to the suspension of oil transportation via the Baku-Supsa and Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan pipelines in August due to the conflict, and Baku's new interest in the Russian pipeline stems from a desire to protect its relationship with Moscow.

The implications are quite serious for Washington. Any reduction in the Azeri exports via BTC could impact the viability of the pipeline, which has been a cornerstone of US oil diplomacy in the Caspian, pumping early 1 million barrels of oil per day from Azerbaijan to Turkey's Mediterranean coast, where most of the supply is then shipped to Europe. The BTC pipeline looks secure for now, but has come under the increased watch of Russia.

Again, question marks have appeared regarding the future of the Nabucco gas pipeline, which, if constructed, would bypass Russian territory and bring Caspian gas from Azerbaijan via Georgia and Turkey to the European market. What if Azerbaijan accepts the Russian offer to buy gas at "European prices"? Has the Caucasus conflict fatally hurt Nabucco's prospects?

Russia comes out on top
There is indeed a new ambivalence in the geopolitics of the region. All across Western Europe, Eurasia and China countries are assimilating what happened in the Caucasus in August and are assessing their stakes vis-a-vis a resurgent Russia. They seek accommodation with Russia. Moscow has come out very much on top.

The war in Georgia has somewhat clouded the relations between Russia and the European Union. The final declaration of the EU summit on September 1 underscored the need to reduce energy dependence on Russia. But the EU's options, too, are limited. Europe has pinned its hopes on Nabucco, but it can only be implemented with Russian participation. Claude Mandil, former head of the International Energy Agency, said recently in an interview with the Russian daily Kommersant, "There is much oil and gas in Central Asia, but still less than in Russia or Iran."

Mandil, who advises French President Nicolas Sarkozy on energy issues, was critical of the US pressure on Europe to isolate Russia, calling it "counter-productive". He said, "The EU alone should decide the issue of energy security. The US itself is highly dependent on oil imports from Venezuela, but no EU members tell Washington that it's time to attend to that problem".

China also recognizes the Russian consolidation in the Caspian-Central Asian region. A commentary in the People's Daily in early September took note that Russia's Central Asia diplomacy has been "crowned with great success". It noted that visits by Russian leaders to Central Asian capitals in August helped "consolidate and strengthen" Moscow's ties with the region and achieved "substantial outcomes" in energy cooperation.

The Chinese commentary concluded: "Against a global backdrop of Russia's growing contradictions with the West � the high-level shuttle diplomacy of Russian leaders will further enhance Russia's strategic position in Central Asia, beef up the control of oil and gas resources and help coordinate the positions of Russia and these Central Asia nations on the Transcaucasia issue". Beijing has obviously made a realistic assessment of its own options in Central Asia.

In fact, during Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin's visit to Tashkent on September 1-2, Uzbekistan and Russia agreed to build a new pipeline with a capacity of 26 to 30 billion cubic meters (bcm) annually to pump Uzbek and Turkmen gas to Europe. Such a pipeline will undermine the US efforts to develop a trans-Caspian energy route bypassing Russia. Again, Russia's LUKoil has announced plans to produce 12 bcm gas in Uzbekistan's Kandym and Gissar fields annually.

All in all, therefore, Rice's visit to Kazakhstan took place against a grim backdrop. Neither Azerbaijan nor Kazakhstan appears interested in US entreaties to re-route energy exports to bypass Russia. Both hope to maintain good relations with the US but that cannot be done by picking a quarrel with Russia. At a press conference with Rice in Astana on Sunday, Kazakh Foreign Minister Marat Tazhin stressed relations with Russia will remain a top priority. "Our relationship with Russia, I can formulate, is just excellent. We have very good political relations. Russia is our strategic partner� At the same time, I should underline that our relationship with the United States has a stable, strategic character."

Neither Tazhin nor Kazakh President Nurusultan Nazarbayev apparently made any commitments to Rice regarding US-sponsored pipelines. On the contrary, addressing the media jointly with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev following the Russian-Kazakh border region forum in Aktyubinsk, Kazakhstan, on September 22, Nazarbayev said Kazakhstan will be increasing its oil production by 12 million metric tons in 2009 and it proposes to pump the additional oil via Russia. "It is very important that Kazakh oil should pass through Russia", he said.

Kashagan puzzle
Nazarbayev hinted Astana would use the Russian-controlled Caspian Pipeline Consortium (CPC) to carry Kazakh crude from the Kashagan deposit in 2012-2013 to the Russian terminal on the Black Sea. Nurlan Balagimbayev, adviser to Nazarbayev, said on Thursday that Kazakhstan is interested in buying an additional 13.7% of stakes belonging to both BP and Oman in the CPC, in which Russia holds 24% besides Chevron, Shell and ExxonMobil.
Rice would have utilized her visit in Astana to check out Kashagan. Kazakhstan and a group of Western oil companies led by Italy's Eni are due to finalize details on Kashagan's future by October 25. A new operating company is expected to be formed and individual companies - Eni, Shell, ConocoPhillips, Japan's Inpex Holdings and Kazkhstan's KazMunaiGas - are likely to control different aspects of the operation such as production or shipping.

Kashagan is estimated to hold 7 billlion to 9 billion barrels of recoverable reserves and is undoubtedly the jewel in the crown of the Caspian Sea Basin. Several different routes are likely to be needed for delivering oil from Kashagan to customers, involving the construction of major new oil pipelines. Rice would have easily anticipated the keen rivalries that lie ahead in advance of the 2013 production start date of Kashagan. The battle for Kashagan is about to be joined.

The transportation route for the Kashagan will have a vital bearing on the long-term economic viability of the BTC pipeline. But Astana has shown no hurry so far in committing Kashagan oil to the BTC. Kazakhstan may well be playing for time and synchronizing with Russia's expected completion of the pipeline from East Siberia to the Pacific (ESPO) by 2012 for routing oil to the Asian markets.

Russian Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko said on Wednesday that Kazakhstan's state-owned oil pipeline operator KazTransOil is interested in transporting Kazakh oil through the ESPO. "Our Kazakh partners are looking at the project with great interest and enthusiasm. We are happy about that", he said at a function launching a section of the ESPO between Talakan and Taishet. The Taishet-Talakan section of the ESPO line was completed in September, while the remaining stretch to Skovorodino, near the Chinese border, is scheduled to be completed by end-2009.

Will Astana decide to ship its projected oil output - 150 million tons a year by 2015 - through ESPO? If that happens, China will be a huge beneficiary and the geopolitics of the Caspian will undergo a historic transformation.

Russian-Kazakh "oil alliance"
Rice put on an appearance, saying, "This is not some kind of contest for the affection of Kazakhstan between the countries of the region". But it is very obvious that Washington is nervous Kazakhstan is showing alarming signs of shifting towards Moscow. Astana supported the Russian action in the Caucasus and cut down its investment in Georgia. If Rice was hopeful of encouraging Kazakhstan to stand up to Russian "bullying", she was disappointed.

On the eve of Rice's arrival in Astana, Nazarbayev said, "I personally was a witness to the fact that Georgia attacked first. I was in Beijing on August 8 with Mr Putin, when we first heard the news. I think the coverage of those events was biased. Whoever you may blame for the conflict, the facts are bad enough."

Since assuming office in the Kremlin on May 7, Medvedev has visited Kazakhstan three times. During his last visit, he promised, "We [Russia and Kazakhstan] will keep building up the production and the export of hydrocarbon raw materials, build new pipelines when it is beneficial and necessary, and attract large-scale investment into the fuel and energy sector."

On Wednesday, while on a visit to Almaty, Kazakhstan's largest city, the influential head of the CIS (Commonwealth of Independent States) committee of the Russian parliament, Vadim Gustov, floated a new idea that the two countries needed to develop a common energy market. He said an "oil alliance" would be mutually advantageous.

"A common energy market of Russia and Kazakhstan would help develop energy cooperation, supply cheap energy resources to the domestic markets and increase energy supplies to third countries", Gustov said. According to him, Russia and Kazakhstan should develop and adopt a joint concept of the energy market, which could serve as basis for Euroasian Economic Community space.

Evidently, Washington is barely keeping pace with the Russian diplomacy. To make matters worse, the financial crisis at home has eroded US credibility. An entire ideology of economic development that US diplomats propagated in the region stands discredited.

There is huge political symbolism when Iceland expresses "disappointment" with the Western world and turns to Moscow for a 4 billion euro (US$5.5 billion) loan to salvage its economy from imminent bankruptcy. Such images make a lasting impression on the Central Asian steppes.

M K Bhadrakumar served as a career diplomat in the Indian Foreign Service for more than 29 years, with postings including ambassador to Uzbekistan (1995-98) and to Turkey (1998-2001).

(Copyright 2008 Asia Times Online (Holdings) Ltd. All rights reserved.
 

Red Baron

Paleo-Conservative
_______________
Fatima and Russia’s New War

I've always found the Miracle of Fatima to be fascinating and uplifting.

The relevance to Russia is especially compelling now.

cross posted from,
http://www.timebomb2000.com/vb/showthread.php?t=305571

Fatima and Russia’s New War

by John Vennari

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No student of the true Message of Fatima is surprised by the war now erupting between Georgia and Russia. For over twenty-four years since Pope John Paul II’s consecration of the world to the Immaculate Heart of Mary in 1984, Father Nicholas Gruner’s The Fatima Crusader, and other concerned Catholics (including Catholic Family News), have insisted that Russia has not converted and we still await the period of peace promised by Our Blessed Mother.

The conversion of Russia and period of peace can only come about by the Pope, in union with the world’s bishops, on one day in a solemn public ceremony, consecrating Russia by name to the Immaculate Heart of Mary. These simple conditions laid down by the Mother of God are not yet fulfilled.

Those who have warned for years that hostilities with Russia will break out at some future date were often laughed to scorn. “Russia is our ally now!”, they would insist.
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Worse, too, many would retort, “I saw a report on EWTN that said the Consecration is accomplished, so there’s no further need to pester the Holy Father for the Consecration of Russia.” Such statements come from an apparent willful blindness to the true condition of the world around us. It indicates a mind cut off from reality.
But not everyone is blind. Since hostilities broke out on August 8, a number of those in the secular media frankly admit their belief that the Cold War never really came to a close. Even secular journalists note that since the alleged collapse of Communism, we have not seen a period of peace, nor have we seen evidence that Moscow wants to relinquish control over its satellite states.

In an August 12 article titled “The Russian Empire Strikes Back”, Time magazine noted that since the “collapse” of the Soviet Union 17 years ago, “Washington in particular has deluded itself into believing that it was somehow a real competitor to Russia in the southern tier of the former Soviet Union — that is, the eight states that make up the Caucasus and the former Soviet Central Asia. Washington acted as if these states were truly independent and sovereign, immune from the influence of the old metropolitan center, Moscow. Washington deliberately ignored how Russia held on to its military bases in the southern tier, how the successor to the KGB stayed more plugged into intelligence from the area than the CIA ever hoped to, and how local leaders flew to Moscow to clear all important decisions…”1
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Robert Baer, the author of the article, goes on to say he had been in Tajikistan in the early 1990s during its civil war; and was evacuated from the embassy by Russia’s 201st Motorized Rifle Division. “The Russian officers who commanded the unit”, said Baer, ‘were proud that the Red Army had held together through the breakup of the Soviet Union”, even though the army’s mission was to aid the United States during Tajikistan’s war.
In similar vein, Dr. Ivan Eland of the Independent Institute, who has been Director of Defense Policy Studies at the Cato Institute, and spent 15 years working for Congress on national security issues, noted on August 16, “…contrary to Secretary [Condoleezza] Rice’s implication, Russia is not bringing back the Cold War. In fact, it never ended.”2

Those who live in the region likewise attest to the fact that there is yet no period of peace. The Financial Times spoke of Anna Kuzayeva, a South Ossetian woman who spent two nights in a cellar with 300 people and rotting corpses under a school in Tskhinvali before being taken to a refuge camp by Russian solders. Kuzayeva said, “This war will continue. It’s been going on in various ways for 15 years.”3
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And Simon Jenkins, writing in the Guardian, noted: “Every student of the Caucasus has known since the fall of the Soviet empire that this part of the world was an explosion waiting to happen … there were too many old scores to settle, too much territory in dispute and too much wealth at stake…”4
These writers clearly recognize that no miraculous period of peace, no permanent order of tranquility, has swept the world.
If this is clear to even secular commentators, why is it apparently unclear to those who were entrusted with the task of consecrating Russia itself? In June of 2000, did we not read the absurd statement in the Vatican document “The Message of Fatima” that “any further discussion or request [for the Consecration of Russia] is without basis”? Did we not witness this insanity repeated in Cardinal Bertone’s recently-released book The Last Secret of Fatima in which he reiterates the claim that the Consecration requested by Our Lady of Fatima has been accomplished?
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Any Church official of whatever rank who continues this charade not only mocks Our Blessed Mother — who is quite specific when She asks for the consecration of “Russia” and not “the world” (as Sister Lucy made clear many times during her life)5 — but also delivers the people over to despair. They effectively block Heaven’s only true solution. In the little-known revelation of Our Lady to Sister Lucy in May 1952, which is recounted in Il Pellegrinaggio Della Meraviglie, published under the auspices of the Italian episcopate, the Virgin Mary said, "Make it known to the Holy Father that I am always awaiting the Consecration of Russia to My Immaculate Heart. Without the Consecration, Russia will not be able to convert, nor will the world have peace."

Rather than recognize this truth, modern Churchmen in high places erect a barrier against employing this solution, and seek resolutions of conflicts by means that are primarily natural, looking to men of power without grace to forge peace. If this is not a recipe for despair, then the word has no meaning.

Meanwhile, as these lines are being written, the hostility in the region continues — a mounting hostility that leaves people around the world shuddering at the thought of an impending World War III (Heaven forbid!).
Yet without Our Lady’s assistance, how can we be anything but fearful? No one seems sure why Georgia’s President Mikheil Saakashvili committed the reckless act of invading South Ossetia in the first place. Yes, we know he had been armed by Israel and the United States;6 yes, we know that Israeli military have helped train the Georgian army; yes, there seems to be evidence that Georgia went into the war believing that the United States would back them. But why tempt Russia to such provocation?

The fact that Russia retaliated with crushing swiftness seems to indicate it fears neither Israel nor the United States. Russia is certainly aware of the present weakened state of the US military. It is no secret. The Associated Press reported in 2004 that President Bush was led down into “The Tank”, a secure room at the Pentagon about the “crises facing the US Army and Marine Corps”. The admirals and generals warned Bush that the two long wars in Afghanistan and Iraq are wearing down US ground forces of fewer than 700,000, “one in every six of them women”.7
Along the same lines, the late Col. David Hackworth noted in 2004, “right now the Army is trying to do the work of 14 divisions with 10 under-strength, active-duty divisions.” At a press conference on July 2, 2008, when speaking on a possible US strike on Iran, Joint Chiefs of Staff Chairman Admiral Mike Mullen told reporters “from the United States’ military perspective in particular … opening up a third front right now would be extremely stressful on us.”8 How much more stressful would be a confrontation with the full might of Russia?

A formidable array of Russian firepower was on display in what has been called a disproportionate response to Georgia's attack on South Ossetia. In scenes reminiscent of a Soviet-style invasion, Russian forces cut deep into Georgia causing massive damage.

The Georgian city of Gori, birthplace to Stalin, is now described as a ghost town. Approximately thirty-thousand refugees from the city are spread out in Georgia and Tbilissi. Those left in Gori live in fear. Many who abandoned their homes give comparable accounts of atrocities from the Russian and South Ossetian military. “Having survived firefights and shelling between Georgian and Russian forces”, wrote the Glasgow Herald, Gori citizens “were then subjected, they say, to a frenzy of murder, rape, looting and torching of their property by roaming bands of crazed militiamen, many of them drunk.”

