
#2
Moscow Times
August 29, 2002
Alliance Hangs in Balance
By Pavel Felgenhauer
Almost a year ago, Russia and the United States joined forces to fight
terrorism. Moscow helped to topple the Taliban regime in Afghanistan; Washington
in return tacitly gave its new Russian friends a free hand in the Caucasus after
it was established that al-Qaida terrorists had links with Chechen rebels.
But now the alliance with Russia seems to be at breaking point. On Saturday,
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer publicly accused Russian officials of lying
that their warplanes did not bomb Georgia last Friday. Fleischer also accused
Russia of escalating tensions in the region and called for an urgent political
settlement to the conflict in Chechnya.
It is reported that Russian bombers attacked Georgia with heavy fuel, or
vacuum, bombs under cover of darkness at 5:20 a.m., killing one and wounding
seven civilians. The powerful blasts were registered by international border
monitors from the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe, who said
they watched the warplanes cross into Georgia from Russia.
The United States has its own means of monitoring Russian military activities
in the Caucasus -- in the same manner as Russia always closely follows U.S.
military activity in the Middle East and the Balkans. U.S. spy satellites would
surely have registered the powerful flash of a fuel bomb exploding in the dark.
U.S. radars at bases in Turkey and surveillance planes observing the no-fly zone
in Northern Iraq could also have recorded the Russian bombers flying over the
main ridge of the Caucasus Mountains to attack Pankisi Gorge to the south.
What's clear is that the White House had additional facts at hand when it
publicly called Russian officials liars -- including President Vladimir Putin's
close friend and political ally Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov. But why was this
particular instance of deceit taken up so doggedly by Washington?
Russian warplanes have bombed Georgia many times in the past, and the Russian
military has often meddled in the internal strife that has ravaged this
post-Soviet republic during the past decade. Russia also reportedly bombed
Georgian territory at the beginning of this month, and OSCE monitors registered
the strike. The Russian military denied any involvement and the White House did
not intervene publicly.
Georgian President Eduard Shevardnadze is an old friend of the United States,
but his regime is ineffective and corrupt. If the problems between Moscow and
Washington were confined only to the Caucasus -- the conflict in Chechnya and
the spillover of hostilities into Georgia -- it is possible the White House
would not have issued such a stern public rebuke.
Putin is no doubt a much more valuable ally than old Shevy. If Putin had
continued to act as an American ally, Washington would surely have done its best
to resolve the Pankisi problem in private, as between friends. The reason the
incident went public and got ugly is that, in Washington, Putin's Russia is not
seen as an ally anymore.
Over the last year, as relations improved, Washington increased pressure on
Moscow to stop nuclear technology transfers to Iran, to cut back sales of new,
sophisticated weapons to Iran, China and other questionable states that might
use them against U.S. forces or those of its allies. But instead of heeding
these warnings, Moscow stepped up activities that many in Washington believe to
be anti-American.
In recent weeks -- and despite U.S. protests -- Moscow has confirmed that it
will finalize and put into operation a nuclear power reactor in Iran at Bushehr
on the Persian Gulf. Last month, it signed a deal to build five more. Moscow has
announced its intention to sign a long-term, $40 billion cooperation deal with
Iraq. It has also signed new arms deals with China and Iran, pledging to sell
new jets and sophisticated anti-aircraft and anti-ship missiles that could be
used against U.S. forces in the Persian Gulf and near Taiwan. And to add insult
to injury, Putin once again publicly embraced the North Korean dictator Kim Jong
Il during Kim's recent trip to the Russian Far East.
There are influential groups of people both in Moscow and Washington who
never trusted the other side despite all the recent protestations of a new
friendship. The present major crisis was obviously promoted by them from behind
the scenes. If Putin does not intervene firmly when he returns to Moscow from
the Far East, the bureaucracies and lobbying groups will have their way and
attempts to bring Russia into the West will fail once again.
Pavel Felgenhauer is an independent defense analyst.
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