Russian
Bear Growls At U.S. Hypocrisy
By K
Gajendra Singh
" The war in Iraq
is a historic strategic and moral calamity
undertaken under false assumptions-- undermining
America's global legitimacy --collateral civilian
casualties, -- abuses, -- tarnishing America's moral
credentials. Driven by Manichean impulses and
imperial hubris, it is intensifying regional
instability." Zbigniew Brzezinski, National Security
Adviser to US President Jimmy Carter
02/14/07 "
ICH"
-- -- At the 43rd annual
International Security Conference held in Munich on
10 February, Russian President Vladimir Putin spoke
on the importance of the role of United Nations ,
U.S. missile defense, NATO expansion, Iran's nuclear
program and the Energy Charter. He accused
Washington of provoking a new nuclear arms race by
developing ballistic missile defenses, undermining
international institutions, trying to divide modern
Europe and making the Middle East more unstable
through its clumsy handling of the Iraq war.
Ever since Soviet
leader Mikhail Gorbachev ended the cold war in 1989
, more out of naiveté than misplaced goodwill which
after USSR's collapse the US ruling elite claimed as
the victory of the capitalist West over Socialist
Russia ,this is the first blunt criticism of US
unleashed rampant forces trying to coerce the whole
world to its will for total domination while using
brazen lies and illegal , brutal and inhuman means .
While calling
a spade a spade Russian leader Putin was only
articulating what a majority of peoples in the world
think of US policies .A BBC poll covering more than
26,000 people in 25 countries, including the U.S.,
held in November - January, found that 49 % believe
U.S. playing "mainly negative" role in the world,
compared to 32% who said it was "mainly positive."
In 18 countries asked the same question earlier ,
which had called U.S. influence positive, it fell
from 40 % in 2005, to 36 % last year, to 29 % in
2007. In Germany and Indonesia, nearly 3 out of 4
respondents had a mainly negative opinion of U.S.
influence while it was 69 % in France and Turkey.
Nearly 73 % disapproved of Washington's role in the
Iraq war. In Egypt, France, and Lebanon where more
than 3 out of 4 respondents "strongly disapproved" ,
while more than 68 % said the U.S. military presence
in the Middle East provokes more conflict than it
prevents."
Even in US ,
57 % disapprove of their government's handling of
the Iraq war and of the Israeli-Hezbollah war; while
60 % disapproved of its handling of Guantanamo
detainees; and 53 % believed the U.S. military
presence provokes more conflict than it prevents. A
plurality of 50 % in U.S. disapprove of the
government's handling of Iran's nuclear program,
"These days
the U.S. government hardly seems to be able to do
anything right," said Steven Kull, director of the
University of Maryland who co-ordinated the poll.
In last November elections US electorate trashed
Bush's policies by trouncing his Republican party in
the Senate and the House and disapprove of Bush's
policies by 2 to one .But instead of course
correction , also recommended by Baker –Hamilton
Iraqi Study Group, there is now the so called policy
of "surge" in Iraq , with only a massive surge in
deaths and destruction in Iraq , specially Baghdad ,
where the new policy would be implemented .
Then there are
multifarious accusations against Tehran without
proof and threats to use force , even nuclear
weapons .Such an irrational and immoral attack if
carried out, most experts and people believe would
plunge the world into hell like turmoil for decades.
You just have to look at the quagmire in Iraq with
daily massacres and almost total destruction of the
Iraqi state with a burgeoning civil war triggered by
Washington .
Putin's speech marks a
new era in Russia's new found confidence after 7
years of his rule which has brought stability and
economic strength .He is now visiting Saudi Arabia
,Qatar and Jordan , first ever visits by a Russian
head of state. With Middle East in a state of flux
and USA bogged down in Iraq with no clear cut exit
policy , Saudi Arabia and others in the region are
looking elsewhere to counter irrational US
policies.
"I see in -- Putin a
statesman and a man of peace and fairness," Saudi
King Abdullah
Unlike 1991 , when
Gorbachev's peace initiative to help resolve the
problem of Iraqi occupation of Kuwait , was brushed
aside by Washington ,Moscow is now better positioned
to play a vital and constructive role in the region.
Exchange of Presidential visits with Syria two years
ago , writing off of old Syrian debts of almost $10
billion and supply of missiles to deter arrogant
Israeli jets buzzing the Presidential Palace in
Damascus have almost restored the old relationship .
Historical enemies Russia and Turkey have made up
and have booming economic exchanges
Moscow is now ready to
play a role of reliable and honest broker in Arab
Israeli dispute with its excellent relations with
Tel Aviv and PLO and even Hamas which was received
in Moscow , soon after it was elected to power.