The civilians insist the militia’s actions were carried out in full view of the Russian army who did nothing to stop the rampage.
These militiamen also hijacked vehicles at gunpoint from civilians and journalists. Some of the vehicles were later found abandoned and wrecked. The infrastructure of the city of Gori is completely looted. Hunger and lawlessness are rampant. One Georgian refugee said, “What you have seen in the town is nothing, believe me. With your own eyes you must see the evil they have done in the villages, burning and killing.”9
To date, Russia still holds checkpoints deep inside of Goergia, and it is blocking the only land entrance to Georgia’s main port city of Poti.10
Even more chilling is the report that Russia has dropped cluster-bombs into civilian areas of Georgia. Human Rights Watch reported on August 15 that it had found substantial evidence that Russia had deployed these weapons, which had been recently banned by more than 100 countries.
The London Times wrote, “Cluster-bombs scatter small bomblets across a wide area and can prove deadly to civilians — particularly children — who pick up munitions which have failed to detonate on impact.” The slightest touch to these seemingly dud bombs will cause an explosion. “The bombs”, said the Times, “effectively leave behind a trail of landmines.”

Russia denies using these cluster-bombs, but Human Rights Watch researchers say that they have conducted numerous interviews and have examined video footage of the August 12 attack on Gori, which indicate the use of these weapons. Craters in Gori were also consistent with a cluster strike.

Further, doctors at two main hospitals in Tbilisi described injuries to civilians caught in the attack on Gori that were consistent with cluster bombs.11

In its report, Human Rights Watch also called upon Georgia to ban the use of cluster munitions. Though there is no indication it has used these weapons in the recent clash, Georgia nonetheless is known to have RBK-500 cluster bombs in its stockpiles.12 This is cause for concern, since Georgia is not lily-white in this affair. Its invasion of South Ossetia included direct attacks on civilians.13

So wars and rumors of war continue in the news. Poland has agreed to a missile shield from the United States (allegedly as a defense against Iran), resulting in Russia’s immediate threat that deploying such weapons exposes Poland “to a strike -- 100 percent.”14 NATO now appears to be rallying around Georgia, and warning Russia it will tolerate no new “line drawn through Europe,” referring to the possibility of a new Iron Curtain.
And Russia, as of this date, repeatedly pledges to withdraw its troops from Georgia tomorrow, or the next day, or next Friday, while it continually digs in.

In the meantime, we cling to our Rosaries. What the future brings remains to be seen.

Of Georgian President Saakashvili's decision to use the opening of the Olympic Games to cover Georgia's invasion of South Ossetia, Pat Buchanan said it “must rank in stupidity with Gamal Abdel-Nasser's decision to close the Straits of Tiran to Israeli ships.”15

“Nasser's blunder cost him the Sinai in the Six-Day War,” notes Buchanan, “Saakashvili's blunder probably means permanent loss of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.” It also means bearing the brunt of Russia’s military rage.16
Stupidity, here, is the operative word. Most of us long ago abandoned hope that today’s leaders will act with wisdom. The virtue of Prudence, that all-important virtue that dispenses charity and justice here and now, that crucial virtue that chooses the best means to the end here and now, has all but disappeared from modern leadership, whether civil or ecclesiastical.

What greater act of supernatural prudence could there be than for the Pope to use this opportunity — this tinderbox of turmoil in the Caucasus — to order the Consecration of Russia to the Immaculate Heart of Mary as Our Lady instructed, so that Russia may finally be converted to the Catholic Faith, a period of peace be granted to the world, and Fatima’s dire warning of the annihilation of nations be averted.

Our Lord, in the Fatima Message, said, “Pray a great deal for the Holy Father”. Our Lady of Fatima also said of the Consecration of Russia that the Pope “will do it, but it will be late.” Let us pray that the Holy Father does not act too late to avoid what could become a cataclysmic war of worldwide proportions.

http://www.fatima.org/news/newsviews/jvnews082608.asp
 

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The Realist Resurgence


Russia is weaker than it looks, which is why NATO's soft-power strategy can still prevail.
Christopher Dickey, John Barry and Owen Matthews
NEWSWEEK
From the magazine issue dated Oct 20, 2008

http://www.newsweek.com/id/162995?tid=relatedcl

http://www.newsweek.com/id/162995?tid=relatedcl


High over the Bering Sea where the black Arctic sky bends toward Alaska, Russian Tu-95 Bear bombers moved in for the kill last week. In rapid succession, cruise missiles dropped from beneath them like deadly spawn, fanning out toward their targets. Eleven thousand kilometers away in the warm waters south of Florida, a Russian naval squadron approached, carrying more megatons of nuclear weapons than the Cubans ever dreamed of during the missile crisis that brought the world to the edge of annihilation in October 1962. The Russians' goal: to link up with the military forces of Venezuela's Hugo Chávez, who has cast himself as the successor to Fidel Castro in leading hemispheric hostility to the United States of America.

Geopolitical thriller writer Tom Clancy could set this scene. Flashbacks would provide the context: Moscow's punitive invasion of little Georgia last summer; its tanks and missiles parading in Red Square last May; its coffers filled with hundreds of billions of dollars paid by Western Europeans addicted to Russian gas and oil; and the vows of former KGB operative, former president and now Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to use this war chest for an ever more powerful military machine. Clancy could make it all sound like, well, the eve of World War III. But State Department spokesman Sean McCormack last month made the latest Russian operations above the Arctic and in the Caribbean, dubbed "Stability 2008," sound more like a joke. Sneering at the weakness of Russia's fleet en route to Venezuela, McCormack said, "We'll see if they actually make it there. Somebody told me they had a tugboat accompanying them in case they break down along the way."

All is not what it seems in the new cold war, if such a thing exists—and most leaders in NATO insist emphatically that it does not. The world is too interdependent, they say, to allow that sort of global standoff. Russia is not the Soviet Union. And the Western powers don't want to be drawn into a game of bluff that will only inflate Putin's prestige. "One cold war is enough," U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates told Putin to his face at a conference in Germany last year. In Washington, where policy fell prey to political fictions for much of the Bush administration, the mantra of the moment is "realism." For too many years the White House looked at the world through a crude, dialectic lens—"with us or against us," "war or appeasement." Since Gates took over at Defense in late 2006, he has demanded from the waning administration "a pragmatic blend of resolve and restraint." U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, for her part, talks about a "uniquely American realism." It has an idealistic tinge favoring friends and allies who share Western democratic values. But, that said, Rice's brand of realism readily allows an autocratic Russia, or for that matter China, to be accepted as competitive on some issues and embraced when cooperative on others.

The approach harks back to the days 60 years ago when University of Chicago professor Hans J. Morgenthau led what came to be known as the realist school of international relations. "Foreign policy must be conducted in such a way as to make the preservation of peace possible and not make the outbreak of war inevitable," he wrote. Moderate, reasonable, focused on clearly perceived national interests, he warned against "the crusading spirit," insisted on looking at the political scene from the viewpoint of other nations, and advocated compromise on any issue not absolutely vital to a country's well-being.

Such views have always been a hard sell with the U.S. public. Especially after an incident like the invasion of Georgia, Americans tend to hanker for definitive confrontations and conclusions that smell like victory. To talk about responding with what Gates calls "nonmilitary tools of national power"—what others call "soft power"—sounds soft, period. (You won't hear the phrase cross the lips of any presidential candidate.) But when you have the preponderance of power, you can husband your resources and still contain your adversary.

That was the point Sean McCormack was making about Russia's rickety fleet. Moscow is not the threat that it wants to appear. With more than 5,000 nuclear warheads and its status as the world's largest energy exporter, it cannot really be called a paper tiger. Not militarily and not economically. But in both respects it is a pretty dysfunctional bear. "The Russian military is still a lot more bark than bite," says Alexander Kliment, an analyst at the consultancy Eurasia Group. During the cold war the West used nuclear weapons as an equalizer, backing up an inferior conventional force. Now that's what the Russians are doing. Since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the country has invested most of its defense money in maintaining its nuclear weapons, while conventional forces were left to decay. "Now it's 20 years later," says Kliment, "and the better part of the Russian Navy is rusting in dry docks." The country has a single aircraft carrier, compared with a dozen in the American fleet. Russian troop strength at 1.2 million is about a quarter of what it was in 1986 and morale is low. "A Russian soldier has fewer rights than a Russian prisoner," says Valentina Melnikova, the head of the Union of Soldiers' Mothers. One Army lieutenant, who despaired after repeated attempts to point out the disastrous condition of his barracks, recently made a rap video (to an Eminem tune) showing the decrepit plumbing and filthy corridors, then posted it on YouTube. The lieutenant was ordered to transfer to Siberia.

Putin has been promising huge new infusions of cash to solve some of the military's problems, and on the financial front his government wisely built up an enormous reserve of some $600 billion in foreign currency over the past nine years. But those monies may be needed now to stave off economic disaster, not re-create the old war machine. Russia's fortunes are tied directly to the volatile price of oil and gas, which is headed down sharply as the world economy slows. Russian markets started hemorrhaging capital even before the confrontation in Georgia, then took massive hits when the shock waves from the global credit crisis started rolling over the country in September. The Moscow bourses had to stop trading several times in September. Last week they dropped 21 percent in a single day. Even before the current crisis, the scale of Russia's $1.3 trillion economy was roughly on a par with Mexico's and Brazil's, well behind China's (at $3.3 trillion) and the United States' (at $13.8 trillion).

The second salient point appreciated by today's realists is the role NATO and the European Union played transforming the old Eastern bloc into a collection of increasingly prosperous democratic states and, yes, steadfast allies who share U.S. values. In the 1990s NATO was at a loss to justify its original hard-power reason for being. If the Western Europeans' rationale for the alliance after World War II was "to keep the Americans in, the Russians out and the Germans down," the fall of the Berlin Wall put an end to that game. There weren't going to be any European wars of the kind NATO was created to fight so it would have to adapt to small conflicts elsewhere. The catchphrase in the halls of Brussels became "Out of area or out of business." And soon enough, those little wars were found: first Kosovo, which was a quick, relatively clean victory in 1999, then Afghanistan, a fight that has gone on for seven years and is getting uglier by the day.

The story of NATO's soft power was different. The collapse of the Soviet Union had left a vacuum in Central Europe, and NATO rushed to fill it, not with troops, but with ideas about good governance and democratic societies. To vulnerable new regimes, the alliance held out the tantalizing prospect of membership with guarantees of defense under Article 5 of the treaty. But that came at a price. According to Ronald Asmus, a former deputy assistant secretary of state for Europe, in the 1990s "the administration consciously used potential membership in NATO as a 'golden carrot' to encourage the countries of Central and Eastern Europe to consolidate political and economic reforms, resolve minority issues and border disputes and establish civilian controls of the military." The expansion of NATO was "values driven," not militarily driven, Asmus said. As the EU expanded its membership, too, the borders of "the West" were pushed east from the Elbe by 1,600km. Not a shot had been fired, not a brigade deployed. Soft power had triumphed.

But success brought its own complications. Analysts as distinguished—and as tough—as former secretaries of state Henry Kissinger and George Shultz now regret the lack of attention paid to the Russians' pride in the 1990s when the country was poor and its people often felt humiliated. "What they have sought, sometimes clumsily, is acceptance as equals in a new international system rather than as losers in cold war to which terms could be dictated," the elder statesmen wrote jointly in an op-ed piece earlier this month.

NATO tried to discourage its new partners from embarking on campaigns to build up conventional war-fighting capabilities that might look provocative to Moscow. War with Russia, no matter how weak the Kremlin had become, was not what Brussels wanted. In fact, the American administration was looking for NATO's new members to fill useful niches for its far-flung "war on terror," whether in Iraq or Afghanistan. But the aspirants inevitably saw their training in a different light. Ultimately, their grudges were against Russia.

Georgia became a case in point of this simmering animosity—and of Morgenthau's dictum to "Never allow a weak ally to make decisions for you." Though the little country in the Caucasus was not a NATO member, U.S. military trainers were teaching local troops basic tactics for counterinsurgency operations. In a stunning miscalculation, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, paying too much attention to talk of "common values" with the West, made the decision to attack South Ossetian rebel positions, which caused the Russians to move in to relieve their allies. NATO stepped back, not forward, which was the unpalatable but prudent thing to do. Moscow's military, whatever its shortcomings, then rolled over the Georgian troops like a lawn mower over an anthill.

Since then, the realists have stayed their restrained course, and events have strengthened their hand. Immediately after the fighting began, the United States, NATO and the EU demonstrated openness to compromise with a sensible Russian government—a role President Dmitry Medvedev quickly adopted—but they showed contempt for the flailing bear. Gates told a conference at Blenheim Palace, where that bulldog of a realist, Winston Churchill, was born, that Georgia would be rebuilt with $1 billion of U.S. money to help it get along. Its ties to the West would be strengthened. But "Russia faces a decision: to be a fully integrated and responsible partner in the international community, which we would welcome, or … to be an isolated and antagonistic nation viewed by much of the world as little more than a gas station for Europe."

For now, the Medvedev faction, at any rate, seems to have made its choice: reintegration, not isolation. Last week Russian troops withdrew from the checkpoints they'd established deep inside Georgia and pulled back to the contested enclaves where they were before last summer's war. But the tensions are likely to continue at least as long as NATO's expansion goes on, and the encirclement of Russia, politically if not militarily, progresses. In every direction Moscow looks, its neighbors (and former provinces and satellites) have signed Individual Partnership Action Plans that are the first step toward joining the military club in Brussels. Since Georgia signed up in 2004, Azerbaijan, Armenia, Moldova and Kazakhstan have, too. They are a long way from the North Atlantic, but right in the middle of the Near Abroad.

Since the fighting in Georgia, NATO is also finding it harder to fudge its commitments to new members. Paris, London and Washington may claim they do not see the Russians as their adversaries, but the Baltic states sure do, and they are pushing for concrete ground defense plans that they've never had from NATO before. All the while, despite Medvedev's moderation, hawks on Russian state television continued to trumpet the military might demonstrated by the Stability 2008 exercises. The machos in the Kremlin seemed determined to show that if the United States and NATO could play around in Russia's backyard, Russia could play around in America's. So the fleet led by the Kirov-class guided missile cruiser Pyotr Veliky (Peter the Great) continued toward Caracas. And so, by last report, did the tugboat.

With Barrett Sheridan in New York and Anna Nemtsova in Moscow
URL: http://www.newsweek.com/id/163577
© 2008
 

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http://www.hindu.com/2008/10/13/stories/2008101352841400.htm
The Hindu
Online edition of India's National Newspaper
Monday, Oct 13, 2008
Russia’s nuclear deterrent in good shape: Medvedev

Vladimir Radyuhin

MOSCOW: Russia has successfully test-fired four long-range nuclear-capable missiles over the weekend in an unprecedented show of force that has not been seen since the Cold War era.

On Sunday, two nuclear submarines deployed in the Sea of Okhotsk, north of Japan, and the Barents Sea, northeast of Norway, simultaneously test-fired Intercontinental Ballistic Missiles (ICBM), which hit targets at the opposite extreme of the country.

A third missile, Topol, was fired from a mobile land-launcher at the Plisetsk space centre in northwest Russia. A day earlier, a nuclear submarine test-fired the new ICBM Sineva in the Barents Sea.

Russia’s President Dmitry Medvedev, who was present at the Sineva’s launch on Saturday, and watched the Topol launch on Sunday, said the country’s nuclear deterrent was “in good shape” and “new weapon systems” will be inducted in the future. The missile launches were part of the “Stability 2008” war games, the biggest strategic manoeuvres by Russia since the break-up of the Soviet Union. The exercise involved nearly 50,000 troops and over 7,000 pieces of heavy-war gear, including aircraft, ships and nuclear missiles.
 

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Page last updated at 19:19 GMT, Sunday, 12 October 2008 20:19 UK
Lithuania votes in comeback poll

Lithuanians have voted in a general election which could see the return to power of two disgraced ex-leaders.

Rolandas Paksas stepped down as president four years ago after being impeached - but his Order and Justice party could help form a new government.

A likely partner in a populist coalition would be the Labour party led by a Russian-born millionaire who is battling corruption allegations.

The governing Social Democrats are in trouble because of the failing economy.

Lithuania - an ex-Soviet state - enjoyed an economic boom when it joined the European Union in 2004.

But rampant inflation and slumping growth have eroded the feel-good factor, and correspondents say many voters have lost confidence in mainstream parties.

Mr Paksas was the first European head of state to be removed by impeachment. He was accused of corruption - a charge he has always denied.

He is still banned from holding public office, but an exit poll suggests he could wield huge influence behind the scenes.

