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Western Press Review: Putin's Speech, NATO's Black Sea Interests

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  • Western Press Review: Putin's Speech, NATO's Black Sea Interests

    Radio Free Europe, Czech Republic
    May 28 2004

    Western Press Review: Putin's Speech, NATO's Black Sea Interests,
    Prosecuting Wartime Abuses, The Arab Summit
    By Khatya Chhor

    Prague, 28 May 2004 (RFE/RL) -- Among the topics being discussed
    in the media today are Russian President Vladimir Putin's first
    formal address this week since winning a second term; refocusing NATO
    attention on the Black Sea-South Caucasus region; determining command
    responsibility for crimes committed in wartime; events in Iraq, as
    preparations continue for the 30 June handover of power; and this
    week's summit meeting of Arab leaders in Tunis, among other issues.

    THE NEW YORK TIMES

    Russian President Vladimir Putin's first formal address to the
    Federal Assembly (both legislative bodies) since his reelection in
    March is the topic of an editorial today in New York's leading daily.
    The Kremlin head's words this week (26 May) showed "the real, core
    [Putin], not a rookie [or] a shaky politician looking for votes. The
    speech was the program of a man very much in charge of Russia. Too
    much, in fact," the paper remarks dryly.

    Putin's main theme was his commitment to tackle the tough economic
    problems -- including housing, health care, education, and jobs -- that
    affect every Russian family. And while such pledges are not original,
    Putin is "serious," the paper says. "His enormous popularity among
    Russians comes largely from his success in bringing stability and
    growth to a chaotic land." Aided by high oil prices, Putin has made
    "impressive progress in reforming the decrepit economic institutions
    he inherited."

    Yet despite the welcome promises of economic reform, "The New York
    Times" says it was Putin's "Soviet echoes" that reverberated most
    loudly through the great Marble Hall of the Kremlin. The most chilling
    was Putin's denunciation of civil associations that have been critical
    of his government and his swipe at Western critics, whom he accused
    of trying to prevent Russia from being strong and free."

    Such comments are reminders of a time when the Kremlin assumed
    "that economic growth and national security require an all-powerful,
    centralized state apparatus."

    The paper writes: "The longing of the Russians for a measure
    of security is understandable. But it is imperative that Putin be
    reminded at every turn not to confuse the laudable goal of improving
    the lives of the Russians with a restoration of the authoritarian,
    centralized rule that destroyed their lives to begin with."

    WASHINGTON POST

    A joint contribution today by James Dobbins of the Rand Corporation
    and Philip Gordon of the Brookings Institution says the United States
    must soon make needed changes in its military strategy if it is to
    stabilize Iraq.

    "Reaching the goal of a stable, unified and non-threatening Iraq does
    look increasingly difficult," say the authors. But the withdrawal
    of U.S. troops from Iraq would create a security vacuum "that would
    quickly be filled by the most heavily armed and violent groups
    in Iraq." Iraq's many different ethnic, religious, and cultural
    communities "would probably struggle to establish control over
    that country's vast energy riches. Civil war, ethnic cleansing, and
    genocide [would] be a likely result. Iraq's neighbors -- including
    Iran, Syria, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey -- would probably be drawn in,
    supplying arms and money to their preferred factions."

    To achieve success in Iraq, the United States needs a major strategic
    shift. "Henceforth, American forces cannot afford to destroy villages
    to save them. They cannot afford to use artillery, gunships and
    ordnance from fixed-wing aircraft in populated areas, regardless
    of the provocation. They cannot afford to sacrifice innocent Iraqi
    civilians to reduce American casualties. They cannot afford to sweep
    up, incarcerate and hold for months thousands of Iraqis -- many of them
    innocent -- to apprehend a smaller number of guilty ones. They cannot
    afford to use pain, privation or humiliation to secure information."

    Dobbins and Gordon say an insurgency "cannot be defeated without the
    support of the population." And the United States will not receive
    that support from the Iraq people "unless it puts public security at
    the center of its military strategy."

    WALL STREET JOURNAL EUROPE

    Vladimir Socor of the Washington, D.C.-based Jamestown Foundation
    says that at its upcoming (27-28 June) summit in Istanbul, "NATO can
    celebrate a triumph." Seven new members from the Baltic to the Black
    Sea will attend the alliance summit as members. "This -- along with
    the previous accession round by three Central European countries --
    represents the alliance's greatest strategic, political and moral
    victory in its 55-year history."