Moscow's strengthened relations with Tehran with its
support at the UN , supply of missiles and arms and
building of nuclear power plants and possibly create
an informal gas OPEC give Russia an important role
.And Putin has worked towards it assiduously.
"I see in ...
Putin a statesman and a man of peace and fairness,"
said Saudi King Abdullah according to official Saudi
Press Agency. "That's why the kingdom of Saudi
Arabia extends a hand of friendship to Russia."
Qatar has the world's third-largest natural gas
reserves after Russia and Iran while Russia is
second largest exporter of oil after Saudi Arabia.
They could consult each other on oil and gas prices.
Putin's warm reception
in Riyadh ,Qatar and Amman is harbinger of Russia's
growing influence in the region and desire of the
unnerved states in the region for a bulwark against
USA's destructive policies , which could unleash a
terrible Shia-Sunni conflagration in the region and
beyond .The Arabs and Muslims have seen through US
policies!
Middle East
and the Muslim world is learning to trust Putin's
Russia It was granted observer status in the
Organisation of the Islamic Conference in 2005, and
in 2006 the Russia-Muslim World Strategic Vision
Group was established.
Before embarking on his
tour of the Middle East , in an interview with Al-Jazeera
TV , extremely popular in Arab and Islamic world ,
Putin said that the new U.S. strategy in Iraq will
work only if a date for withdrawal of foreign
military forces was agreed upon .The U.S. has
officially declared that it plans to hand over full
authority, primarily in the law enforcement and
security areas, to Iraqi agencies.
Putin said, "But I
think this won't work if we don't decide beforehand
when the foreign contingent should be withdrawn.
Because, as it happens in any conflict and in any
country, people should know that they have to be
prepared to take on full responsibility inside the
country by a certain date. When they do not have a
definite date and when it is unclear when the
maturity of relevant organizations in this country
should reach a certain appropriate level, then
everything is shifted off to the foreign
contingent."
Putin's Munich
Discourse;
Putin's
audience in Munich comprised of dozens of Western
ministers and policy makers ,including the new US
Defence Secretary, Robert Gates, and the hawkish
Republican Presidential contender, Senator John
McCain.
Putin stated ;
"Today we are observing unrestrained, hypertrophied
use of force in international affairs, a force that
plunges the world into an abyss of recurring
conflicts." "I am convinced that the UN Charter is
the only legitimate decision-making mechanism for
the use of military force as a last resort," he
said.
"The UN must
not be replaced either by NATO or the European
Union," declared Putin.
On NATO's
eastward expansion , Putin said that it has nothing
to do with its modernization and would affect
Moscow's relations with the Alliance.{Romania,
Slovakia, Slovenia, Bulgaria, and Baltic states -
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania - joined NATO in 2004.
Georgia and Ukraine , which saw US franchised street
gangs, financed , trained and supported by
Washington and its so called democracy promoting
institutions and NGOs , install US puppets in power
( both are in trouble now ) are being encouraged to
join NATO .Russia strongly objects to the deployment
of NATO bases on the territory of newly admitted
member nations. Reports suggest that Romanian and
Bulgarian bases could be used if Iran was attacked.
}
"It is evident
that the process of NATO expansion has nothing to do
with modernizing the alliance or with ensuring
security in Europe. On the contrary, it is seriously
eroding mutual trust," the Russian leader said. "Why
do they have to move their military infrastructure
closer to our borders?" Putin wondered, "Is this
connected with overcoming global threats today?"
Putin added
that the main threat facing Russia, the U.S. and
Europe derives from international terrorism, which
can only be fought jointly.
"What is a uni-polar
world? No matter how we beautify this term it means
one single centre of power, one single centre of
force and one single master," clarified Putin .
He stated that
deployment of a U.S. missile defense system in
Central Europe could trigger a new spiral of the
arms race. US reasons for deploying a missile
defense system in Europe are not convincing enough,
since launching of North Korean ballistic missiles
against the U.S. across western Europe would be in
conflict with the laws of ballistics. " Or, as we
say in Russia, it's the like trying to reach your
left ear with your right hand," he clarified.
Putin pledged
to amend Russia's military strategy. "All our
responses will be asymmetric, but highly effective,"
he said.
This riposte
was in response to US plans to install a radar
system in the Czech Republic and a missile
interception system in Poland,' to protect itself
against a potential threat from Iran.' Recently
Washington has also shifted its largest sea-based
missile defense radar in the Pacific from Hawaii to
the Aleutian Islands, not far from Russia's
Kamchatka Peninsula.
Putin affirmed
that Moscow is committed to its obligations on the
reduction of nuclear warheads by 2012. The Strategic
Offensive Reductions Treaty, signed on May 24, 2002
by Putin and Bush in Moscow, and expiring December
31, 2012, limited both countries' nuclear arsenals
to 1,700-2,200 warheads each. The treaty has been
criticized for a lack of verification provisions and
the possibility of re-deploying stored warheads.
