Nuclear smackdown in
New Europe
By Mike
Whitney
November 09,
2008 "Information
Clearinghouse"
---
"US
president-elect Barack Obama
has told
Polish
President
Lech
Kaczynski he
will go
ahead with
plans to
build a
missile
defense
shield in
eastern
Europe
despite
threats from
Russia,
Warsaw said
on Saturday"
AFP Warsaw
Dmitry
Medvedev is
a quiet and
reflective
man who
enjoys
reading
novels,
lifting
weights and
listening to
rock and
roll music.
He has a
large
collection
of vintage
vinyl
records. His
favorite
rock bands
are Deep
Purple, Pink
Floyd and
Led
Zeppelin.
His parents
were
university
professors
who raised
him in a
crowded 500
sq ft
apartment in
Leningrad.
He excelled
at school
and went on
to become a
lawyer
before
entering
politics. He
married his
high school
sweetheart,
Svetlana
Linnik, and
is a close
friend of
former
president
Vladimir
Putin.
Medvedev was
elected
President of
Russia on
March 2,
2008 in a
landslide
victory. He
won over 70
percent of
the vote. As
Putin's
hand-picked
successor,
the election
was never
really in
doubt,
although
critics in
the United
States have
challenged
the fairness
of the
balloting.
No one,
however,
questions
Medvedev's
public
approval
ratings,
which are
nearly as
high as
Putin's (who
usually
polls in the
80 percent
range) Both
leaders are
extremely
popular
among
working
Russians.
Medvedev is
a strong
proponent of
democracy
and is
deeply
committed to
an
independent
judiciary,
private
property and
free
markets. He
is an honest
and
reasonable
man who is
also
fiercely
nationalistic.
This
biographical
information
may help
readers to
form an
opinion
about a man
who the
western
media has
decided to
destroy.
Medvedev is
not Putin's
"puppet", a
warmonger,
or the "new
Hitler". In
fact, he is
precisely
the type of
leader that
the United
States
should be
working with
to deal with
the critical
issues of
global
poverty,
energy
depletion,
climate
change and
the ongoing
financial
crisis. But
that is
unlikely to
happen
because
Russia has
frustrated
Washington's
ambitions in
the Caucasus
and is
blocking Big
Oil's access
to vital
reserves in
the Caspian
Basin.
That's why
Medvedev has
been added
to
Washington's
"enemies
list".
Medvedev
finds
himself in
the same
position as
Hugo Chavez
and Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad--the
axis of
diesel--
both of who
are
regularly
savaged by
the media
because they
sit on
massive oil
reserves
which are
beyond the
grasp of the
transnational
corporations.
That's why
most of what
is written
about
Medvedev is
nonsense.
The same
corporations
that own the
politicians
own the
media as
well.
Naturally,
they want to
demonize
their
rivals. In
truth, most
Americans
would have a
lot more in
common with
Medvedev
than they
would with
Bush, Cheney
or any of
their
"silver
spoon"
elitist
cronies.
US relations
with Russia
have
steadily
deteriorated
under George
Bush. Bush
ignored his
father's
promises not
to push NATO
into former
Soviet
territory
and now is
planning to
deploy a
nuclear
missile
system in
Eastern
Europe.
Missile
Defense
poses a
clear danger
to Russia's
national
security. It
integrates
the United
States
entire
nuclear
capability--including
space-based
operations--with
systems that
are inside
Russia's
traditional
sphere of
influence.
Putin summed
it up like
this in a
press
conference
at the G-8
meetings:
"For the
first time
in history,
there are
elements of
the US
nuclear
capability
on the
European
continent.
It simply
changes the
whole
configuration
of
international
security ...
Of course,
we have to
respond to
that."
The Bush
administration
is trying to
achieve what
nuclear
weapons
specialist,
Francis A.
Boyle, calls
the
"longstanding
US policy of
nuclear
first-strike
against
Russia". By
placing
weapons
systems and
radar on
Russia's
borders the
US will have
a critical
advantage
that will
disrupt the
delicate
balance of
power.
Medvedev
cannot allow
this to
happen. His
first
responsibility
is to ensure
the security
of the
Russian
people who
are clearly
at greater
risk by the
proposed
system. The
planned
deployment
must be
stopped.