Correspondents say his party could go into coalition with the Russian-born millionaire Viktor Uspaskich's Labour party.

Mr Uspaskich - who is known as Mr Gherkin because of his pickles business - resigned as economy minister when he came under formal investigation over his dealings with Russia.

He is still under investigation and barred from leaving Lithuania.

The exit poll suggested the biggest party would be the populist parties' main rival - the conservative opposition Homeland Union - with the Social Democrats trailing.

Final results are not due until an expected second round of voting in some constituencies on 26 October.

Voters were also being asked about plans to close down a Chernobyl-style nuclear reactor.

The European Union wants Lithuania to close down the plant as planned at the end of 2009. But it provides 70% of Lithuania's electricity, and many voters do not want to increase their country's dependency on Russia.

However, as polls closed it was not clear if enough people had voted to make any referendum valid.
Story from BBC NEWS:
 

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NATO Rules Out Supplying Weapons For Georgia
By Stefan Bos
Budapest
10 October 2008

Bos report - Download (MP3) audio clip
Bos report - Listen (MP3) audio clip

United States Defense Secretary Robert Gates says it appears Russian troops are withdrawing from key positions in the former Soviet republic of Georgia, nearly two months after a brief war ended between Russian and Georgian troops. He made the comments on the sidelines of a NATO summit in Budapest, where defense ministers pledged political and practical support for Georgia, but ruled out delivering weapons to the country. Stefan Bos reports from Budapest.

The two-day NATO summit in Budapest concluded with the first ever ministerial meeting of the NATO-Georgia Commission, which was set up to solidify ties between the Western military alliance, and the former Soviet nation.

They gathered Friday, as a deadline expired for Russia to withdraw troops from buffer zones near Georgia's breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
ap_us_robert_gates_175_10Oct08.jpg

U.S. Defense Minister Robert Gates looks across the room during a meeting of NATO defense ministers in Budapest, Hungary, 10 Oct 2008
Robert Gates looks across the room during a meeting of NATO defense ministers in Budapest, Hungary, 10 Oct 2008
Ahead of the meeting, U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates told reporters there were indications that Russian troops are withdrawing under a European Union brokered ceasefire agreement.

But he also criticized Russia's military actions in Georgia. "Unfortunately their behavior has undermined security in the region," said Gates. "I am pleased that Russia appears to be fulfilling its obligations under the ceasefire to withdraw in compliance with tomorrow's deadline."

Yet, Russia has made clear it will keep nearly 8,000 troops in Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Moscow recognized the two areas as independent states, following a brief war between Russian and Georgian forces in August.

ap_hungary_nato_jaap_de_hoop_scheffer_175_10Oct08.jpg

NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer gestures while speaking during a media conference after a meeting of NATO defense ministers in Budapest, 10 Oct 2008
Jaap de Hoop Scheffer gestures while speaking during a media conference after a meeting of NATO defense ministers in Budapest, 10 Oct 2008
NATO has condemned the move and NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said the alliance would continue to support Georgia's territorial integrity. However, he ruled out NATO's military involvement in the area.

"The Georgian Defense minister of course heard firm support for Georgia's territorial integrity," said de Hoop Scheffer. "We discussed NATO's stepped-up support for Georgia's defense reform. To avoid any misunderstandings NATO will not supply any weapons to Georgia. But we can and do provide guidance and expert advise to Georgia as it sets it own priorities."

He added that NATO will help Georgia to recover from its recent conflict by providing, as an example, capabilities to get a better air picture of the situation on the ground.

De Hoop Scheffer stressed, however, the Budapest meeting was not used to assess Georgia's readiness to join the alliance. He said the first assessment will be made by NATO foreign ministers in December in Brussels.

Georgian Defense Minister David Kezerashvili said his government wants to join NATO soon, despite Russian opposition. "We hope that our continued good performance and alliance performance based policy will enable us to make swiftly the next step on our direct way to NATO membership," he said.

Earlier Friday, NATO defense ministers focused their attention on Afghanistan. They authorized their troops in Afghanistan to attack drug runners who are blamed for pumping up to $100 million a year into the coffers of Taliban militants.

However, soldiers will only be able to attack drug facilities if authorized by their own governments, and only drug producers deemed to be supporting the insurgency will be targeted, till Afghan forces are able to take on the task.

NATO defense ministers will review the mission when they meet again in February in Poland.

De Hoop Scheffer said he was less satisfied with other military commitments to the mission in Afghanistan, including his call for more retooled helicopters to reduce the time injured soldiers have to wait on the battle field before receiving medical assistance and to improve overall security.

The military alliance also looked at other security threats in the world, including Somalia, where it agreed to send a seven-ship force to protect ships of the United Nations Food Program against piracy. Pirates have attacked dozens of vessels and are still holding ships, including a Ukrainian cargo ship seized laden with heavy weapons.
 

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Georgia blasts Russia on eve of peace talks


7 hours ago

GENEVA (AFP) — Georgian and Russian delegates were to meet here face-to-face on Wednesday -- for the first time since a brief August war -- in talks that threatened to collapse even before they began.

The negotiations in Geneva are meant to provide a forum for Russians and Georgians to sit down together and work out how to assist displaced people faced with the onset of winter and launch an overall process for resolving the conflict.

On the eve of talks, however, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili cast doubt on the any chances of success while branding representatives of Georgia's rebel regions of South Ossetia and Abkazia as "ethnic cleansers."

"We don't think these people are politicians, we think they are ethnic cleansers and we think they are criminals," Saakashvili told reporters in Brussels, after talks with European Commission chief Jose Manuel Barroso.

"First Russia has to get out of there, they have no right to be there with tanks and troops," he said. "We would be more than happy to cooperate with any community, any representative but not in this kind of situation."

Georgia plans to raise three main issues at the talks: the withdrawal of all Russian troops from its territory, return of those displaced by the conflict and the restoration of the country's territorial integrity.

But the major sticking point ahead of Wednesday's talks has been the participation, or not, of South Ossetian and Abkhazian officials in the meetings in Geneva, as Moscow insists.

As UN chief Ban Ki-moon arrived in Geneva on Tuesday to try to kick-start the talks, the problem was still to be resolved.

At a press briefing late on Tuesday, neither Ban nor French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner would make any comment on who precisely would be at the talks.

"The international discussion that shall take place tomorrow is a beginning. This should not be seen as the end. It may take time, so we need to have some patience," Ban said.

His comments were echoed by Alexander Stubb, the Finnish foreign minister who chairs the Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe, which is co-hosting the talks along with the UN and the European Union.

"We know that this is a long process, we're taking it slowly, step by step," Stubb said.

Russia has indicated it could pull out if delegations from the Georgian territories are not awarded equal status.

Georgia has said the official format for the talks only includes representatives of Georgia, Russia, the United States, European Union, OSCE and UN.

Speaking to AFP, Georgian Deputy Foreign Minister Giga Bokeria said Tuesday that Tbilisi could accept meeting with the regions' rebel leaders but only informally and if pro-Georgian representatives of those areas were included.

Although Russia has withdrawn from most of Georgia in line with an EU-brokered ceasefire, Tbilisi is furious at the continued presence of 7,600 Russian troops in the Georgian rebel regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

But Russian President Dmitry Medvedev insists Moscow has fulfilled its ceasefire obligations and Moscow says it will demand at the meeting a ban on all weapons sales to Georgia.

According to a diplomat in Brussels close to the issue, the representatives from South Ossetia and Abkazia would participate in talks at the level of two working groups, but not at the plenary sessions.

The European delegation has been urged by the US-based non-governmental organisation Human Rights Watch to focus on protecting civilians and holding both sides to account for abuses.

"Civilians bore the brunt of this conflict," HRW's Rachel Denber said in a statement. "Tens of thousands had to flee, and now they need safe and secure conditions so they can return to their homes."

Russia launched an offensive against Georgia on August 8 to push back a Georgian offensive to retake South Ossetia from Moscow-backed separatists.

Moscow said it was protecting Russian citizens in the region from Georgian aggression, but Tbilisi accused Moscow of provoking the conflict in order to cement control over the region and destabilise its pro-Western government.
 

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US, Russia send high-level teams to Georgia talks

By ALEXANDER G. HIGGINS – 3 hours ago

GENEVA (AP) — The United States and Russia have assigned high-level delegations to European Union-sponsored talks aimed at promoting security in Georgia under the cease-fire that ended this summer's brief war in the former Soviet republic, officials said Tuesday.

Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried will head a three-member delegation at the one-day talks in Geneva on Wednesday, said Dick Wilbur, spokesman for the American mission to U.N. organizations in Geneva.

Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin arrived Tuesday, said an official of the Russian mission, who spoke on condition of anonymity because he wasn't an authorized press spokesman.

The talks are aimed at following up on the cease-fire mediated by French President Nicolas Sarkozy that ended the Russian-Georgian war in August.

Originally the talks were expected to bring ministers to Geneva for substantive discussions, but diplomats said it was downgraded to expert level because of differences over the participation of representatives from breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia.

The U.S. and Russian delegations, however, are considerably higher than expert level.

The talks will cover "security and stability arrangements in Abkhazia and South Ossetia in keeping with the cease-fire," Wilbur said. "The talks will address compliance with the cease-fire, security issues, the return of internally displaced persons and human rights."

European diplomats said the talks will start a process of dialogue rather than aim at a specific conclusion or statement.

The five-day war erupted Aug. 7 when Georgian forces launched an attack seeking to regain control of South Ossetia. Russian troops repelled the offensive and then drove deep into other parts of Georgia. Soon after the fighting ended, Russia recognized South Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent states.

Associated Press writers Edith M. Lederer at the United Nations and Eliane Engeler and Frank Jordans in Geneva contributed to this report.
 

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Saakashvili: Georgia open to talks with breakaway regions
www.chinaview.cn 2008-10-15 08:03:51

BRUSSELS, Oct. 14 (Xinhua) -- Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili said here on Tuesday that he was open to talks with representatives from breakaway South Ossetia and Abkhazia at the upcoming Geneva conference, but not with the politicians from the two regions.

"We don't think these people are politicians, we think they are criminals from our point of view and the point of view of international criminal law," he said at a joint press conference with European Commission President Jose Manuel Barroso.

Saakashvili said this when asked if Georgia would take part in Wednesday's conference in Geneva if politicians from the two regions showed up.

He also said he would not engage talks with Russia unless that Russian troops pull out of the two regions.

"We will reach out, but first the Russians should get out of there," he said, adding "We are more than happy to cooperate with any community, with any representative, but not in this kind of situation."

Saakashvili's remarks overshadowed talks scheduled to begin in Geneva on Wednesday between Georgia and Russia over security issues in the Caucasus.

Russia insists that politicians from the two regions take part in the talks.

EU diplomats reportedly said to hope for a compromise formula whereby representatives of the two regions could be allowed to take part informally.

The talks, to be co-chaired by the EU, UN and Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, is part of a six-point cease-fire agreement mediated by the EU.

Russia recognized South Ossetia and Abkhazia as independent nations in August following its conflict with Georgia, while Georgia says they are part of its territory.
Editor: Sun Yunlong
 

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Minister: Russian armed forces to halve officers by 2012
www.chinaview.cn 2008-10-14 23:29:09

MOSCOW, Oct. 14 (Xinhua) -- Russia will halve its military officers and reduce the number of generals by 2012 in a bid to condense and strengthen the Armed Forces, Itar-Tass reported Tuesday.

Russian troops now have 355,000 officers in service, which constitutes about 32 percent of the overall military forces; and the officers will be dismissed in a step-by-step manner, Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov was quoted as saying.

The number of generals will also be reduced from more than 1,100 to about 900 by 2012, according to a plan for priority measures to develop the Armed Forces laid out by the ministry's collegium.

"While forming a prospective structure of the Armed Forces, it is planned to eliminate the imbalance between the number of top officers and senior officers," Serdyukov said.

The current vertical chain of command in the Armed Forces will also be transformed from a military district-army-division-regiment structure into a military district-operative command-brigade regime so as to improve efficiency, he said.

There would be an extra paratroop brigade subordinate directly to the district's commander in each military district to serve as a quick response force.

Editor: Mu Xuequan
 

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Don't Laugh at the Bear
But don't make him bigger than he is.

by Stuart Koehl
10/14/2008 5:30:00 PM


Over at Commentary, Abe Greenwald is incensed by a Newsweek article by Christopher Dickey, John Barry and Owen Matthews, "The Realist Resurgence", that claims "Russia is weaker than it looks, which is why NATO's soft power strategy can still work." Greenwald is particularly irked by the article's snarky tone:

Sneering at the weakness of Russia's fleet en route to Venezuela, [State Department Spokesman Sean] McCormack said, "We'll see if they actually make it there. Somebody told me they had a tugboat accompanying them in case they break down along the way."

Based on that point alone, we're treated to three pages on how today's Russia is more worthy of laughter than concern, and why, therefore, globally-minded "realists" in the State Department are winning the day with their laid-back approach to handling Moscow. The article closes on this cute note:

So the fleet led by the Kirov-class guided missile cruiser Pyotr Veliky (Peter the Great) continued toward Caracas. And so, by last report, did the tugboat.

Greenwald points out that the Russian battle group made a detour into the Mediterranean to pay a visit to the port of Tripoli in Libya--just a few weeks after Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice paid a formal visit to that country to open "a new chapter in U.S.-Libya bilateral relations," the implication being that Russia is working to undermine that new relationship through its visit.

Greenwald also makes much of the recent announcement that Russia will increase its defense budget by 26 percent in 2009, to a total of $48 billion, and that President Medvedev has promised to restore Russia's nuclear deterrent over the next 12 years.

Greenwald's main point appears to be Russia is still dangerous. It most certainly is, as the recent invasion of Georgia showed. Yet if you can get past the tone of the Newsweek article, its salient point is to assert the viability of the European policy of appeasing Russia into collapse. That notion is dangerously wrongheaded and misreads the nature of the Russian threat today--ironically, by overestimating its military dimension in the same way Greenwald has done.

But first, some context. Yes, Russia will spend $48 billion on defense next year. That makes its budget about the same size as . . . Great Britain's. In comparison, the United States will spend somewhere in the vicinity of $650 billion (depending on the size of the supplemental appropriations for the war). Note that the bulk of the Russian defense budget, like ours, goes to military personnel expenses--salary, pensions, benefits, etc. The Russian defense budget is opaque, but it is probably reasonable to say that they resemble other European countries in spending about 25 percent of their budget on "investment"--meaning procurement plus research & technology (R&T). That leaves the remainder for operations and maintenance (O&M), the money spent on things like training, repairs, supplies, spare parts, fuel, and so forth, without which all the hardware in the world is so much overpriced junk.

This means Russia will spend perhaps $20-22 billion on personnel next year (more, if they intend to improve professionalism and develop a real NCO corps); about $12 billion on investment (let's say about $10 billion on procurement); and about $9-10 billion on O&M.

That's really not that much for modernization, push come to shove and even taking into account Russia's low labor rates. By way of comparison, Poland bought some 24 F-16s a couple of years back for about $3 billion; Romania intends to buy 48 multi-role fighters at a cost of $4.5 billion. How much do you think Russia can really buy for $10 billion per year? How much new technology can it develop into workable systems on $2-4 billion per year? As for O&M, Russia maintains an extremely large force of increasingly elderly tanks, APCs, artillery, aircraft and ships. Much of its inventory is non-operational because of lack of maintenance. What they do have they run on a shoestring, because they have chronically under-invested in O&M. This means their force, what there is of it, cannot sustain combat operations or deploy substantial forces out of area for any significant time.

Much of what Russia has done with its military forces over the past few years can best be described as "stunts." Yes, they can get a few Tu-95 Bears or Tu-160 Blackjacks airworthy and send them to probe U.S. and British air defenses, but to do so means grounding most of the rest of the force, scrounging for parts, hoarding fuel (yes, the Russian military is short of fuel). Same thing with sending a battle group on a grand tour of warm water ports. Given the Russian fleet's record for maintenance and reliability, it would indeed be surprising if they make it to Venezuela without a major casualty. Ballistic missile tests? I'm underwhelmed. What's left of the Strategic Rocket Forces has no first-strike capability at all.