Putin hoped
that "our partners will also act in a transparent
manner and will not try to stash away an extra
couple hundred nuclear warheads against a rainy
day."
Moscow has
prepared a draft treaty on preventing the deployment
of weapons in outer space. Putin said , "It will be
submitted to our partners as an official proposal in
the very near future."
He also called
on the international community to resume dialogue on
nuclear non-proliferation. "Russia speaks for the
resumption of dialogue on this most important issue.
It's necessary to preserve stability of the
international legal disarmament base, and ensure the
continuity of the nuclear arms reduction process,"
he said.
"We are seeing
increasing disregard for the fundamental principles
of international law," said Putin. The United States
had repeatedly overstepped its national borders on
questions of international security, a policy he
said had made the world less, not more, safe.
"Unilateral,
illegitimate actions have not solved a single
problem; they have become a hotbed of further
conflicts,"
"One state, the United
States, has overstepped its national borders in
every way ," asserted Putin.
Putin added
that force should only be used when the option is
backed by the United Nations Security Council. "This
is very dangerous. Nobody feels secure any more
because nobody can hide behind international law,"
he said.
Putin also
said the increased use of force was "causing an arms
race with the desire of countries to get nuclear
weapons." He did not name the countries but quite
obviously these are north Korea, even Iran and many
Arab states to counter Israel's arsenal of hundreds
of nuclear bombs and means to deliver them . [While
sanctions were passed against India and Pakistan in
May, 1998 , after they went nuclear ,any enquiry
forget any action against Israel is regularly vetoed
by USA in New York and Vienna.]
Energy Charter
Russia is
already cooperating with European countries on the
basis of principles agreed in the Energy Charter, a
mechanism for cooperation between Western and
Eastern Europe on energy issues and signed at The
Hague in 1991. [West now wants its investors free
access to Russia's vast oil and gas deposits and
export pipelines , but is unwilling to grant similar
facilities to now petro dollar rich Russia to invest
in European downstream business .Remember how US
refused China , which has saved one trillion dollars
by over exporting to US , investment in UNOCAL or a
Dubai company a contract for handling of US ports
.US led West wants only one way freedom in
investment. }.
On Energy
Charter Putin declared, "We have stated on numerous
occasions that we are not against coordinating the
principles of our relations with the European Union
in the energy sphere. But we find the [Energy]
Charter itself hard to accept." He said Russia's EU
partners themselves are not observing the Charter,
citing the nuclear materials market, which is still
off limits to Russia. "No one has opened it up for
us. There are also other issues that I would not
like to bring up just now," he said.
Putin stated
that Russia-EU energy relations should not be
included in a new basic agreement replacing the
Partnership and Cooperation Agreement. "I do not
think we should [include these relations in the
basic agreement], as there are other [important]
spheres in our interaction with the European Union,
besides energy," he said.
Russia and the
EU were to begin talks on a new framework at the
Russia-EU summit in Helsinki in November 24 last
year, but Poland vetoed the negotiations over
Russia's ban on its meat exports and Moscow's
refusal to sign the Energy Charter. [Vice President
Dick Cheney accused Moscow of using its energy
resources as "tools of intimidation or blackmail."
Many members in the Bush Administration belong to
the energy interests to which they will revert back
and are cheesed off that Russia does not allow
freedom to exploit they have in Saudi Arabia , Gulf
kingdoms and elsewhere.]
Putin recalled
that Germany shortly after the end of the Cold War
had sought to reassure Moscow (its historic enemy)
that it would never send its military forces outside
its borders. Berlin now has troops in the Balkans
and Afghanistan. "Where are those guarantees now?"
Putin demanded , arguing that Europe was attempting
to set up new "virtual" barriers to replace the
Berlin Wall.
Rubble from the Berlin Wall was "hauled away as
souvenirs" to countries that praise openness and
personal freedom, he said, but "now there are
attempts to impose new dividing lines and rules,
maybe virtual, but still dividing our mutual
continent."
Putin rightly dismissed
European complaints about Russian threats last year
to cut off energy supplies to its neighbors, saying
Moscow was only seeking market prices and stable,
long-term contracts with countries including Ukraine
and Georgia, which in the past had received
subsidized supplies. Even friendly Belarus had to
agree to market related prices. [US does it every
day .It wants India to vote against Iran on the
nuclear question and not have an energy security
agreement either .Why ! because it is signing an
agreement on nuclear power cooperation .India had
its first nuclear explosion way back in 1974 and
needs nuclear deterrent to protect its 1.1 billion
citizens against nuclear blackmail. So does north
Korea .And so think many others now that the biggest
proliferators and violators of NPT are the 5 nuclear
armed NPT members, also wielding veto power in UNSC}
Human rights;
Putin rebuffed
criticism of his country's human rights record by
the head of the New York-based Human Rights Watch ,
who said the world was seeing an "increasingly
uni-polar government in Russia, where competing
centres of influence are being forced to toe the
party line."[US leaders routinely denounce HRW's
critique of Abu Ghraib , Guantanamo and other
violations.]
