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The ‘New Multilateralism’

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Posted on Oct 9, 2008

By William Pfaff

The issues that have fueled Russian-American tensions in Europe in recent months, and European tensions with both Russia and the United States, have suggested a willingness on all sides to reignite tensions that on the face of it serve no one’s real interests. The past week, however, has displayed different perspectives and the possibility of a general reassessment of problems, with new security arrangements to replace the weakened Cold War structures that currently serve everyone badly.

The United States and NATO headquarters have blamed recent troubles on a “resurgent Russia’s” wish to reclaim its Cold War predominance in Eastern Europe as well as within the old boundaries of Russia. Yet the first is an impossible ambition: Only by a new European war could Russia retake control of the former Warsaw Pact states (not to speak of reconstituting East Germany). That it wants to be left alone within Russia’s historical borders is normal enough, if inconvenient to Georgians. However, as a Georgian leader of Russia, Stalin, once said, “I am not responsible for geography.”

The Warsaw Pact gave Russia a deep defensive glacis to absorb attack by Western armies. The Western armies are no more. The only one that survives, the American, is battling for its life in Afghanistan and sitting on a powder keg in Iraq. No one in Russia today can be so paranoid as to think the country could be threatened by an attack from a NATO alliance currently unable (and unwilling) to scrape up the troops to resist the Taliban in Afghanistan.

That shows the nonexistence of any European interest in pushing Russia into starting a war, as does the formal abstention of nearly all the West European governments from the U.N. General Assembly vote last week to send the question of the legality of Kosovo’s declared independence from Serbia to assessment by the Hague International Court of Justice.

The U.S. created Kosovo independence, but was one of only six states voting against sending the affair off for a verdict in international law (which anyway could only be advisory). The General Assembly vote was 77 to six, with most of the European governments formally abstaining, a devastating defeat for the U.S. and victory for Serbia, backed by Russia. The U.S. reiterated that it will continue to station troops in Kosovo and train and supply an embryonic Kosovo army.

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Defense Secretary Robert Gates has been in Europe to make another generally unsuccessful effort to recruit NATO and non-NATO troops to support the ill-advised U.S. and NATO campaign in Afghanistan.

On Wednesday, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev insisted to a conference at Evian of France’s Institute for International Relations that the United States has forfeited its place at the center of world order by its illegal and unjustified invasion of Iraq; its reintroduction of missiles into Western Europe, interpreted as threatening Russia; its expansion of NATO despite promises not to do so; and its attempt to annex to NATO Ukraine and Georgia, both parts of czarist Russia since the early 19th century.

Medvedev said, “The Warsaw Pact has not existed for almost 20 years, but unfortunately for us ... the expansion of NATO is being carried out with particular fervor. Naturally, no matter what is being said, we regard this as directed against us.”

On the same day, the Georgian government confirmed that Russia had fulfilled its promised withdrawal of forces from the buffer zones protecting the breakaway regions that Georgia (as now is generally acknowledged) attacked and attempted to seize in August, causing South Ossetia and Abkhazia to declare their own independence, under Russian protection.

Medvedev’s colleague, Serguei Karaganov, offered a glimpse of the steel in the Russia reproach by denouncing a Western media “anti-Russian campaign” and reminding the Europeans of their dependence on Russian energy exports (heavily dependent on Western technology, he was reminded, and not worth trading for Russia’s current version of democracy).

However, the affair ended with Nicolas Sarkozy, current holder of the EU presidency, and President Medvedev talking about pan-European security. Sarkozy arguing for a summit called by the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe to create new security institutions “from Vladivostok to Vancouver,” replacing those of the Cold War with what he called a “new multilateralism.”

The formula is sure to enrage today’s Washington establishment, but possibly would be of interest to Barack Obama.

Visit William Pfaff’s Web site at www.williampfaff.com.

© 2008 Tribune Media Services, Inc.


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By Dimitry Angel Sarkozy, October 22, 2008 at 6:07 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

EU with Russia is Great Superpower and complete Europe.Russia must joint EU now to end US evil influence in Europe and to end US occupation in many countries in Europe. US is big countries should mind their own countries.
US and Georiga are started war in Georgia last August to make war in Europe but they failed cause Great President Nicolas Sarkosy end the war by diplomacy to avoid escalation of war in Europe that will bring total destruction Europe. US are doing anything to divide and destroy Europe, to maintain their Empire and Superpower status. Russia is European Country and very powerful country is very qualified and very welcome to joint EU. If Russia joint EU Ukraine, Maldova, Belerus and Georgia will automatically joint also.

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By M Henri Day, October 13, 2008 at 3:07 am Link to this comment

There can be no doubt but that 8 years of a regime fronted by Messrs Bush and Cheney has greatly hastened the decline and fall of the US Empire predicted by Professor Galtung, inter alia. The fate of the world will, I suspect, be largely determined by the ability of the next US president and the currents he represents (I am here presuming that Ms Palin will not occupy the office) to face up to this, for those who have traditionally determined US policies, unpalatable fact. Will the political establishment in the United States be able to manage these changes without starting yet another war, more destructive than any of the many that have gone before ? Will the people of the United States be able to reconstruct the «Republic», mentioned by Franklin when asked about the results of the US Constitutional Convention ? The odds are long….

