Russia never stopped being the enemy.  Only the naive and unschooled ever
thought so.
 
B

 
http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/014/319xmkrv.a
sp
The Cool Peace?
by Michael Weiss,  7 November 2007 12:00:00 AM


Resolved: Russia is becoming our enemy again.


TUESDAY NIGHT MARKED the eleventh Intelligence Squared U.S. debate hosted at
the Asia Society and Museum on Park Avenue.
Generously endowed by the conservative philanthropist Robert Rosenkranz,
IQ2US underwrites a series of intellectual exchanges  modeled on the
full-blooded forensic style of the Oxford Union,  though given that the
august society has lately invited speakers like Nick Griffin,  head of the
fascist British National Party,  and David Irving,  Holocaust denier in
chief,  one wonders if like so many other British traditions  this one has
better thrived by crossing the Atlantic.

The proposition before the house on Tuesday was perhaps the most tantalizing
yet: "Russia Is Becoming Our Enemy Again." Arguing in favor of the motion
were Bret Stephens,  an editor at the Wall Street Journal,  Claudia Rossett,
journalist-in-residence at the Defense of Democracies and a WEEKLY STANDARD
contributor,  and J. Michael Waller,  the Annenberg Chair in International
Communication at the Institute for World Politics.

Arguing against were Nina Khrushcheva,  granddaughter of the Soviet premier
and professor of International Affairs at the New School,  Robert Legvold,
a political science professor  at Columbia University,  and Mark Medish,  a
former Clinton administration official  and now the vice president for
Studies of Russia,  China and Eurasia  at the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace.

A nicely arrayed Sovnarkom of laurels,  yet the most interesting curriculum
vitae of the evening  belonged to moderator Edward Lucas,  who has a new
book coming out titled The New Cold War: The Future of Russia and the Threat
to the West.

If that language strikes you as  assured then perhaps it's because the
calendar of bilateral relations  does appear to be heading back to 1962.
World headlines announce Le Carré-esque tales of irradiated expatriates,
gunned-down journalists,  and poisoned politicians,  all of whom were guilty
of the unforgivable crime of opposing Moscow.
The bald-faced euphemism of Eastern dictatorship has returned in the form of
Russia's post-millennial "managed democracy." Gas and oil pipelines have
been made hostage to the pro-Russian sentiments of Caucasian peoples who
rely on them stay warm in winter. A Baltic state and NATO ally has been
subjected to a costly cyberwar,  with at least a few soldiers of the
invading army residing,  according to their virtual signatures,  in the
fortified offices of the Kremlin.
And Vladimir Putin,  the KGB Tsar who has presided over all these episodes
of intimidation and repression - and likely plans,  as prime minister,  to
preside over many more - happily finances a Middle Eastern theocracy's
"peaceful" wish to explore the varied uses of the atom. Yet it's soft
brinkmanship when the U.S. announces plans to construct a defensive missile
shield on European soil.

American debates  over Russia's present and future have always lent
themselves to witty theatrics.
Rossett alone twice reminded me of the Trotskyist Max Shachtman's
devastating indictment of CPUSA chief Earl Browder in 1950:


"There but for an accident of geography,  stands a corpse!"


First she recounted a dinner  she attended in Moscow ten years ago  at which
one Russian held forth against a tide of Western skepticism  about the
positive direction in  which his country was headed. "His name was Gary
Kasparov."
Next,  having poured herself a cup of tea  at the lectern  prior to her
opening remarks,  Rossett brandished the photographs  of the dying Alexander
Litvinenko,  the ex- KGB agent turned British citizen  who was poisoned by
Polonium 210,  and a badly disfigured Victor Yushchenko,  the current
pro-Western reformist president of Ukraine.
She invited the audience to imagine itself  a Russian dissident sitting down
with an envoy from the Kremlin  to discuss the murder of a journalist  in a
foreign city.


