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Unfinished Business in Russia

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  • Unfinished Business in Russia

    Unfinished Business in Russia

    Stratfor.com
    Wednesday, August 10, 2005

    By Peter Zeihan

    It should come as no surprise that the most dynamic part of U.S. foreign
    policy relates to Russia. Condoleezza Rice, appointed as Secretary of
    State at the beginning of the year, began her government work during the
    end of the Cold War, when she served as former President George H. W.
    Bush's Soviet expert at the National Security Council. Now that she is
    in the big chair at Foggy Bottom, she has surrounded herself with
    members of the same team from her previous stint in government service.
    Of particular note are former U.S. Trade Representative Robert Zoellick,
    former U.S. ambassador to NATO Nicholas Burns, and Robert Joseph, former
    special assistant to the president and senior director for proliferation
    strategy, counterproliferation and homeland defense with the National
    Security Council (NSC) -- a wordy way of saying that he was really
    important. The three now serve essentially as Rice's No. 2, 3 and 4 at
    State.

    As we stated when Rice was appointed in January, the State Department is
    now "staffed by a team that helped knock the Soviet Union off its
    superpower perch. Russia can look forward to four years of a State
    Department with the resources and the will to ratchet back Moscow's
    influence throughout the Baltics, the Balkans, the Caucasus, Central
    Asia and even its western Slavic flank. The confrontation over Ukraine
    was just the beginning."

    Personnel changes have not been limited to the top tier. Vershbow's
    replacement as ambassador -- William Burns -- fits the mold set by Rice
    and her top team. He served at the U.S. embassy in Moscow as
    minister-counselor for political affairs during the 1980s, a position
    and time that would tend to shape one's political views. He is now
    coming back to Moscow after several years of knocking Israeli and
    Palestinian heads together.

    In the case of Russia, however, the transformation is much deeper than
    "just" a fresh ambassador, secretary of state and top management team.
    The rank and file of the entire Russia desk at the State Department is
    being overhauled. Considering that most State Department personnel swap
    out positions every two to three years to avoid the dangers of going
    native, a certain amount of turnover is expected, but the top-to-bottom
    housecleaning in the case of the Russia team appears to be far more
    thorough than any scheduled rotation.

    The big shift began -- and the direction of U.S. policy was set -- at
    the V-E Day celebrations in Moscow in May. During that trip, the Bush
    team bracketed a whirlwind tour past a parade stand in Moscow between
    deep, long and extremely friendly visits to Latvia and Georgia. The
    message was clear: the United States is now more concerned with the
    comings, goings and concerns of Vaira Vike-Freiberga and Mikhail
    Saakashvili -- the Latvian and Georgian presidents -- than it is with
    the Russians, and this message was sent on the Russians' national day.

    In the Russian mind, it is all snapping into place: color "revolutions"
    in Georgia, Kyrgyzstan and Ukraine; NATO and EU expansion right up to
    the Russian border; the commencement of pumping on the
    Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline; and now a thorough personnel shift in
    the State Department that is stocking the top ranks with people who were
    present at -- and played a role in -- the Soviet defeat. The Kremlin's
    belief is that the West, led by the United States, is committing to a
    full-court press into Russia's geopolitical space in an attempt to
    permanently remove Russia as a threat.
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