Henri

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By Peter, October 12, 2008 at 5:24 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

dhey said “it is significant that the first Bush administration regarded questions related to the independence and territorial conflicts in Georgia as internal affairs of the Soviet Union.”  And that position makes much more sense than what the USA says today.  As for Hitler’s violation of the Munich agreement by invading all of Czechoslovakia, I view that as an internal affair of Austria from which Bohemia and Moravia was stolen in 1919 to create the new country of Czechoslovakia.  It was not Britain’s, France’s or the USA’s business. 

Just as the USA is trying to strengthen its own position and weaken Russia with its new policy in Georgia; England, France and the USA weakened Germany and Austria by taking from them Bohemia, Moravia, Danzig, the entire “Polish Corridor”, Memel, Alsace-Lorraine, Eupen and Malmedy all of which had millions of Germans living there and giving these territories to new or existing countries.  The British, French and American’s drove a wedge right through the middle of German territory.  This wedge was given to Poland and separated one part of Germany (East Prussia) from the rest of Germany. 

Despite the west’s insistence that Germany and Austria had no right to territories that had been theirs going as far back as the thirteenth century, Britain felt it had the right to subjugate darker peoples all over the world to its rule.  In 1982 it sent its navy thousands of miles away to South America to steal back the Falkland Islands from Argentina.  After WW II the USA incorporated the US colony Hawaii into American territory.  To this day many native Hawaiin’s don’t like white Americans and thats why its more difficult for whites to get a job there.

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By Alan, October 11, 2008 at 8:21 am Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

I know it’s gonna hurt some US ego, but Russia is still the largest country on the planet, it dwarfs the US. I guess this must get those neocons riled.  Russia also has a hatfull of nukes enough to respond in kind to any agression.  As a European living not so far from the Russian border I can only say this.  Better Europe dumps this Nato crap and gets real about dealing with Russia on a partnership basis. Germans are not stupid they know only too well what should be done.  Poles of course, like their US partners carry their grudges long and deep.  They stand to lose alot when those missile bases are installed.  Lately I visited a very large modern tractor manufacturing company which employs alot of hard working people.  Their production goes one way that is to Russia.  This is the reality and by provoking the Russian bear this lot could close down overnight. So are these grudges worth all this?

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By dihey, October 11, 2008 at 8:09 am Link to this comment

bc41: To begin with, Russian peacekeepers were not in Georgia but in autonomous South Ossetia. Secondly, they were there because of an agreement reached in 1992 on the status of South Ossetia, an agreement that the Government of Georgia at that time signed. Thirdly, it is precisely this agreement that the current president of Georgia violated. His actions were no different from Hitler’s when he violated the Munich agreement by invading all of Czechoslovakia.
Finally, it is significant that the first Bush administration regarded questions related to the independence and territorial conflicts in Georgia as “internal affairs of the Soviet Union.”

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By dihey, October 11, 2008 at 7:52 am Link to this comment

During their debates Senators McCain and Obama suggested that kicking Russia out of the G7 might be one good way of “punishing” Putin for “invading” Georgia. Both nincompoops forgot that Russia is not a member of the G7. They probably meant G8, the group of 8 of which Russia is a member.
This weekend the G7 meet in Washington to discuss the world’s financial meltdown. It is a political and economical crime that Russia and China have not been admitted as full members to G7 because they are badly needed to participate in helping to stabilize the world economy. On second thought, perhaps Russia and China do not want to become members. G7 has created the shit, so why participate in cleaning up the doodoo?

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By Outraged, October 10, 2008 at 9:25 pm Link to this comment

Personally, I think it odd that Obama supporters aren’t “all over this issue”.  Is there a reason for that…?

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By bc41, October 10, 2008 at 8:06 pm Link to this comment

I thought everyone connected to the US government were very closed minded, too quick to condemn Russia.  No one responded to Medvedev’s claims or even why they did not do so.  Just shows their thinking is on autopilot.  It looks like also that Georgia had a specific purpose in deploying troops to Iraq, to get affordable support in case Russia reacted to Georgia’s plans and actions.  I would be interested to know the history of how these breakaway regions came to pass and why only Russian peace keepers are there.

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By Peter, October 9, 2008 at 9:17 pm Link to this comment
(Unregistered commenter)

I agree with Folktruther 100%.  WW I made the USA a military power and WW II made the USA and the Soviet Union world powers, replacing Germany, France and Great Britain.  Nothing benefitted the USA more than the almost complete destruction of the civilized world (Europe) while not even a bullet was fired in the USA (Hawaii was not part of the USA in 1941).  The USA wants war and destruction, but it wants it doesn’t want it in the USA.

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By abdo, October 9, 2008 at 8:54 pm Link to this comment

old !Europe has made its mind long ago to avoid wars at all coast, very reluctantly participated in the conflict in former Yugoslavia.  Many people in the former soviet republics has historical grievances against Russia, however the wish for peace is overwhelming in Europe old and new

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By Folktruther, October 9, 2008 at 4:26 pm Link to this comment

The US has a murderous, irrationl and self defeating foreign policy.  Which is bipartisan.  The Bushites are currently heating up wars against nuclear states in Georgia, Pakistan and by sending nuclear technology to India and six billiion dollars of missiles to Taiwan.  The world is turning away from the US, and it does so to the benefit of the American people.

Europe should continue to exclude US policy from Nato and continue to incorporate Russia into its military and economic plans.  Russia is a European power as well as Asian as US threats against her is a form of political insanity, as is so much of US policy. 

Anything that weakens US militarism benifits the American people as well as the people of the world.

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