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  • US Problems With Putin

    US PROBLEMS WITH PUTIN
    By Dimitri Sidorov And Bill Thomas
    UPI Outside View Commentators

    United Press International
    March 9 2006

    WASHINGTON, March 9 (UPI) -- The recent visit to Moscow by leaders
    of Hamas should not be viewed as just another attempt by the Kremlin
    to create confusion in Washington.

    The Hamas meeting, coupled with Russia's agreement to sell arms
    to the terrorist group now in charge of the Palestinian Authority,
    indicates something much more problematic in U.S.-Russia relations,
    namely Moscow's desire to return to the Middle East with a well-planned
    campaign to unite all parties dissatisfied with American policy in
    the region.

    In fact, the Kremlin's latest moves suggest that Russian President
    Vladimir Putin may be reviving the cold war-era Primakov Doctrine.

    Originated by former Soviet hard-liner and current Putin adviser
    Yevgeny Primakov, the strategy was designed to challenge the United
    States and its NATO allies on every major political and strategic
    front.

    Some Kremlin experts in Washington believe Russia has only a reactive
    foreign policy, responding to events as they occur without any specific
    long-term agenda. But an arms sale to Syria, a missile deal with Iran
    and the get together with Hamas hardly fit that pattern.

    All of this indicates a growing political struggle between Washington
    and Moscow. "U.S.-Russia relations are clearly headed in the
    wrong direction," concluded a new report by the Council on Foreign
    Relations. The Kremlin wants to be a player again in the old Soviet
    sphere of influence, and its ambitions have gone largely unchecked
    by a White House preoccupied with Iraq.

    Moscow has insinuated itself into the Armenia-Azerbaijan conflict;
    become an obstacle in territorial disputes going on in independent
    Moldova and Georgia; increased political pressure in Ukraine, trying
    to reverse its failure in last year's presidential election; and
    formed an alliance with Uzbekistan after a popular revolt and the
    expulsion of the U.S. military from that country.

    Following a trial run in the ex-Soviet republics, the Kremlin has
    turned its full attention to the Middle East and the Persian Gulf.

    Unlike the Soviet policy of backing rogue terrorist groups, Putin
    and his Kremlin colleagues have set out to create a support network
    of rogue nations dedicated to frustrating the United States and
    its allies.

    Helped by the war in Iraq, Moscow has strengthened ties with several
    neighboring countries unhappy about Washington's policies, particularly
    Iran where American and European resolve faces a crucial test.

    For more than a decade the White House tried unsuccessfully to persuade
    Russia to end its nuclear cooperation with Iran. American suspicions
    about "peaceful, financially based" relations between Moscow and Tehran
    grew stronger when Russians began work on an Iranian nuclear facility.

    Moscow has not only continued to assist with Iran's potentially
    threatening nuclear program, the Russian government has some in the
    West convinced it can be trusted to enrich Iran's uranium, though
    talks on the matter between Russian and Iranian negotiators have so
    far gone nowhere.

    Meanwhile, the Bush administration seems uncertain about what its next
    move should be. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice still insists the
    United States "has very good relations with Russia, perhaps the best
    we've had in the long time." The report issued by Council of Foreign
    Relations sharply disagrees with that assessment.

    So does a former CIA official, citing the administration's lack of
    leverage with Moscow as one reason for escalating tensions over Iran.

    At this point the Russians are pretending to cooperate, he added. The
    moment of truth will come when Kremlin strategy shifts to outright
    opposition, in other words when the Primakov Doctrine gives way to the
    approach perfected by longtime Soviet Foreign Ministry Andrei Gromyko,
    whose penchant for defying the United States earned him the nickname
    "Mr. Nyet."

    And that's when Washington's real problems begin.

    --

    (Dmitry Sidorov is the Washington correspondent for Kommersant Daily.

    Bill Thomas is the author of "Red Tape: Adventure Capitalism in the
    New Russia" and other books. They are writing a book on US-Russia
    relations.)

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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