As antagonists United States President George W. Bush and
his Russian counterpart, Vladimir Putin, both begin ceding power to others, one
would expect new political horizons to open up. Bush already looks more like a
footnote than a leader, with the US focusing on McCain vs Clinton/Obama,
leaving the failed president a classic lame duck. Putin is introducing his
successor Dmitri Medvedev to the subtleties of power politics, with Western
analysts slavering over hints in his biography of liberalism and even a
rejection of Putin's clear anti-imperialist foreign politics. But this
appearance of change belies the reality.
As the recent anniversary of the US debacle in Iraq
underlined, the US is in its sixth year of a brutal and illegal occupation and
will remain there for years to come, no matter who is president, and in its
seventh year in an even worse nightmare in Afghanistan.
Things are a bit different in Russia. No electoral chaos and
public linen washing. And despite the wishful thinking of pundits, its foreign
policy appears to be continuing the independent, self-assured path that Putin
gave it: no to US missile bases in Eastern Europe, no to a war against Iran, no
to an independent Kosovo.
There are nuances though; notably, a flurry of talks in
Moscow between US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and Secretary of Defense
Robert Gates and their Russian counterparts prior to the 2-4 April NATO meeting
in Romania. They rushed to Moscow to negotiate a "strategic
framework" on policy issues such as trade, counter-terrorism and nuclear
proliferation. This looks suspiciously like window-dressing, as there has been
no movement on the key disagreements over US missile bases and the fate of
Kosovo. Defense Minister Anatoly Serdyukov made it very clear: "In
principle our positions have not changed." Interestingly, the Americans
discretely limited their talks with opposition figures, bypassing the likes of
Gary Kasparov and even Human Rights Watch activist Tatyana Lokshina, whom Rice
met with last year, and who said, "I can't say why she didn't meet us this
time, but frankly it's very disappointing. It sends a signal to the Russian
government." Very much so.
As for NATO, according to US Under Secretary of State for
Political Affairs Nicholas Burns, it is suffering an "existential
crisis," which Jean-Paul Sartre might find amusing. Bush has pushed seven
ex-Soviet bloc states into NATO during his tenure and is eager to make this a
metric dozen with Albania, Croatia and Macedonia. It also has "road
maps" for Ukraine and Georgia to get them on a quick entry ramp into this
peculiar alliance. But Europe is having trouble digesting all these new
dishes -- Greece doesn't want Macedonia for purely Greek reasons, Germany
doesn't want Ukraine and Georgia for very good Russian reasons. It's not at all
clear that anyone besides Bush really wants basket case Albania among the big
boys. Many argue that the alliance has actually become weaker with all the new
members, as individual states -- with the notable exception of the
US -- quietly reduce their own defence spending. Gates warned recently
that NATO was becoming a two-tiered alliance, with some brave stalwarts and a
lot of cowards.
Meanwhile, German Chancellor Angela Merkel's Social
Democratic foreign minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier, is publicly calling for
the EU to take on its traditional role of mediator between America and Russia.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy now shows his concern for Russian
"sensibilities," and his Socialist foreign minister, Bernard
Kouchner, insists that Moscow must now "have the place that belongs to
it." Even Russophobe Merkel realises the folly of inducting Ukraine and
Georgia into NATO. As if to draw a line in the sand, the Russian Duma just
voted unanimously (440-0) for the recognition of Georgian provinces Abhazia and
South Ossetia as independent states.
As for hopes that Medvedev will abandon Putin's legacy, a
careful reading of his record shows that he is actually taking the Putin
revolution to its logical conclusion, with his intent on streamlining the
government, promoting rule by law, supporting business through infrastructure
development and market-friendly policies, emphasising the need to nuture NGOs
to replace Soviet-style state provision of all services.
Complementing the words of Steinmeier, he has proposed that
the EU look to its own experience in the early post-WWII period of
reconstruction, when the European coal and steel community laid the vital
ground work for the EU itself, bringing enemy states together. He has offered
an "asset swap" that will guarantee energy security for the entire
continent as "the best form of partnership." Russian investment in
refinery and distribution in Europe in exchange for European investment in oil
and gas extraction in Russia would create a "virtuous cycle,"
engendering economic efficiency and security throughout the continent.
Medvedev's message is clear, and irrefutable: security is enhanced when
countries share risk, not when they build walls and rattle missiles.
This is day to the night of US "might makes right"
that unfortunately seems to infect anyone who gets near the White House these
days. So while the superpower dance of death continues, there is that other
Cold War partner -- detente -- waiting in the wings, if only the US
can remove its neocon blinkers. Europe is already waiting for its tune to
change. And we can only hope such a detente will be followed by a perestroika --
this time in the US.
Perhaps all this is best encapsulated in the respective
attitudes of the US and Russia towards the Organisation of Islamic Conference
(OIC) expressed during its recent meeting in Senegal. For the first time, the
US sent a PR envoy, Sada Cumber, a smooth Pakistani-born businessman from
Texas, to promote understanding with Muslim countries. Rice explained:
"The notion that the US is at war with Islam is simply propagated by
violent extremists who seek to divide Muslim communities against
themselves." Cumber admitted that he hadn't made much headway in Dakar.
In contrast, Russia actually wants to join the OIC --
its Muslim population is larger than that of several Asian and African Muslim
states -- "to enhance cooperation with Islamic nations,"
according to Russian Ambassador at Large Veniamin Popov. Russia continues to
work within international bodies and observe international laws, while the US
continues to bully and schmooze the world to follow one of its many "road
maps."
Eric
Walberg writes for Al-Ahram Weekly. You can reach him at www.geocities.com/walberg2002.