"Would you,  without a second thought these days,  drink that tea?"


Stephens went a step further  by coining a few powerful phrases  to describe
the Great Russian Chauvinism of Putinshchina. 
He referred to the Kremlin's "pipeline warfare" against Belarus,  Ukraine,
and Georgia,  and cited the murder of Litvinenko  as an act of "nuclear
homicide,  if not nuclear terrorism," Scotland Yard's investigations of
which the Russian Foreign Ministry has dismissed as so much of a fuss "over
one man."
Meanwhile,  Litvinenko's accused and un- extradited murderer,  Andrei
Lugovoi,  will likely be elected to the Duma next month. Stephens misspoke,
however,  when he claimed that the Siberian prison term of Mikhail
Khordorkovsky,  Putin's oligarchic archnemesis and the CEO of Yukos
convicted on sham charges,  has been "prolonged." Actually,  Khordorkovsky's
parole was denied but for an unsurprisingly nominal infraction of prison
rules: he didn't keep his hands behind his back upon returning to his cell
from exercise.

Stephens and his colleagues  might have made more of the specifically Cold
War provenance  of the methods used to kill Litvinenko.
The notorious "Umbrella Murder" of Bulgarian dissident Georgi Markov in 1978
also occurred in London  in broad daylight. The weapon was also a recherché
component of WMD,  ricin.  And,  according to former KGB agents Oleg
Gordievsky and Oleg Kalugin,  Yuri Andropov personally gave the go-ahead to
the Bulgarian secret police to carry out the assassination.

J. Michael Waller provided the most thorough,  insider analysis of Russian
military infrastructure  and its regnant political ideology.
His brief rested on the strong evidence that Soviet tendencies,  rather than
simply reviving,  never really died off. If Russia had erased or buried its
Communist past the better to emerge more confident as a market democracy,
then how to explain that the Foreign Intelligence Services offices,  the FSB
State Security Services offices,  and the state prosecutor's offices  all
bear the sword and shield insignia of Felix Dzerzhinsky's Bolshevik Cheka?
Waller spoke of the arrant "KGB-ization"  of the state,  and indeed,  the
most prominent form of "dissent" within the country  occurs among the
various factions of the siloviki - the new military and espionage class  of
which Putin is primus inter pares.
Waller made the often- overlooked point  that Russia never had a Truth and
Reconciliation Commission to address the corpse-strewn nightmare of
Stalinism. To the contrary,  the Kremlin has released new "ideological
guidelines" for teaching social studies and history to schoolchildren.

Textbooks being studied by future Russian generations thus inform that
Stalin was the "most successful leader of the U.S.S.R.," resurrect his
personality cult on behalf of Putin,  and resort to a level of hostile
rhetoric against the United States not heard since the grumbling days of
Brezhnev.
Add to this that for all of Putin's de-escalationist posturing,  he has
commissioned the Yuri Dolgoruky,  an advanced Borei class nuclear submarine
that is currently undergoing sea trials  and carrying a payload unnecessary
to,  say,  level Grozny (again).

As for the "anti" side,  their case relied heavily  on the phrasing of the
proposition. No one dared challenge the above-cited  high crimes of the
Putin regime,  so the task was to show how those crimes  do not an enemy
make.
Robert Legvold said that to characterize Russia in such a Manichean way is:
wrong because it misunderstands what Russia's all about,  and it
misunderstands what motivates its foreign policy. And it's unhelpful,  maybe
even harmful because it almost certainly runs the risk of bringing about the
behavior and stance on Russia's part that we fear in the first place.
If we're to read this assessment right,  then Legvold is saying that Russia
might become our enemy  simply by our saying that Russia might become our
enemy.
This was by no means the most evasive or tautological  that his team got.
Legvold spoke of Russia as a "challenge,"  a recovering nation that is
motivated by three desires: a "renewed voice,"


 "respect of its national interests as it defines them,  not the way in
which we define them,"


and an "end to the assigned role as either a pupil or as a junior partner."
It's just acting out,  in other words.
Obstructing justice in the murder investigation of a British citizen,
supplying Hamas and Hezbollah with arms,  building the ayatollahs a nuclear
reaction at Bushehr -  what more to expect from the rebellious phase  of a
pubescent superpower?