This is not
a negotiable
point.
Russian/US
relations
reached a
new low
following
the recent
war in
Georgia. The
aggression
was
initiated by
Georgia
President
Saakashvili
who ordered
the invasion
of South
Ossetia
after
dropping
thousands of
cluster
bombs on
civilian
areas and
leveling the
capital of
Tskhinvali.
The media
has blamed
Russia for
the
conflict,
but a new
report by
Human Rights
Watch
confirms
that Georgia
was the real
perpetrator.
The report,
which was
presented at
the
Convention
on
Conventional
Weapons,
"adds to a
growing body
of evidence
of Georgian
atrocities
in the
fighting....The
group said
Tuesday that
Georgia...used
cluster
munitions
extensively
in the war,
which began
when Georgia
launched a
major
artillery
strike
against
South
Ossetia, a
breakaway
Georgian
enclave,
prompting
Russia to
invade large
swaths of
Georgian
territory."
(New York
Times)
Another
report in
the New York
Times
stated: "The
accounts
suggest that
Georgia’s
inexperienced
military
attacked the
isolated
separatist
capital of
Tskhinvali
on August 7
with
indiscriminate
artillery
and rocket
fire,
exposing
civilians,
Russian
peacekeepers
and unarmed
monitors to
harm.... The
then senior
OSCE
representative
in Georgia,
Ryan Grist,
said:
“It was
clear to me
that the
attack was
completely
indiscriminate
and
disproportionate
to any, if
indeed there
had been
any,
provocation...The
attack was
clearly, in
my mind, an
indiscriminate
attack on
the town, as
a town.”
Mr. Grist
has served
as a
military
officer or
diplomat in
Northern
Ireland,
Cyprus,
Kosovo and
Yugoslavia.(New
York Times)
An unknown
number of
Russian
civilians
were killed
in the
aggression,
which has
fundamentally
changed the
political
dynamic
between
Moscow and
Washington.
Just below
the surface
of
diplomatic
civility, a
war is
underway,
which is why
Russia is
strengthening
alliances in
Central Asia
and Latin
America,
opening
naval bases
in the
Mediterranean,
establishing
energy
corridors to
Europe, and
developing
new weapons
systems.
Russia is
not Iraq. It
will be
prepared if
hostilities
break out.
The war in
South
Ossetia was
a turning
point in
US/Russo
relations,
as Medvedev
points out:
"Events in
the Caucasus
dispelled
whatever
illusions
people had
remaining
from the
post-Soviet
period.
Those
illusions
were about
the world
being just
and about
the current
security
system being
optimal."
(Russia
Today)
Medvedev
also sees
the war in
South
Ossetia as
symptomatic
of a larger
and more
deeply-rooted
problem.
Medvedev: “A
barbaric
aggression
against
South
Ossetia and
the global
financial
crisis – two
very
different
problems
which
nevertheless
have common
traits and a
common
origin...A
local
reckless
enterprise
provoked a
rise of
tensions far
behind the
region’s
borders, in
the whole of
Europe, in
the whole
world. It
called into
question the
efficiency
of
international
security
institutions
and
practically
destabilized
the basics
of the world
order. The
lessons of
mistakes and
crises of
2008 proved
to all the
responsible
nations that
it is the
time to act,
and it is
necessary to
radically
reform the
political
and economic
system."
Medvedev is
right. The
present
architecture
for global
security
needs to be
thoroughly
revamped as
does the
global
financial
system.
Unilateralism,
preemption
and the Bush
Doctrine
have only
made the
world a more
dangerous
place. So,
too, Wall
Street's
disproportionate
influence on
financial
markets has
precipitated
the worst
crisis in
the last 80
years. There
needs to be
a new order
based on
mutual
cooperation
and
international
law which
establishes
greater
parity
between the
countries
(and their
currencies)
and a
renewed
commitment
to
fundamental
principles
of national
sovereignty
and self
determination.
Superpower
politics,
wherein one
nation
arbitrarily
imposes its
will on all
the others,
has proved
to be a
failure.
Unipolar
rule must
end for the
sake of
global
security.
Medvedev: “I
emphasize;
we do not
have a
problem with
the American
people, we
are not
anti-American.