    But the alliance "cannot avoid addressing the issue of peacekeeping
    and conflict resolution on its own vital strategic perimeter," Socor
    says. "Thirteen years after the end of the Soviet Union, peacekeeping
    in this region remains in practice Moscow's monopoly, which only
    serves to freeze the political settlements of the conflicts."

    Two years ago, both NATO and the United States seemed ready
    "to engage jointly with Russia in peace-support operations
    and conflict-resolution efforts in Moldova, Georgia and the
    Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict. [However,] nothing further has been
    heard about these intentions since those summits."

    Socor observes that U.S. "forces and resources are now overextended
    worldwide." Thus he suggests European nations should be ready "to
    take the lead in peace-support operations and conflict settlement in
    the Black Sea-South Caucasus region, Europe's doorstep."

    The United States, NATO, and the European Union "have the strategic
    and democratic motivations, as well as the means, to initiate a
    transformation of peacekeeping and conflict resolution at this
    crossroads, where the access routes to the Greater Middle East and
    the energy transit routes to Europe intersect." Socor says this "must
    become a Euro-Atlantic priority." June's NATO summit agenda would be
    "incomplete" if it did not indicate its readiness to address this
    vital issue.

    FINANCIAL TIMES

    In a contribution to London's leading financial daily, a former U.S.
    ambassador-at-large for war crimes, David Scheffer, discusses the
    difficulties of determining command responsibility for abuses committed
    in wartime. In the wake of the Abu Ghurayb prison scandal in Iraq,
    Scheffer looks at how the international war crimes tribunal in The
    Hague has dealt with offenses committed during the Balkan wars of
    the 1990s.

    He says some of the same "[fundamental] questions of 'responsibility'"
    that arose from the mistreatment of Muslim prisoners at the Trnopolje
    Camp in Bosnia-Herzegovina are likely to be addressed in the Abu
    Ghurayb investigation. Was there, from top U.S. administration
    officials down to prison guards, a common intention to institute
    practices prohibited by the Geneva Conventions? Who had de facto
    control over the U.S. personnel and private contractors conducting
    interrogations? And who had the authority "to subject detainees to
    inhumane treatment?"

    The Hague tribunal has, in recent years, determined "responsibility"
    for abuses and the complicity of military and civilian leaders
    "by asking whether the individual had superior responsibility for
    subordinates, or was a co-perpetrator in a joint criminal enterprise,
    or aided or abetted an atrocity by knowingly assisting or encouraging
    it."

    The tribunal's determination of command responsibility rests on whether
    "there was a superior-subordinate relationship where the accused had
    'effective control' over the perpetrator. Such control should exist
    when a superior has the power to prevent or punish atrocities committed
    by subordinates."

    The Hague tribunal "has shown that responsibility for atrocities,
    especially war crimes committed against detainees, requires serious and
    objective review of evidence up the chain of command." Scheffer says,
    "The die, therefore, is cast for U.S. judges and Congress, which can
    punish such crimes, to enforce the law with unassailable integrity."

    THE ECONOMIST

    London's weekly magazine observes that the meeting of Arab leaders
    in Tunis last week "was supposed to have been about two things:
    political reform and a uniform stand on thorny issues such as Iraq
    and Palestine." But following the summit's end, "Commentators from
    Morocco to the Gulf, in unprecedentedly uniform derision, variously
    deemed the meeting 'ridiculous,' 'a failure,' 'empty rhetoric' and
    'instantly forgettable.'"

    The strains between the Arab League's 22 members have been exacerbated
    by the "muscular" approach to the region by the United States,
    the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, and Washington's unflagging support
    for Israeli policies, its "icy hostility to old adversaries" like
    Syria, and its "aloofness" from longtime allies such as Egypt and
    Saudi Arabia. Moreover, the sudden U.S. preoccupation with promoting
    democracy throughout the Middle East has "shaken Arab palaces and
    streets alike."

    But the heads of state and envoys meeting in Tunis did make
    an attempt to address "both their own peoples' and Americans'
    concerns." The summit's final communique "restated a commitment to
    a comprehensive Palestinian-Israeli peace and made a new gesture to
    Israel by condemning 'all operations that target civilians, without
    distinction.'" The text also, "unsurprisingly," condemned the U.S.
    president's recent rejection of the right of displaced Palestinians
    to return to Israel as well as his contention that Israel should be
    allowed to keep some of the territory it has occupied since 1967.
    Some statements were made about the leaders' commitment to social and
    political reform in the region, but many of these were "notably vague."

    The "Economist" notes that 34 Arab nongovernmental organizations from
    14 countries issued a statement of protest, calling for a specific
    timetable for change or for holding elections.
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