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Russia and NATO:
Not a Piece of Furniture
By Eric Walberg
Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, November 29, 2010
The results of the NATO summit were as predictable as a Soviet
Communist Party congress, with the word “peace” replaced by “war”. NATO’s
embrace of the US agenda of missile defence, nuclear arms, and its new
role as global policeman surprised no one. No word about the
United Nations or peacekeeping. In deference to Russia, the only
mention of eastern expansion was continued “partnerships” with former
Soviet republics Ukraine and Georgia. Indonesia, Malaysia, Australia, New
Zealand and Japan were also offered special status. The new Strategic
Doctrine, replacing the more modest Euro-centric 1999 model, really just
reaffirmed US control of the foreign policy of what Zbigniew Brzezinski
called its “vassal states”.
There were a few ripples. France’s
new defense minister, Alain Juppe, openly said the Afghan conflict was a
“trap” for NATO and called for an exit strategy, unlike Head of the
British Armed Forces Sir David Richards, who opined, “NATO now needs to
plan for a 30 or 40 year role.” The Euro-spat continues over the continued
presence of nuclear weapons in Europe, between France, which prides itself
on its force de frappe, and Germany, which was denied any such private
nuclear toys during the Cold War.
But they agreed to disagree and
the summit was all smiles and photo ops, at least centre-stage. On the
sidelines, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev told a warm United States
President Obama Barack that he was ready to
cooperate on missile defence but only in “a full-fledged strategic
partnership between Russia and NATO”, and Afghanistan’s President Hamid
Karzai told a frosty Obama that he should scale back military operations
and night raids that inflict heavy civilian casualties.
Through
NATO’s integration into the Pentagon’s world command structure, it can be
said that now, officially, the US rules the world. NATO has its Istanbul
Initiative, attempting to militarise the
Mediterranean Dialogue and Gulf Cooperation Councils covering the
entire Middle East, including Israel. Even in Africa, only Eritrea, Libya,
Sudan and Zimbabwe do not (yet) have relations with USAFRICOM. But then,
NATO’s two major “out of area” police roles -- Kosovo and Afghanistan --
are not encouraging signs, nor are the Pentagon’s efforts in Iraq. The
bigger NATO gets, and the more far-flung the US military, the more
unwieldy and expensive both become. How do Malaysian soldiers in
Afghanistan converse with Albanians? As Muslims, they may know their
prayers in Arabic, but only by rote. And can they be trusted to kill their
Afghan brothers?
What Russian strategists really think of NATO’s
“new” doctrine is difficult to tell. The professed preference for closer
relations with the West by
Atlantist Medvedev and the Russian elites he represents differ
markedly from his predecessor Putin’s. Despite Medvedev’s assurances, his
appearance at the NATO conference did little to dissipate the confusion
about relations with NATO. His offer of a joint missile defence network is
not the one that the US has in mind. He told the gathering that Russia
won’t join NATO missile defence as “piece of furniture”. A senior Russian
diplomat told Kommersant, “Yes, we will defend countries to the west of
Russia. Equally, NATO must commit to the same responsibilities -- any
missiles that fly against us over Europe, they must all be shot down by
American or NATO forces.”
Despite Russia’s apparent weakness, it
still casts the biggest shadow over the alliance. There are signs of
meaningful cooperation in the Russia-NATO Council Action Plan as described
by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. Russia's Black Sea Fleet is
taking part in NATO’s antiterrorist Operation Active Endeavour in the
Mediterranean Sea and fighting against piracy off the coast of Somalia.
Rather than a will-o-the-wisp missile defence, he emphasised the joint
radar system near completion along Russia’s western borders “to prevent
seizures of aircraft by terrorists” and the ongoing assistance “during
floods, fires and man-made disasters”.
But Lavrov said there are
“international problems on which we do not see eye to eye”, that in any
missile defence system there must be “no actions that may adversely affect
the legitimate interests of each other”. He was more concerned about
reducing conventional forces in Europe and “a systemic discussion about
military restraint”. NATO “must be guided by the UN Charter, especially in
regard to the possible use of force in international relation, and by
international law”. Meaning, of course, that at present NATO policies
adversely affect Russia, and NATO and the US are operating outside of
international law.
Quite possibly more significant than the hot air
emitted in Lisbon was the tete-a-tete between Medvedev, French President
Nicolas Sarkozy and Germany Chancellor Angela Merkel a month earlier on
18-19 October at their own mini-summit in Deauville, calling on the EU to
launch a “modernisation partnership” with Russia, establishing an economic
space with “common security concepts”, including visa-free travel and
cooperation on European security. The United States was pointedly not
mentioned though the security issues involved “the Euro-Atlantic and
Eurasian zones”, a half-step towards Medvedev’s proposal for a new
European Security Treaty in 2008.
Despite the professed
devotion of the French and German leaders to the US and the war in
Afghanistan, this clear outreach to Russia by the EU’s most important
members is an expression of the geopolitical logic at work as the US
flounders and Russia matures into an unavoidable and increasingly
desirable Eurasian partner. It is Russia that provides Europe with access
to a large market and source of raw materials -- a peaceful gateway to the
entire continent. This contrasts with the US/NATO forced march from
Eurasia’s underbelly, creating enemies from the Middle East through Iran
to China. Spoiler Britain was pointedly left out of the Deauville summit.
Even at its most Atlantist, Russia is establishing a new configuration
without the Ango-American empire at the centre.
Both the power
struggle among Russia’s political elite and the developing
facts-on-the-ground in Afghanistan and Washington, where START is probably
not going to be ratified by the Senate, will determine just how
US-Euro-Russian relations fare, and whether calls for Putin to run for
president in 2012 result in a return of Russian geopolitical strategy to
the
Eurasian path it was taking prior to Medvedev. Medvedev’s abrupt
cancellation of the
S-300 missile deal with Iran was not a popular one; it “undermines
Russia’s prestige and erodes its security, making the world less safe for
every one of us. At the moment, the Islamic world has reasons to believe
that Moscow has switched to the camp of its foes,” warns former Russian
Joint Chief of Staff member General Leonid Ivashov.
Turkish
Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, taking a leaf from both Lavrov and
Ivashov, insisted at the summit that any missile defence shield should
protect NATO members from real threats, which translates into Turkish as
“protecting NATO members from Israel, not Iran”. He called for a nuclear
weapons-free zone ranging from Iran to Israel. Davutoglu might have felt
more comfortable outside the summit with members of the “No to War – No to
NATO” alliance, who continued their tradition of using NATO summits as
platforms of protest against war and militarism. They installed a Square
of Peace and held a counter summit and International Anti-war Assembly,
suggesting their own Strategic Doctrine for NATO -- euthanasia.
*** Eric Walberg can be reached at
http://ericwalberg.com/ .
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