News 
 Opinion 
 Editorial 
 General 
 Sending the Bear back into the cold was never wise 

Sending the Bear back into the cold was never wise

29 Aug, 2008 10:49 AM
At the Beijing Olympics, Russia, whose confident young athletes brought home more medals than any other country save China and the United States, certainly didn't look like a defeated country. Russia has recovered at last from her post-communist dog years of shame and depression. Under the skilled leadership of Vladimir Putin and Dmitry Medvedev gifted politicians by any standards Russia is reasserting its natural role as a great world power.

Historians will see NATO's attempts after the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 to extend its security mandate to cover the former Soviet republics and Warsaw Pact states adjoining Russia as a great folly. With Soviet communism, Russia's abiding strategic imperative for a national security glacis of friendly and unthreatening neighbours on its western and southern borders should have been respected. Instead, under the mischievous influence of neo-conservatives in Washington over the past eight years, the Russian bear was recklessly baited and provoked.

US-led NATO gave diplomatic and material support to assertively anti-Russian post-communist government policies in the Baltic states, Poland, Ukraine and Georgia. Russian diplomatic signals over several years that it could not accept such provocations in its near abroad, that it demanded friendly and mutually respectful relations with its near neighbours on the Finland model (and, be it noted, Finland is a fully sovereign European nation and EU member), were recklessly brushed aside.

Finally, now, Georgia: a bridge too far by a weak, irresponsibly advised, US prote{aac}ge{aac} government, producing national disaster. Abkhazians and South Ossetians, whose regions were included in the Georgian republic under the old Soviet internal boundaries but which were ethnically distinct communities, had good reason to fear Georgian nationalism after a brutal armed incursion into Abkhazia soon after Georgia voted for independence on the break-up of the Soviet Union. They have been de facto Russian protectorates ever since. Georgia's military attempt this month to occupy South Ossetia while the world's eyes were on the Olympic Games ended in humiliating failure. Now, the Russian Parliament, pointedly citing the Kosovo precedent, has formally recognised the two regions' right to independence.

In response, the US and the EU pronounced this decision internationally invalid, and NATO declared it would review its whole relationship with Russia. Poland finalised a long-debated deal to install a US anti-missile system on its Baltic coast, over Russia's vehement objections. Russian President Medvedev says defiantly that Russia needs nothing from NATO. US Vice-President Dick Cheney announces a demonstratively supportive visit to broken, humiliated Georgia. The British Foreign Minister, David Miliband, pays a similar visit to Ukraine. The East-West mood is worsening daily.

So is the Cold War coming back? Some in the US want it so. The US, by far the most highly militarised country in the world, needs a plausible new global enemy. Islamic fundamentalism is too diffuse and inchoate. China is too deeply enmeshed in the US economy as a major creditor and industrial supplier: too many vital interdependences are at stake to risk sabre-rattling. Self-sufficient, assertive Russia could again play the role of the enemy at the gates.

Post-communist Russia itself has no global ideological agenda beyond stability. Russia does not want a new Cold War. Yet, in a key speech in Munich last year, Putin warned the West that Russia would not tolerate US pretensions to superpower dominance, asking: ''What is a unipolar world? It refers to one type of situation, one centre of authority, one centre of force, one centre of decision-making. It is a world in which there is one master, one sovereign. This is pernicious, unacceptable, impossible.''

Russia's demand to be respected as a great power both in its own region, and in a global concert of great powers, is reasonable. China and India make similar demands. Russia is pressing for a legitimate balance of world power on the classic European model. Yet Western voices now seek to re-demonise Russia.

For people like US Vice-President Cheney, the humiliating failure in Georgia is not a signal to reasonably accommodate to Russian interests but an opportunity to revive in US public opinion half-forgotten Cold War antipathies to Russia. What a perfect way to justify the continued high level of US military expenditures, now 45 per cent of the world's total.

These recent events will advantage the Republican right in the US election campaign. Revived anti-Russian fears could wedge either Obama or McCain into an anti-Russian stance after the election.

Whoever wins, Western-Russian relations seem set for difficult years. There is an urgent need for wiser voices in the Western alliance to make themselves heard before things get much worse. A new Cold War does not have to happen, but events are moving that way.

Tony Kevin, a retired Australian career diplomat, served in Moscow (1969-71); UN, New York (1973-76); and as Australian ambassador to Poland (1991-94).

Print
Increase Text Size
Decrease Text Size
Page:
2

comments


Date: Newest first | Oldest first
Fantastic article Tony. As someone who has been greatly angered by the constant bias of the West's reports on Tibet, I have at least learned to look into things before jumping to a conclusion. And so after reading many news reports on the Russia/Georgia situation, I find your article the most balanced, without all the anti-Russian rhetoric so common in other articles. Good job
Posted by Andrew Jia, 29/08/2008 11:33:56 AM
Finally an article about this crisis that cuts through the media hype and speaks some truth. It is so clear to anyone with an iota of intelligence that the pursuit US and EU stratigic interests has brought about this situation. Your appraisal of the georgian situation is also accurate, finally somone who can look at the whole history of the region and see the whole story, as opposed to the polished bias media crap we have been getting spoon fed more recently. I agree fully with this article well said.
Posted by HardCalibre, 29/08/2008 11:46:23 AM
I agree with this opinion
Posted by Anatoli, 29/08/2008 12:11:57 PM
Astonishing! An unbliased, fair and mostly, thruthful analysis in the "free press". If you keep publishing such analysis calling you will be drummed out of the ranks of the "free press".
Posted by Sven, 29/08/2008 12:25:17 PM
It is wonderful to see Tony Kevin continuing to use his fine mind and considerable writing talent to explore a contemporary problem. No wonder the previous government sought to discredit him for his views on that "certain maritime incident". We need protection from constant political obfuscation. People, especially former public servants, who tell the truth as they see it have become a novelty in public discourse in Australia. Please Tony Kevin, keep your comments flowing.
Posted by MMcI, 29/08/2008 2:10:05 PM
What a wonderful analysis. It's good to hear your voice. Right-wing types have and will continue their attempts to force others into submission. They are ignorant, uncivilized and dangerous. The reason for this is that the US doesn't value public education and its role in the preservation of republican democracy. If the people were truly informed, surely we would, through our leaders, act with wisdom. Money has become the only measure of value in these United States. The people have the power of the vote, but many are too uninformed to wield that power in ways that can bring about peace and compromise. Domination provides instant gratification.
Posted by Hilary Smith, 29/08/2008 3:31:25 PM
Great article! Finally a voice that pierces the veil of western bias rhetoric and sheds some light on the real situation without all the emotion and hype.
Posted by Beren, 29/08/2008 4:12:05 PM

post a comment


Screen name  *
Email address  *
Remember me?
Comment  *
 
We invite and encourage our readers to post comments. Comments are moderated and will appear as soon as our editor has approved them. When posting comments you agree to be bound by our Terms and Conditions.

MOST POPULAR

Yourguide to Your Toyota
Red Hot Deals at Eurobodalla! click now
 
University of Canberra - click here
 
 
James Bond Happy Hour at Flint - click now
 
Click here to read See Canberra online!
 
Ready, Set. Drive!
 
Classifieds
 SEND...
 SAVE...
 SHARE...