Operations in Georgia must have sorely strained Russia's inadequate O&M budget, to say nothing of depleting its stockpiles of fuel, spare parts and ordnance. Ongoing security operations in Chechnya also eat into the O&M budget, leaving precious little for routine training and maintenance--the inability of Russian pilots to hit the broad side of a barn in Georgia, and the loss of twelve or more combat aircraft to ill-equipped Georgian forces doesn't speak well of Russian military prowess.

For Russia to become a major regional military threat--i.e., able to take on something more capable than the picayune Georgian army--would require not a 20 percent increase in the Russian military budget, but an order of magnitude increase, sustained over a decade. It ain't gonna happen.

Under Putin, Russia is an economy with two ends and no middle. It produces high-tech military hardware for export, and it produces raw materials-but there is no real commercial or consumer manufacturing sector worth discussing. Russia has been using the cash it takes in from the extractive sector to buy off the Russian people with the veneer of prosperity. It has also begun investing in infrastructure improvements, and has been buying foreign influence with petrodollars.

Putin has deliberately starved the Russian military of funds for a decade, because in his mind the military has less utility in fostering Russian power than does Russia's control of Europe's oil and gas supplies. His focus has been on economic, rather than military power. So far, it has paid off.

That is likely to change. With the collapse of oil (now off about 50 percent from its mid-summer high), Russia is beginning to feel a cash crunch just as it really needs some liquidity. The Russian financial sector is in a shambles, foreign direct investment has dried up, and the Russian oil industry is poised to collapse on its own obsolescent facilities. If the price of oil declines to $50 per barrel (as many Russian analysts now assume), Russia's ability to meet all its financial obligations without seriously curtailing government spending is highly unlikely.

Add to that Russia's ongoing demographic and mortality crises, and you have a former great power unwilling to decline gracefully into the middle-sized power that its economy and population justify. It's still New Jersey with nuclear weapons, and will continue to be that until its decline becomes inevitable even to Russian nationalists.

In the meanwhile, Russia can cause mischief, and maybe even seriously interfere with U.S. foreign policy--but it is not now and will not reemerge as an existential threat to our country, or even to the West as a whole, because it is and will remain militarily weak.

Aside from its budget woes, the Russian military suffers from some very fundamental structural and cultural problems, that inhibit reform, not the least of which is the absence of a professional NCO corps and the poor quality of conscript training.

Lack of suitable military manpower remains a major problem for the Russian army, exacerbated by the unpopularity of conscription, which has forced a reduction in the term of service to just 18 months--barely enough to teach the basic operating principles of the equipment, and totally inadequate to instill unit cohesion and tactical finesse. As a result, Russian training is heavily biased towards rote battle drills executed with absolute rigidity. Russian tactics remain crude and rely heavily on mass and firepower--which the Russian army no longer has in the abundance its tactics presume.

Worse still, from the Russian perspective, these tactics are totally outmoded in the era of "network centric warfare"--the combination of remote sensors, high-speed data networks, and long-range precision weapons. Network centric warfare (which, ironically, the Soviet Union conceived through its groundbreaking work on "Reconnaissance-Strike Complexes) was developed by the United States from the late 1980s as a way of overcoming Soviet numerical superiority on the NATO Central Front. That the Russians continue to base their operational methods on Cold War models dovetails perfectly with U.S. capabilities developed since Operation Desert Storm. If Russia wishes to engage in conventional war with the U.S. or its allies, the end result will be a lot of smoldering Russian tanks.

On the other hand, this same approach renders the Russian military incapable of fighting modern low -intensity warfare of the kind the U.S. has faced in Iraq and Afghanistan. The approach taken in Chechnya--absolute brutality in suppressing all resistance combined with open-handed largesse in reconstruction--is not likely to work outside of Russia. There are a few Russian units, mainly Spetsnaz, Airborne and Air Assault, which are capable of more supple tactics, and may be able to wage counter-insurgency on something approaching the U.S. model, but they are too few, and Russia lacks the cultural sensitivity to make it work.

So the problems Russia's military faces are both endemic and systemic, and cannot be fixed by a relatively small infusion of cash. Modern war makes certain cultural demands on the forces that fight it, and Russia is not capable of meeting those demands. Russia's military can intimidate its weaker neighbors and steamroller small countries incapable of resistance, but not even in ten years will they be capable of fighting a major conventional war.

And that brings us back to Newsweek article's contention about European "soft power," which was not adopted after serious strategic reflection, but out of fear of military confrontation with Russia, which in turn is due to a gross overestimation of Russia's military capabilities on the one hand, and the realization that Europe is heavily dependent on Russia for its oil and natural gas supplies. Germany has been particularly culpable in this regard, being almost supine in the face of Russian economic and military aggression. Prime Minister Angela Merkel continues to block Ukrainian accession to NATO, and enters into energy agreements that make Germany ever more dependent on Russian supplies, which in turn makes Germany even less willing to challenge Russia's actions in the "near abroad." Yet every appeasement of Russia merely encourages Russia to pursue its two-track policy of reincorporation of separated territories (i.e., Ukraine, Belarus, Georgia, the Baltic States) and of controlling the European energy supply. Success in the former would greatly strengthen Russia's position regarding the latter, which in turn would give Russia the leverage it needs to sustain itself as a "great power" in the midst of its ongoing economic and demographic decline. The result would be a setback for freedom and human rights throughout Eastern Europe and Central Asia, and a weakening of America's beneficial influence in those regions.

Europe would be much more inclined to actively oppose Russian military adventurism if it had a more realistic assessment of Russian military capabilities. Ironically, the U.S. has developed just such an assessment, as reflected, however frivolously, in the Newsweek article, but it has mistakenly chosen to view this as a reason to ignore Russia rather than pressing our military advantage to demand a higher standard of international conduct from Putin, Medvedev & Company. Understandably, the U.S. has a lot on its plate right now, but there is still a lot more that can be done.

Stuart Koehl is a frequent contributor to THE WEEKLY STANDARD Online.

© Copyright 2008, News Corporation, Weekly Standard, All Rights Reserved.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use....
http://afp.google.com/article/ALeqM5h4-tWFI-anlmK7ShA_zWkvtcCUqA

Georgia-Russia talks angrily break down


3 hours ago

GENEVA (AFP) — Internationally-backed peace talks between Georgia and Russia broke down on the first day Wednesday with the rivals, who fought a war in August, blaming each other for the failure to even enter the same room.

"There were two separate meetings, the Russians and the Abkhazians (in one) and the Georgians in another," Sergei Shamba, foreign minister of the pro-Russian separatist region of Abkhazia, told journalists.

The talks would have been the first time representatives of the two sides have held direct negotiations since the five-day war after Russia thwarted a Georgian assault to retake its breakaway region of South Ossetia.

Russia has kept troops in South Ossetia and another rebel region, Abkhazia, and recognises both as independent states.

Pierre Morel, an official for the European Union, which organised the talks with the United Nations and Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), blamed "procedural difficulties" for the quick suspension of the negotiations.

Georgia said that Russia had refused to meet its delegation. "It's regrettable that the Russian Federation has put the process from the very beginning under severe constraints," Georgia's head of delegation and deputy foreign minister Giga Bokeria told journalists.

Russia would not take part in any further talks with Georgia if representatives from South Ossetia and Abkhazia were not invited, Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin said.

The Americans injected a third element to the breakdown, with its head of delegation Daniel Fried saying that it was the South Ossetians and Abkhazians who failed to exhibit a "constructive spirit" to keep talks going.

"Unfortunately... the de facto authorities of South Ossetia and Abkhazia who were present at the meeting, I'm sorry to say did not exhibit such a constructive spirit -- they chose instead to walk out of the informational session," he said.

Following the walk out, the parties demanded to be treated as full national delegations before coming back to talks, but "no one was prepared to do that," said Fried.

"This was unfortunate and so the session ended early because the South Ossetians and Abkhaz walked out," he added.

Even before the session, there was tension over the participation of the Abkhazians and the South Ossetians, with Russia insisting there could be no agreements without their presence.

The Georgians had argued that the official talks should only include representatives of Georgia, Russia, the United States, the European Union, the OSCE and the UN.

Russia has said it wants security guarantees and a ban on all weapons sales to Georgia, which in has demanded that all Russian troops leave Georgian territory, including South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Russia called on the Georgians to sign "concrete and legally binding" security pacts with the two breakaway regions.

Georgia's President Mikheil Saakashvili accused Moscow of adopting "Soviet" tactics during the talks.

"Despite the fact that Georgia had a very constructive approach and the rare opportunity for negotiations, Russia has left the negotiations. This is how the Soviet Union acted in the past," Saakashvili said in comments broadcast on Georgian Public Television.

Russian troops and tanks rolled into Georgia on August 8 to push back a Georgian offensive to retake South Ossetia.

Russia has since withdrawn from most of Georgia in line with an EU-brokered ceasefire but Tbilisi is furious at the continued presence of 7,600 Russian troops in South Ossetia and Abkhazia.

Georgia says that Russia wants to annex the territories.

After the war Russia formally recognised both rebel Georgian provinces as independent countries.

Russia has since set about establishing permanent military bases in the territories.

The Geneva talks were intended to provide a forum for the two sides to work out how to assist thousands of displaced people and begin the overall process of resolving the conflict.

Russian President Dmitry Medvedev has insisted that Moscow has fulfilled all its ceasefire obligations.

On Wednesday, however, Georgia accused Russian forces of firing grenades at a police post near Abkazia as well as entering Georgian airspace.

And the UN's highest court ordered Russia and Georgia not to harm ethnic groups in South Ossetia and Abkhazia.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use...
http://www.stratfor.com/analysis/20081014_geopolitics_russia_permanent_struggle

The Geopolitics of Russia: Permanent Struggle

October 15, 2008 | 1847 GMT
Russian monograph

Editor’s Note: This is the fourth in a series of monographs by Stratfor founder George Friedman on the geopolitics of countries that are currently critical in world affairs.

By George Friedman
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Russia’s defining characteristic is its indefensibility. Unlike the core of most states that are relatively defensible, core Russia is limited to the region of the medieval Grand Principality of Muscovy. It counts no rivers, oceans, swamps or mountains marking its borders — it relies solely on the relatively inhospitable climate and its forests for defense. Russian history is a chronicle of the agony of surviving invasion after invasion.

Traditionally these invasions have come from two directions. The first is from the steppes — wide open grasslands that connect Russia to Central Asia and beyond — the path that the Mongols used. The second is from the North European Plain, which brought to Russia everything from the Teutonic Knights to the Nazi war machine.

Russia-MonoG-Threat-800.jpg

Russia-Threat
(click image to enlarge)

To deal with these vulnerabilities, Russia expanded in three phases. In the first, Russia expanded not toward the invasion corridors to establish buffers but away from them to establish a redoubt. In the late 15th century, under Ivan III, Russia did creep westward somewhat, anchoring itself at the Pripet Marshes, which separated Russia from the Kiev region. But the bulk of Russia’s expansion during that period was north to the Arctic and northeast to the Urals. Very little of this territory can be categorized as useful — most was taiga or actual tundra and only lightly populated — but for Russia it was the only land easily up for grabs. It also marked a natural organic outgrowth of the original Muscovy — all cloaked in forest. It was as defensible a territory as Russia had access to and their only hope against the Mongols.

The Mongols were horsemen who dominated the grasslands with their fast-moving cavalry forces. Their power, although substantial, diminished when they entered the forests and the value of their horses, their force multipliers, declined. The Mongols had to fight infantry forces in the forests, where the advantage was on the defender’s side.

Russia-MonoG-Expansion-800.jpg

Russia-Expansion
(click image to enlarge)

The second phase of expansion was far more aggressive — and risky. In the mid-16th century, Under Ivan IV, Russia finally moved to seal off the Mongol invasion route. Russia pushed south and east, deep into the steppes, and did not stop until it hit the Urals in the east and the Caspian Sea and Caucasus Mountains in the south. As part of this expansion, Russia captured several strategically critical locations, including Astrakhan on the Caspian, the land of the Tatars — a longtime horse-mounted foe — and Grozny, which was soon transformed into a military outpost at the foot of the Caucasus.

Also with this expansion, Ivan IV was transformed from Grand Prince of Moscow to Tsar of All Russia, suggesting the empire to come. Russia had finally achieved a measure of conventional security. Holding the northern slopes of the Caucasus would provide a reasonable defense from Asia Minor and Persia, while the millions of square kilometers of steppes gave birth to another defensive strategy: buffers.

Russia — modern, medieval or otherwise — cannot count on natural features to protect it. The Pripet Marshes were small and could in many cases simply be avoided. There is no one who might wish to attack from the Arctic. Forests slowed the Mongol horsemen, but as Muscovy’s predecessor — Kievan Rus — aptly demonstrated, the operative word was “slowed,” not “stopped.” The Mongols conquered and destroyed Kievan Rus in the 13th century.

That leaves buffers. So long as a country controls territory separating itself from its foes — even if it is territory that is easy for a hostile military to transit — it can bleed out any invasion via attrition and attacks on supply lines. Such buffers, however, contain a poison pill. They have populations not necessarily willing to serve as buffers. Maintaining control of such buffers requires not only a sizable standing military for defense but also a huge internal security and intelligence network to enforce central control. And any institution so key to the state’s survival must be very tightly controlled as well. Establishing and maintaining buffers not only makes Russia seem aggressive to its neighbors but also forces it to conduct purges and terrors against its own institutions in order to maintain the empire.

The third expansion phase dealt with the final invasion route: from the west. In the 18th century, under Peter and Catherine the Great, Russian power pushed westward, conquering Ukraine to the southwest and pushing on to the Carpathian Mountains. It also moved the Russian border to the west, incorporating the Baltic territories and securing a Russian flank on the Baltic Sea. Muscovy and the Tsardom of Russia were now known as the Russian Empire.

Yet aside from the anchor in the Carpathians, Russia did not achieve any truly defensible borders. Expansions to the Baltic and Black Seas did end the external threat from the Cossacks and Balts of ages past, but at the price of turning those external threats into internal ones. Russia also expanded so far and fast that holding the empire together socially and militarily became a monumental and ongoing challenge (today Russia is dealing with the fact that Russians are barely a majority in their own country). All this to achieve some semblance of security by establishing buffer regions.

But that is an issue of empire management. Ultimately the multi-directional threat defined Muscovy’s geopolitical problem. There was a constant threat from the steppes, but there was also a constant threat from the west, where the North European Plain allowed for few natural defenses and larger populations could deploy substantial infantry (and could, as the Swedes did, use naval power to land forces against the Muscovites). The forests provided a degree of protection, as did the sheer size of Russia’s holdings and its climate, but in the end the Russians faced threats from at least two directions. In managing these threats by establishing buffers, they were caught in a perpetual juggling act: east vs. west, internal vs. external.

The geography of the Russian Empire bequeathed it certain characteristics. Most important, the empire was (and remains) lightly settled. Even today, vast areas of Russia are unpopulated while in the rest of the country the population is widely distributed in small towns and cities and far less concentrated in large urban areas. Russia’s European part is the most densely populated, but in its expansion Russia both resettled Russian ethnics and assimilated large minorities along the way. So while Moscow and its surroundings are certainly critical, the predominance of the old Muscovy is not decisively ironclad.

Russia-MonoG-Population-800-2.jpg

Russia-Population Density-2
(click image to enlarge)

The result is a constant, ingrained clash within the Russian Empire no matter the time frame, driven primarily by its size and the challenges of transport. The Russian empire, even excluding Siberia, is an enormous landmass located far to the north. Moscow is at the same latitude as Newfoundland while the Russian and Ukrainian breadbaskets are at the latitude of Maine, resulting in an extremely short growing season. Apart from limiting the size of the crop, the climate limits the efficiency of transport — getting the crop from farm to distant markets is a difficult matter and so is supporting large urban populations far from the farms. This is the root problem of the Russian economy. Russia can grow enough to feed itself, but it cannot efficiently transport what it grows from the farms to the cities and to the barren reaches of the empire before the food spoils. And even when it can transport it, the costs of transport make the foodstuffs unaffordable.

Population distribution also creates a political problem. One natural result of the transport problem is that the population tends to distribute itself nearer growing areas and in smaller towns so as not to tax the transport system. Yet these populations in Russia’s west and south tend to be conquered peoples. So the conquered peoples tend to distribute themselves to reflect economic rationalities, while need for food to be transported to the Russian core goes against such rationalities.

