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On the Road to Moscow

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  • On the Road to Moscow

    Heritage.org, DC
    May 9 2005

    On the Road to Moscow

    By Ariel Cohen

    President George W. Bush's visit to Latvia, Russia and the Republic
    of Georgia underscores how much the geopolitical landscape changed 13
    years after the collapse of the Soviet Empire.

    In Riga, Mr. Bush will address leaders of Estonia, Latvia and
    Lithuania. These are America's new allies -- members of North
    Atlantic Treaty Organization. They are also members of the European
    Union. Russia is an ex-rival and a strategic partner, a vague term
    indeed. Georgia (and neighboring Azerbaijan) are emerging allies.

    In Riga, Mr. Bush should avoid new dividing lines in Europe, but call
    for recognition of Latvian and Estonian borders by Russia and the
    signing of a peace treaty. The president should also tell people of
    the Baltic States that their well-earned and much-deserved freedom
    should not be dishonored by occasional expressions of sympathy to
    Nazis or by discriminatory measures against the Russian population.

    Mr. Bush should also acknowledge our new allies' great achievements
    in making the transition to democracy and market economy and
    integration into NATO. He should remember a new generation has come
    of age, which did not suffer from Soviet occupation and is not as
    pro-American as its parents. The president should remind these young
    people the U.S. supported Baltic independence and never recognized
    Soviet annexation. The task now is to keep these young people friends
    of America.

    Presidential challenges in Russia are different. He should address
    Russia's people through press conferences and in the meeting with
    democracy activists.

    He should acknowledge the great sacrifices of the peoples of Russia
    and the former Soviet Union in World War Two -- a topic most dear to
    every Russian's heart. Josef Stalin no doubt enabled Adolf Hitler to
    start the war, and the Soviet regime then was as bloodthirsty as the
    Nazis. Stalin also destroyed the top Soviet generals and was
    criminally negligent and oblivious to the coming Nazi attack --
    Operation Barbarossa, which started in June 1941. In it, millions of
    Soviet soldiers were surrounded and whole field armies destroyed.

    It was, however, the blood and heroism of Russians, Ukrainians,
    Tatars, Jews, Georgians and others who stopped the Nazi war machine.
    Battles of Stalingrad and Kursk broke the backbone of the Wehrmacht.
    The strategic gifts of Marshal Georgi Zhukov helped a lot. Still,
    Soviets lost 25 million sons and daughters.
    Mr. Bush can also remind his audience that the victories of the Red
    Army were due to a large degree to Franklin D. Roosevelt's
    "lend-lease" program: Studebaker trucks, Cobra fighter planes, SPAM
    and GI boots.

    Today, the president should say, the United States and Russia face a
    new enemy: implacable Islamist terrorism coveting weapons of mass
    destruction (WMD). In talks with Mr. Putin, Mr. Bush should advance
    joint anti-proliferation efforts, such as the Nunn-Lugar program
    worth up to $1 billion a year aimed at securing and destroying the
    creaky Russian WMD arsenal and related materials.

    The United States and Russia should work on ways to prevent Iran from
    obtaining nuclear weapons. While Tehran can hit Russian soil, it
    still lacks the missile capability to strike the U.S. The two leaders
    should also discuss the future challenges U.S. and Russia may face
    from assertive and resource-hungry China.

    The president should extend a helping hand to the Russian people.
    America can help address Russia's catastrophic social trends: an
    HIV/AIDS and tuberculosis epidemics and a male life expectancy of
    58-59 years -- behind that of Egypt.

    Russia suffers from a wave of alcoholism, drugs and related
    illnesses, and the abortion rate remains among the highest in the
    world. This is not about geopolitics, it is about helping Russians
    lead healthier, happier lives.

    In meeting with Russia's democracy activists, President Bush should
    explain why America promotes democracy around the world. Without
    stentorian lectures, Mr. Bush should explain why smooth and bloodless
    transition from one power elite to another benefits Russia, why free
    media helps fight corruption, why transparency and the rule of law
    attract foreign investment. If Russia wants to modernize, it needs to
    liberalize. It is in the Russian national interest to be free. The
    United States can help -- if the Russians want it to.

    Finally, a speech at the Independence Square in Tbilisi is a great
    opportunity to look into the future. Mr. Bush should acknowledge
    Georgia's accomplishments in its Rose Revolution, a bloodless
    pro-democracy power change. He should express America's -- and the
    world's -- firm hope that Georgia will remain on the democratic path
    and its territorial integrity and sovereignty be restored. U.S.
    should support return of secessionist Abkhazia and South Ossetia to
    Georgia's fold, and withdrawal of Russian military bases from
    Georgian soil.

    Further, President Bush should demand the end to "frozen conflicts"
    between Armenia and Azerbaijan in Nagorno-Karabakh and in
    Transnistria in Moldova. These conflicts lasted too long, and make
    everyone miserable and unable to economically develop.

    Finally, the president should express our hope the right will be
    respected of the region's peoples -- from Belarus to Turkmenistan to
    Uzbekistan -- to elect their leaders. Tbilisi will be a terrific
    place to launch a new campaign for a better future in the former
    Soviet area, a future where dignity, the rule of law, civil society,
    economic development and freedom prevail.

    Ariel Cohen is a senior research fellow in Russian and Eurasian
    studies and international energy security at the Heritage Foundation.
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