Putin responded that
Russia was taking steps to stop foreign governments
clandestinely using Russian non-governmental
organizations (NGOs) to influence Russian policy.
On the killings of a
few Russian journalists during his Presidency, Putin
retorted that it was in Iraq that most journalists
were killed doing their job.
Kosovo and Serbia;
Putin declared
"Only the Kosovars and Serbs can resolve this."
"Let's not play God and try to resolve their
problems."
Serbia and
Kosovo's ethnic Albanian leadership have failed to
reach agreement on the province's future. Serbia
demands that the province remain its part, while
Kosovo's ethnic Albanians want independence. U.N.
envoy Martti Ahtisaari last week unveiled a
proposal, backed by the U.S. and European Union, for
an internationally supervised statehood for Kososvo.
The plan — which needs U.N. Security Council
approval to take effect — does not explicitly
mention independence, but spells out conditions for
self-rule, including a flag, anthem, army and
constitution, and the right to apply for membership
in international organizations. Kosovo's Serb
minority would have a high degree of control over
their own affairs.
Serbia has rejected
the plan, while Kosovo's leaders welcomed it.
Moscow has said a
solution imposed against Serbia's consent could
serve as a model for other separatist provinces
elsewhere in the world. Washington maintains that
the Kosovo situation is a "one-off" because the
province has been under U.N. rule since 1999, when
Serbian forces were ejected after a two month NATO
's illegal war on Yugoslavia, which destroyed its
industry and infrastructure. Yugoslavia, a nation of
southern Slavs and closer to Russia was broken up by
USA and West Europe . Orthodox Serbia has close
ethnic and religious affinities with Russia. But
West opposes independence for South Ossetia,
Abkhazia and the Transdneister .
Iran;
On Iran ,
Putin stated that unlike many countries including in
Europe ,Russia did not pass missile technology to
Iran. "I have no evidence to show that Russia, in
the 1990s, helped Iran create its own missile
technology. Other countries acted there. Technology
was transferred through different channels. We have
proof, and earlier I passed it directly to the U.S.
president," Putin said.
"Technology is
coming from Europe, from Asian countries. Russia has
nothing to do with this," he said. "Russia supplied
much less weaponry there than the U.S. or other
countries did," he said, Russia has provided Iran
with air defense systems with an effective range of
30 to 50 kilometers. "We did that so that Iran would
not feel driven into a corner," he explained.
But Putin
clarified that Iran has no missiles that could
threaten Europe. "As regards [fears that] Iran has
missiles that could threaten Europe, you are wrong.
Iran has missiles with a range of 1,600-1,700 km.
Calculate how many kilometers it is from the Iranian
border to Munich," he asked.
Iran has been
under US led campaign after it resumed uranium fuel
enrichment in January 2006, which some Western
countries claim is part of a covert nuclear weapons
program. Moscow shares the concerns of the Vienna
based International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN
nuclear watchdog, but the agency has not found a
nuclear weapons program. Although Tehran has
repeatedly affirmed its program is peaceful, the UN
Security Council under US pressure did adopt a
resolution in December imposing sanctions on Tehran
,but much diluted under insistence from Russia and
China.
Russia, Iran's
neighbour and a key economic partner has
consistently supported Tehran's right to nuclear
power under NPT. On February 23, the IAEA would
report on the UN resolution on Iran's nuclear
program. IAEA's chief El Bardai has asked all sides
'to take time out' and cool down and revert to
negotiations. Bush Administrations accusations have
not been taken seriously by newly empowered
Democrats and many others , who accuse Bush
administration of having used similar ratcheting
tactics before invading Iraq , when all its
accusations on WMDs, Iraq's connection with Al Qaeda
and efforts to obtain Uranium ore were proved to be
lies.
During the
question period after the address, Putin made some
soothing gestures and remarks.
Putin said President Bush had told him that the U.S.
assumed the two countries would "never be enemies
again, and I agree with him." "I really consider
the president of the United States my friend." "He's
a decent man, and one can do business with him,"
Putin said.
Inter-fax quoted Russian Foreign Minister Sergey
Lavrov telling state Russian TV Channel that the
building of a good relations between Moscow and
Washington was "not easy-- probably the most
difficult partner."
