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  • Looking for the enemy

    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say. Part B (Russia)
    July 14, 2005, Thursday

    LOOKING FOR THE ENEMY

    SOURCE: Vremya Novostei, July 14, 2005, p. 4

    by Nikolai Poroskov


    The political demarche of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization has
    forced NATO to change tactics. Earlier this month, Shanghai
    Cooperation Organization members and observers expressed support for
    Uzbekistan in its demand for NATO to withdraw its bases from Central
    Asia. Moreover, they also asked the Alliance to set a timeframe for
    the withdrawal. Implementation of decisions made at the NATO summit
    in Istanbul last year, when a sizeable part of Central Asia and the
    Caucasus were branded as a NATO strategic interests zone, was
    therefore jeopardized.

    It stands to reason to expect NATO to concentrate on the Caucasus
    now. Colonel-General Leonid Ivashov, Vice President of the
    Geopolitical Academy, maintains that as soon as the Russian military
    bases are expelled from Georgia and then Armenia, NATO will
    immediately move in with its tactical bases with the necessary
    infrastructure and personnel ready to receive major forces airlifted
    there in the matter of hours. Efforts are undertaken to have a new
    alliance (Turkey, Georgia, Azerbaijan) formed. As far as Ivashov is
    concerned, President Ilham Aliyev of Azerbaijan is being put under
    pressure to make three airfields available to the Americans.

    What really counts, however, is that NATO is bound to concentrate on
    Ukraine whose political establishment longs for integration into
    Europe. Back in 2002, the Rada passed a resolution (which amounts to
    a law) making all of the territory of Ukraine available for
    deployment of NATO troops with heavy military hardware. The Greater
    Black Sea Zone NATO Program is quite explicit on how naval bases,
    coast infrastructure, etc. should be acquainted and familiarized
    with. All this worries patriotic Russian politicians and political
    scientists. They believe that the new course of the Ukrainian
    authorities may eventually split the country into three parts whose
    borders will be defined by the West-East confrontation and
    instability of the Crimea. "Even if Ukraine is ever admitted into
    Europe, it will only be part by part," Ivashov claims. In any case,
    the situation in Ukraine may make presence of the Russian Black Sea
    Fleet there impossible. Even though it is supposed to remain there
    until 2017. Still, NATO doors will be closed for Ukraine while it has
    the Russian fleet on its territory.

    Now that the West is blamed for orchestration of color revolutions
    and that the Shanghai Cooperation Organization pulled off the latest
    demarche, Russian politicians regularly recall the episodes when the
    Alliance proved itself an unreliable partner or did not keep its
    promise. Russia insisted on amendment of the Russia-NATO Pact so that
    it would include the provision that nuclear weapons would never be
    deployed on the territories of new NATO countries. The Alliance,
    however, only gave the consent to a vague provision mentioning "the
    lack of intentions" and would not become more specific. It is clear
    now that not even interaction with the Alliance in the war on
    terrorism is effective. "Show at least one arrested criminal, why
    don't you?" Ivashov says. "There is no one to show. How can it be
    anything else when 85% of interaction with the Alliance boils down to
    combat readiness drills..." That is what makes interaction with NATO
    a waste of time and effort that doesn't augment anyone's security.

    The Alliance is accused of "conceptual aggressiveness." This
    assumption is reiterated by the words of NATO Secretary General Jaap
    de Hoop Scheffer at the meeting of the Parliamentary Assembly of the
    Council of Europe on the eve of his visit to Moscow. NATO exists to
    protect and advance democracy, even by military means if need be, he
    said. Even the necessity of joint military exercises is questioned.
    Once again, history is referred to. Back in 1998 and 1999, NATO
    leaders spared neither time nor effort to persuade the Kremlin that
    military exercises around the former Yugoslavia would not escalate
    into hostilities. Besides, NATO forces involved in Exercise Baltops
    were supposed to detect and destroy a terrorist submarine. Whose
    submarines but Russia's can ever be in the Baltic Sea?

    By the way, Russia doesn't participate in Exercise Peace Shield 2005
    that began yesterday. About 750 servicemen from 22 countries are
    involved. The legend of the first phase of the exercise is based on
    the actual military-political situation in Iraq. On July 25, the
    exercise will shift to the Crimea.

    Sure, every military exercise emulates a situation that might take
    shape in real life. Peace Shield exercises of the past were clearly
    anti-Russian. Here is an example of the scenarios: widespread riots
    begin in the Crimea, and a foreign power gives aid to the
    Russian-speaking population. It isn't hard to guess that the foreign
    power could only be Russia... This time, the objectives of an
    "international peacekeeping operation" will be drilled in the naval
    part of the exercise. That is probably why Russia has opted not to
    participate. Or perhaps the situation in the Shanghai Cooperation
    Organization became the guiding motive.

    There are, however, people in Russia who view the "alliance with the
    Alliance" from a different angle. Alexander Konovalov, head of the
    Strategic Evaluations Institute, believes that the worst possible
    thing happened to NATO: NATO has found itself without a mission and
    without an adversary. NATO is frantically seeking some other form of
    self-definition. Unfortunately, it hasn't been effective so far in
    the war on WMD proliferation, terrorism, drug trafficking, or illegal
    immigration. Even the Americans admit that NATO is really a burden,
    with little to show for the trouble. Article 5 of the Washington
    Accord (aggression against one NATO country means aggression against
    all) doesn't work. Konovalov maintains that NATO countries are not
    prepared for joint defense of the Baltic states. Flights of patrol
    aircraft above the Baltic states are but a PR move, a purely
    political gesture. Whatever the aircraft observe can as easily be
    observed on flights from Norwegian airfields.

    The eastward movement of NATO bases is attributed to purely financial
    considerations. Maintaining them in Poland or Bulgaria is much
    cheaper than maintaining them in Germany. Konovalov's conclusions:
    NATO doesn't pose any threats to Russia; and we could lose our
    country without any external aggression, simply by failing to improve
    the nation's health and the quality of its human resources.

    Translated by A. Ignatkin
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