Losing Russia
2007-12-03
The message of a Dimitri K. Simes article in Foreign Affairs is
that the West is partly to blame for the aggressive reawakening
of the Russian bear. The Clinton administration generated much
resentment, Simes said, by giving Russia the "spinach
treatment." The U.S. fed it policies that Washington deemed
healthy, no matter how unappetizing Moscow found them. Nato
expansion then heightened the resentment. To avoid losing
Russia, Simes said, the U.S. should drop its belief that it can
secure Russia's support for its own policies while ignoring
Russia's priorities. This means not backing down on missile
defense, he said, but limiting deployment to the stated objective
of overcoming rogue-state threats and combining this with
specific steps to reassure Moscow that MD isn't aimed against it.
The good news, Simes said, is that Russia isn't eager to enter
into an alliance against the West. Its elite, he said, don't want to
give up their Swiss accounts. (Or Carlsbad spas.)
[Czech Republic Switzerland North Atlantic Treaty Organization
enlargement radar shield Vladimir Putin]
|