Putin's
spokesman Dmitry Peskov said the President's speech
in Munich was not "confrontational" and attributed
his blunt words to the sense that the number of
conflicts fomented by Washington "was constantly
growing" and that international law was being
undermined by such actions.
"It is in the
interest of the United States, the European Union
and other countries that international law is
upheld, not further destroyed," Peskov stated.
Before Putin's
sermon ,Chancellor Angela Merkel of Germany , which
holds the European Union's rotating presidency had
praised Russia, saying it would be a reliable energy
supplier to Europe. She called for closer relations
between the EU and Moscow to enhance stability on
the continent.
"How relations
between the EU and Russia evolve will have a crucial
impact on how security in the region will develop,"
said Merkel She also said that the international
community is determined to prevent Iran from
obtaining nuclear weapons. Tehran needed to accept
demands made by the U.N. and the IAEA , she added.
On the
sidelines of the conference, Iranian nuclear
negotiator Ali Larijani defended his country's
nuclear program as peaceful, saying: "We are no
threat to our region or other countries," while
indicating a willingness to return to negotiations.
Western reaction;
Having seen
Putin being lectured to even by leaders of pidddling
Baltic states ,now part of EU ; US and European
leaders were stunned at the candour of his speech
.While US officials mostly played it down as empty
rhetoric divorced from the real world,( Did not US
Sen Barbara say recently, "The president[Bush] is
living in a dream world.'') but European leaders are
worried and felt that West must square up to a brash
and combative new Russia.
"We should
take him at his word. This was the real Russia of
now, and possibly in four or five years time it
could go further in this direction," declared
Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt in Munich." We
have to have a dialogue with Russia but we must be
hard-nosed and realistic. We must stand up for our
values."
Karl
Schwarzenberg, the new Czech Foreign Minister, said
it was none of Moscow's business whether Prague
hosted the radar facilities for the US missile
shield. "We have to thank President Putin [who]
clearly and convincingly argued why Nato should be
enlarged," he quipped to applause. "Some people have
not noticed that the Soviet Union no longer exists."
"I do not see
how we can negotiate a new partnership pact on this
basis," said German Green Angelika Beer, a member of
the European Parliament. "We need Russia for energy
and Kosovo. He knows that - but perhaps he is going
over the top," she said.
The European
Union wants to negotiate a new partnership agreement
with Russia but its hand is weakened by its
dependence on Russian energy supplies. The other
alternative is Iran. Any takers!
"This Munich
conference is normally about the Americans and
Europeans bitching at each other," said Ron Asmus,
executive director of the Transatlantic Centre think
tank in Brussels. "It will be interesting to see
whether Putin actually managed to bring us
together."
US & Europe
need Moscow's support in UN to resolve the dispute
over Iran's nuclear question and in securing
independence for the breakaway Serbian province of
Kosovo.
NATO Secretary
General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said he was
disappointed by Putin's statement that alliance
enlargement was "a serious factor provoking reduced
mutual trust." "I see a disconnection between NATO's
partnership with Russia as it has developed and
Putin's speech," he said.
"Who can be
worried that democracy and the rule of law are
coming closer to somebody's border?" Scheffer asked.
[ Yes, de Hoop Scheffer. USA and NATO are spreading
democracy in Iraq and Afghanistan and international
law by illegal invasion of Iraq.]
Putin's Munich
growl came a day after a similar speech by Russian
Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov - a possible
successor to Putin ,to his NATO counterparts meeting
in Seville, Spain.
"One Cold War was
quite enough," US Defence Secretary Robert Gates .
Robert Gates
sat through Putin's speech stone faced. A former CIA
chief , as is the usual US trait when demonizing
Putin they refer to his KGB background ( rarely
mentioned when George WH Bush , a former CIA chief
,was Vice President or President ) Gates replied
next day, "As an old Cold Warrior, one of
yesterday's speeches almost filled me with nostalgia
for a less complex time," He paused for effect
before adding, "Almost."
"And, I guess,
old spies have a habit of blunt speaking," Gates
said. "However, I have been to re-education camp —
spending four and half years as a university
president and dealing with faculty." His remark drew
laughs and applause.
"Russia is a
partner in endeavors," Gates added. "But we wonder,
too, about some Russian policies that seem to work
against international stability, such as its arms
transfers and its temptation to use energy resources
for political coercion." [ Really , What about
invading Iraq to grab energy ?]
"All of these
characterizations belong in the past," Gates said,
and he listed some of them: "The free world versus
those behind the Iron Curtain. North versus South.
