http://onlinejournal.com/artman/publish/printer_2770.shtml
 
Putin will not allow Bush's "Missile Defense" system to be deployed
By Mike Whitney
Online Journal Contributing Writer


Dec 24, 2007, 01:35




It's been a lot of hard work, but Russian President Vladimir Putin has
finally achieved his goal. He's cleaned up the mess left behind by Yeltsin,
put together a strong and thriving economy, and restored Russia to a place
of honor among the community of nations.

His legacy has already been written. He's the man who rebuilt Russia. The
last thing he wants now, is a pointless confrontation with the United
States. But how can it be avoided? He understands Washington's long-range
plans for Russia and he is taking necessary steps to preempt them. He is
familiar with the heavyweights of US foreign policy, like Zbigniew
Brzezinski, and has undoubtedly read his master plan for Central Asia, "The
Grand Chessboard."

Brzezinski's recent article in Foreign Affairs (A publication of the Council
on Foreign Relations), "A Geostrategy for Eurasia," summarizes his views on
America's future involvement in the region: "America's emergence as the sole
global superpower now makes an integrated and comprehensive strategy for
Eurasia imperative.

"Eurasia is home to most of the world's politically assertive and dynamic
states. All the historical pretenders to global power originated in Eurasia.
The world's most populous aspirants to regional hegemony, China and India,
are in Eurasia, as are all the potential political or economic challengers
to American primacy. . . . Eurasia accounts for 75 percent of the world's
population, 60 percent of its GNP, and 75 percent of its energy resources.
Collectively, Eurasia's potential power overshadows even America's.

"Eurasia is the world's axial supercontinent. A power that dominated Eurasia
would exercise decisive influence over two of the world's three most
economically productive regions, Western Europe and East Asia. A glance at
the map also suggests that a country dominant in Eurasia would almost
automatically control the Middle East and Africa. With Eurasia now serving
as the decisive geopolitical chessboard, it no longer suffices to fashion
one policy for Europe and another for Asia. What happens with the
distribution of power on the Eurasian landmass will be of decisive
importance to America's global primacy and historical legacy."

So, there it is. The US is moving into the neighborhood and has no intention
of leaving. The war on terror is a fraud; it merely conceals the fact that
Bush is sprinkling military bases throughout Central Asia and surrounding
Russia in the process. Brzezinski sees this as a "strategic imperative." It
doesn't matter what Putin thinks. According to Brzezinski "NATO enlargement
should move forward in deliberate stages." The US must make sure "that no
state or combination of states gains the ability to expel the United States
or even diminish its decisive role."

This isn't new. Putin has known for some time what Bush is up to and he's
been as accommodating as possible. After all, his real passion is putting
Russia back on its feet and improving the lives of its citizens. That will
have to change now that Bush has decided to install a "Missile Defense"
system in Eastern Europe. Putin will have to devote more time to blocking
America's plans. The new system will upset the basic balance of power
between the nuclear rivals and force Putin to raise the stakes. A
confrontation is brewing whether Putin wants it or not. The system cannot be
deployed. Period. Putin must now do whatever is necessary to remove a direct
threat to Russia's national security. That is the primary obligation of
every leader and he will not shirk his responsibility.

Putin is an elusive character; neither boastful nor arrogant. It's clear now
that Western pundits mistook his reserved, quiet manner as a sign of
superficiality or lack of resolve. They were wrong. They underestimated the
former KGB colonel. Putin is bright and tenacious and he has a vision for
his country. He sees Russia as a key player in the new century; an energy
powerhouse that can control its own destiny. He doesn't plan to get bogged
down in avoidable conflicts if possible. He's focused on development not
war; plowshares not swords. He's also fiercely nationalistic; a Russian who
puts Russia first.

But Putin is a realist and he knows that the US will not leave Eurasia
without a fight. He's read the US National Security Strategy (NSS) and he
understands the ideological foundation for America's "unipolar" world model.
The NSS is an unambiguous declaration of war against any nation that claims
the right to control its own resources or defend its own sovereignty against
US interests. The NSS implies that nations' are required to open their
markets to Western multinationals and follow directives from Washington or
accept a place on Bush's "enemies list." There's no middle ground. You are
with us or with the terrorists. The NSS also entitles the United States to
unilaterally wage aggressive warfare against any state or group that is
perceived to be a potential threat to Washington's imperial ambitions. These
so-called "preemptive" wars are carried out under the rubric of the "war on
terror," which provides the justification for torture, abduction, ethnic
cleansing and massive civilian casualties.

US National Security Strategy articulates in black and white what many
critics had been saying for years; the United States owns the world and
everyone else is just a guest.

