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Geopolitical Diary: A Russian Message For NATO

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  • Geopolitical Diary: A Russian Message For NATO

    GEOPOLITICAL DIARY: A RUSSIAN MESSAGE FOR NATO

    Stratfor
    June 8 2006

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Wednesday in a speech
    to the Duma that "Every country has the right to make sovereign
    decisions.... At the same time, the acceptance into NATO of Ukraine
    and Georgia will mean a colossal geopolitical shift and we assess
    such steps from the point of view of our interests." This is pretty
    blunt language for a diplomat. Russia does not want to see a colossal
    geopolitical shift, and that's what it thinks is happening.

    The Russian Foreign Ministry also condemned Ukraine's decision to
    bar several senior Russian lawmakers from Ukraine. One of these,
    Vladimir Zhirinovsky, is a fairly notorious Russian nationalist. The
    Russian Foreign Ministry doesn't much care for Zhirinovsky, but it
    also obviously doesn't care for Ukraine barring Russian legislators
    -- even if, as the Ukrainians put it, he was known for "insulting
    statements about Ukraine." At the same time, a Ukrainian diplomat
    was also refused entry to Russia.

    Both Ukraine and Georgia clearly want to join NATO. There are
    multinational joint military exercises scheduled for July in Ukraine,
    to include U.S. forces. These have met with protests by pro-Russian
    Ukrainians, whom the Ukrainian government claims are being stirred
    up by the Russians. At the same time, Georgia announced that it will
    build a NATO-compliant military based in Gori, to join the one already
    built in Senakskaya.

    As we have said, NATO's expansion to Ukraine would be the break
    point for Russia. Adding to that a NATO base in the Caucasus would
    absolutely convince the Russians that the United States is planning
    to encircle them. Russia has been busy trying to demonstrate the cost
    of this strategy to NATO and the United States. It has intruded into
    U.S. areas of interest in the Middle East, particularly regarding
    Hamas and Iran. It has not intruded as aggressively as it could,
    still signaling Washington that things are not past the break point.

    Nevertheless, as NATO accession looms for Ukraine and Georgia, things
    will get less pleasant.

    There is a fundamental difference in NATO's admitting Georgia and
    Ukraine from the admission of other former Soviet bloc nations. NATO is
    a military alliance. Bringing in Hungary or the Czech Republic meant
    little from that point of view; there is no real, immediate threat
    for NATO to protect them from. Admitting Ukraine and Georgia would
    mean entering into a formal alliance with countries that face serious
    regional threats. It would mean making a commitment to defending those
    countries and therefore, in some way, to assuring their stability. It
    is hard to defend an unstable country.

    Every other expansion of NATO has been notional. By that we mean that
    it amounted to a political signal, far more than a serious political
    commitment. That is not the case with these two countries. In fact,
    that is the point the Russians are working very hard to make. The
    Russian statement today was a message. Russia regards Ukrainian and
    Georgian membership in NATO as a major, unwelcome geopolitical shift.

    As such, Moscow will resist this process -- and failing that, will
    consider these two countries a threat to Russia.

    Geographically, the defense of either of these countries against a
    major regional power -- which Russia certainly is -- is a significant
    burden. Neither country can defend itself. Moreover, each country has
    other regional antagonists that NATO would be committed against -- such
    as, in Georgia's case, Armenia. That is quite a tangle to get into.

    What is attracting Washington is the opportunity to guarantee, by
    surrounding it with NATO members, that Russia will not re-emerge as
    a superpower. The Russians see this move as that, plus a threat to
    the long-term territorial integrity of the Russian Federation. The
    Russians do not believe that they can simply accept this as a fait
    accompli, as they accepted other NATO expansions. Therefore, this
    will trigger Russian responses in the region and more broadly.

    The most important thing to watch here is relations between Russia
    and China. China has been very careful not to get entangled with
    anti-American alliances. It has important economic issues to deal
    with. However, given recent U.S. statements on how it views China,
    access to Russian military technology becomes more important to
    Beijing. And Russia knows it does not, by itself, have the weight to
    counter the United States. Therefore, the logic here, over the coming
    months, is closer ties between Moscow and Beijing. When this happened
    last, in 1948, Washington found itself in an uncomfortable position.

    Therefore, it has to calculate how quickly it can move and consolidate
    its position via NATO before the Russians can act.

    And then there is also the question of the European members of NATO --
    particularly France and Germany -- whose acceptance of NATO expansion
    up to this point has been a signal to Washington of a willingness
    to cooperate. On the other hand, NATO is going to a complicated
    and dangerous place. Paris and Berlin may not have the appetite for
    Washington's game.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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