Faced with a choice of accepting urban starvation or the forcing of economic destitution upon the food-producing regions (by ordering the sale of food in urban centers at prices well below market prices), Russian leaders tend to select the latter option. Joseph Stalin certainly did in his efforts to forge and support an urban, industrialized population. Force-feeding such economic hardship to conquered minorities only doubled the need for a tightly controlled security apparatus.

The Russian geography meant that Russia either would have a centralized government — and economic system — or it would fly apart, torn by nationalist movements, peasant uprisings and urban starvation. Urbanization, much less industrialization, would have been impossible without a strong center. Indeed, the Russian Empire or Soviet Union would have been impossible. The natural tendency of the empire and Russia itself is to disintegrate. Therefore, to remain united it had to have a centralized bureaucracy responsive to autocratic rule in the capital and a vast security apparatus that compelled the country and empire to remain united. Russia’s history is one of controlling the inherently powerful centrifugal forces tearing at the country’s fabric.

Russia, then, has two core geopolitical problems. The first is holding the empire together. But the creation of that empire poses the second problem, maintaining internal security. It must hold together the empire and defend it at the same time, and the achievement of one goal tends to undermine efforts to achieve the other.
Geopolitical Imperatives

To secure the Russian core of Muscovy, Russia must:

* Expand north and east to secure a redoubt in climatically hostile territory that is protected in part by the Urals. This way, even in the worst-case scenario (i.e., Moscow falls), there is still a “Russia” from which to potentially resurge.
* Expand south to the Caucasus and southeast into the steppes in order to hamper invasions of Asian origin. As circumstances allow, push as deeply into Central Asia and Siberia as possible to deepen this bulwark.
* Expand as far west as possible. Do not stop in the southwest until the Carpathians are reached. On the North European Plain do not stop ever. Deeper penetration increases security not just in terms of buffers; the North European Plain narrows the further west one travels making its defense easier.
* Manage the empire with terror. Since the vast majority of Russian territory is not actually Russian, a very firm hand is required to prevent myriad minorities from asserting regional control or aligning with hostile forces.
* Expand to warm water ports that have open-ocean access so that the empire can begin to counter the economic problems that a purely land empire suffers.

Given the geography of the Russian heartland, we can see why the Russians would attempt to expand as they did. Vulnerable to attack on the North European Plain and from the Central Asian and European steppes simultaneously, Russia could not withstand an attack from one direction — much less two. Apart from the military problem, the ability of the state to retain control of the country under such pressure was dubious, as was the ability to feed the country under normal circumstances — much less during war. Securing the Caucasus, Central Asia and Siberia was the first — and easiest — part of dealing with this geographic imbroglio.
Related Special Topic Page

* Geopolitical Monographs by George Friedman

The western expansion was not nearly so “simple.” No matter how far west the Russians moved on the European plain, there was no point at which they could effectively anchor themselves. Ultimately, the last effective line of defense is the 400 mile gap (aka Poland) between the Baltic Sea and Carpathian Mountains. Beyond that the plains widen to such a degree that a conventional defense is impossible as there is simply too much open territory to defend. So the Soviet Union pressed on all the way to the Elbe.

At its height, the Soviet Union achieved all but its final imperative of securing ocean access. The USSR was anchored on the Carpathians, the Black Sea, the Caucasus and the Urals, all of which protected its southern and southwestern flanks. Siberia protected its eastern frontier with vast emptiness. Further to the south, Russia was anchored deeply in Central Asia. The Russians had defensible frontiers everywhere except the North European Plain, ergo the need to occupy Germany and Poland.
Strategy of the Russian Empire

The modern Russian empire faces three separate border regions: Asian Siberia, Central Asia and the Caucasus (now mostly independent states), and Western Europe.

First, Siberia. There is only one rail line connecting Siberia to the rest of the empire, and positioning a military force there is difficult if not impossible. In fact, risk in Russia’s far east is illusory. The Trans-Siberian Railroad (TSR) runs east-west, with the Baikal Amur Mainline forming a loop. The TSR is Russia’s main lifeline to Siberia and is, to some extent, vulnerable. But an attack against Siberia is difficult — there is not much to attack but the weather, while the terrain and sheer size of the region make holding it not only difficult but of questionable relevance. Besides, an attack beyond it is impossible because of the Urals.

East of Kazakhstan, the Russian frontier is mountainous to hilly, and there are almost no north-south roads running deep into Russia; those that do exist can be easily defended, and even then they dead-end in lightly populated regions. The period without mud or snow lasts less than three months out of the year. After that time, overland resupply of an army is impossible. It is impossible for an Asian power to attack Siberia. That is the prime reason the Japanese chose to attack the United States rather than the Soviet Union in 1941. The only way to attack Russia in this region is by sea, as the Japanese did in 1905. It might then be possible to achieve a lodgment in the maritime provinces (such as Primorsky Krai or Vladivostok). But exploiting the resources of deep Siberia, given the requisite infrastructure costs, is prohibitive to the point of being virtually impossible.

Russia-MonoG-Perspective-800.jpg

Russia-Perspective
(click image to enlarge)

We begin with Siberia in order to dispose of it as a major strategic concern. The defense of the Russian Empire involves a different set of issues.

Second, Central Asia. The mature Russian Empire and the Soviet Union were anchored on a series of linked mountain ranges, deserts and bodies of water in this region that gave it a superb defensive position. Beginning on the northwestern Mongolian border and moving southwest on a line through Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, the empire was guarded by a north extension of the Himalayas, the Tien Shan Mountains. Swinging west along the Afghan and Iranian borders to the Caspian Sea, the empire occupied the lowlands along a mountainous border. But the lowlands, except for a small region on the frontier with Afghanistan, were harsh desert, impassable for large military forces. A section along the Afghan border was more permeable, leading to a long-term Russian unease with the threat in Afghanistan — foreign or indigenous. The Caspian Sea protected the border with Iran, and on its western shore the Caucasus Mountains began, which the empire shared with Iran and Turkey but which were hard to pass through in either direction. The Caucasus terminated on the Black Sea, totally protecting the empire’s southern border. These regions were of far greater utility to Russia than Siberia and so may have been worth taking, but for once geography actually helped Russia instead of working against it.

Finally, there is the western frontier that ran from west of Odessa north to the Baltic. This European frontier was the vulnerable point. Geographically, the southern portion of the border varied from time to time, and where the border was drawn was critical. The Carpathians form an arc from Romania through western Ukraine into Slovakia. Russia controlled the center of the arc in Ukraine. However, its frontier did not extend as far as the Carpathians in Romania, where a plain separated Russia from the mountains. This region is called Moldova or Bessarabia, and when the region belongs to Romania, it represents a threat to Russian national security. When it is in Russian hands, it allows the Russians to anchor on the Carpathians. And when it is independent, as it is today in the form of the state of Moldova, then it can serve either as a buffer or a flash point. During the alliance with the Germans in 1939-1941, the Russians seized this region as they did again after World War II. But there is always a danger of an attack out of Romania.

This is not Russia’s greatest danger point. That occurs further north, between the northern edge of the Carpathians and the Baltic Sea. This gap, at its narrowest point, is just under 300 miles, running west of Warsaw from the city of Elblag in northern Poland to Cracow in the south. This is the narrowest point in the North European Plain and roughly the location of the Russian imperial border prior to World War I. Behind this point, the Russians controlled eastern Poland and the three Baltic countries.

The danger to Russia is that the north German plain expands like a triangle east of this point. As the triangle widens, Russian forces get stretched thinner and thinner. So a force attacking from the west through the plain faces an expanding geography that thins out Russian forces. If invaders concentrate their forces, the attackers can break through to Moscow. That is the traditional Russian fear: Lacking natural barriers, the farther east the Russians move the broader the front and the greater the advantage for the attacker. The Russians faced three attackers along this axis following the formation of empire — Napoleon, Wilhelm II and Hitler. Wilhelm was focused on France so he did not drive hard into Russia, but Napoleon and Hitler did, both almost toppling Moscow in the process.

Along the North European Plain, Russia has three strategic options:

1. Use Russia’s geographical depth and climate to suck in an enemy force and then defeat it, as it did with Napoleon and Hitler. After the fact this appears the solution, except it is always a close run and the attackers devastate the countryside. It is interesting to speculate what would have happened in 1942 if Hitler had resumed his drive on the North European Plain toward Moscow, rather than shift to a southern attack toward Stalingrad.

2. Face an attacking force with large, immobile infantry forces at the frontier and bleed them to death, as they tried to do in 1914. On the surface this appears to be an attractive choice because of Russia’s greater manpower reserves than those of its European enemies. In practice, however, it is a dangerous choice because of the volatile social conditions of the empire, where the weakening of the security apparatus could cause the collapse of the regime in a soldiers’ revolt as happened in 1917.

3. Push the Russian/Soviet border as far west as possible to create yet another buffer against attack, as the Soviets did during the Cold War. This is obviously an attractive choice, since it creates strategic depth and increases economic opportunities. But it also diffuses Russian resources by extending security states into Central Europe and massively increasing defense costs, which ultimately broke the Soviet Union in 1992.
Contemporary Russia

The greatest extension of the Russian Empire occurred under the Soviets from 1945 to 1989. Paradoxically, this expansion preceded the collapse of the Soviet Union and the contraction of Russia to its current borders. When we look at the Russian Federation today, it is important to understand that it has essentially retreated to the borders the Russian Empire had in the 17th century. It holds old Muscovy plus the Tatar lands to the southeast as well as Siberia. It has lost its western buffers in Ukraine and the Baltics and its strong foothold in the Caucasus and in Central Asia.

To understand this spectacular expansion and contraction, we need to focus on Soviet strategy. The Soviet Union was a landlocked entity dominating the Eurasian heartland but without free access to the sea. Neither the Baltic nor Black seas allow Russia free oceangoing transport because they are blocked by the Skagerrak and the Turkish straits, respectively. So long as Denmark and Turkey remain in NATO, Russia’s positions in St. Petersburg, Kaliningrad, Sevastopol and Novorossiysk are militarily dubious.

There were many causes of the Soviet collapse. Some were:

* Overextending forces into Central Europe, which taxed the ability of the Soviet Union to control the region while economically exploiting it. It became a net loss. This overextension created costly logistical problems on top of the cost of the military establishment. Extension of the traditional Russian administrative structure both diffused Russia’s own administrative structure and turned a profitable empire into a massive economic burden.
* Creating an apparent threat to the rest of Europe that compelled the United States to deploy major forces and arm Germany. This in turn forced the Russians into a massive military buildup that undermined its economy, which was less productive than the American economy because of its inherent agricultural problem and because the cost of internal transport combined with the lack of ocean access made Soviet (and Russian) maritime trade impossible. Since maritime trade both is cheaper than land trade and allows access to global markets, the Soviet Union always operated at an extreme economic disadvantage to its Western and Asian competitors.
* Entering an arms race with much richer countries it could compete against only by diverting resources from the civilian economy — material and intellectual. The best minds went into the military-industrial complex, causing the administrative and economic structure of Russia to crumble.

In 1989 the Soviet Union lost control of Eastern Europe and in 1992 the Soviet Union itself collapsed. Russia then retreated essentially to its 17th century borders — except that it retained control of Siberia, which is either geopolitically irrelevant or a liability. Russia has lost all of Central Asia, and its position in the Caucasus has become tenuous. Had Russia lost Chechnya, its eastern flank would have been driven out of the Caucasus completely, leaving it without a geopolitical anchor.

Russia-MonoG-Warsaw-Pact-800.jpg

Russia-Warsaw Pact
(click image to enlarge)

The gap between Kazakhstan in the east and Ukraine in the west, like the narrowest point in the North European Plain, is only 300 miles wide. It also contains Russia’s industrial heartland. Russia has lost Ukraine, of course, and Moldova. But Russia’s most grievous geopolitical contraction has been on the North European Plain, where it has retreated from the Elbe in Germany to a point less than 100 miles from St. Petersburg. The distance from the border of an independent Belarus to Moscow is about 250 miles.

To understand the Russian situation, it is essential to understand that Russia has in many ways returned to the strategic position of late Muscovy. Its flank to the southeast is relatively secure, since China shows no inclination for adventures into the steppes, and no other power is in a position to challenge Russia from that direction. But in the west, in Ukraine and in the Caucasus, the Russian retreat has been stunning.

We need to remember why Muscovy expanded in the first place. Having dealt with the Mongols, the Russians had two strategic interests. Their most immediate was to secure their western borders by absorbing Lithuania and anchoring Russia as far west on the North European Plain as possible. Their second strategic interest was to secure Russia’s southeastern frontier against potential threats from the steppes by absorbing Central Asia as well as Ukraine. Without that, Muscovy could not withstand a thrust from either direction, let alone from both directions at once.

It can be said that no one intends to invade Russia. From the Russian point of view, history is filled with dramatic changes of intention, particularly in the West. The unthinkable occurs to Russia once or twice a century. In its current configuration, Russia cannot hope to survive whatever surprises are coming in the 21st century. Muscovy was offensive because it did not have a good defensive option. The same is true of Russia. Given the fact that a Western alliance, NATO, is speaking seriously of establishing a dominant presence in Ukraine and in the Caucasus — and has already established a presence in the Baltics, forcing Russia far back into the widening triangle, with its southern flank potentially exposed to Ukraine as a NATO member — the Russians must view their position as dire. As with Napoleon, Wilhelm and Hitler, the initiative is in the hands of others. For the Russians, the strategic imperative is to eliminate that initiative or, if that is impossible, anchor Russia as firmly as possible on geographical barriers, concentrating all available force on the North European Plain without overextension.

Unlike countries such as China, Iran and the United States, Russia has not achieved its strategic geopolitical imperatives. On the contrary, it has retreated from them:

* Russia does hold the northern Caucasus, but it no longer boasts a deep penetration of the mountains, including Georgia and Armenia. Without those territories Russia cannot consider this flank secure.
* Russia has lost its anchor in the mountains and deserts of Central Asia and so cannot actively block or disrupt — or even well monitor — any developments to its deep south that could threaten its security.
* Russia retains Siberia, but because of the climatic and geographic hostility of the region it is almost a wash in terms of security (it certainly is economically).
* Russia’s loss of Ukraine and Moldova allows both the intrusion of other powers and the potential rise of a Ukrainian rival on its very doorstep. Powers behind the Carpathians are especially positioned to take advantage of this political geography.
* The Baltic states have re-established their independence, and all three are east and north of the Baltic-Carpathian line (the final defensive line on the North European Plain). Their presence in a hostile alliance is unacceptable. Neither is an independent or even neutral Belarus (also on the wrong side of that line).

Broader goals, such as having a port not blocked by straits controlled by other countries, could have been pursued by the Soviets. Today such goals are far out of Russian reach. From the Russian point of view, creating a sphere of influence that would return Russia to its relatively defensible imperial boundaries is imperative.

Obviously, forces in the peripheral countries as well as great powers outside the region will resist. For them, a weak and vulnerable Russia is preferable, since a strong and secure one develops other appetites that could see Russia pushing along vectors such as through the Skagerrak toward the North Sea, through the Turkish Straits toward the Mediterranean and through La Perouse Strait toward Japan and beyond.

Russia’s essential strategic problem is this: It is geopolitically unstable. The Russian Empire and Soviet Union were never genuinely secure. One problem was the North European Plain. But another problem, very real and hard to solve, was access to the global trading system via oceans. And behind this was Russia’s essential economic weakness due to its size and lack of ability to transport agricultural produce throughout the country. No matter how much national will it has, Russia’s inherently insufficient infrastructure constantly weakens its internal cohesion.

Russia must dominate the Eurasian heartland. When it does, it must want more. The more it wants the more it must face its internal economic weakness and social instability, which cannot support its ambitions. Then the Russian Federation must contract. This cycle has nothing to do with Russian ideology or character. It has everything to do with geography, which in turn generates ideologies and shapes character. Russia is Russia and must face its permanent struggle.
 

Housecarl

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* REVIEW & OUTLOOK
* OCTOBER 18, 2008

The Axis of Moscow
It's lonely out there for Vladimir Putin.

Where would Russia be without Daniel Ortega? Even more isolated than the Kremlin now finds itself after its August adventure in Georgia.