Putin knows that there's no way to reconcile this doctrine with his own
aspirations for an independent Russia but, so far, a clash has been averted.

He also knows that Bush is flanked by a band of fanatics and militarists who
plan to weaken Russia, install an American stooge (as in Georgia and
Afghanistan) and divide the country into four regions. This strategy is
clearly presented in forward-planning documents that have been drawn up in
Washington think tanks that chart the course for US world domination.

Brzezinski is quite candid about this in his article in Foreign Affairs:
"Given (Russia's) size and diversity, a decentralized political system and
free-market economics would be most likely to unleash the creative potential
of the Russian people and Russia's vast natural resources. A loosely
confederated Russia -- composed of a European Russia, a Siberian Republic,
and a Far Eastern Republic -- would also find it easier to cultivate closer
economic relations with its neighbors. Each of the confederated entities
would be able to tap its local creative potential, stifled for centuries by
Moscow's heavy bureaucratic hand. In turn, a decentralized Russia would be
less susceptible to imperial mobilization." [Zbigniew Brzezinski,"A
Geostrategy for Eurasia"]

Partition is a common theme in imperial planning whether its called
apartheid in Israel, federalizing in Iraq, "limited independence" in Kosovo,
or "loose confederation" in Russia. It's all the same. Divide and rule;
undermine nationalism by destroying the underlying culture and Balkanizing
the territory. This isn't new. What is amazing, is that Bush's plan is going
forward despite seven years of uninterrupted foreign policy failures. Hubris
and self-delusion have a longer shelf life than anyone could have imagined.

Putin is surrounded by ex-KGB hardliners who have warned him that America
cannot be trusted. They have watched while the US has steadily moved into
the former Soviet satellites, pushed NATO to Russia's borders, and
precipitated regime change via "color coded" revolutions. They point to the
Chechen war where US intelligence services trained Chechen insurgents
through their ISI surrogates in Pakistan -- teaching them how to conduct
guerrilla operations in a critical region that provides Russia with access
to the western shores of the resource-rich Caspian Basin.

Michel Chossudovsky has done some excellent research on this little-known
period of Russian history. In his article "
<http://globalresearch.ca/articles/CHO303B.html> The Anglo-American Military
Axis," he says, "U.S. covert support to the two main Chechen rebel groups
(through Pakistan's ISI) was known to the Russian government and military.
However, it had previously never been made public or raised at the
diplomatic level. In November 1999, the Russian Defense Minister, Igor
Sergueyev, formally accused Washington of supporting the Chechen rebels.
Following a meeting held behind closed doors with Russia's military high
command, Sergueyev declared that: 'The national interests of the United
States require that the military conflict in the Caucasus [Chechnya] be a
fire, provoked as a result of outside forces," while adding that 'the West's
policy constitutes a challenge launched to Russia with the ultimate aim of
weakening her international position and of excluding her from geo-strategic
areas.'

"In the wake of the 1999 Chechen war, a new 'National Security Doctrine' was
formulated and signed into law by Acting President Vladimir Putin, in early
2000. Barely acknowledged by the international media, a critical shift in
East-West relations had occurred. The document reasserted the building of a
strong Russian State, the concurrent growth of the Military, as well as the
reintroduction of State controls over foreign capital. . . . The document
carefully spelled out what it described as 'fundamental threats' to Russia's
national security and sovereignty. More specifically, it referred to 'the
strengthening of military-political blocs and alliances' [namely GUUAM], as
well as to "NATO's eastward expansion" while underscoring 'the possible
emergence of foreign military bases and major military presences in the
immediate proximity of Russian borders.'"

That's right; there's been a low-grade secret war going on between Russia
and the US for over a decade although it is rarely discussed in diplomatic
circles. The war in Chechnya is probably less about "succession" and
independence, than it is about foreign intervention and imperial overreach.

The same rule applies to the controversy surrounding Kosovo. The Bush
administration and its EU clients are trying to fragment Serbia by
supporting an initiative for Kosovo's "limited independence."

But why "limited"?

It's because Bush knows that the resolution has no chance of passing the UN
Security Council, so the only way to circumvent international law is by
issuing a unilateral edict that is promoted in the media as "independence."
By this same standard, Abraham Lincoln should have granted Jefferson Davis
"limited independence" and avoided the Civil War altogether.

Author Irina Lebedeva reveals the real motives behind the administration's
actions on Kosovo in her article "USA-Russia: Hitting the same gate, or
playing the same game?"