East versus West, and I am told that some have even
spoken in terms of 'Old Europe' versus 'New.'" (It
referred to remarks by his predecessor Donald
Rumsfeld on Europe)
"The
distinction I would draw is a very practical one — a
realist's view perhaps," Gates said. "It is between
alliance members who do all they can to fulfill
collective commitments, and those who do not." He
urged NATO allies to increase their military
spending to meet the benchmark of two percent of
gross domestic product set by the alliance; only six
of NATO's 26 members fulfill that standard.
Digging old
ghosts ie NATO's success in facing the Soviet
threat, Gates stated that "it seems clear that
totalitarianism was defeated as much by ideas the
West championed then and now as by ICBMs, tanks and
warships that the West deployed," Gates said. The
alliance's most effective weapon, he said, was a
"shared belief in political and economic freedom,
religious toleration, human rights, representative
government and the rule of law. These values kept
our side united, and inspired those on the other
side."
Gates added that the
interceptor missiles and radar installations planned
for Poland and the Czech Republic were not directed
against Russia - it offered no protection against
the Kremlin's arsenal of nuclear-tipped
intercontinental rockets.
Article continues
"This umbrella
of protection unifies the alliance rather than
divides it," he said.
Throughout his
reply to Putin's commanding performance , Gates
asked how America's European allies must help
rebuild Afghanistan ( There are few takers for South
Afghanistan.) and remain vigilant in the fight
against global terrorism. He mentioned Putin only
once by name ,to say he had accepted his invitation
to visit Moscow.
Gates also
referred to China, saying, "Looking eastward, China
is a country at a strategic crossroads. All of us
seek a constructive relationship with China, but we
also wonder about strategic choices China may make.
We note with concern their recent test of an
anti-satellite weapon."
If the United
States and its partners fail in Iraq, and chaos
tears the nation apart, Gates warned, "every member
of this alliance will feel the consequences" of
regional turmoil and terrorism. He acknowledged the
damage done to America's global standing by its
conduct in the campaign against terrorism.
Sen. John
McCain who was present in Munich described Putin's
remarks as "the most aggressive speech from a
Russian leader since the end of the Cold War."
During his formal remarks later, McCain echoed the
sentiments of several Americans in attendance, that
Russia appeared to be turning more autocratic and
its foreign policy was standing increasingly in
opposition to Western democracies.
"Today's world is not unipolar," McCain said,
disputing Putin's main theme. "In today's multipolar
world, there is no need for pointless
confrontation." [Sen. McCain remains a hawk on Iraq
war ]
Reaction in Washington;
US spokesman
Kurt Volker said he listened to Putin with a sense
of disconnect from reality. "That was like a
parallel universe. The rest of us were in there
talking about common challenges," he said. Gordon
Johndroe, President Bush's national security
spokesman was "surprised and disappointed" by
Putin's remarks. "His accusations are wrong," said
Johndroe. But "We expect to continue cooperation
with Russia in areas important to the international
community such as counterterrorism and reducing the
spread and threat of weapons of mass destruction,"
added Johndroe.
Stephen
Sestanovich, Clinton's ambassador-at-large to states
of the former Soviet Union said ;"Most Americans are
not aware of how heated and agitated the Russians'
discussions are about their relationship with the
West." He added, "It may come as a surprise to
Americans, but for the Russians, the rhetoric on
these questions tends to be pretty grim, among the
experts and regular folks, about the deterioration
of the relationship.
"The theme is, 'We're tired of American hegemony,
we're tired of being treated like a former
superpower doormat, and we're back, and we're mad,'
" Sestanovich said.
Prof Charles A. Kupchan of Georgetown University
remarked "It's not just about U.S. foreign policy."
"It's also about growing self-confidence in Russia,
and Putin's determined effort to conduct a more
muscular foreign policy, which is at least in part a
byproduct of oil revenue," he said.
Why Russians dislike
Washington;
The Soviet
Union's collapse was ruthlessly exploited by US led
West when its capitalist controlled media sang
praises of economic reforms and democratization
bringing economic disintegration and ruination to
Russia .The worst kind of depression in modern
history with economic losses more than twice those
suffered by USSR in World War II. Russian GDP was
trimmed to half and capital investment fell by 80
percent. People were reduced to penury and misery,
death rates soared and the population shrank. And in
August 1998, the Russian financial system collapsed.
Putin was
appointed Prime Minister in 1999, then acting
president. In the 2000 election, Putin took 53% of
the vote in the first round and, four years later,
he was re-elected with a landslide majority of 71%.
After Putin took charge he arrested the decline ,
brought stability and security and consolidated the
disintegrating core of the Russian state . The rise
in energy prices , natural and a consequence of Iraq
war has benefited Russia immensely .
