Russia

United States and its allies are to blame for the difficulties with Russia, including the current war with Georgia. The West excluded Russia:

  • At the end of the Cold War in the late 1980s, Russia was not invited to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). That was tantamount to making them our adversary.
  • Again, when the European Union was formed in 1993, Russia wasn’t included, extending the discrimination.

At the conclusion of the war with Communism, Russia was creating a democratic form of government. Belonging to these two organizations would have encouraged and cultivated the democratic process, precluding the Putin dictatorial government. Now we’re faced with the invasion of Georgia in the planned restoration of the Soviet Empire. This Georgia incursion is a mirror image of Adolph Hitler’s take-over of Rhineland in March of 1935. Is history being repeated?

The United Nations, the European Union, and the United States, thus far, are having difficulty stopping the conflict. The United Nations can do very little because of the veto power of the members of the Security Council. In this case, Russia can thwart any action, whether it’s simply condemnation or a more forceful threat. The European Union can’t be too aggressive because Russia is its sole source of natural gas. The United States is stretched thin fighting two wars.

The price of a compromise of the Georgian conflict may be incorporating Abkhazia and South Ossetia into Russia or at least as colonies under the Kremlin’s control. This will set a dangerous precedent that may lead Russia to regain the other members of her empire that she lost at the end of the Cold War. Then too, this compromise may encourage China’s appetite for Taiwan.

Russia agreed to an unfulfilled cease-fire at the insistence the G8 heads of state organization (France, Germany, Italy, Japan, United Kingdom, and United States). The only leverage to end this conflict, available to the West, is Russia’s involvement in Global organizations – end its membership in the G7, threaten to boycott its winter Olympics in 2014, and forbid membership in the World Trade Organization.

The lesson to be learned, regardless of the outcome of the Georgia incursion, is that it is most important to involve every nation in world organizations so that there can be peaceful resolutions of national disagreements.

Putin doesn’t want his neighbors joining the European Union; he feels threatened and isolated by the West and the United States. It is late, it should have been done years ago; Russia should be asked to join the EU and NATO if it meets the social and economic requirements. Unfortunately, the invitation will be declined. However, this will remove the Soviet’s excuse about being isolated.

Filed Under: war, NATO, global citizens

Preventing MAD only leads to nuclear utilization theory-that is any concept of Ballistic missile defense is inherently dangerous to the rational actor model. Rational actors will find themselves in times of crisis hedging their bets because of the deployment of this type of technology. It is why MIRVing was so dangerous and why Star Wars was so dangerous. It takes the concept of nuclear war and instead of an absolute zero-sum game gives it statistical possibility, no matter how small that one can survive. That is why any type of anti-missile defense destroys the rational actor model It does more to destroy a balance then protect against the irrational actor imbalance.

overextension and war. Its bad enough it was extended to Poland to invite Russia would have led to such splintering during the breakup of Slavia that without question the two sides would rip the alliance to shreds. Move the game up a few years and you have Chechnya Major major policy mistake would be to extend NATO into Russia a bipolycentric state that was undergoing massive geopolitical/cultural/economic/ military change. It would have also gone against Washingtons own baselines. ‘Beware the foreign entanglement’ John Lewis Gaddis wrote an excellent book that examined the developments of US-Soviet relations and the cold war and the thaw after’ The Long Peace, by John Lewis Gaddis’

DC

I agree. I have an opportunity as a half blood russian living in lithuania to know what russians think about the operation in Georgia, and what westerners think about it. I think Saakashvily have done a wrong deed. Because I think what is important here is to respect the privacy of Russia. I dont think Putin or Medvedev are not democrats or they dont want to make a market economy there in Russia. The point of not democratic goverment in Russia is only a subjective point of western politics or media. At the stage in 1998 there were no options or discussions what should be done. You know there can be discussion when you have a choice which way to go not knowing which is the best. But at that time for EVERYBODY it became evident that Russia under Jetcin was going the WRONG way. So if you think that Russian goverment wants to have a control over everything this is no truth. The have broken in to parts a govermental company a provider of electricity in to many small companies which were privatized then. The point here is not to sell very cheap very big companies as it was under Jeltsin (remember Yukos, Abromovic, why they are billionaires - because they purchased the companies for the price which was thousands times less that the real marked price companies had) Under Putin the capitalization of those companies grew hundreds -thousands times, isnt it a good indicator. Then when the company had their real price, then is a proper time to sell it. But when the company is taken very cheap, and then from nowhere that person becomes thousands time wealthier, this is not right especially when it comes to energy resources. This is what happened in Russia, anyone may blame Putin has a strict not democratic hand.. This is not bad when it is productive. If you want democracy, then most probably there would be a lot of corruption. US and most of countries, I believe went through it. They had strict leaders who made rules more equal for everybody. And if Russia became more influential politically doesnt it shows that it becomes stronger, not necessary millitary, but economicall. Instead of huge ammount of mony to be deployed in European and US banks during Yeltsin, now they come back to Russian economy, they are biulding new schools, hospitals and more. And for example if westerners may see Russia as an enemy.. any tension is economically costy, you may deploy your fleet in the Black Sea, but it is costy, because, then Russia will deploy their bombers in Venezuela, not because they want to bomb US, it would be a contraction, a message, Then US jet fighters would have to convoy russian bombers all the time they become airborne. Too much of expenditures. And is enyone about to fight a WAR, nobody, even a small conflicts are very costy, big wars are not to WIN ANYMORE, they are too costy to win, and nobody wants to fight anymore. The only solution here is to respect; people of Russia become very conscious about their position in the world, and they are very cooperative. Nobody spoke there about occupation og Georgia, only Saakashvilly spoke about that, he used world media to show himself as hero, but he first gave up political solution to a problem, hi stroke first, he involved everyone in to his unfair crusade. Even political and democratic opposition in Russia say that Russia should have responded. Anyway such conflicts shoul involve negotiation with all parties, as well as other conflicts should be negotiated, which was not done in Yougoslavia (which was and remains a failure of western policy), US dont speak to IRAN, since it is an axis of evil, they wait when Castros dies in Cuba, to “liberate” them then. There are many conflicts where US fails because, they dont really try to find the sollution which would satisfy or at least will harm nobody, in their forign policies they distiguish between loved ones and not.. this is not fair not speaking-democratic. Thus they dont find sollution. Nobody should be left aside, and nobody should be forced to a sollution.. As general Petraneus told that there will be no victory in Iraq (means that US will leave gaining almost nothing but having killed there more than million of Irakees). Terrorists are in minority, but they fight because they have different attitude, which is not necessary wrong, but since nobody wants to listen to them they fight for their attitudes.Regards

“This Georgia incursion is a mirror image of Adolph Hitler’s take-over of Rhineland in March of 1935. Is history being repeated?” Not only is this not true, but you are pandering to the basest fears of the ever-feebling baby-boomers that will read your article.

I do agree with your assertion to include Russia in NATO and the EU. Though you are right that they will probably deny their invitation.

What scares me more is the situation in Poland with the missile defense shield being constructed on their borders. I think if the US was really trying to be a world leader we would make this technology available to all nations. Spread this defense and crumble the insanity of Mutually Assured Destruction.

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