We want to
be partners
with the new
U.S.
administration,
and have
good
relations
with the
United
States.
Together
with all
countries
interested
we will
create a
really
democratic
model of
relations.
But the
world cannot
be ruled
from one
capital.
Those who do
not want to
understand
that will be
only
creating
problems for
themselves
and for
others."
RUSSIAN
MISSILES IN
EUROPE?
In his first
State of the
Nation
speech on
Thursday
Medvedev
addressed
everything
from South
Ossetia, to
terrorism,
to Missile
Defense, to
a plan for
global
security. He
said that he
would deploy
Iskander
missiles in
the Baltic
exclave of
Kaliningrad
if the US
administration
went ahead
with its
plans for a
missile
shield in
Europe.
Obama's
foreign
policy
advisers
have taken
Medvedev's
warning as a
"test" of
the new
president's
mettle and
persuaded
him to
publicly
announce his
commitment
to Bush's
Missile
Defense
system.
According to
AFP: "US
president-elect
Barack Obama
has told
Polish
President
Lech
Kaczynski he
will go
ahead with
plans to
build a
missile
defense
shield in
eastern
Europe
despite
threats from
Russia,
Warsaw said
on Saturday.
The US wants
to base 10
interceptor
missiles in
Poland plus
a radar
facility in
the
neighboring
Czech
Republic by
2011-2013 to
complete a
system
already in
place in the
United
States,
Greenland
and
Britain."
Obama is
walking into
a trap. He
should see
that the
proposed
deployment
is
needlessly
provocative
and will
only lead to
further
escalation.
He's already
facing two
unfinished
wars and a
deepening
recession;
he doesn't
need a
nuclear
confrontation
with Russia.
Marching in
lockstep
with the
fanatical
neocon
agenda is
not the
"change" the
American
people were
hoping for.
In his State
of the
Nation
speech,
Medvedev
announced
plans to
make Russia
a global
financial
center by
the end of
2008.
Medvedev: "A
package of
bills
forming the
basis for
the creation
of one of
the world's
leading
financial
centers in
Russia needs
to be passed
before the
end of this
year. This
center
should serve
as the
nucleus for
an
independent
and
competitive
Russian
financial
system.
Practical
steps are
needed to
strengthen
the ruble's
role as an
international
settlement
currency and
to finally
achieve the
transition
to
settlements
in rubles
for gas and
oil, over
which we
have,
regrettably,
taken a long
time."
(Russia
Today)
Medvedev and
Putin blame
the United
States for
the current
firestorm in
the
financial
markets.
Wall
Street's
sale of
fraudulent
subprime
mortgage-backed
securities
(MBS) and
other
structured
investments
have pushed
the global
banking
system to
the brink of
a meltdown.
It all could
have been
avoided with
sufficient
oversight
and
regulation.
Even so,
Medvedev
still
remains
committed to
free markets
and
democracy.
Medvedev: "I
want
everyone to
know: our
goals are
unchanged.
Sharp
fluctuations
in the
political
and economic
situation,
turbulence
of the world
economy and
even forced
military and
political
tensions
will not
become the
ground to
dismount
democratic
institutions,
nationalizing
industries
and the
financial
system.....Political
freedom of
citizens and
their
private
property are
untouchable....Any
infringement
of civil
rights and
freedoms, or
any action
that worsens
the material
position of
citizens, is
immoral and
illegal."
While
Russia's
young
president is
looking for
ways to
strengthen a
progressive
agenda and
emerge from
the darkness
of
Soviet-era
repression,
the United
States is
still in the
clutches of
hawkish
neocons,
recalcitrant
cold
warriors and
self-serving
banking
elites.
Obama has a
unique
opportunity
to reconcile
past
differences
and
collaborate
on a shared
vision of
the future
with his
Kremlin
counterpart,
or he can
put a knife
to Moscow's
throat and
force
Medvedev to
repond.
Which will
it be?
From the
Associated
Press,
Saturday Nov
8: "A
Kremlin
statement
says
Medvedev and
Obama spoke
by telephone
on Saturday.
Both parties
'expressed
the
determination
to create
constructive
and positive
interaction
for the good
of global
stability
and
development.'"
International
security is
in
everyone's
best
interest.
Bush's
Missile
Defense
System must
be stopped.