NATO Picks a New Fight with Russia
The Obama administration and much of Official Washington have
dangerously lost touch with reality, ginning up a costly new Cold
War with Russia even as expensive wars continue in Afghanistan and
Iraq/Syria. The latest provocation against Russia is to invite
Montenegro into NATO, writes Jonathan Marshall.
By Jonathan MarshallDecember 05,
2015 "Information
Clearing House" - "Consortium
News" -
If insanity means trying the same thing over and over
and expecting a different result, President Barack Obama’s foreign
policy is best understood in a psychiatrist’s office. Secretary of
State John Kerry’s
announcement that NATO plans to expand east by inviting
Montenegro to join is guaranteed to destroy hopeful prospects of
renewed cooperation between Russia and Western powers over Syria.
The move follows NATO’s recent defense of Turkey’s
calculated and provocative decision to bring down a Russian bomber
just seconds after it may have entered Turkish air space. More
important, planned expansion follows years of bad faith on the part
of NATO toward Russia, led by Washington.
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A map showing
stages of NATO’s expansion. Dark blue showing original
members; lighter blue the “round one” members; aqua the
“round two” members; yellow represents neutral states;
and brown and red (including Ukraine), otherwise
aligned. On the map, Montenegro is one of the tiny brown
spots on the eastern Adriatic. |
NATO’s eastward expansion following the purported
end of the Cold War lies at the heart of Russia’s chilly reaction to
Washington’s attempts to build a uni-polar world. Many
authorities agree that in 1989, Secretary of State James
Baker and West German Foreign Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher
explicitly promised Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev that NATO would
not “take advantage” of upheaval in Eastern Europe by expanding
toward Russia.
But it didn’t take long for the Western allies to
break that promise and flex their muscles against a radically
weakened Russia that had been stripped of most of its empire after
the fall of the Soviet Union. In 1999, against Russian opposition,
NATO absorbed the Czech Republic, Hungary and Poland. In 2004, it
added Bulgaria, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Romania, Slovakia and
Slovenia. Albania and Croatia joined next in 2009.
The latest move to incorporate tiny Montenegro
followed a 2011 decision by NATO to formally recognize several
aspiring members, including also Bosnia and Herzegovina, Georgia and
Macedonia.
Most brazenly of all, in 2008, NATO invited
Ukraine to join the Western alliance, putting Russia on the
defensive. That aggressive announcement set the stage for the
dangerous escalation of military tension between the world’s two
great nuclear powers after the 2014 Ukrainian putsch that ousted the
elected government of President Viktor Yanukovych, who was friendly
toward Moscow.
There is much that could be said about the madness
of Washington leading NATO deeper into needless confrontation with
Russia — exactly how will guaranteeing Montenegro’s security and
antagonizing the Kremlin advance U.S. interests? — but many of the
keenest observations have already been crowd-sourced, so to speak,
through an unlikely source: insightful comments from New York Times
readers to an article on the topic, such as:
“Obama will do just about anything to prevent
collaboration with Russia against ISIS, even increasing the threat
of war between the nuclear superpowers.” – JDD, New York
“I am completely lost. Why are we going to any and
every length to alienate and threaten Russia when Russia is the
staunchest ally we have in fighting against wildly violent
insurgents in the Middle East who are a threat to us all? The way in
which we have vilified Russia, as though only wishing another Cold
War, is beyond all my understanding. Russia should be our partner
now.” – Nancy, Great Neck
“In the ‘poor timing’ department, it looks like we
couldn’t have thought of a better way to plant obstacles in the path
of improving relations with the Russians – say what you will about
Putin – at a time when both sides really need the dialogue. This
NATO business could have been easily postponed. Or scrapped.” –
Rocky, CT
“We can all rest safely, Montenegro is now firmly
in our corner. It was touch and go there for a while, but now –
Onward to Victory!!” – Clotario, NYC
“Why do we suggest such stupid ideas. Assad is a
pimple. Montenegro is a nothing regarding NATO. The enemy is ISIS
and probably Turkey, but certainly ISIS. Keep your eyes on the ball.
The ball is flattening ISIS. It is not to make Russia mad. How
stupid can our government be? We are not fighting the Cold War of
the 1960’s. Sheesh!” – Dick Diamond, Bay City, OR
“The US will now have to defend Montenegro should
the tiny country come under attack. How many Americans could find
Montenegro on a map? This is in addition to the other 27 NATO
countries that the US is currently obligated to go to war for should
they come under attack. All this happens while the US has a $19
trillion debt and annual deficits of $500 billion. The US is
currently fighting endless and counter-productive wars in
Afghanistan, Syria and Iraq while our gallant allies hold our coats.
Add Japan, South Korea, Australia, New Zealand and other
Asia/Pacific countries that the US is obligated to defend under
current treaties. Congress has appropriated $300 billion in
infrastructure spending over 5 years while trillions of dollars are
needed. Yet there is always money to sustain the empire. Our
priorities are so misplaced.” – Jeff Clark, Reston, VA
“I’m also no fan of Russia, but the US and the
West seems a lot more concerned with weakening Russia and expanding
their political agendas than truly fighting ISIS and radical Islam.
The world will greatly suffer for this self-centered myopia.” –
Peisinoe, New York
“Great, more aggression against Russia by our
government and NATO that they will of course deny. There is no other
explanation for them inviting a tiny powerless Montenegro with no
military to speak of to join NATO other than get closer to Russia’s
borders and threaten the Russians. Of course, this means more money
for the military industrial complex, the usual winner. Then there is
Kerry’s delusional statement about not allowing the Syrian
government ‘to implode’ although it is Assad and his allies who are
holding it together. Without them, Syria will devolve into anarchy
like Libya with Al Qaeda, ISIS, and Sunni Extremists running
everything. When will Obama wake up and join reality?” – Simon,
Tampa
“Russia is no saint, but in 1996 the West should
have listened to the legendary diplomat and father of Cold War
containment policy, George Kennan, who warned that NATO’s expansion
into former Soviet territory was a ‘strategic blunder of potentially
epic proportions.’ The current crisis with Russia over Ukraine came
as no surprise to those of us who understand that great powers react
negatively to encroachment by foreign alliances. We may think of
NATO as a values-based organization devoted to peace and democracy,
but the Russians see it as a threat to their security.” – Adam,
Minneapolis
Jonathan
Marshall is an independent researcher living in San Anselmo,
California. Some of his previous articles for Consortiumnews were “Risky
Blowback from Russian Sanctions”; “Neocons
Want Regime Change in Iran”; “Saudi
Cash Wins France’s Favor”; “The
Saudis’ Hurt Feelings”; “Saudi
Arabia’s Nuclear Bluster”; “The
US Hand in the Syrian Mess”; and
“Hidden
Origins of Syria’s Civil War.” ]