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Russia Takes One Step Closer To A New Cold War

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  • Russia Takes One Step Closer To A New Cold War

    RUSSIA TAKES ONE STEP CLOSER TO A NEW COLD WAR
    by Taras Kuzio

    Kyiv Post
    Aug 26 2008
    Ukraine

    The Russian parliament's unanimous endorsement of the independence of
    South Ossetia and Abkhazia is a dangerous step towards conflict in
    the former Soviet Union and another step towards a new Cold War. In
    both instances Russia loses.

    Western and Ukrainian apologists of Russia's new imperialism can no
    longer say, as they did until recently, that the Russian parliament
    undertook policies that were not always endorsed by the president.

    This was the argument that was used under President Boris
    Yeltsin. Under President or Prime minister Vladimir Putin this
    argument is bogus. The Russian parliament is no longer an independent
    institution and, since Russia's last two elections, both houses of
    parliament are controlled by the executive as part of Russia's managed
    democracy and militocracy.

    After recovering from its nationalistic hangover Russia, in promoting
    territorial expansionism towards Georgia, will lose the new Cold War.

    Russia's de facto annexation opens up a pandora's box among former
    Soviet republics and within the Russian Federation itself. If South
    Ossetia and Abkhazia can be independent, then why not Transdniestr,
    Nagorno-Karabakh or Chechnya?

    Russia's relations with its Commonwealth of Independent States
    neighbors will deteriorate, leading to a negative impact on Russia's
    hopes for CIS integration. The loss of South Ossetia and Abkhazia
    will make it easier for Georgia to enter NATO, just like the loss of
    Kosovo has made it easier for Serbia to join the European Union.

    Russia's imperialism in Georgia will also return support levels in
    Ukraine for NATO membership to their pre-Iraqi invasion levels when a
    third of Ukraine's population backed membership. Obtaining 51 percent
    in a referendum is easier to accomplish when your starting base is 33
    percent, rather than 20 percent. Any attempt at repeating the Putin
    Doctrine in the Crimea would increase support in Ukraine for NATO
    membership to over a third.

    Russia will lose out in any Cold War confrontation with the West,
    as the USSR lost in the 1990s when it competed with Ronald Reagan's
    USA. Russia's highly corrupt autocratic regime has neither the
    resources, ideology nor allies that the USSR possessed, factors which
    still did not prevent the Soviet Union from losing the Cold War and
    disintegrating. Perhaps Russia's new rulers should be advised to
    watch the recent U.S. film "Charlie's War" on U.S. support to the
    Afghan freedom fighters in the 1980s.

    Russia's new imperialism will increase the chances that U.S. Sen. John
    McCain will win this year's U.S. elections, the candidate least liked
    by Moscow.

    The near unanimous Western criticism of Russian imperialism in Georgia
    (even the passive EU has called an extraordinary meeting on Sept. 1)
    has pushed many non-committal NATO members towards support for
    Ukrainian and Georgian inclusion into NATO Membership Action Plans
    at the December review meeting.

    Russia's new imperialism is the last stage of the disintegration
    of the Soviet empire that was delayed during the Yeltsin era by
    many years of alcoholism, mass corruption and a brutal invasion of
    Chechnya. As in the 1980s, Russia will ultimately lose again and face
    its own disintegration.
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