Two months after the war in the Caucasus, Mr. Ortega's Nicaragua is the lone country to follow Moscow's recognition of the "independence" -- in effect, Russian annexation -- of Georgia's South Ossetia and Abkhazia provinces. Given Russia's serious diplomatic onslaught, that's an embarrassing outcome for Vladimir Putin.
[Review & Outlook] AP

Consider the rogue's gallery that refused to go along: Hugo Chávez's Venezuela, the Castros' Cuba, Bolivia, Iran and Syria. The club of seven authoritarian former Soviet republics known as the Collective Security Treaty Organization also demurred. Even Moscow's puppet autocrat in Belarus, Aleksander Lukashenko, deferred to his toothless parliament; in other words, nyet, for now. Russia was rebuffed by China and India at the Shanghai Cooperation Organization.

There is of course a long line of goons happy to take military, energy or economic handouts from the Kremlin, though the dramatic drop in oil prices and Russian stocks will limit its ability to buy people off. Mr. Lukashenko could well be holding out his support for cheaper natural gas. But Russia's erratic and aggressive behavior in the Caucasus has apparently given even him pause about its possible intentions against Belarus.

In addition to Mr. Ortega, Russia did manage recognition by Hamas, Hezbollah and the Moldovan regions of Gaugazia and Trans-Dniester. But that is little solace for a Kremlin whose bigger goal in the war was to declare a Monroe-ski Doctrine for its "near abroad" and lead a new anti-American block. Fyodor Lukyanov, the editor of Russia in Global Affairs, summed up the strategy: "Our long effort to become part of the West is over. The aim now is to be an independent power in a multipolar world in which Russia is a major player."

It's hard to be a major player when all you have is very minor friends.

Please add your comments to the Opinion Journal forum.
 

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Where Georgia Stands

The struggle to ensure that Russia's aggression doesn't succeed has not ended.

Sunday, October 19, 2008; B06

IT'S BEEN more than two months since a cease-fire ended fighting between Russia and Georgia and 11 days since Russian troops withdrew into two breakaway provinces that have declared themselves independent states. But the battle over whether Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and President Dmitry Medvedev will ultimately gain or lose from their aggression goes on. By now it appears fairly clear that one of the Kremlin's principal objectives -- the overthrow of Georgia's democratically elected president, Mikheil Saakashvili -- will not be realized. Nor has Georgia's previously flourishing economy been irretrievably damaged; arguably, Russia has suffered even more from the flight of foreign investors spooked by the war.

On the other hand, more than 7,000 Russian troops are entrenched in the Georgian provinces of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, including several small areas controlled by Georgia before the war. Moscow thus remains in violation of Mr. Medvedev's commitment to return to the status quo of Aug. 7, when the fighting began. Thousands of ethnic Georgians whose villages were looted and burned while under Russian occupation have been unable to return home. This week Russia torpedoed the first meeting it had agreed to for negotiating a long-term settlement by insisting that the governments of the two provinces -- which have not been recognized as independent states by any country other than Russia and Nicaragua -- be treated as equals with Georgia and the United States.

Despite this, some European governments are anxious to declare the Georgian conflict over and return to normal relations with Moscow. In the time remaining to it, the Bush administration should do its best to prevent this from happening, unless Mr. Putin is willing to retreat further. The United States and Europe should work together to persuade Moscow to observe international law rather than press ahead with independence claims for South Ossetia and Abkhazia. Russian companies that invest in the two provinces without obtaining the approval of the Georgian government can be sued, sanctioned and eventually prohibited from doing business in the West. The territories should be placed under an international trusteeship while their future is negotiated, as was done for the former Serbian province of Kosovo.

It's vital that the Georgian war becomes a net loss for Moscow, because that is the best way to ensure that the same sort of aggression is not directed at Ukraine or other independent states on Russia's borders. At the same time, it should lead to a consolidation of Georgian democracy, along with a clear acceptance by its government that the embrace of human rights -- and not military force -- is the best defense of a small country. Mr. Saakashvili has promised much-needed steps to ensure freer media, more independent courts and robust political competition in his country; the Bush administration should insist that he follow through.
 

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U.S. Says Russia Hasn't Met Cease-Fire Obligations in Georgia

By Helena Bedwell

Oct. 20 (Bloomberg) -- U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried said Russia has failed to meet its obligations under a European Union-brokered cease-fire that ended a five-day war with Georgia in August.

``The cease-fire accord negotiated by Sarkozy requires Russian armed forces to withdraw to their positions before the outbreak of hostilities,'' Fried told reporters today in the Georgian capital Tbilisi. ``The Russians haven't done so. They're in compliance with some of it,'' he said, referring to the cease-fire.

President Nicolas Sarkozy of France, which holds the rotating EU presidency, brokered the cease-fire that ended Russia's five-day war with Georgia over the separatist region of South Ossetia. Russia later recognized the independence of South Ossetia and another breakaway region, Abkhazia, from Georgia, a move condemned by the U.S. and many European countries.

Fried echoed comments made by French Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner during a trip to Georgia on Oct. 10. President Dmitry Medvedev said the same day that Russia had done everything required of it. ``We have met all the obligations we accepted in the first document, the Medvedev-Sarkozy plan, and the second document, which was agreed on not long ago in Moscow,'' he said.

The original cease-fire required Russian forces to return to their pre-conflict positions. Russia sent about 10,000 soldiers into Georgia during the fighting, according to state- run news service RIA Novosti.

Disputed Town

Under a subsequent deal reached by Medvedev and Sarkozy, Russia agreed to withdraw its forces from ``Georgian territory outside South Ossetia and Abkhazia,'' Sarkozy said on Sept. 8. He said the agreement was ``the maximum we could get.''

Fried visited the central Georgian city of Gori, though he wasn't allowed to enter the disputed town of Akhalgori, located inside South Ossetia. The situation in this area is ``far from satisfactory,'' he said. Georgia insists that Russian troops must relinquish control of the town.

``I have to be honest, this is not a situation that will be resolved easily or very soon,'' Fried said after talks with Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili and opposition leaders. He said the U.S. hopes Russia will respond ``constructively'' to efforts by the U.S. and EU to find a solution.

Medvedev said on Sept. 8 that his decision to recognize South Ossetia and Abkhazia was ``final'' and ``irrevocable.'' Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov said the following day that Russia had agreed to deploy about 3,800 soldiers in each region.

A first round of talks on security and refugees in Georgia was suspended in Geneva on Oct. 15. EU special envoy Pierre Morel said talks will resume on Nov. 18.

To contact the reporter on this story: Helena Bedwell in Tbilisi at hbedwell@bloomberg.net
Last Updated: October 20, 2008 11:01 EDT
 

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Russian actions in Georgia 'irresponsible': US envoy

4 hours ago

TBILISI (AFP) — Russia is acting irresponsibly by maintaining troops in parts of Georgia's separatist regions of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, a senior US official said Monday in Tbilisi.

US Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried told journalists in the Georgian capital that Moscow was not complying with an agreement to withdraw its forces to positions held before August's Russia-Georgia war.

"The ceasefire plan requires that all Russian forces have to return to their positions before the outbreak of hostilities. Russia has not yet complied with this commitment," he said. "For Russia to have forces there is irresponsible."

Russian forces remain in at least two areas that were under Georgian control before the conflict: the Akhalgori district of South Ossetia and the Kodori Gorge in Abkhazia.

But they have withdrawn from "buffer zones" adjacent to the two breakaway regions as required under the European Union-brokered ceasefire agreement, a development that Fried welcomed.

In a rare US criticism of its ally Georgia, Fried also urged Tbilisi to strengthen its democracy.

"Georgia has a lot of things to do to strengthen its democracy: an independent media, an independent judiciary," he said.

Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili has been praised as a reformer since coming to power in 2004, but the opposition accuses him of suppressing critical media outlets and judges.
 

SassyinAZ

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One more:

http://uk.reuters.com/article/homepageCrisis/idUKLK496667._CH_.2420

Georgia rebels accuse EU of ignoring violenceMon Oct 20, 2008 4:37pm BST

By Dmitry Solovyov

MOSCOW, Oct 20 (Reuters) - Georgian separatist region South Ossetia accused Tbilisi on Monday of breaching a ceasefire deal by firing at its villages from an EU-monitored area, and said its forces would not hesitate to retaliate.

French President Nicolas Sarkozy brokered the deal to end August's brief war between Russia and Georgia, but analysts say tension on the de facto border between South Ossetia and undisputed Georgian territory could spark new fighting.


Russian troops this month pulled out of areas adjacent to South Ossetia and Georgian separatist region Abkhazia in line with the ceasefire deal and allowed some 300 unarmed European Union observers and support staff into the area.

A South Ossetian official said EU monitors remained silent while Georgian forces fired at Ossetian villages.

"For a week now, Georgia has been shooting daily at the border districts of Znaur and Tskhinvali," Irina Gagloyeva, head of the separatist Press and Information Committee, told Reuters by telephone from South Ossetia's capital Tskhinvali.

"Georgia is violating the (French-brokered) agreement ... it has resumed its aggressive actions." She said separatist Interior Minister Mikhail Mindzayev had ordered "all security bodies to give an adequate response to all Georgian provocations".

"Accordingly, all Georgian firing positions will be destroyed," Gagloyeva said. "By the way, all this is happening in the presence of international monitors who -- quite surprisingly to us -- turn out to be blind, mute and deaf."

"We now have the impression the international community does not want to see stability here," she added.



REFUGEE RETURN Russia launched a massive counter-strike after Georgian forces tried to retake South Ossetia, a region that rejected Tbilisi's rule in a separatist war in the early 1990s.

Moscow says it acted to prevent greater bloodshed, but Western states condemned its response as disproportionate.

Russia has since recognised South Ossetia and Abkhazia, both pro-Moscow, as independent states.

Georgia, a close U.S. ally, accused the separatists of fanning tensions along the de facto frontier.

"This escalation plays right into the hands of those who do not want EU monitors to implement their mandate of monitoring in Abkhazia and South Ossetia," Georgian National Security Council Secretary Kakha Lomaia told Reuters by telephone from Brussels. He said it would harm efforts to see refugees return. "This only further whips up tension."

In Tbilisi, visiting U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried expressed concern at the security situation. "The situation is far from satisfactory," he told a news conference. "There are problems of basic security."

International negotiations in Geneva last week to establish a lasting security mechanism for Georgia collapsed after Moscow and Tbilisi could not agree on how the separatists should be represented at the talks.

"Russia will discuss this problem only if Abkhazian and South Ossetian representatives take part," said Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Grigory Karasin, Moscow's chief negotiator at the Geneva talks.

"Tbilisi wants to present it in such a way as if the August 7-8 aggression never happened," he said in an interview with Russia's Ogonyok weekly magazine published on Monday.

"They are proposing we start with a 'clean page', but unfortunately this page is already stained with blood and marked with human suffering." (Additional reporting by Margarita Antidze and Matt Robinson in Tbilisi) (Reporting by Dmitry Solovyov; Editing by Myra MacDonald)
 

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Challenging U.S. Global Dominance

Herbert Bix | October 20, 2008

Editor: Emily Schwartz Greco

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Foreign Policy In Focus
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The five-day Russo-Georgian war in the Caucasus brought into sharp focus many conflicts rooted in the region's history and in aggressive U.S.-NATO policies since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Notable among these were the military encirclement of Russia and attempts to control energy resources in areas long dominated by the Soviet Union. The net effect was to hasten a dangerous new era of rivalry between the world's two most powerful nuclear states, one that will be shaped hereafter by the current global recession and the changes it is bringing about in the economic practices of all states.

President Bill Clinton's resort to force in Kosovo in 1999 was crucial in precipitating this situation. At that moment, the United States moved to thrust aside international law and the primacy of the UN Security Council. Clinton justified war as a matter of establishing a more humane international order, and every civilian death that resulted from it became "unintentional collateral damage," morally justifiable because the end was noble. By substituting a quasi-legal, moral right of humanitarian intervention for the long-established principles of national sovereignty and respect for territorial integrity, U.S.-NATO aggression against Serbia prepared the ground for Bush's unilateral military interventions.

Now, bogged down in illegal, unjust wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, the U.S. government suddenly appears to have rediscovered the usefulness of norms of international law it had denied in Kosovo. But it invoked the principle of state sovereignty selectively, attacking Russia for its intervention in Georgia while simultaneously sending its own armed forces and aircraft on cross-border raids into Pakistan.

Quest for Full Dominance

The search for causes of the Georgia conflict also brought to the fore the American quest for unchallengeable global military dominance, which requires the Pentagon to plant military bases at strategic places around the world and Congress to pass ever-larger military budgets. In 2002 President George W. Bush adopted the Pentagon strategy, first formulated a decade earlier by Dick Cheney and Paul Wolfowitz, of making the United States the sole superpower, deterring foes and allies alike from even aspiring to regional dominance. When, in pursuit of this ultimate goal, the United States pushed NATO further eastward toward the borders of Russia while pouring money and armaments into Georgia and training the Georgian army, it paved the way to the August war.

Or, more precisely: the Russo-Georgian war exhibited the features of a proxy war pitting U.S.-NATO imperialism against Russian nationalism. Russian forces thwarted Georgia's armed provocations and issued a challenge to American and NATO policies in the borderlands.

Another disruptive trend highlighted by the war is the increasingly fierce competition between U.S. and Russian corporations for control of Caspian Sea and Central Asian oil and gas resources. Georgians, Ossetians, Azerbaijanis, Kazakhs, and other peoples in the eastern Caspian Sea basin are hapless pawns in this continuous struggle, affecting their territorial and ethnic conflicts in ways they cannot control. The struggle over oil and gas has led the U.S. Central Command, originally established to deal with Iran, to extend its operations from the Middle East to the oil-and-gas-rich Central Asian and Caspian Sea states of Turkmenistan, Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan, thus underlining the geopolitics that lay behind the Iraq and Afghanistan wars, and now the Russo-Georgian War.

When Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and President Dimitry Medvedev ordered Russian forces to move through South Ossetia and cross the border into Georgia, they violated the UN Charter. Their initial justification — defense of the Ossetians' right of self-determination — was as arbitrary as the one the United States and NATO put forward for U.S.-NATO attacks on Kosovo and Serbia, where (unlike in Russia's case) their own self-defense was never involved. So, in responding unilaterally to a very real threat that had actually materialized, did Russia commit an act of aggression? Neither the Security Council nor the General Assembly could make that legal determination. Even if they had, Russia wouldn't have taken seriously a U.S.-NATO charge of aggression that served only to emphasize its accusers' egregious double standards.

In the course of conducting the war, Georgian ground troops, tanks, and some South Ossetian militia deliberately targeted civilians, committed acts of ethnic cleansing, and wantonly destroyed civilian property in Tskhinvali, the South Ossetian capital, and in villages along South Ossetia's border with Georgia proper. The legal scholar Richard Falk argues that Russia too targeted "several villages in the region populated by Georgians." If so, there is little evidence that Russia carried out anything like ethnic cleansing. If Russians committed war crimes, they pale in comparison to the crimes the United States and its allies perpetrate every day on Iraqi and Afghan civilians. But, as Falk says, all such charges should be investigated regardless of their magnitude.

Last, the crisis in the Caucasus highlighted the narrowly nationalist mindset of Western policymakers and many of their publics. Secessionist movements exist in many of the multiethnic satellite states of the former Soviet Union, where Russians are in the minority. American and NATO policymakers and neoconservatives have been only too eager to exploit them. But once Russian tanks and ground forces moved into Georgia, abruptly halted U.S.-NATO encirclement, and exposed the limits of American military power, the Western mass media immediately poured fiery scorn on "brutal Russia," while ignoring, A, Georgia's role in starting the conflict, and B, U.S. and Israeli military support for Georgia. Saakashvili made it easier for them to cover the war by hiring Aspect Consulting, a European PR firm that sent in a top executive to disseminate daily, sometimes hourly, falsehoods about rampaging Russians attacking Georgian civilians.