Since 1999 Russian economy has averaged 6 to 7
annual growth, its gold and foreign currency
reserves are the world's fifth largest. Moscow is
booming with new construction, frenzied consumption
of Western luxury goods , but over 60% Russians live
below the poverty line. Still Putin's rule has
brought stability and restored some sense of pride ,
and he remains very popular.
Stephen F. Cohen in an article "The New American
Cold War " wrote in 10 July 2006 issue of US
Magazine ,'The Nation" that since 1990s ,Washington
has followed hypocritical policy of "strategic
partnership and friendship," with Presidents being
on first name basis but underneath, all US
administrations have followed a ruthless policy of
undermining Russia " accompanied by broken American
promises, condescending lectures and demands for
unilateral concessions. USA has been even more
aggressive and uncompromising than was Washington's
approach to the Soviet Communist Russia."
" A growing
military encirclement of Russia, on and near its
borders, by US and NATO bases, which are already
ensconced or being planned in at least half the
fourteen other former Soviet republics, from the
Baltics and Ukraine to Georgia, Azerbaijan and the
new states of Central Asia. The result is a US-built
reverse iron curtain and the remilitarization of
American-Russian relations.
" A tacit (and closely related) US denial that
Russia has any legitimate national interests outside
its own territory, even in ethnically akin or
contiguous former republics such as Ukraine, Belarus
and Georgia." Richard Holbrooke, Democratic a
democrat Secretary of State in waiting roundly
condemned Russia for promoting a pro-Moscow
government in neighboring Ukraine, where Russia has
centuries of shared linguistic, marital, religious,
economic and security ties and declared ' that
far-away Slav nation part of "our core zone of
security."
"Even more, a presumption that Russia does not have
full sovereignty within its own borders, as
expressed by constant US interventions in Moscow's
internal affairs since 1992. They have included an
on-site crusade by swarms of American "advisers,"
particularly during the 1990s, to direct Russia's
"transition" from Communism; endless missionary
sermons from afar, often couched in threats, on how
that nation should and should not organize its
political and economic systems; and active support
for Russian anti-Kremlin groups, some associated
with hated Yeltsin-era oligarchs.
It was even suggested that Putin be overthrown by
the kind of US-backed "color revolutions" carried
out since 2003 in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan,
and attempted this year in Belarus. US corporate
media 'increasingly call the Russian President
"thug," "fascist" and "Saddam Hussein," one of the
Carnegie Endowment's several Washington crusaders
assures us of "Putin's weakness" and vulnerability
to "regime change." (Do proponents of "democratic
regime change" in Russia care what it might mean
destabilizing a nuclear state?)
" Underpinning
these components of the real US policy are familiar
cold war double standards , condemning Moscow for
doing what Washington does - such as seeking allies
and military bases in former Soviet republics, using
its assets (oil and gas in Russia's case) as aid to
friendly governments and regulating foreign money in
its political life.
"More broadly, when NATO expands to Russia's front
and back doorsteps, gobbling up former Soviet-bloc
members and republics, it is "fighting terrorism"
and "protecting new states"; when Moscow protests,
it is engaging in "cold war thinking." When
Washington meddles in the politics of Georgia and
Ukraine, it is "promoting democracy"; when the
Kremlin does so, it is "neo-imperialism."
" And not to forget the historical background: When
in the 1990s the US-supported Yeltsin overthrew
Russia's elected Parliament and Constitutional Court
by force, gave its national wealth and television
networks to Kremlin insiders, imposed a constitution
without real constraints on executive power and
rigged elections, it was "democratic reform"; when
Putin continues that process, it is
"authoritarianism."
US has attempted by exploiting Russia's weakness, to
acquire the nuclear superiority it could not achieve
during the Soviet era. Washington unilaterally
withdrew from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile
Treaty, in order to create a system capable of
destroying incoming missiles and thereby the
capacity to launch a nuclear first strike without
fear of retaliation. US coerced Russia to sign an
empty nuclear weapons reduction agreement without
actual destruction of weapons or verification , but
allowing US development of new ones, which
Washington has announced.
" The
extraordinarily anti-Russian nature of these
policies casts serious doubt on two American
official and media axioms: that the recent "chill"
in US-Russian relations has been caused by Putin's
behavior at home and abroad, and that the cold war
ended fifteen years ago. The first axiom is false,
the second only half true: The cold war ended in
Moscow, but not in Washington."
"The crusade to transform Russia during the 1990s,
with its disastrous "shock therapy" economic
measures and resulting antidemocratic acts, further
destabilized the country, fostering an oligarchical
system that plundered the state's wealth, deprived
essential infrastructures of investment,
impoverished the people and nurtured dangerous
corruption. In the process, it discredited
Western-style reform, generated mass
anti-Americanism where there had been almost none -
only 5 percent of Russians surveyed in May (2006)
thought the United States was a "friend" - and
eviscerated the once-influential pro-American
faction in Kremlin and electoral politics."
