...And it's not even "Big Yellow Taxi" this time!  Nice hook, (Cherokee?) Louise!

-Julius

Bush can give a hand up to Putin 

By Louise Branson 

Remember those lines from Joni Mitchell's 1970s song, Blue Motel Room: "You and me, 
we're like America and Russia, we're always keeping score, we're always balancing the 
power, and that can get to be a cold, cold war"?

The lyrics definitely need updating. As President Bush heads today for a summit with 
Russian President Vladimir Putin, he should take the lead in shaping them. Not that 
the leaders need to "hold ourselves a peace talk in some neutral cafe." They're 
already comfortable on each other's territory. Putin visited Bush's Texas ranch in 
November. He will now show Bush around Moscow and his native St. Petersburg.

A core problem, though, remains. The Soviet Union collapsed more than a decade ago, 
but the ghosts and mind-set of the Cold War linger. Russia's establishment, in 
particular, has found it hard to accept its diminished status.

Bush and Putin have quietly formed a pragmatic partnership. Bush once said America and 
Russia shouldn't be dependent on the relationship between the two leaders, as he felt 
it was under Bill Clinton. He should revise that assessment. His relationship with 
Putin is fast becoming an engine for potentially dramatic changes.

The first, most visible evidence will come at the summit. The two will sign an 
agreement deeply cutting nuclear weapons b from some 6,000 warheads to between 1,700 
and 2,200 each. This, Bush announced, would "liquidate the legacy of the Cold War."

In fact, Bush had not wanted a formal agreement, preferring a gentleman's handshake on 
a verbal accord. But he did Putin this face-saving favor (even though the agreement, 
only three pages long, is seen by many experts as laughably lacking in detail). The 
reason: Putin is on a risky course. He has begun taking Russia in a new direction on 
the world stage: staking Russia's success and security on Western integration b 
economic, military and political. But he is doing so with a comparatively small circle 
of enlightened advisers, plus going against the country's instinctual Cold War grain.

Bush needs to help and nudge Putin, and Russia, further on this track. Bush can 
already take much credit for this new direction b beginning with early in his 
presidency, when he refused to be intimidated by Putin, a shrewd former KGB officer. 
That includes Putin's moves to form an alliance with China and to create international 
momentum against the American pullout from the Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty.

Putin's new pragmatism emerged with force only after Sept. 11, as he took the decision 
to give strategic, intelligence and other aid to the United States in the war on 
terrorism in Afghanistan. In part, this was because of the stark choice the United 
States gave the world: You are with us or against us.

The nuclear-weapons agreement is an important moment. But two other issues could prove 
more significant: NATO and oil.

First, NATO. A few days after the Bush-Putin summit, both will attend the new session 
of the first NATO-Russia council, being referred to as the "19+1" arrangement. It will 
give Russia a real say in NATO decisions, a first move toward possibly joining the 
alliance.

That is a breathtaking step, having Moscow in this new arrangement with NATO, which 
was formed to combat Moscow's growing menace. But in addition, the three formerly 
Soviet Baltic states, as well as Slovenia and Slovakia, could be invited to join NATO 
in November, along with Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia and others. Poland, Hungary and the 
Czech Republic are already in.

A senior NATO official said this meant the Cold War was now "kaput." But that 
assessment is premature. In fact, it's only a beginning. The real work is ahead.

NATO's effectiveness has been diluted with so many new members. It needs to firmly 
define its new raison d'etre as fighting terrorism and create standards and procedures 
that make it the kind of civilizing "club" the European Union has proved to be. Bush 
should take the lead in giving NATO new meaning and bringing Russia properly into its 
fold.

Oil, the other long-term issue, is perhaps the most important question mark now 
looming over the Russia-America relationship. It has become more urgent in recent 
weeks because of the Middle East crisis, which has underscored America's reliance on 
OPEC and particularly Saudi Arabia. A possible oil partnership could quite literally 
transform U.S.-Russia relations into a solid partnership lashed with business ties.

The bottom line: Russia has huge reserves of oil, and the USA would like to tap into 
them. It is far from a perfect match. Among the many potential pitfalls: 
transportation difficulties, Russia's continuing economic mess and the bad experiences 
of American businesses that invested in Russia in the 1990s.

Still, the idea is far more probable today. If Russia's economy were eventually 
stabilized and underpinned by wealth from properly managed oil sales, Russia could in 
time join other clubs such as the World Trade Organization, as China has just done. 
Perhaps even, in the distant future, it could join the European Union, an economic 
organization many Russians view as more of a threat than NATO.

Bush's goal should be clear: to create a stable and allied Russia within the Western 
fold. That would be the real happy ending to an updated Blue Motel Room.

For now, though, the lyrics will have to focus on the search for that happy ending b 
and the hopeful signs that one may be in sight.

Louise Branson, co-author of Gorbachev: Heretic in the Kremlin, is a former Moscow 
correspondent for London's Sunday Times.

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