American journalists fostered Russophobic sentiment by disseminating completely one-sided war news, demonizing Russia as the evil aggressor, and championing "democratic," peace-loving Georgia. The American business magazine Fortune decried the bear's "brutishness" and its threat to an interdependent world; Forbes labeled Russia "a gangster state" ruled by a "kleptocracy." TV newscasters likened the Russian Federation to Nazi Germany at the time of the 1938 Munich crisis. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice even asserted an American moral right to lecture Russia on how a "civilized country" should behave in the 21st century. All of which led Russia's former President Vladimir Putin to comment sarcastically, "I was surprised by the power of the Western propaganda machine...I congratulate all who were involved in it. This was a wonderful job. But the result was bad and will always be bad because this was a dishonest and immoral work."

The War

Virtually everything about the Russo-Georgian war is contested, especially the question of who started it. But an abundance of published evidence contradicts Georgian propaganda and indicates that Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili provoked the war with encouragement and material support from the Bush administration. Years earlier, Saakashvili's regime had drawn up plans for invading South Ossetia, which had been seeking independence from Georgia ever since 1920. He was emboldened to implement those plans (in the midst of the Beijing Summer Olympics) because he expected aid from American and NATO allies, whose Afghanistan and Iraq wars he was supporting with 2,000 Georgian troops.

Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe military observers stationed in landlocked South Ossetia reported that "shortly before midnight on August 7," Georgian forces fired the first shots. Before that time Russian jets had occasionally entered Georgian airspace. There had been minor skirmishes between South Ossetians and Georgians, and Georgian spy drones had flown over Abkhazia, which has important ports on the Black Sea. These actions didn't start the war. What did was the late-night bombardment and ground offensive, ordered by Saakashvili, in which U.S. and (to a lesser extent) Israeli-trained Georgian army units used rockets, heavy artillery, and Israeli-supplied cluster bombs to attack Tskhinvali and kill Russian soldiers.

It's hard to gauge the resulting scale of death and physical destruction from the Georgian army's bombardment and land assault, which targeted not only Russians and Ossetians but also fellow Georgians living in South Ossetia. Russian officials initially claimed that the Georgian attack killed an estimated 2,000 South Ossetians who were Russian citizens. Later underestimates in the Financial Times suggested the assault killed "at least 133 civilians" and 59 Russian peacekeeping forces. The same article estimated 146 Georgian soldiers and 69 civilians were killed in the subsequent Russian mass invasion and bombardment. Russia lost four planes and an unknown number of airmen in that attack. Some 30,000 South Ossetians who fled into North Ossetia, plus the Georgians living in Abkahzia and South Ossetia who were driven from their homes, must also be counted among the victims of the war.

On October 9, at the World Policy Conference in Evian, France, Medvedev announced that Russia had vacated the buffer zones in Georgia a day in advance of the deadline specified in the armistice agreement. For this he was commended by Sarkozy who, for the first time, publicly censured Georgia for its "aggression." But tensions between Europe and Russia are certain to continue as long as the United States persists in using Georgia and Ukraine to advance its national policies, while tensions between Georgian forces, Ossetian soldiers, and Russian peacekeepers also remain undiminished.

A new chapter in the conflict between NATO and Russia, however, has definitely opened, signaled by Mevedev's speech to Europe's leaders. He reiterated that Russia was "absolutely not interested in confrontation" and called on them to forge "a new global security framework that would challenge the United States' 'determination to enforce its global dominance.'"

Meanwhile, the Russian people have lost their remaining illusions about "the West," and Russia's leaders must now worry about zones of ethnic conflict spreading from the North Caucasus through the Black Sea region to Central Asia and beyond, returning to the limelight other potential flashpoints like Afghanistan's Nagorno-Karabakh and Yakutia in the Far East.

Behind the War

Russia's conflicts with the non-Russian peoples of the Caucasus go back centuries, but the developments that led directly to the Russo-Georgian war start with the breakup of the Soviet Union. The Soviet collapse ignited euphoria among American and European elites. Many felt they would now be able to redesign Europe without having to take into account the preferences of the Russian giant on their doorstep. While admitting Russia to full membership in the IMF and the World Bank, and making hard currency loans to it, they quickly began to chart a new offensive mission for NATO.

Russia plunged into a protracted, multi-sided decline. It abandoned its dominant position on both the Baltic and Black Seas coasts. Azerbaijan, Armenia, and the five ex-Soviet republics of Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan emerged as independent states, eager to attract Western investment, and some even receptive to hosting American military bases. Ukraine, which owns the Crimea where Russia bases its Black Sea fleet, proclaimed its independence in 1991 and soon thereafter expressed a desire to join NATO. Poland joined both NATO and the EU in 1996. Once Eastern Europe became wide open to Western economic intervention, Russia could do little to prevent the region's elites from gravitating to full incorporation in the U.S. empire.

Economically, Russia was sorely beset. Under Boris Yeltsin it had chosen to transit rapidly from over-relying on central planning to embracing capitalist markets. Its huge economy contracted. Its armed forces and navy decayed. Social pathologies of every kind deepened. Many Russians experienced acute economic hardship while a handful seized opportunities to purchase state-owned enterprises, enrich themselves overnight, and enter the class of Russia's new elites.

This era of rapid economic redistribution, national humiliation, and social disintegration lasted for about eight years. By 1999 expectations began to rise, driven by rapid economic growth. Russia soon paid off its debts. It didn't, however, recover from its enormous demographic decline. No longer a military superpower, its leaders saw themselves as a nation-state faced with special security concerns because it spanned Eurasia from the Baltic Sea to the Pacific coast, shared borders with 14 other states, and had nuclear weapons capability. Over the next few years Russia's self-confidence grew and its booming market economy allowed it to reappear on the world stage as a major energy exporter to Europe.

Popular protests in Georgia led to the toppling of its government in 2004. Dubbed the "Rose Revolution," this political change was funded partly by the State Department, the National Endowment for Democracy (a semi-official nongovernmental organization and Cold War relic from the Reagan era), and the billionaire investor George Soros. Overnight American propaganda turned the autocratic state of Georgia into a "beacon of liberty," a "democracy" with a "free-market economy," deserving to be supported for NATO membership despite its ongoing ethnic conflicts with Abkhazia and South Ossetia. Americans, through their "democracy-promoting" organizations, played a similar role in funding the peaceful "Orange Revolution" in Ukraine. First, they helped the anti-Russian Viktor Yushchenko rise to power in a politically divided country, less than half of which leaned toward the West; then, they supported Ukraine's right to apply for NATO membership.

For more than a decade, Russian leaders had repeatedly objected to U.S. efforts to turn its neighboring states into U.S. clients. But recognizing their own national weakness and the growing interdependence of nations, Russian leaders knew their options were limited. They had to work with Washington and, in principle, were committed to doing so. However, as American leaders pursued their quest for global military dominance, and as they and EU leaders pushed NATO ever closer to Russia's borders, the leadership in Moscow came to believe they had made too many compromises on vital security interests to stay in Washington's good graces. Just how far could statesmanship and international law go in safeguarding Russia's borders? Or in preventing Georgia from being turned into the "Israel of the Caucasus"?

Consequences

Fallout from the war was felt first in the Caspian Sea and Black Sea regions. Azerbaijan, which since 1994 had allowed Western companies to develop its gas and oil resources, decided to lower its reliance on the trans-Caucasus oil pipeline from its port of Baku to Georgia, and make a small but permanent increase in oil shipments to Russia and Iran. "We don't want to insult anyone…but it's not good to have all your eggs in one basket, especially when the basket is very fragile," said the vice president of Azerbaijan's state oil company. Kazakhstan's reaction was to enter into talks with Moscow on "new export pipelines to Russia" now that their Georgia route had become less secure.

Georgia, which the United States valued primarily to control gas and oil pipelines to Azerbaijan and Central Asia, and which Israel supported as a market for arms sales and in hope of obtaining use of airbases from which to attack Iran, has been shorn of its small autonomous enclaves. Although its impetuous strongman, Saakashvili, has redoubled his efforts to secure membership in NATO and military-economic assistance from the West, neither the EU nor NATO is likely to admit Georgia in the near future, let alone allow Saakashvili to manipulate them. Georgia's resounding defeat has diminished the importance of its pipelines.

Russia showed the world that it would shed blood to prevent further security threats from developing on its own borders, though it would not wage war on a genocidal scale for the sake of controlling foreign oil, as the United States has done in Iraq. Russia also demonstrated that it could at any time end Georgia's role as a secure energy corridor through which gas and oil was piped, via Turkey, to the West. At the same time, Putin took pains to reiterate points he and other Russian leaders had been making to Washington for years: namely, there was no need for confrontation and certainly "no basis for a Cold War" "or "for mutual animosity." Putin insisted that "Russia has no imperialist ambitions."

Indeed, Russia's aims were very limited. For nearly two decades it had tried unsuccessfully to get the United States and EU to recognize its national security needs and build a real partnership. South Ossetia, which had long been pro-Moscow, didn't want to become part of Russia, though Abkhazia did. But Russia had no intention of annexing either region and exposing itself to the charge of territorial expansionism. Russia's answer to the Kosovo precedent was to grant formal recognition of their de facto independence and to sign friendship treaties with South Ossetia's leader, Eduard Kokoity, and Abkhazia's Sergei Bagapsh. The treaties included pledges to defend them by stationing troops in each region and building military bases. At the signing, Medvedev reiterated that "We cannot view steps to intensify relations between the [NATO] alliance and Georgia any other way than as an encouragement for new adventures."

But did the Georgian military campaign make Russia more secure from the threat of a nuclear attack? Did it shatter the curve of encirclement the United States and NATO were constructing around it? The Georgian aggressor was easily "punch[ed] in the face" (Putin's stern words). Yet when looking at U.S.-NATO policy, Russia's leaders see that they have not stopped NATO's eastward drive and the American implantation of ABM missiles in Poland. The danger remains of the United States spreading an arms race through the Caucasus and in Europe generally. NATO defense ministers, coming at this from a confrontational angle, recently reviewed plans to establish a "rapid-response" military force to fight Russia's future military actions. Medvedev's September 26 announcement that Russia would build a "guaranteed nuclear deterrent system" and a new "aerospace defense system" — and have it in place by 2020 — should be read as a response to the Georgian war and Western encirclement, even though the planning preceded the crisis. Just when Russian leaders need to invest more in modernizing infrastructure and improving the lives of the Russian people, they're forced to cope with the determined efforts of the top U.S. and EU leaders to surround them with military bases and nuclear missiles.

Russia can't ignore the threat of economic and diplomatic isolation for the South Ossetians and Abkhazians. Their inability to secure international recognition will make it harder for them to prosper, whereas Georgia is already the recipient of a large IMF loan and new promises of EU and American aid. To see Georgia made into a Western showcase state while Ossetia and Abkhazia languished would further harm Russia's image in the West.

In the process of defending its borders from a real security threat Russia, partly through its own actions, has suffered a setback in the court of world opinion. Only tiny Nicaragua joined it in formally recognizing the two breakaway republics. The major Western powers refused to accept the validity of the border changes that the war had brought about. South Ossetia and Abkhazia met the factual criteria for statehood, but not the European and American political criteria for recognition. The consensus of U.S. and NATO leaders was that they lacked real independence from Russian control and didn't respect the rights of their minorities, as if the Kosovar Albanians in Europe's new colony respected the rights of their Serb and Roma minorities. One cannot fail to see the blatant hypocrisy of this stance given U.S.-NATO practice with respect to the successor states of the former Yugoslavia.

On the other hand Russia's position, which holds that Georgia forfeited its claim to these territories by its abuse of the Ossetians and Abkhazians, is equally hypocritical in the light of Putin's brutal suppression of Chechnya's secession movement. It also looks two-faced to Serb eyes, especially because recognition of the new Caucasus states appears to violate the principle of territorial integrity, thus undermining Russia's previous moral opposition to the Kosovo precedent.

Confrontational Response

What may be one of the most dangerous outcomes of the Georgia-Russian war is the hectoring, confrontational way the Bush administration and American politicians have responded to it. While locked into a self-defeating "global war on terrorism," overstretched militarily, and weakened by the deepening global economic crisis, the United States persists in extending its sphere of influence into the Black Sea region. The Bush administration wants to hold on to Georgia as a "transportation route for energy" and a staging base from which to pursue U.S. interests in the Eurasian region. It refuses to see the Georgian war as a historically rooted territorial dispute and continues to encourage Georgia and Ukraine in their bid for eventual NATO membership.

Presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama have publicly endorsed the Bush confrontation with Russia, and neither offers any principled critique of U.S. foreign policy. In fact, they seem as willing as Bush to take virtually any action that will keep "Russia bogged down in the Caucasus if it saps Russia's capacity to play an effective role on the world stage."

The major European governments, on the other hand, pursue a slightly saner approach only because they depend on energy supplied by Russia and are less unified in their foreign and domestic policies. But they are deeply divided on how to treat Moscow, with Germany apparently eager to continue deepening amicable relations.

Ironically, Russia remains for the time being a U.S. "strategic partner." The United States needs its continued cooperation in Afghanistan, and in dealing with Iran, Iraq, and North Korea. Putin and Medvedev are not denying the U.S. military the right to ship non-military supplies though Russian territory to NATO forces in Afghanistan, though that option is available to them. But they have weakened U.S. and UN sanctions on Iran, against whom the Bush administration is waging economic and covert war. Russia also sells weapons to Iran and is completing construction of Iran's Bushehr atomic reactor complex. In July 2008, Russia strengthened oil ties with Iran with a cooperation agreement the giant state corporation Gazprom signed to develop Iran's oil and gas fields. It recently concluded similar deals with Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan.

In short, when it comes to dealing with hostile U.S.-NATO actions in Iran, Iraq, Afghanistan, and especially in its "near abroad," Russia has on its side geography as well as many diplomatic options.

America's future leaders need a new approach to Russia and to the rest of the world. As they consider how to rebuild at home and regain trust abroad, they should work with Moscow on all aspects of their relationship. The next president should strive to build a new global security system and to move in the direction of nuclear disarmament. This will require, however, the repudiation of all past U.S. national security strategies, predicated on the idea that America has a God-given duty to police the world and meddle in the affairs of other nations.

Herbert Bix, a Foreign Policy In Focus contributor, is the author of Hirohito and the Making of Modern Japan (HarperCollins), which won the Pulitzer Prize. He teaches at Binghamton University, New York, and writes on issues of war and empire.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use....
http://www.canada.com/topics/news/world/story.html?id=c895a28b-af9f-48d7-ad08-a82922578027

Permanent Russian bases in S. Ossetia, Abkhazia next year: Army

AFP
Published: Tuesday, October 21, 2008

MOSCOW - Russia will establish permanent military bases in the Georgian separatist regions of South Ossetia and Abhazia next year, the chief of the Russian general staff said Tuesday.

"I think it will take us at least a year to set up these bases so that they fully meet our aims," General Nikolai Makarov told the Interfax news agency.

He was speaking on his return from Helsinki where he had met his US counterpart Admiral Michael Mullen.

"I think their establishment will be completed in 2009," he said.

He estimated that 3,700 troops would be deployed in each of the two bases in the framework of the agreements with the two countries.

The bases "were aimed above all at defending our interests and those of these republics," Makarov said.

Russia recognized on Aug. 26 the two breakaway territories after a brief war at the beginning of the month when Georgia tried to re-establish control over South Ossetia.

In September Moscow signed cooperation agreements with the two territories allowing it to set up military bases in them.

It had previously said it would station 3,800 troops in each.

Under the cooperation and mutual assistance agreements with South Ossetia and Abkhazia Russia has undertaken to defend their borders with the rest of Georgia.


© AFP 2008
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/7682556.stm

Five policemen killed in Dagestan


_45129542_44346256.jpg


At least five Russian police officers have been killed and several others injured in a battle with rebels in Russia's southern republic of Dagestan.

One officer was killed and three injured when rebels opened fire on their car in a wooded area, a spokesman for Russia's interior ministry said.

Militants then ambushed the police search party, killing another four officers and wounding six.

Police are combing the area to find the attackers, a police source said.

The incident happened 45km (28 miles) south-west of the capital, Makhachkala.

Located on the Caspian sea bordering Chechnya, Dagestan has long been plagued by violence often linked to the Chechen rebel movement.

