Who Lost Russia? <http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=106> 


by Patrick J. Buchanan

 Patrick J. Buchanan
<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/05/pbuchanan.thum
bnail.jpg> By 1988, Ronald Reagan, who had famously branded the Soviet Union
"an evil empire," was striding through Red Square arm-in-arm with Mikhail
Gorbachev. Russians were pounding both men on the back.

They had just signed the greatest arms reduction agreement in
history—eliminating all Soviet SS-20s targeted on Europe, in return for
removal of the Pershing and cruise missiles Reagan had deployed in Europe.

"Bliss was it in that dawn to be alive, But to be young was very heaven!"
wrote Wordsworth about his first hearing the news of the fall of the
Bastille.

Many of us felt that way then.

Within three years, the Berlin Wall had come down, the puppet regimes of
Eastern Europe had been swept away, Germany was reunited, the Red Army had
gone home, the Soviet Empire had vanished and the Soviet Union had broken up
into 15 nations. The Baltic republics were free. Ukraine was free.

Yet, on the eve of the G-8 summit, Vladimir Putin has announced that Russia
would re-target missiles on NATO. We must, he said, counter Bush's decision
to put anti-missile missiles in Poland and radars in the Czech Republic. Why
are we doing this?

The United States says the ABM system in Europe is to defend against an
Iranian attack. But Tehran has no atom bomb and no ICBM.

We appear to be headed for a second Cold War—and, if we are, responsibility
will not fully rest with the Kremlin. For among those who have mismanaged
the relationship are presidents Clinton and Bush II, the baby boomers who
appear to have kicked away the fruits of a Cold War victory won by their
Greatest Generation predecessors.

How did they do it?

—When the Red Army went home from Eastern Europe, the United States, in
violation of an understanding with Moscow, began to move NATO east. We have
since brought into our military alliance six former members of the Warsaw
Pact and three former provinces of the Soviet Union: Lithuania, Latvia and
Estonia.

—Anti-Russia hawks are now pushing to bring Ukraine and Georgia into NATO.
If they succeed, we could be dragged into future confrontations with a
nuclear-armed Russia about who has sovereignty over the Crimea and whether
South Ossetia should be part of Georgia.

Are these vital U.S. interests worth risking a war? Why are we moving a
U.S.-led military alliance into the front yard and onto the side porch of a
country with thousands of nuclear weapons? Would we accept any commensurate
Chinese or Russian move in the Caribbean?

—After Moscow gave us a green light to use the former Soviet republics of
Central Asia to base U.S. forces for the Afghan war, the United States has
sought permanent bases there. Russia and China have now united to throw us
out of their back yard.

—America colluded with Azerbaijan and Georgia to build a Baku-Tiblisi-Ceyhan
pipeline to transmit Caspian Sea oil across the Caucasus to the Black Sea
and Turkey, cutting Russia out of the action.

—In 1999, the United States bombed Serbia 78 days to punish her for fighting
to hold her cradle province of Kosovo, which Muslim Albanians were tearing
away. Orthodox Russia had long seen herself as protectress of the Balkan
Slavs. That Clinton ignored Russia in launching this unprovoked war on
Serbia was seen in Moscow as proof that Russian concerns had become
irrelevant in Washington.

—After helping dump over the government in Belgrade, our Neocomintern—the
National Endowment for Democracy, Freedom House and other fronts—interfered
in Ukraine and Georgia, helping oust pro-Moscow regimes and install
pro-American ones. Since then, NED has been run out of Belarus and its
subsidiaries are about to get the boot from Moscow.

Can we blame the Russians for being angry? How would we react to left-wing
NGOs in Washington, flush with Moscow oil money, aiding elements hostile to
the Bush administration?

—The United States has been constantly hectoring Russia on backsliding from
democracy. But compared to Beijing, Moscow is Montpelier, Vt. And why, if
the Cold War is over, are Russia's political arrangements any of our
business?

If we don't like the way Putin treats Mikhail Khorokovsky, Boris Berezovksy
and the other "oligarchs" who robbed Russia blind in the 1990s, maybe Putin
doesn't like how we treated Martha Stewart.

Harry Truman is often blamed for having started the Cold War. He didn't.
Stalin did. But Clinton, George W. and the neocons have a strong claim to
having started the second. A first order of business of the next president
should be to repair the damage this crowd has done—and to get out of
Russia's face.

COPYRIGHT 2007 CREATORS SYNDICATE INC. 

Patrick J. Buchanan <http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?author=6>  ::
Jun.05.2007 :: Patrick J. Buchanan
<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?cat=17> 

 

source: http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?p=106
<http://www.chroniclesmagazine.org/?cat=17>  


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