Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

NATO: Why not really make Russia a partner?

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • NATO: Why not really make Russia a partner?

    International Herald Tribune

    NATO: Why not really make Russia a partner?

    Ian Bremmer and Nikolas Gvosdev IHT Tuesday, June 22, 2004

    WASHINGTON 'You're not our enemies anymore," Secretary of State
    Colin Powell told the Russians last month. Yet two years after the
    NATO-Russia Council was unveiled as a new "bridge of security across
    Europe," 47 percent of Russians still consider the North Atlantic
    alliance a threat to their national security.

    As long as the NATO-Russia partnership remains solely a matter of
    declarations and consultations, the opportunity to fundamentally
    reshape the security not only of the Euro-Atlantic community but the
    entire Eurasian land mass is being missed. Diplomats are squabbling
    over four Belgian aircraft flying patrol over the Baltic states,
    while real threats percolate along the soft underbelly of Eurasia -
    terrorism, organized crime (especially smuggling and the drug trade)
    and unstable states.

    NATO's primary purpose is to provide security. The alliance is there to
    prevent any country - including Russia - from using force to dominate
    its neighbors. But it is not NATO's job to make Russia "disappear"
    as an economic power in the region. If the United States wants to
    extend a zone of peace and security across Eurasia, NATO cannot be
    seen as a lever to keep Russia on the sidelines.

    The "Great Game" geopolitical rivalry between Russia and the West
    for influence across the Eurasian steppe is over. Russia failed in
    its attempt to monopolize the region's transportation links, and the
    construction of the Baku-Ceyhan pipeline is one signal victory. But
    Central Asia's gas reserves are controlled by Gazprom and, as in Soviet
    times, will continue to pass through Russian-controlled routes. There
    is nothing further to be gained by continuing to compete with Russia.

    This is the reality: Moscow has sufficient economic and strategic
    leverage to frustrate further Western plans for the region if Russian
    interests are not taken into consideration. Russia will continue to
    play a critical role in the Caucasus and Central Asia irrespective
    of American intent. Cooperation with Russia is the only way forward.

    Russia continues to have the most effective network of contacts
    in Eurasia. First steps have already been taken in coordinating
    intelligence collection, marrying Russia's human intelligence
    capabilities with American technological capacity. Why not build upon
    this foundation and create a new security organization, grounded in
    the NATO-Russia Council, that would develop joint institutions for
    our joint security challenges?

    Recent events in Georgia demonstrate how the lack of coordination
    between Washington and Moscow can cause serious misunderstandings
    and frustrate effective cooperation. When Americans hint that
    the real purpose of U.S. forces in Georgia is to combat Russian
    influence rather than root out terrorist cells, Moscow responds
    with suspicion. Russia has a shared interest with the United States
    in promoting a Georgian administration that can effectively crack
    down on organized crime and radicals, and it demonstrated this by
    helping to end the stand-off between President Mikheil Saakashvili
    of Georgia and the defiant leader of Adzharia, Aslan Abashidze.
    But cooperation will be limited if Russia believes America's true
    intent is to leverage Russia out of the region altogether.

    Too often, security initiatives in Eurasia have had an "us or them"
    approach. In the Kyrgyz Republic, both the United States and Russia
    maintain military bases, although both ostensibly serve the same
    purpose - to prevent the spillover of Islamist terrorism into Central
    Asia. Indeed, Russia opened its base at Kant in autumn 2003, its
    first post-cold war deployment, in response to the arrival of the
    U.S. military. These forces have no mechanism for joint action -
    not even the ability to communicate by cellphone.

    Creating a joint U.S.-Russia base under the aegis of a NATO-Russia
    partnership, a proposal the Kyrgyz president, Askar Akaev, endorses,
    could lay the basis for practical cooperation that could then
    be extended, both to the countries where Russia has prevailing
    influence (such as Armenia) and those seeking greater integration
    into Euro-Atlantic structures (such as Georgia, Uzbekistan or even
    Azerbaijan). It would send a clear message to all countries in the
    region that cooperation with Russia does not jeopardize their progress
    to full membership in the Euro-Atlantic community.

    It could also pave the way for greater regional stability. Take the
    Nagorno-Karabakh conflict - if it can be resolved, a major source
    of instability and a threat to the export of hydrocarbons from the
    Caspian basin would be removed. Given the lack of trust on both sides,
    the only effective peacekeeping force would be a joint Russia-NATO
    operation - one that could give assurances to both the Armenians
    and Azeris. The peacekeeping operations in Bosnia and Kosovo - the
    first time that Russian and NATO forces collaborated in that manner -
    provide a foundation for extending such cooperation.

    The American ambassador to Russia, Alexander Vershbow, has declared
    that "NATO sees Russia as a partner." If that is the case, then it
    is time to institutionalize cooperation between Russia and the West
    to deal with common threats.

    Ian Bremmer is president of the Eurasia Group and a senior fellow at
    the World Policy Institute. Nikolas Gvosdev is executive editor of
    The National Interest. NATO looks east
Working...
X