Russia blames Islamist militants and criminal gangs for the unrest in the region.
Story from BBC NEWS:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/europe/7682556.stm

Published: 2008/10/21 16:05:10 GMT

© BBC MMVIII
 

rmomaha

The Wise Man Prepares
Russia modernizes missiles in response to US plans

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20081022/ap_on_re_eu/eu_russia_missiles

MOSCOW – Russia's efforts to upgrade its missile arsenals will help counter the planned U.S. missile defense sites in Europe, a top general said Wednesday.

Russia's Strategic Missile Force chief, Col.-Gen. Nikolai Solovtsov, said the military will commission a new type of intercontinental ballistic missile and modify the existing missiles.

Solovtsov said that the new RS-24 missile equipped with multiple nuclear warheads will enter service next year.

"Its deployment will increase the Strategic Missile Forces' capability to penetrate missile defense systems, thus strengthening the nuclear deterrent potential of Russian strategic forces," he said in a statement carried by Russian news agencies.

Solovtsov said the military conducted two test launches of the RS-24 last year and will make another one before the year's end. Russian officials have said it would gradually replace Soviet-built ballistic missiles.

Solovtsov added that the military will also upgrade the existing types of missiles to fit them with decoys intended to counter the prospective U.S. missile shield.

Russia has denounced a U.S. plan to deploy a battery of 10 missile interceptors in Poland and a related missile defense radar in the Czech Republic, saying it threatened Russian security. It has dismissed the U.S. claim that the sites were intended to counter a prospective missile threat from Iran and was not aimed against Russia.

Russian officials have threatened to point nuclear missiles at the countries that will allow U.S. missile defense sites on their territory.

"We are fully confident that the Strategic Missile Forces will be capable of providing a guaranteed nuclear deterrent in the long time to come," Solovtsov said.

He said the military will maintain the Soviet-built missiles, including those that were manufactured in Ukraine. "We have agreements with Ukraine that would allow us to maintain their capability," Solovtsov said.

Russia's Strategic Missile Forces said it successfully test-fired an intercontinental ballistic missile Wednesday as part of regular efforts to check the readiness of Soviet-built missiles.

Russia's Strategic Missile Forces spokesman Alexander Vovk said the RS-18 missile was launched from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. He said in a statement that the launch was intended to confirm the missile's reliability as part of efforts to extend the lifetime of this type of missile.

Russia's strategic forces have conducted regular test launches of Soviet-built ballistic missiles to check their performance. The military has repeatedly extended the lifetime of Soviet-built weapons as the government lacks the funds to replace them quickly with new weapons.
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use....
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aPgU6ambCy9U&refer=home

Georgia Says Russia Has Massed 7,000 Troops in South Ossetia

By Helena Bedwell

Oct. 23 (Bloomberg) -- Russia has deployed as many as 7,000 soldiers in the separatist region of South Ossetia, leading Georgia to suspect ``further provocations'' following a five-day war in August, a Georgian Interior Ministry spokesman said.

Shota Utiashvili said Georgia has been monitoring ``suspicious movements'' by Russia's military in South Ossetia, the object of Georgia's war with Russia. ``Up to 2,000 soldiers have entered the region which, added to troops already in the area, make at least 7,000,'' he said by telephone today in the capital Tbilisi.

The South Ossetian government denied Georgia's claim about a Russian troop buildup. ``What Mikheil Saakashvili's government says about us and our Russian allies is nonsense,'' spokeswoman Irina Gagloyeva said by telephone from the regional capital Tskhinvali. ``Some troops are here, but we feel safe with them around since we face continual provocations from the Georgian side.''

Russia recognized the independence of South Ossetia and another breakaway region, Abkhazia, from Georgia on Aug. 26. Only Nicaragua has followed suit. Russian President Dmitry Medvedev said on Sept. 8 that his decision to recognize the regions was ``final'' and ``irrevocable.'' Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov said the following day that Russia had agreed to deploy about 3,800 soldiers in each region.

A European Union-brokered cease-fire agreement that ended the fighting in Georgia requires Russia to remove its forces to their pre-conflict positions. Russia sent about 10,000 soldiers into Georgia during the fighting, according to state-run news service RIA Novosti.

Under a subsequent deal reached by Medvedev and his counterpart Nicolas Sarkozy of France, whose country holds the rotating EU presidency, Russia agreed to withdraw its forces from ``Georgian territory outside South Ossetia and Abkhazia,'' Sarkozy said on Sept. 8. He said the agreement was ``the maximum we could get.''

U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried said on Oct. 20 that Russia had failed to meet its obligations under the cease-fire.

To contact the reporter on this story: Helena Bedwell in Tbilisi hbedwell@bloomberg.net

Last Updated: October 23, 2008 06:24 EDT
 

Housecarl

On TB every waking moment
Posted for fair use.....
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hMwNwByhP9L89m6jkmQOXgM6etqQD940655G1

Russia criticizes EU monitors in Georgia
37 minutes ago

MOSCOW (AP) — Russia's foreign minister says Moscow is concerned about European Union monitors turning a blind eye to Georgian troops movements.

Sergey Lavrov says Georgian troops are in areas near the breakaway provinces of South Ossetia and Abkhazia in violation of a cease-fire that ended Russia's war with Georgian in August.

He criticized the EU monitors Thursday for failing to pay attention to the Georgian troops movements and warned that the Georgian actions could lead to new clashes.

Georgia's Interior Ministry spokesman Shota Utiashvili has dismissed Lavrov's claims and says Georgia has no military forces in the area. He says Georgian police are deployed in the area and are free to move wherever is necessary.
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
Thanks Housecarl, what a powder keg!!!

http://www.nation.co.ke/News/-/1056/483372/-/view/printVersion/-/phe8rq/-/index.html

Russia seeks go-ahead with attack

The Russian destroyer Neustrashimy enroute to Somalia crosses the Suez Canal waterway at the south gate, about 100 km southeast of Cairo on Tuesday. The destroyer passed through the Suez Canal on Tuesday on its way to tackle piracy in the waters of Somalia, sources at the Suez Canal Authority said.

By DOMINIC WABALA and AGENCIES Posted Thursday, October 23 2008 at 21:11

Russia has asked Somalia’s Transitional Federal Government for permission to use force in its territorial waters to tackle piracy.

If granted, then the Russian warship, Neustrashimy, which is scheduled to arrive off the Somalia coast any time now, will launch a strike to repossess the Ukrainian ship, mv Faina, which was hijacked 29 days ago.


“To ensure freedom of actions to fight piracy directly in Somalia’s territorial waters, the Foreign Ministry of Russia has requested the agreement of the Interim Federal Government of the Somali Republic to grant the Russian Federation ‘cooperating state’ status,” the ministry said in a statement.

Improve maritime

The statement further said that Russia, in cooperation with other states, intends to undertake all measures sanctioned by the United Nations Security Council to improve maritime situation in the Gulf of Aden region.

The Russian warship was dispatched to the Gulf of Aden after the Ukrainian ship carrying weapons was hijacked last month.

Neustrashimy sailed through the Suez Canal on Monday on its way to the pirate-infested waters of Hobyo, according to Reuters news agency.

It joined six American warships and a similar number of Nato frigates already there, and will be joined later this year by a European Union fleet.


The Russian warship arrives as the Nato task force commander, US admiral Mark Fitzgerald, said it would be difficult to tackle the hijacking because pirates have to attack before it is confirmed that they are bandits.

Pirates have hijacked more than 30 ships this year and received ransoms totalling between 18 million and 30 million dollars, according to British think-tank- Chatam House.

Mr Fitzgerald said that while he was aware of where the pirates were operating, there was little he could do militarily to stop them.

Guidelines on how to take them on were yet to be issued by the North Atlantic council, which was working on the rules of engagement, he told reporters on Monday during a briefing on US naval operations in Europe and Africa.

Six Nato members have contributed warships to participate in the anti-piracy operations in what has now become the most dangerous waters in the world.

Security experts say there is a window of only about 15 minutes for a navy ship to respond to a distress call and get to another ship that is being hijacked. Once pirates are on board, there’s little, legally, that can be done.

Taken hostage

“You’ve got a very short window, a short time span, from the point where they decide to board a ship and (actually) board it. If you’re not right there, there’s not much you can do, and once the ship is taken hostage, then...”

A senior British naval commander admitted last week that it was essentially a legal minefield trying to take on the pirates, and urged commercial ships operating in the region to hire their own private security companies to deal with the threat.

Mr Fitzgerald said his task force would focus on escorting World Food Programme ships trying to deliver aid to Somalia. Meanwhile, the pirates are still holding the crew aboard the mv Faina.
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
UPDATE 1-Russia says swing oil producer plan is long-term

Thu Oct 23, 2008 10:07am EDT
(Adds more quotes, China talks, background)

By Vladimir Soldatkin

MOSCOW, Oct 23 (Reuters) - Russia should play a bigger role in influencing global oil prices but it will take some time before the country can become a swing producer, Russian Energy Minister Sergei Shmatko said on Thursday.

Shmatko was speaking a day after OPEC called on Russia and other non-member states to join the group in cutting production to stop a steep fall in oil prices.

"We believe global oil market instability has created a threat to the investment plans of our companies. This is why Russia should take a more active position on the market from the point of view of price formation," Shmatko told reporters.

"But our approach differs from OPEC. We have different technologies. We are working on technology to create an oil reserve so we can quickly raise and cut production. But this is a mid-term, long-term forecast," he said.

The idea of an oil reserve was first made known by Deputy Prime Minister Igor Sechin on Wednesday, who said it would allow Russia "to work more efficiently in the oil market."

Shmatko did not say how big the reserve could be.

"We are studying international experience and oil storage possibilities. In the United States for example it exceeds 100 million tonnes," he said.

Russia, the biggest non-OPEC oil producer and the world's second-largest oil exporter after Saudi Arabia, has said it enjoyed constructive dialogue with OPEC but would rather keep its policies independent.

On Wednesday OPEC Secretary General Abdullah al-Badri met with Russian president Dmitry Medvedev in Moscow for the first ever meeting between OPEC and the head of the Russian state. Both sides said they exchanged information.

Oil prices have more than halved from record July levels to under $70 per barrel now, and OPEC is widely expected to agree to cut production at its emergency meeting in Vienna on Friday.

CHINA CONTRACT

Shmatko, who was speaking after his meeting with the head of China's National Energy Administration, Zhang Guobao, said Russian state-controlled oil company Rosneft (ROSN.MM: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) was likely in a month or in six weeks' time to sign a new long-term oil supply agreement with China's CNPC.

"It is a contract for at least 15 years," Shmatko said.

He declined to say what price is being discussed, saying only that Russia "agreed with the price formula."

Rosneft said last year that it was not going to extend its current oil supply contract with CNPC, valid until 2010, as the discount price written into the agreement no longer suited Russia.

The agreement on delivery of 48.4 million tonnes of oil to China was used as collateral under the $6 billion loan facility which Rosneft used to finance the purchase of a major production unit, formerly belonged to bankrupt former rival Yukos. (Writing by Dmitry Zhdannikov and Tanya Mosolova; editing by James Jukwey)
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
http://www.news.com.au/heraldsun/story/0,21985,24544708-5005961,00.html

Russia denies cluster bombs death

Article from: Agence France-PresseFont size: Decrease Increase Email article: Email Print article: Print From correspondents in Moscow

October 24, 2008 07:03am

RUSSIA today disputed a Dutch government report that its cluster bombs killed a journalist in Georgia during August's conflict, Russia's Foreign Ministry said.

"Documents and photographs from site of S. Storimans' (the journalist's) death presented by the Dutch are not sufficient proof that he died as a result of fire by the Russian side," the ministry said.

The ministry complained that Russia's arguments "were not heard" in the Dutch investigation and hinted that Dutch cameraman Stan Storimans may have been killed by Georgian forces.

"Incidentally, cluster bombs are in the arsenal of the Georgian side," they said.


On Wednesday, the Dutch Foreign Ministry said Storimans' death in the Georgian city of Gori on August 12 had been caused by a Russian cluster bomb attack.

Storimans was one of several journalists killed in the conflict, which began when Georgian forces attempted to retake the rebel South Ossetia region and Russia responded by pouring troops and tanks into its southern neighbour
 

SassyinAZ

Inactive
Posted for fair use.....
http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5hMwNwByhP9L89m6jkmQOXgM6etqQD940655G1

Russia criticizes EU monitors in Georgia
37 minutes ago

MOSCOW (AP) — Russia's foreign minister says Moscow is concerned about European Union monitors turning a blind eye to Georgian troops movements.

Sergey Lavrov says Georgian troops are in areas near the breakaway provinces of South Ossetia and Abkhazia in violation of a cease-fire that ended Russia's war with Georgian in August.

He criticized the EU monitors Thursday for failing to pay attention to the Georgian troops movements and warned that the Georgian actions could lead to new clashes.

Georgia's Interior Ministry spokesman Shota Utiashvili has dismissed Lavrov's claims and says Georgia has no military forces in the area. He says Georgian police are deployed in the area and are free to move wherever is necessary.

Related:

http://news.xinhuanet.com/english/2008-10/23/content_10241504.htm

Russia warns of new clashes in Caucasus if EU observers fail to fulfill obligation

www.chinaview.cn 2008-10-23 22:38:55 Print

MOSCOW, Oct. 23 (Xinhua) -- Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov warned Thursday new clashes may break out in the Caucasus region if the European Union (EU) observers fail to function as security guarantors.

"Let's keep in mind that the EU acts as the guarantor of the non-use of force against South Ossetia and Abkhazia. We are worried that EU observers have so far been paying little attention to such matters. This is a dangerous play with fire," Lavrov told a briefing in Moscow .

"If a clear demilitarization regime under the control of EU representatives with the participation of OSCE and UN observers is not established, activities that could result in dangerous clashes could evolve in these zones," he was quoted as saying by Interfax news agency.

The Russian top diplomat accused Georgia of not fulfilling its obligations to return troops to their permanent deployment positions, saying it sent special troops and other military units to areas adjacent to South Ossetia and Abkhazia from time to time.

Lavrov also dismissed claims by the Georgian Foreign Ministry that the number of Russian forces stationed in South Ossetia had increased from 2,000 to 7,000.


Russia had deployed about 3,700 troops in both South Ossetia and Abkhazia under friendship and cooperation agreements with the two republics, he said.

Russia sent in troops in August after Georgia launched a sudden attack to retake its breakaway region of South Ossetia. Russia recognized the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia, another breakaway Georgian republic, two weeks after the brief war.

Under a French-brokered ceasefire pact, Russia pulled out its troops from undisputed parts of Georgia by Oct. 10. An observer mission from the EU officially started to work in Georgia on Oct. 1 to monitor the implementation of ceasefire deals in the Caucasus conflict zone.
 

Jeffrey Thomason

Veteran Member
Russia tries to play down the chill it is catching from the world's icy economic wind

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/...tching-from-the-worlds-icy-economic-wind.html

Meanwhile, Dmitry Medvedev, the president, has boasted that Moscow will use the crisis to buy up stock in the United States and Europe while reassuring Russians that they have nothing to fear. "Money today is not a problem at all," he said recently. "Just click your fingers and there you are: two billion, three billion."

"The global recession could have catastrophic consequences for Russia politically and socially," warns Leonid Radzikhovsky, who predicts that Mr Putin's popularity could plummet. "No stabilisation fund will be able to stop the social and political upheaval that lies ahead."

So how genuinely chastened is Russia? Real concessions, such as the release of oligarch Mikhail Khodorkovsky or a full withdrawal from Georgia are unlikely. The rescue package is likely to be exploited to bail out loyalist oligarchs at the expense of troublesome ones, bringing the financial elite more firmly under the Kremlin's thumb.

It is even possible that the blame for the financial crisis could be pinned on Mr Medvedev, allowing Mr Putin to return as president.


At the same time, the Kremlin's hardliners are unlikely to sit back for long and many are itching to resume Russia's hawkish foreign policy, particularly towards Georgia. Few of them seem to understand the crisis or care much about its consequences - and besides playing the militaristic card is often the best way to distract people from their domestic miseries.

"For the West the crisis is a shock, for Russia it's just a needle prick," claims Sergei Markov, a political scientist linked to the Kremlin's hardliners who predicts that Russia's Georgia adventure is far from over.

"It is evident that Georgia will organise terrorist acts and Russia will have to respond with airstrikes. This is a scenario which will be implemented."
 
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