United States President Barack Obama has shown a flicker of
independence in shaping US Eurasian politics.
To secure transit routes through Russia to Afghanistan, he
loudly proclaimed the end to US missile base plans for Poland and the Czech
Republic, and downplayed any further NATO expansion in Russia�s backyard. He
resisted jumping on the Gates-Clinton-McChrystal escalation bandwagon,
insisting that it would be counterproductive to blindly back the thoroughly
discredited Karzai, and hinting that negotiations with the Taliban and Iran
could mean an about-face on the Bush strategy of total war in the region.
Obama�s strategy is now described as focused on securing the
main cities in Afghanistan, while abandoning most of the country to the
Taliban. This can only be a holding measure while attempts are made to lure
moderate elements in the Taliban away from their comrades to join the Karzai
clique.
In talks with former Taliban foreign minister Mullah Wakil
Ahmed Mutawakkil brokered by Saudi Arabia and Turkey, US negotiators supposedly
offered governorship of six provinces in the south and northeast, a senior
Afghan Foreign Ministry official told IslamOnline.net -- if they accept
the presence of NATO troops in Afghanistan and eight US bases.
US drone attacks continue apace in AfPak with Obama�s
blessing, and the US is urging Pakistan on in its civil war against its
frontier provinces of Baluchistan and Waziristan, pouring in massive military
aid.
And missile and other plans in Eastern Europe are proceeding
apace, with or without Obama�s blessing. US officials have gone out of their
way to assuage the Poles and Czechs with assurances that the bases were not really
cancelled. Under Secretary of State for Arms Control and International Security
Affairs Ellen Tauscher recently said the command centre for the new version of
anti-missile defence could be stationed in the Czech Republic.
Now Poland is asking not only for missiles, but US troops,
apparently �alarmed� by military exercises conducted by the Russian army in
Belarus. �We would like to see US troops stationed in Poland to serve as a
shield against Russian aggression,� Polish Foreign Minister Radek Sikorski was
quoted by Interfax. �If you can still afford it, we need some strategic
reassurance,� he added sarcastically. When asked to comment, a Russian
Foreign Ministry official told Kommersant, �It is better to ask the
World Health Organisation for an assessment of Mr Sikorski�s words.� Estonia,
which has sent a hefty 10 per cent of its armed forces to Afghanistan, is also
asking for US troops.
NATO assurances to Georgia and Ukraine about joining up are
still a dime a dozen. Georgia�s army is being armed by the US, Israeli and
Ukraine, according to Alexander Shlyakhturov, head of Russia�s Main
Intelligence Directorate, encouraging Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili in
his plans to reincorporate South Ossetia and Abkhazia.
All this can only mean that talk of real cooperation with
Russia is an illusion, as is vague talk of accommodation with Iran. Obama may
mean well, but the pursuit of US empire is hard to stop.
Russian politicians are not blind. Nor are the Chinese. Both
Russia and China refuse to accede to US fiat on Iran, and are cooperating on
many fronts these days looking for ways to ease the world towards a �multipolar
world.�
This was the backdrop to the 9th meeting of the
Russia-India-China (RIC) trilateral meeting which took place in Bangalore in
late October, attended by Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, Indian
External Affairs Minister SM Krishna and Chinese Foreign Minister Yang
Jiechi. Said Lavrov after the meeting, �RIC is a group of countries that are
integrally needed to mobilise regional efforts. But they are not enough. All of
Afghanistan�s neighbours are needed. The US, the main supplier of troops is
needed. Iran is needed. The Central Asian countries are needed.� He politely
refrained from saying that it is only because of the US invasion that the US
has any role at all in the region.
As Lavrov rightly points out, it is the regional countries
China, Russia, India and Iran that are the ones left to pick up the pieces in
AfPak after the US finally packs its many bags. Russia has the Collective
Security Treaty Organization. Russia and China have the Shanghai Cooperation
Organisation. Even Iran has initiated its own trilateral format with Pakistan
and Afghanistan. However, as MK Bhadrakumar writes in Asia Times, so far
Lavrov�s efforts to fashion the three mini-superpowers into a united front on
regional issues have been fruitless. Bad karma between the two most populous
countries in the world lingers on; namely, the India-China frictions over
borders and the Dalai Lama.
It is not only its Chinese neighbour that India can�t get
along with. Deriving from its perennial distrust of anything to do with
Pakistan, Delhi refuses to acknowledge the fact that the Taliban are an Afghan
political reality and are part (let alone �all�) of any solution. Having
drifted into the US orbit (curiously, along with its rival Pakistan), India
risks being left behind, as the US-inspired war in Afghanistan continues to go
nowhere, Pakistan descends into anarchy, China surges ahead, and the Russians
and Chinese intensify their cooperation.
Of course, this and RIC�s inability to address Afghanistan
suits the US just fine. Regional powers working together independently of the
US to solve their problems would leave the US and its many SEATOs and NATOs out
of the picture. Japan would like to fashion an East Asian community no longer
subservient to Washington, but, according to president of the Japan Foundation,
Kazuo Ogoura, �It is intolerable [for Washington] to see Asians considering
their relations among each other in a form that excludes the US.�
Obama is visiting Beijing and Tokyo this week. Oblivious to
Asian disinterest in marching to US orders, Mark Brzezinski (son of Zbigniew)
advised him in the New York Times to include in his �China List� establishing
a formal mechanism among the leaders of the US, China and Pakistan -- China is
after all Pakistan�s oldest friend as counterweight to India. This pointedly
leaves out Russia and India and ties China to US plans for the region. Good
luck, Mr Obama.
Surprisingly, Moscow hasn�t given up entirely on Obama.
Lavrov told Russian journalists in Bangalore, �Obama has announced a different
philosophy -- that of collective action, which calls for joint analysis,
decision-making and implementation rather than for all others to follow
Washington�s decisions. So far, inertia lingers at the implementers� level in
the US, who still follow the well-trodden track. This is a process which will
take time before the president�s will is translated into the language of
practical actions by his subordinates.�
However distasteful US actions are, the Russian leadership
cannot risk closing the door completely on US efforts to end the war in
Afghanistan, considering it was on the losing end against the Afghan resistance
20 years ago and is less than enamoured by an avowedly Islamic state there. But
it is unlikely that China will join India and Pakistan as a US client state,
and if India buries the hatchet with China and reconsiders its position on the
Taliban, the situation for the US -- and Afghanistan -- could yet change
dramatically. There is small reason for any of the RICs to be haunted by Bush�s
curse -- the US-inspired wars and subversion in their backyard.
Eric Walberg writes for Al-Ahram Weekly. You can reach him at ericwalberg.com.