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  • Russian Offensive Hailed in Mideast

    Washington Post
    Aug 30 2008




    Russian Offensive Hailed in Mideast

    By Ellen Knickmeyer
    Washington Post Foreign Service
    Saturday, August 30, 2008; Page A18

    CAIRO -- For some in the Middle East, the images of Russian tanks
    rolling into Georgia in defiance of U.S. opposition have revived warm
    memories of the Cold War.

    Syrian President Bashar al-Assad flew last week to Moscow, where he
    endorsed Russia's offensive in Georgia and, according to Russian
    officials, sought additional Russian weapon systems.

    Saif al-Islam Gaddafi, Libyan leader Moammar Gaddafi's influential
    son, echoed the delight expressed in much of the Arab news
    media. "What happened in Georgia is a good sign, one that means
    America is no longer the sole world power setting the rules of the
    game," the younger Gaddafi was quoted as telling the Russian daily
    Kommersant. "There is a balance in the world now. Russia is resurging,
    which is good for us, for the entire Middle East."

    In Turkey, an American and European ally that obtains more than
    two-thirds of its natural gas from Russia, the reaction was more
    complex. Turks watched as the United States, NATO and a divided
    European Union hesitated in the face of Russian military
    assertiveness, leaving them more doubtful than they already were about
    depending on the West to secure U.S.-backed alternative oil and gas
    supply lines.


    "This Russian invasion of Georgia is a turning point in the relations
    of the Atlantic community with Russia, including, of course, Turkey,"
    Ozden Sanberk, a former Turkish ambassador to Britain, said by
    telephone from Turkey. "There is a change in the paradigm, a change in
    assessment."

    Since Aug. 8, when Russia sent troops and tanks across its southern
    border in a confrontation with Georgia's pro-Western government, many
    Turkish newspapers have urged the Turkish government to improve
    relations with Russia, in pragmatic acceptance of the possibility that
    Russia could directly or indirectly control most oil and gas supplies
    from Central Asia to Europe.

    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan for the past two weeks has
    sought to persuade leaders of Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia and Russia
    to put their political differences aside in the interest of keeping
    oil and gas flowing.

    Russian leaders, angry at Turkish military aid to Georgia, repeatedly
    refused to take Erdogan's calls, Turkish news media reported.

    Russia has been paying closer attention to the needs of the United
    States' least favorite Middle East countries, Syria and Iran.

    Russia's ambassador in Tehran, Alexander Sadovnikov, told Iranian news
    media this week that Russia was committed to helping Iran finish work
    on its Bushehr nuclear plant as soon as possible. At the same time,
    Iran's oil minister declared his country's eagerness to do more
    business with Russia's main energy company, Gazprom.

    The United States has tried to discourage European countries and
    Turkey from turning to Iran for oil and gas. With Russia demonstrating
    its ability to control supplies through Georgia and the rest of the
    Caucasus, Iran's supplies are going to look more attractive to
    U.S. allies in Europe, analysts noted.

    And with the United States and Russia at odds, Iran also can expect
    more help from Russia in blocking U.S. efforts at the U.N. Security
    Council and other international bodies to sanction Iran over its
    nuclear program, said Flynt Leverett, a former Bush administration
    Middle East policy director and now a senior fellow at the New America
    Foundation in Washington.

    Especially with Assad's visit to Moscow, Russians are signaling that
    there is more they can do to undermine U.S. policies, Leverett said.

    Syrian officials this week denied reports in Russian news media that
    Assad had sought Russian ballistic missiles on his visit to Moscow and
    had offered to host a Russian naval post again, as Syria did in the
    Cold War to ward off any attack by Israel.

    Iranian officials, mindful of a possible U.S. or Israeli strike, also
    have voiced hopes of obtaining Russia's most advanced antiaircraft
    missile systems.

    In Israel and the United States, there is "definitely rising concern
    Russia may go ahead and deliver those systems as a way of further
    indicating how unhappy it is with U.S. policy," Leverett said.

    Russia, however, also has been building relations and trade with
    Israel, and has denied selling its most advanced systems to Syria or
    Iran. Syria itself is in indirect peace talks with Israel. Russian
    Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said last week that Russia was ready to
    sell Syria arms of a "defensive character that do not violate the
    strategic balance of power in the Middle East."


    Israel said Prime Minister Ehud Olmert planned to travel to Russia to
    discuss any Syria-Russia arms deals, amid statements from Israeli
    officials that the arms could be used to bolster Syrian ally
    Hezbollah.

    Middle East governments have experience with Russian-made weapons,
    which haven't worked so well, said Abdel-Moneim Said, director of the
    al-Ahram Center for Political and Strategic Studies in
    Cairo. Egyptians still blame their defeats in wars against Israel
    partly on their Russian-supplied weapons.

    Many Arab analysts initially cheered Russia's flexing of its military
    muscles. An opinion piece in the United Arab Emirates-based Gulf News
    called it "long overdue." Editorials in some Arab news media this week
    and last expressed second thoughts, questioning whether Russia has the
    stability, surety of purpose or strength to be a leader among
    countries.

    "All that ended up to be a kind of nostalgia, or looking for a new
    kind of Cold War, when there was not only one, single power dominating
    the world, the United States, and its ally, Israel," Said said.

    Now, "there's a realization that Russia has a lot of interests with
    the West. Also that Russia is still a limited power," he said. "It's
    no match. There is no new Cold War coming."
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