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Excessive Ambitions Are Complicating Crisis Management Efforts

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  • Excessive Ambitions Are Complicating Crisis Management Efforts

    EXCESSIVE AMBITIONS ARE COMPLICATING CRISIS MANAGEMENT EFFORTS

    Nezavisimaya Gazeta
    Feb 5 2009
    Russia

    Despite the dwindling reserves and economic recession, the country
    is still littering the world with dollars.

    The latest reports of Moscow's extraordinarily generosity towards
    its permanent and temporary allies suggest the country is unaware
    of the onset of hard times from the economic standpoint and of the
    need to reconsider excessive geopolitical ambitions rather than
    cultivating them.

    The creation of a collective fund of $10 billion within the framework
    of the Eurasian Economic Community (EAEC) was announced yesterday. Most
    of the money will be contributed by Russia and Kazakhstan during
    the first phase. The money will be used to alleviate the effects of
    the crisis in five countries belonging to this organization. There
    were reports a day earlier that Russia was ready to extend a loan
    of tens of billions of roubles to Belarus in exchange for the move
    to settlements in Russian roubles. This was in addition to the loan
    of $2 billion which had already been approved, with half of the
    money already released to Minsk, and in addition to an estimated
    $5 billion a year in hidden subsidies. The allocation of an amount
    ranging from half a billion dollars to 1 billion to Armenia is also
    being negotiated. Raul Castro, the new Cuban leader, left Moscow
    a few days ago with a line of credit for $175 million. Meanwhile,
    Havana has no plans to pay the debts that have been accumulating
    since the Soviet era and now exceed $20 billion.

    The apotheosis of this extravagance could be the decision, announced
    on Tuesday, to give Kyrgyzstan a loan of $2 billion and $150 million
    in nonrefundable aid. For the sake of comparison, the entire budget
    of this small mountain country is just over $1.1 billion. In
    exchange, President Kurmanbek Bakiyev of Kyrgyzstan promised to
    close the American military base in Manas, through which the United
    States delivers supplies to its contingent fighting the Taleban and
    Al-Qa'idah in Afghanistan. This expensive exchange is dubious from
    the economic and geopolitical standpoints. If the Americans and their
    allies suddenly leave Afghanistan, Moscow might have to restrain the
    radical Islamists in that region again.

    Even expenditures of that size on allies might be justified in some way
    if it were not for the financial crisis, which has drastically reduced
    Russia's own economic potential. Now this money is needed within
    the country. The Ministry of Economic Development and Trade expects
    a decrease of 0.2 per cent in the GNP. The country is in danger of
    dropping out of the top 10 economies in terms of dollars. The exchange
    rate of the rouble to the dollar was more than 1.5 times the present
    figure in July, and gold-backed currency reserves have decreased by
    more than one-third. The federal budget for this year will be adjusted
    in line with an income projection of only 6.5 trillion roubles instead
    of the 10,927 trillion in the current budget. The plans for spending
    cuts are still unknown, but the projected expenditures in the current
    budget amount to 9.024 trillion roubles. The number of unemployed
    might also double and exceed 10 million.

    Even the United States, with the largest economy in the world,
    is tempering its geopolitical ambitions in the atmosphere of
    crisis. Barack Obama has announced the reduction of the contingent
    in Iraq and is urging Russia to reduce the nuclear potential of our
    country by 80 per cent. Moscow, on the other hand, is eager to take
    advantage of the crisis to strengthen our position in the world and to
    restore and maintain our status as a great power instead of thinking
    of ways to solve its own socioeconomic problems. Furthermore, price
    is no object. In this sense, Russia is similar in some respects to
    the almost penniless Countess de Beauvilliers in Emile Zola's novel
    "Money," who was willing to limit her daily diet to nothing but bread
    as long as she did not have to reduce her lavish banquet menu by a
    single dish, all for the sake of maintaining her image as a prosperous
    aristocrat. The sooner Russia gives up the great-power ambitions that
    are so inconsistent with the present state of its economy, the less the
    country, its population, and the physical production sector will have
    lost when the crisis is over. It would be regrettable if Russia were
    to make the same mistake as the USSR, wasting all of its resources on
    global confrontation with the West and trying to maintain its status
    as the world's second superpower at any cost, to the point of the
    complete collapse of the economy and the disintegration of the country.
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