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Alliance & Dictatorship: Moscow Is Trying To Frighten The West With

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  • Alliance & Dictatorship: Moscow Is Trying To Frighten The West With

    ALLIANCE OF DICTATORSHIPS: MOSCOW IS TRYING TO FRIGHTEN THE WEST WITH A MILITARY ALLIANCE WHERE MEMBERSHIP IS SELF-IMPOSED AND COMPULSORY ALL AT ONCE
    by Pavel Felgengauer

    WPS Agency
    DEFENSE and SECURITY (Russia)
    February 11, 2009 Wednesday
    Russia

    MOSCOW SEEMS CONFIDENT THAT THE UNITED STATES CANNOT SUCCEED IN
    AFGHANISTAN WITHOUT MANAS AND RUSSIAN SUPPORT; Russia is trying to
    tighten its grip on the post-Soviet zone.

    Granted that the Americans were admonished for their invasion into
    Iraq and Afghanistan, practically all their allies did send their
    contingents to at least one of these two countries. When the Russian
    army entered Georgia and seized part of its territory in August, not
    one of its allies in the CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization
    sent contingents to help Russia in the hostilities or recognized
    Abkhazia and South Ossetia afterwards. Military-diplomatic circles in
    Moscow maintain that it is this embarrassing situation that compelled
    the Kremlin to force military integration within the CIS Collective
    Security Treaty Organization and try to evolve this amorphous structure
    into a military alliance with its own armed forces.

    Transformation of the CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization
    into an adequate military bloc with a permanent armed forces under the
    Russian command is a serious step toward development of the "region of
    privileged interests" into an actual sphere of influence. As things
    stand, however, other members of the CIS Collective Security Treaty
    Organization do not really think that they need it.

    The CIS Collective Security Treaty Organization is
    essentially an alliance of dictatorships with varying degrees of
    authoritarianism. Presidents of the countries comprising it desperately
    need elite battalions as guarantees of their own power, always on
    alert and handy. That every president will be happy to accept aid
    from Russia goes without saying, but that is all. This is the only
    value that all dictators share: every man for himself.

    Alexander Lukashenko verified documents of the CIS Collective Security
    Treaty Organization session in return for Russian credits, but his
    signature accounts for nothing at all. The Belarussian Constitution
    expressly forbids the deployment of the military abroad, and the
    thought of amending it has never even crossed Minsk's mind.

    Sandwiched between Azerbaijan, Turkey, and Georgia, Armenia couldn't
    send its troops anywhere even if it were of the mind to do so.

    Central Asian regimes are prepared to fight Islamic radicals in their
    own region with Russia's help, but not one of them will ever send a
    single soldier to the Caucasus or elsewhere. Uzbekistan did sign the
    documents and, unlike others, plainly stated that it was not going
    to participate in the collective forces on the permanent basis.

    Promised an economic aid package worth $2 billion, President of
    Kyrgyzstan Kurmanbek Bakiyev, said before the forum in Moscow that
    the American AF base in Manas would be closed. Consolidation of
    the post-Soviet zone and its transformation into a zone of Russian
    influence is impossible without neutralization of Washington's
    destructive clout, of course. President Barack Obama meanwhile
    proclaimed the war on Islamists in Afghanistan number one priority of
    his foreign policy and promised to double numerical strength of the
    US Army contingent in this country before the year was out. It will
    take additional supplies and the support of troops in Afghanistan,
    but Talib gunmen regularly attack NATO convoys driving northward
    across Pakistan from Karachi.

    Manas US AF Base "processes" 15,000 soldiers and 500,000 tons of cargo
    every month. American flying tankers operating out of Manas refuel
    aviation of the Alliance flying combat missions in Afghanistan. Russia
    offers its own territory for non-military transit to Afghanistan,
    but not even this transit will recompense for the loss of the AF base
    in Kyrgyzstan.

    Moscow seems arrogantly confident that Obama cannot succeed in
    Afghanistan without Manas and Russian support and that the West
    will be forced to cry uncle: leave the regimes in Kiev and Tbilisi
    without its support and abandon the missile shield plans for East
    Europe. Russia suggested a new European security framework, one that
    would take into account Moscow's legitimate interests and spheres of
    control and influence. If Washington disagreed this time, the odds
    are it would never agree.
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