US leaders and media pretend that Washington has a
"well-intentioned Russian policy," but "a Russian
autocrat ... betrayed the American's faith." After a
decade of broken US promises and Yeltsin's boozy
compliance, Kremlin declared four years ago, in a
Radio commentary "The era of Russian geopolitical
concessions [is] coming to an end." (Looking back,
the commentator remarked bitterly that Russia has
been "constantly deceived.")
In the
undeclared cold war now there are no structures for
any substantive negotiations and cooperation, .The
"dialogue is almost non-existent ," in regard to
nuclear weapons after US's abandonment of the ABM
treaty and real reductions, its decision to build an
antimissile shield, and talk of pre-emptive war and
nuclear strikes which had kept the nuclear peace for
nearly fifty years are now open . Reportedly, Bush's
National Security Council is contemptuous of arms
control as a "baggage from the cold war." US
editorial pages are dominated by resurgent cold war
orthodoxies, with incessant demonization of Putin's
"autocracy" and "crude neo-imperialism". It reads
like a bygone Pravda on the Potomac.
So the
discourses at Munich should surprise no one except
hypocritical US leaders , its media and its Trojan
horses in EU like, UK , Poland and the Czechs. Those
in the Baltics and East Europe ,who decry past
Soviet domination , would they have preferred Nazi
victory and rule .In any case USA was not prepared
to expend men and material to liberate East Europe
and the Baltics from the Nazis. It were the Soviet
people and its armed forces which destroyed 80% of
Nazi military machine and sacrificed tens of
millions of its citizens and military men. Hollywood
only makes films of great US victories.
Arabs welcome Putin's
Middle East visit;
Arab world has
welcomed President Putin's Middle East visit to
Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Jordan .Arab experts feel
that the primary aim is to "send a message" to the
US that Moscow has a key role to play in this vital
region and that it is high time for Washington to
give up its policies of domination and destruction.
"By carrying out this
exceptional trip, I believe Putin is at pains to
dispatch a message to the United States that the
Middle East is not a backyard for Washington, but a
vital area for the whole world," Faisal al-Rofou,
head of the political science department at the
University of Jordan, told Deutsche Presse-Agentur
dpa. (In Jordan and most Arab countries such
comments have the governments' approval)
Al-Rofou remarked that
the Russian leader's Munich comments indicated
Moscow was "fed up with the domination polices of
George Bush. "
"Putin is heir to the legacy of a great state - the
Soviet Union - and although Moscow's role has
receded over the past few years, the Russian leader
wants to say that it is high time for Moscow to play
that great part again in the affairs of the Middle
East and the world at large," he said. "Therefore ,
his Middle East trip seeks to drive the idea home
that we are present in this part of the world and
the United States should recognize others' interests
in the region," he added.
Putin's visit would "add significance" to the
agreement concluded in Mecca with Saudi brokerage
between the key Palestinian factions of Fatah and
Hamas. (Against Israeli protests Moscow had received
a Hamas delegation , soon after it won in a free
democratic election.)
"I believe the accord
will figure largely in Putin's talks with Saudi
leaders and the Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas,"
he said. Abbas is scheduled to meet with Putin in
Amman on 13 February. Palestinian diplomats expected
the Mecca declaration to be high on the agenda
during the meeting.
"We count on the
Russian support for ensuring a lift of the Western
embargo that was imposed on the Palestinian
Authority in March" in the wake of the landslide
victory scored by Hamas , al-Rofou said.
During the last Mideast Quartet meeting in
Washington at the beginning of this month, the
Russian delegate urged a speedy end of the boycott
of the Hamas-led government which he said came to
office through the ballots. [US led West remains
opposed to Hamas as only pro-West puppets are
acceptable. So much for Western proclaimed love for
democracy.] Besides Russia, the quartet also
includes the US, the E U and the U. N.
Qadri Saeed, at the Cairo-based al-Ahram Strategic
Studies, believes that Moscow "stood a good chance
of influencing the Palestinian-Israeli conflict
through its balanced ties with both Fatah and Hamas
on one side and between the Palestinians and Israel
on the other".
"In face of the receding US influence in the region
due to setbacks in Iraq and other areas, the
Russians now feel they can occupy the ensuing vacuum
in the region," he concluded.
K Gajendra
Singh, Indian ambassador (retired), served as
ambassador to Turkey and Azerbaijan from August 1992
to April 1996. Prior to that, he served terms as
ambassador to Jordan, Romania and Senegal. He is
currently chairman of the Foundation for Indo-Turkic
Studies. Copy right with the author. E-mail:
Gajendrak@hotmail.com