Nina Khrushcheva also resorted to a neat logical troika to explain away
Russia's belligerence. She said the country couldn't possibly be becoming
our enemy because we no longer live in a "bipolar" world -  the Great Game
has been won,  the board has been reset with a multitude of big players.
 Furthermore,  there is no "ideological divide" between democracy and
communism. And Vladimir Putin is not an emperor,  although he likes to sound
like one. However,  he may well be driven to take up the imperial mantle by
American hectoring or bullying. (The corollary - that the U.S. might be
driven to become Russia's avowed enemy by Russian behavior - was never
discussed).

Khrushcheva's strangest utterance,  though,  was this one:


"[P]utin would argue that both Russia and the United States today are of the
same ideology,  that is democracy,  and of the same economic system,  which
is capitalism."


Odd,  then,  that the same man told Dem Spiegel during the last G-8 summit:


"I am an absolutely true democrat. The tragedy is that I am alone. There are
no such other democrats in the world,"


and then took the occasion of the 62nd anniversary of VE-Day to compare the
United States to the Third Reich.  The "bipolar" Khrushcheva was alluding to
might have been  to the psychological disorder.

Mark Medish presented the most cogent case for the opposition,  which is to
say that his was the most legalistic. The motion was "wrong on its face," he
claimed,  because this Russia has never before been our enemy before  (the
Soviet Union was),  and therefore it can't possibly become our enemy
"again."
Those years in the Clinton White House certainly weren't misspent.

Medish also warned that a "friend-foe" dichotomy  had "self-fulfilling
prophecy" written all over it,  and he,  for one,  preferred to highlight
shared U.S.-Russian interests - namely,  stopping WMD proliferation and
fighting Islamic terrorism (never mind about that facility in Bushehr  and
rocket-running  for Hezbollah and Hamas). Medish was also very fond of downy
d-words to portray a hard reality:


"We may have disagreements,  there may be friction,  there may be deep
disappointments and indeed there is great disillusionment and disenchantment
in the mutual relationship today."


But I think his prize moment arrived when said that,  in contradistinction
to a new cold war,  what the two powers are embroiled in now is a "cool
peace." Well,  he brightened my mood,  anyway.

Technically,  the pros won the day,  but the antis made an impressive
come-around. The audience vote at the start of the debate was 41 percent in
favor of the motion,  23 percent against,  and 36 percent undecided. At the
end those percentages were 47,  41,  12. How many FSB agents showed up late
remains a mystery.


Michael Weiss is associate editor of Jewcy magazine.

 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



--------------------------
Want to discuss this topic?  Head on over to our discussion list, [EMAIL 
PROTECTED]
--------------------------
Brooks Isoldi, editor
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

http://www.intellnet.org

  Post message: [email protected]
  Subscribe:    [EMAIL PROTECTED]
  Unsubscribe:  [EMAIL PROTECTED]


*** FAIR USE NOTICE. This message contains copyrighted material whose use has 
not been specifically authorized by the copyright owner. OSINT, as a part of 
The Intelligence Network, is making it available without profit to OSINT 
YahooGroups members who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the 
included information in their efforts to advance the understanding of 
intelligence and law enforcement organizations, their activities, methods, 
techniques, human rights, civil liberties, social justice and other 
intelligence related issues, for non-profit research and educational purposes 
only. We believe that this constitutes a 'fair use' of the copyrighted material 
as provided for in section 107 of the U.S. Copyright Law. If you wish to use 
this copyrighted material for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use,' 
you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.
For more information go to:
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/osint/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Reply via email to