Russia and Obama: Untying the Gordian Knot
By Eric Walberg
Online Journal Contributing Writer
Nov 11, 2008, 11:28
Russian President Dmitry Medvedev gave his
state-of-the-union address last Wednesday, just a few hours after Barack
Obama’s historic electoral triumph, and pointedly refrained from mentioning it,
though he is on record as hoping for an Obama presidency.
“It would be easier to work with people with a modern
outlook, rather than those whose eyes are turned back to the past,” he said in
February, before he was elected president himself. In a simple note sent to
Obama and posted on the Kremlin’s web site later Wednesday afternoon, he said,
“I hope for a constructive dialogue with you, based on trust and consideration
of each other’s interests.”
It is unlikely there will be a love-in à la US
President George W Bush and President Vladimir Putin, when the former famously
said, “I looked the man in the eye. I was able to get a sense of his soul,”
considering the disastrous plunge in relations following this sound-bite
moment. Or, more to the point, because of the foreign policy hawks Obama relies
on, including Zbigniew Brzezinski, whose anti-Russian credentials I dissected
in “Zbigniew
Brzezinski to be the real power behind an Obama throne.” Or, in light of
the virtually identical public avowals by both Obama and John McCain concerning
relations with Russia (apart from McCain’s inane vow to exclude Russia from the
G8), i.e., Georgia , missile defence, and Iran. The Russians know perfectly
well that not much changes in US foreign policy from one regime to the next.
The US empire follows a certain ruthless logic and must be accommodated by the
political functionaries presiding over it.
In fact, analyst Kiril Rogov says most politicians actually
wanted McCain to win. “Russian officials were ready for the kind of old-style
confrontation a McCain presidency appeared to offer,” he said. “Obama has
promised a new model of foreign relations, and that worries Russian
politicians.” And there’s Obama’s loose cannon VP Joseph Biden, who presented
the Democratic Convention with his plan for the new administration’s “real war,”
the war against Russia and China.
Still, there is room for hope. We all know just how
“powerful” US vice presidents are (with the exception of the current office
holder). Obama will not let himself be seen as an Uncle Tom. Both presidents
are 40-something lawyers by training, cultured and reserved, starting their day
online, not just relying on briefings prepared by aides. By all accounts, they
are both reasonably uncorrupted by their meteoric rise to power, have cool
heads and have the best interests of their countries at heart.
It is unlikely that Obama will run such a wild,
unpremeditated foreign policy as his predecessor. There are factions within the
imperial establishment -- liberals vs hawks. As presumably one of the former,
Obama will be more likely to rely on soft power (undermining other governments
in the name of democracy) vs outright war. The Russians no doubt will count on
Obama to wind down the current wars rather than starting new ones, all the time
keeping their eye on campaigns to “promote democracy” in their backyard.
Remember it was Republican McCain’s adviser Randy Scheunemann and
Vice-President Richard Cheney who abetted the brash Georgian president to go to
war with Russia last August. Vyacheslav Nikonov, of the Politika think
tank, says, “Obama is an open book, a story to be written.”
So there is a bit of a fresh slate, despite the exigencies
of the empire. Any anti-Russia manoeuvring under the tutelage of Brzezinski
will be much cleverer than under those who pulled the strings for Bush. The
sorest point with Russia, of course, is the ever-looming plan for US missile
bases in Poland and the Czech Republic. Obama has been cagey about this so far.
After the Polish government website announced Obama would proceed with the
missile sites, his senior foreign policy adviser Denis McDonough said,
“President Kaczynski raised missile defense, but President-elect Obama made no
commitment on it. His position is as it was throughout the campaign, that he
supports deploying a missile defense system when the technology is proved to be
workable.’’ The Czech public is solidly against it and just proved it by
drubbing the ruling Civic Democrats in Senate and regional elections. The Senate
will discuss the plan at the end of November. The Social Democrats, who
benefited from the drubbing, promise to halt it. The Poles are already resigned
to the possibility it will not happen after the above embarrassing exchange,
with analysts suggesting the many problems the US now faces could mean an
indefinite delay in the coveted base.
Alexander Khramchikhin, a defense analyst with the Institute
of Political and Military Analysis, said that with Democrats in control of the
presidency and Congress, the US could well cut defense spending and put the
anti-missile system on the backburner. Obama could easily remove himself from
that hook, providing a wonderful olive branch to the Russians. Medvedev’s
threat to station Iskander missiles next door to Poland in Kaliningrad would
evaporate. Dmitry Rogozin, Russia’s hardnosed envoy to NATO predicted that
Obama would stop pressuring European NATO members from cooperating with Russia.
The other, equally sore point in relations -- NATO’s
triumphal march to Russia ’s borders -- could also be resolved by diplomacy.
The rose is off Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili’s bloom after his
botched war, and Ukraine is due for a new president, with both opposition
contenders dismissing NATO membership as a priority. Again, by giving the right
signals and avoiding Bush bluster about freedom and democracy, Obama could
pacify the Russians without any loss of US prestige.
The main economic issue, which swamps both these political
issues, is the September financial meltdown, which slashed the value of Russian
stocks by two-thirds and, with the collapse in the price of oil, promises to
leave Medvedev helpless to carry out his ambitious reform programme. Medvedev’s
top economic adviser, Arkady Dvorkovich, thinks that under Obama, the United
States will engage in a closer dialogue with Europe, Asia and Russia to find a
way out of the financial crisis. “This dialogue will begin in the near future
in Washington. We will look for solutions together.”
Medvedev will travel to Washington on 15 November to attend
a G20 summit on the financial crisis, where he could meet Obama. Konstantin
Kosachyov, head of the State Duma’s Foreign Affairs Committee, called on Obama
to “find courage” to abandon the United States’ unilateral approach in its
foreign policy and embrace the idea of collective action. The Bush
administration has managed to worsen ties with Russia more than with any other
major country, and Obama’s election “instills hope that a dramatic page in the
relations of the two countries will be turned,” Federation Council Speaker
Sergei Mironov said.
There is one conflict where the US can move quickly to find
common ground with Russia -- in Nagorno-Karabak. The US, Russia and France are
co-chairs of the Minsk Group, which acts as intermediary there. Medvedev met
last week with the leaders of Azerbaijan and Armenia for talks on the conflict,
getting them to agree to continue working on “a political resolution of the
conflict.” None of the co-chairs has any particular hidden agenda, and if they
could get the opponents to agree on a compromise, flooding them with
development aid to sweeten the pill, this would be a strong signal that there
is a way out of the nasty Cold War which Bush-Cheney have bequeathed Obama.
But there are many ways to sour relations, if that’s what
the real actors want. Already, it was announced that Obama’s election team’s
computers were hacked by a “foreign entity” during the election. Obama
“technical experts” later speculated the hackers were Russian or Chinese. How
easy it is to execute any number of pre-packaged false flag operations if
necessary.
The common refrain these days is, “Who could possibly want
to be US president after the mess Bush created?” On the contrary, cleaning up
after the devastation of a hurricane is very rewarding; the results of one’s
labours are clear and laudable. Obama could well have a truly historic sound-bite
moment in a few years, meeting with his equally handsome, dynamic Russian
counterpart to jointly solve some crisis which is bound to happen. The Bush
years could be just a horrible -- but receding -- nightmare as we celebrate
Obama’s re-election in four years.
Eric Walberg writes for Al-Ahram Weekly. You can reach him at www.geocities.com/walberg2002.
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