"The North Atlantic alliance (the US and its EU allies) documents indicate
that the bloc aims at the 'Balkanization' of the post-Soviet space by way of
overtaking influence in the territories of the currently frozen conflicts
and their follow-up internalization along the Yugoslavian lines are set down
in black and white. For example, a special report titled 'The New North
Atlantic Strategy for the Black Sea Region,' prepared by the German Marshall
Fund of the United States on the occasion of the NATO summit, already refers
to Black Sea and South Caucasus (Transcaucasia) as a 'new Euro-Atlantic
borderland plagued by Soviet-legacy conflicts.' And the 'region of frozen
conflicts is evolving into a functional aggregate on the new border of an
enlarging West.' Azerbaijan and Georgia in tandem, the report notes, provide
a unique transit corridor for Caspian energy to Europe, as well as an
irreplaceable corridor for American-led and NATO to bases and operation
theatres in Central Asia and the Greater Middle East.'"

Once again, divide and rule; this time writ large for an entire region that
is being arbitrarily redrawn to meet the needs of mega-corporations that
want to secure "transit corridors for Caspian energy to Europe." The new
Great Game. Brzezinski has called this area a critical "land-bridge" to
Eurasia. Others refer to it as a "new Euro-Atlantic borderland." Whatever
one calls it; it is a good illustration of how bloodthirsty Washington
mandarins carve up the world to suit their own geopolitical objectives.

Putin has seen enough and he's now moving swiftly to counter US incursions
in the region. He's not going to wait until the neocon fantasists affix a
bull's eye to his back and take aim. In the last few weeks he has withdrawn
Russia from the Conventional Armed Forces in Europe Treaty (CFE) and is
threatening to redeploy his troops and heavy weaponry to Russia's
western-most borders. The move does nothing to enhance Russian security, but
it will arouse public concern in Europe and perhaps ignite a backlash
against Bush's "Missile Defense" system.

Russian Navy Admiral Vladimir Masorin also announced last week that Russia
will move part of its fleet to Syrian ports where "it will maintain a
permanent presence in the Mediterranean. Israeli leaders are in a panic over
the announcement claiming that the move will disrupt their "electronic
surveillance and air defense centers" thus threatening their national
security. Putin intends to go ahead with the plan regardless. Dredging has
already begun in the port of Tartus and a dock is being built in the Syrian
port of Latakia.

Also, Russian officials are investigating the possibility of building
military bases in Serbia and have been invited to discuss the issue with
leaders in the Serbian Nationalist Radical Party (SRS) The prospective
dialogue is clearly designed to dissuade the US from pursuing its present
policy towards Kosovo.

Russia also delivered its first shipment of nuclear fuel to Iran last week,
which means that the controversial 1,000 watt nuclear plant at Bushehr could
be fully operational within three months. Adding insult to injury, Iranian
officials announced last Monday their plans to build a second plant in
defiance of US orders to halt its nuclear activities.

Also, last Monday, "Russia test-launched a new intercontinental ballistic
missile part of a system that can outperform any anti-missile system likely
to be deployed," according to Reuters. "The missile was launched from the
Tula nuclear-powered submarine in the Barents Sea in the Arctic.

"'The military hardware now on our weapons, and those that will appear in
the next few years, will enable our missiles to outperform any anti-missile
system, including future systems,' Col.-Gen Nikolai Solovtsov was quoted as
telling journalists." [Reuters]

Bush's "Missile Defense" system has restarted the nuclear arms race. Welcome
to the new Cold War.

Finally, Russian Chief of Staff General Yuri Balyevsky warned: "A possible
launch of a US interceptor missile from Central Europe may provoke a
counterattack from intercontinental ballistic missiles. . . . If we suppose
that Iran wants to strike the United States , then interceptor missiles
which would be launched from Poland will fly towards Russia and the shape
and flight trajectory are very similar to ICBMs." [Novosti Russian News
Agency]

Balyevsky's scenario of an "accidental" World War III is more likely than
ever now that Bush is pressing ahead with his plans for "Missile Defense."
Russia's automated missile warning systems can be triggered automatically
when foreign missiles enter Russian air space. Its a dangerous game and
potentially fatal to every living thing on the planet.

To a great extent, the American people have no idea of the reckless policy
that is being carried out in their name. The gravity of the proposed
"Missile Defense" system has been virtually ignored by the media and
Russia's protests have been dismissed as trivial. But hostilities are
steadily growing, military forces and weaponry are being put into place, and
the stage is set for a major conflagration. This is every bit as serious as
the Cuban Missile Crisis, only this time Russia cannot afford to stand down.

Putin will not allow the system to be deployed even if he has to remove it
through force of arms. It is a direct threat to Russia's national security.
We would expect nothing different from our own leaders.

 



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