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  • Moscow: President's Amour A Sens Unique

    PRESIDENT'S AMOUR A SENS UNIQUE
    Victor Krestianinov

    WPS
    July 25, 2011
    Russia

    ANALYSIS OF THE RUSSIAN-FRENCH RELATIONS; Analysis of the
    Russian-French relations. Russia seems to be outmaneuvered or plain
    tricked at every turn.

    Foreign relations is definitely a sphere handled by heads of states and
    by them alone. Dmitry Medvedev is no exception. Medvedev emphasized
    on more than one occasion that no meddling with what he considered
    his sole prerogative would be tolerated. The president never misses
    a chance to make it plain that foreign affairs is where he feels
    at home. That he is entirely uninhibited, that he tries to make
    relations with his foreign opposite numbers informal and develop
    friendly relationships with them.

    Medvedev has particular fondness for the president of France even
    though he is friends with Nicolas Sarkozy against all political rules.

    The Golden Rule of politics states that "there are no friends or
    enemies in politics, only interests". The French follow this rule
    faithfully, by the way. Regrettably, but it took a whole series of
    foreign political fiascoes for Medvedev and his closest associates
    to finally acknowledge it.

    Lost game in Deauville

    NATO leaders who had started the war in Libya quite openly asked
    Moscow to talk to Libyan leader Gaddafi and persuade him to step down.

    Medvedev agreed.

    Giving his consent to it in Deauville, Medvedev should have realized
    that Gaddafi was to smart not to understand what awaited him in
    retirement. That was why Gaddafi would not even met with Mikhail
    Margelov, presidential special representative, whose forthcoming
    mission in Tripoli was widely publicized.

    Russia's colossal losses in Libya, NATO air-raids, and countless
    casualties in this country turned out to be what Russian ex-ambassador
    in Tripoli had said would happen. Russia lost a good deal of profits
    and, even more significantly, Russia lost face in the Arab world for
    years to come - if not forever. The Arab world had always had respect
    for Russia seeing in it a guarantor of stability in the region. Kirsan
    Ilyumzhinov repeated Gaddafi's arguments in an interview with TV
    Channel I and made it plain that Russia had been tricked again.

    When a friend turns out to be anything but

    France itself is rocked by one scandal after another. Two French
    lawyers intend to file a lawsuit against Sarkozy with the European
    Court of Human Rights. To be more exact, Sarkozy is to be charged
    with crimes against humanity. The lawsuit is to be filed in the
    name of 30 Libyan families who call themselves victims of NATO
    air-raids. The lawyers made a statement in their name claiming that
    the NATO operation launched to protect non-combatants in the first
    place was killing them nowadays. The impression is that the amount
    of lawsuits like that will increase before long.

    The operation in Libya that the French president expected would
    boost his low rating is doing just the opposite. Sarkozy's trial is
    unlikely to improve the image of his Russian colleague. Trust the
    media to start looking for everyone who never even tried to prevent
    bombardments of Libya.

    Mistral saga

    Friendship between the presidents of Russia and France already resulted
    in some erratic developments in the bilateral military-technical
    cooperation. What Russia needs Mistrals for remains unclear even
    now. Not even hard collective thinking on the part of Defense
    Ministry's analysts produced a convincing explanation justifying the
    purchase. If Russia really needed helicopter-carriers, it could also
    discuss the matter with the Koreans, Spaniards, and Germans. All of
    them could supply the ships - and at a cheaper price.

    For some reason, however, Moscow decided to save the shipyards on
    the Atlantic coast of France instead.

    DCNS issued an official statements to the effect that the Mistral
    contract would ensure upwards of 1,000 new jobs for the French. Russia
    did not say anything like that. Which probably means that the Russian
    military-industrial complex will emulate participation in the project
    rather than actually participate in it.

    Of course, the opportunity to lay hands on SENIT-9 is a serious
    argument. Unfortunately, Russia at its current level will need 5-7
    years to master the system while the rest of the world will keep making
    progress beyond it. Moreover, SENIT-9 is not as advanced a system as
    promoters of the contract like to pretend. It is a simplified version
    of SENIT-8, a system designed for the French aircraft-carrier Charles
    de Gaulle in the 1990s. We can only hope that our bureaucrats will
    opt for KA family helicopters and not for Eurocopters to be carried by
    the Mistrals. (Unfortunately, it is whispered already that hangars of
    the French helicopter-carrier are too small for Russian helicopters.)

    In a word, the hideously expensive French surface combatants the
    Russian Navy expects in 2014 and 2015 might become a constant headache
    for Russian admirals.

    In Boris Yeltsin's days, the Duma screamed bloody murder over
    considerably less questionable (and expensive) projects. Not any more.

    Kazan fiasco

    Back to Deauville. Presidents of Russia, United States, and France
    (Medvedev, Barack Obama, and Sarkozy) made a joint statement on
    Karabakh conflict resolution there. The document in question appealed
    to the involved parties to take steps to promote resolution, etc.

    Existence of profound discord between Baku and Yerevan was signalled by
    the no-nonsense tone of the statements presidents of Azerbaijani and
    Armenia made on the eve of the conference in Kazan. Ilham Aliyev for
    one announced that Baku was going to suggest nothing at all in return
    for the withdrawal of the Armenian troops from the territories around
    Nagorno-Karabakh "because Karabakh has always been Azerbaijani." Serj
    Sargsjan in his turn formulated a number of demands all but calculated
    to be turned down by Azerbaijan.

    Why then organize a conference that had practically no chance of
    being successful? Was the meeting organized because France had been
    making countless compliments to Armenia? And because the Kremlin once
    against decided to help Sarkozy and therefore repeat the joint South
    Ossetian experiment everyone had forgotten?

    And by the way, the Kremlin vetoed the subject immediately. TV reports
    from Kazan were removed from the broadcasting schedule. Newspapers
    played mum's the word. Well, what could they say when the results
    were exceptionally frustrating?

    The recent meeting with President of South Africa Jacob Zuma in Moscow
    became another fiasco. It had been Zuma who rallied African leaders
    into a joint boycott of Libya and its leader. On the other hand, the
    African states that would not join the boycott said that they would
    not acknowledge the Hague Tribunal resolution condemning Gaddafi as
    a criminal. What it all left Russia in need not be said.

    ... Opening the heart before his Western counterparts, Medvedev
    discovered to his dismayed amazement that he was tricked and deceived
    again and again. This is the only term that might be applied to the
    decision of the Alliance to station its latest ballistic missile
    defense systems near the Russian borders. And no amount of shoulder
    patting helped Medvedev persuade Obama and Sarkozy that this was not
    how friends were supposed to behave.

    Dmitry Anatolievich, stop being amazed and remember the Golden Rule.

    Or read your Karamzin or Soloviov.

    It stands to reason to assume that the incumbent president of Russia
    will be remembered as author of the "enigmatic" foreign policy of
    the Russian Federation in the early 21st century.

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