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VoA: Russia's "Privileged" Sphere Of Influence Meets Resistance

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  • VoA: Russia's "Privileged" Sphere Of Influence Meets Resistance

    RUSSIA'S "PRIVILEGED" SPHERE OF INFLUENCE MEETS RESISTANCE
    By Judith Latham

    Voice of America
    http://www.voanews.com/english/NewsAnalysi s/2008-09-15-voa28.cfm
    Sept 15 2008

    Russian President Dmitri Medvedev recently laid claim to what he calls
    a "privileged" sphere of influence in the world. And he rejected the
    idea of a "unipolar" world, where one superpower - namely, the United
    States - dominates world affairs.

    A Russian Perspective

    Russian journalist Masha Lipman, editor of Pro et Contra, published
    by the Carnegie Moscow Center, says from a Russian perspective the
    recent conflict in the Caucasus began with Georgia's invasion of
    South Ossetia. Speaking with host Judith Latham of VOA News Now's
    International Press Club, Lipman says it provided a perfect excuse
    for Russia's retaliation. From a Western perspective, however,
    this retaliatory mission was seen as disproportionate, especially
    with respect to Moscow's unilateral recognition of the two breakaway
    enclaves of South Ossetia and Abkhazia and its refusal to recognize
    Georgia's territorial integrity. Russian soldiers have begun
    dismantling some checkpoints in western Georgia near the Black Sea
    port of Poti and outside the region of Abkhazia [9/10/09]. But Russia
    plans to keep about 7,600 troops inside South Ossetia and Abkhazia
    for what Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov says will be "a long time."

    Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has defended Russia's recent
    war with Georgia

    Masha Lipman says the Russian response put into action what former
    President, and now Prime Minister, Vladimir Putin has been saying for
    several years - Russia will not allow Georgia or Ukraine to become
    a member of NATO. Lipman says the West dismissed those concerns,
    expecting Russia to somehow get over it. But Russia is much stronger
    now and far less dependent on Western financial institutions,
    enabling it to act in an "independent fashion" without regard for
    Western opinion. Furthermore, Lipman says, what happened in Georgia
    demonstrates the limits of U.S. power. She notes that, when Washington
    was unable to control its ally - Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili
    - there was nothing it could do to save him from the consequences.

    According to Masha Lipman, Ukraine is also vulnerable. She notes
    that not only is most of the population of the Crimea ethnic Russian,
    but Russian speaking as well. And she points to Ukrainian President
    Viktor Yushchenko's decree last month that puts limits on the movement
    of Russia's Black Sea fleet from its base in Savastopol - a move
    widely seen as a response to Russia's use of its naval forces there
    in its recent military operations in Georgia. In fact, the Russian
    foreign ministry accused Kyiv [9/11/08] of providing Georgia with
    heavy weaponry during last month's conflict.

    A Ukrainian Perspective

    Ukrainian journalist Yevhen Hlibovytsky in Kyiv says people there are
    skeptical of Moscow's explanation that its primary concern lies with
    its opposition to Ukraine's proposed membership in NATO. According
    to Hlibovytsky, the real reason is that Russia is trying to regain
    the influence it once had over the former Soviet republics. So,
    he says, if NATO were not on the agenda, there would be something
    else. Hlibovytsky draws a parallel between Russia's humiliation
    during the 1990s, following the collapse of the former Soviet Union,
    and Germany's humiliation in the 1920s, following World War I. And he
    suggests that Nazi Germany's annexation of the Sudetenland [present-day
    Bohemia, which is part of the Czech Republic] resembles what has just
    happened in South Ossetia.

    During his recent visit to Ukraine, U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney
    pledged support for Kyiv to join the NATO military alliance

    According to Hlibovytsky, the real issue is not about NATO but about
    "passport wars." He says there are claims that Russia is issuing
    Russian passports and granting Russian citizenship to Ukrainians in
    the Crimea and to people in Trans-Dniestria [part of the Republic of
    Moldova], just as they were doing in Abkhazia and South Ossetia. But
    Russian journalist Masha Lipman notes that unlike Georgia, there is
    little popular support for NATO membership in Ukraine, although she
    notes it has the strong support of President Yushchenko.

    A Georgian Perspective

    In contrast, according to David Nikuradze of independent radio and
    television station Rustavi 2, the people of Georgia are "united in
    opposing Russian dominance" in their region. Nikuradze says, "nobody
    wants to see another Soviet Union today." He says it is up to the
    Georgian people to decide whether they "want to be friends" with the
    United States, the European Union, or NATO. Nikuradze says the main
    principle remains that Moscow "should accept" Georgia's territorial
    integrity and its sovereignty. And he adds Georgia wants to have the
    "same relations with Russia" as many other European countries have.

    An Azerbaijani Perspective

    Georgia's neighbor Azerbaijan has a different view of geo-politics in
    the Caucasus, according to independent journalist Shahin Abbasov in
    Baku. He says President Ilham Aliyev has not taken any public position
    - either for or against Russia - and the government prefers to maintain
    what it calls a "balanced" position between the West and Russia.

    Earlier this month U.S. Vice President Dick Cheney was in Baku,
    trying to persuade Azerbaijan to back Washington's position on a
    proposed Trans-Caucasian oil pipeline, running from Turkmenistan
    through Azerbaijan and Georgia to Turkey - bypassing Russia. But
    Abbasov says the Azerbaijani president was non-committal. On the other
    hand, he says public opinion in Azerbaijan is squarely on the side
    of Georgia. He says that's because Azerbaijan has its own problems
    in the breakaway territory of Nagorno-Karabakh, where there is an
    ethnic Armenian majority. What is most critical, Abbasov stresses,
    is that Azerbaijan is extremely vulnerable to Russian pressure.

    A U.S. Perspective

    Meanwhile, U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Daniel Fried says that
    Russia must be prevented from drawing a new line in Europe. And Senate
    Armed Services Committee chairman Carl Levin has said that Washington
    needs to strike the right balance between signaling to Russia that
    its claim of a "sphere of influence" that overrides the sovereignty
    of its neighbors is unacceptable, while continuing to work with Moscow
    in those areas where both nations' strategic interests are aligned.
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