http://www.themoscowtimes.com/opinion/article/americas-new-cold-war-with-russia/474457.html

America's New Cold War With Russia 
23 January 2013 | Issue 5053
By Stephen F. Cohen
 
With the full support of a feckless policy elite and an uncritical media 
establishment, Washington is slipping, if not plunging, into a new cold war 
with Moscow. Relations, already deeply chilled by fundamental disputes over 
missile defense, the Middle East and Russia's internal politics, have now been 
further poisoned by two conflicts reminiscent of tit-for-tat policy-making 
during the previous Cold War.

In December, Congress, in a fit of sanctimonious lawmaking and indifference to 
larger consequences, passed the Magnitsky Act. In effect a blacklist without 
due process, it will punish Russian officials (and perhaps their family 
members) alleged to be guilty of "gross violations of human rights" in their 
own country. However odious such individuals may be, Russia's political class 
was bound to resent yet another haughty U.S. intrusion into its political and 
legal affairs. A no less capricious State Duma quickly responded by banning 
U.S. adoption of Russian orphans, long a highly sensitive issue, which will go 
into full effect in 2014. Little opposition was voiced in the U.S. and Russian 
legislatures to their respective bills.

There was, however, a significant difference. Under President Vladimir Putin's 
"authoritarian regime," the Russian media were filled with heated controversy 
over the adoption ban, including denunciations of Putin for signing it. But in 
the "democratic" U.S. mainstream media, there has been only applause for the 
Magnitsky Act and President Barack Obama's decision to sign it. Nor is this the 
first time leading U.S. newspapers and television and radio outlets have been 
cheerleaders for a new cold war.

Although the U.S. political-media establishment routinely blames Putin for the 
lack of partnership, the movement toward a cold war with post-Soviet Russia 
began almost a decade before Putin came to the Kremlin — that is, in the 1990s 
under the administration of U.S. President Bill Clinton. Indeed, Clinton 
initiated the three basic components of what has remained Washington's Russia 
policy ever since, from President George W. Bush to Obama: expanding NATO (now 
including missile defense installations) to Russia's borders; "selective 
cooperation," which has meant concessions by Moscow without meaningful U.S. 
reciprocity; and interference in Russia's domestic politics that Washington 
tries to package as "democracy promotion." For 20 years, this Cold War approach 
has had overwhelming bipartisan support among the U.S. political elite and 
mainstream media.

Consider the most recent episode: Obama's 2009 purported "reset" of relations 
with Moscow, or what was called "detente" during the Cold War. Obama wanted 
three concessions from the Kremlin: assistance in supplying NATO forces in 
Afghanistan, harsher sanctions against Iran and Russia's abstention on the 
United Nations Security Council vote for a no-fly zone over Libya. The White 
House got all three. In return, Moscow wanted a formal end of NATO's expansion 
to the former Soviet republics, a compromise on European missile defense and a 
cessation of direct U.S. involvement in Russian political life. Instead, Russia 
received an escalation of all three U.S. policies with virtually unanimous 
bipartisan and media approval.

Things weren't always like this. From the 1960s to the 1990s, fierce debates 
raged between Americans proposing a colder war and those advocating detente. 
Both sides had substantial support in the administrations and congresses of 
those years, and both appeared regularly on leading op-ed pages and on national 
television and radio. The democratic process was working, which itself was a 
rebuff to a Soviet system that prohibited such public debates.

But no longer. Obama has surrounded himself with Russia advisers, including 
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, wedded to the 20-year-long approach. As for 
Congress, it has long since become a bipartisan bastion of Cold War lobbyists, 
hearings, resolutions and legislation with barely a handful of House 
representatives protesting this reckless folly. Even the grassroots "peace" and 
"anti-nuke" movements of a previous era have all but vanished.

The U.S. media, considering their essential role in national security 
discussions, have been especially culpable, violating their own professional 
canons in coverage of Russia-related matters. Newspaper editorials now range 
from endorsing the Obama administration's inherently Cold War line to 
complaining that it is too "soft" on the Kremlin. Dissenting opinions rarely, 
if ever, appear on influential op-ed pages or on national television or radio. 
(Cable, even ­MSNBC, and "public" broadcasting are no different.) Editorial 
bias has even spilled over into news reporting. In particular, the media's 
relentless demonization of Putin, often illogical or distorted, has nearly 
displaced serious, multidimensional analysis.

The media's focus has also been selective. Coverage of last year's Moscow 
street demonstrations against Putin was exhaustive, but U.S. correspondents 
have ignored an extraordinary new kind of protest in the same capital. From 
Dec. 18 to 27, students and faculty of the Russian State University of Trade 
and Economics  defied a ministerial takeover of their institution. Its head, 
Sergei Baburin, a prominent political figure, was ousted by the ministry after 
students occupied the university day and night, suspending their protest only 
for the Russian holidays and pending an appeal to Putin. If their protest 
spreads to other universities, Russia could experience its first large-scale 
student strike in many decades, with major political consequences.

Why have the U.S. media failed to report this development? Is it because the 
university students and faculty, unlike several leading street protesters, do 
not have personal ties to the U.S. media and to Washington officials? Or 
because they, also unlike many of last year's street demonstrators, are not 
avowedly pro-Western but nationalist-oriented? Or because the university 
rebellion is directed not against Putin — on the contrary it urged Putin to 
step in and save the university — but against the government of Prime Minister 
Dmitry Medvedev, once a White House favorite? Or is such complexity simply too 
much for the orthodox media narrative of post-Communist Russia?

Nearly 30 years ago, the U.S. media coverage of Soviet Russia was more 
pluralistic and helped President Ronald Reagan meet its leader, Mikhail 
Gorbachev, halfway in a joint effort to abolish the Cold War forever. (They 
thought they had succeeded.) Both leaders encountered powerful opposition in 
their respective parties and media, but they also found significant support. 
Since then, too much may have changed in the quality of leadership, in the 
political elites of Washington and Moscow and in U.S. media practices for this 
to happen again.

Stephen F. Cohen, professor emeritus of Russian Studies at New York University 
and Princeton University, is author of "Soviet Fates and Lost Alternatives: 
From Stalinism to the New Cold War" and "The Victims ­Return: Survivors of the 
Gulag After Stalin." This comment was first published in The Nation.


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