
#2
Canoe News (Canada)
March 26, 2003
Relations between U.S.-Russia frosty
By FRED WEIR
MOSCOW (CP) - The temperature is plunging rapidly in U.S.-Russian ties, as
the two sides exchange Cold War-style accusations and spar over the shape of the
global order after America wins its war in Iraq.
"I can't remember seeing such sharp anti-American moods since the
1960s," says Alexander Panarin, who chairs the department of comparative
politics at Moscow State University. Recent opinion polls suggest more than 90
per cent of Russians oppose U.S. military action in Iraq. "Elections are
coming up in Russia, and every politician has to take the public's views into
account," says Panarin.
The United States alleged this week that its forces fighting against Saddam
Hussein's regime are at risk from sophisticated Russian-made weapons and
electronic jamming equipment recently supplied by Russian companies to Baghdad,
in breach of UN sanctions.
The Kremlin hotly denied the charges, and retorted that the United States has
resumed the Cold War practice of sending high-flying U-2 spy planes to snoop on
Russia from the airspace of Georgia, a former Soviet republic that's allied with
the U.S. anti-Saddam coalition.
Russia's Defence Ministry says three U-2 flights in the past month have
skirted Russia's borders, on one occasion causing fighter planes to be
scrambled.
"There is an impression in Moscow that the U.S. is punishing us for our
political stand against the war in Iraq," says Alexander Pikayev, an expert
with the Carnegie Endowment in Moscow.
"We haven't seen this kind of rhetoric since the Cold War."
Antagonisms have been building up for months as Russia joined France in
threatening to veto any UN Security Council resolution authorizing the use of
force against Iraq.
In the week since the war began, Moscow's opposition has toughened. Russian
Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov warned that Moscow will block any future Security
Council move to grant post facto legitimacy to the U.S.-led coalition's assault
or its postwar control in Baghdad.
"Iraq does not need democracy brought on the wings of the
Tomahawk," Ivanov said, referring to the U.S. cruise missiles.
Some experts warn that tensions could spiral, especially if the U.S. cuts
Moscow out of the anticipated postwar reconstruction of Iraq.
Russian oil companies have major business in the region, including a
$20-billion US contract by the partly state-owned LukOil firm to develop Iraq's
huge West Qurna oilfield, which could be nullified by a post-Saddam regime in
Baghdad.
"If we are shut out of Iraq, Russia will be angry," says Yevgeny
Bazhanov, director of the Russian Foreign Ministry's Institute of Contemporary
International Studies. "The reasons are not so much economic, as that
Russia cannot accept the U.S. acting as though it runs the world."
For many in Moscow, there is deep uncertainty about the further intentions of
the U.S.
"If the Americans break Iraq's resistance swiftly, will they target Iran
next?" says Panarin. "Russia has reasons to fear the threat coming
into our own region."
Bazhanov raises the same worry: "If the Americans intend to move on to
new targets after Iraq, it will be very dangerous," he says.
"Sooner or later, the U.S. must realize that it cannot solve all the
world's problems on its own. It needs to co-operate with the UN, with Russia and
others."
But the specific charges being traded could accelerate suspicions on both
sides.
The U.S. claims that a Moscow-based company, Aviakonversiya, sold Iraq at
least six of its portable jamming units, which are capable of scrambling the GPS
signals used by many U.S. precision-guided munitions to locate their targets.
Aviakonversiya's director, Oleg Antonov, says the laptop-sized,
three-kilogram devices were originally developed by Soviet scientists as an aid
for astronomers.
Antonov says the American allegations that GPS jammers were delivered to Iraq
are "nonsense." But he adds that Iraq "might have constructed
such devices itself or purchased them from a third country."
A U.S. military spokesman on Tuesday declared that Iraqi efforts to baffle
American guided weapons had failed miserably, and that all six Iraqi GPS jamming
units had been destroyed in the early days of the war.
Two other Russian companies are suspected of providing militarily significant
numbers of wire-guided Kornet anti-tank missiles, and thousands of night-vision
goggles to Iraq in recent months. Some experts say the goggles could neutralize
the American advantage in night-fighting.
Russian experts say all three companies named in the U.S. complaint do brisk
export business, with customers that include the United Arab Emirates, Syria,
Jordan, Yemen and India.
"These American allegations are plausible," says Vitaly Shlyikov, a
former Russian deputy defence minister who is now an independent security
consultant.
It's long been known that much of the former Soviet arsenal found its way
into the international arms market during the wild 1990s, he notes, but the U.S.
charges concern fresh production of advanced Russian weaponry.
"The fact is that the Kremlin is unable to control the situation, and
the general climate of anti-Americanism prevailing among the Russian elite may
encourage some businesspeople to take risks," such as dealing with Saddam,
Shlyikov says.
"Russia would like to repair its relations with the U.S., but not at the
cost of submitting to all American decisions," says Sergei Kazyonnov, an
analyst with the independent Institute of National Security and Strategic
Research in Moscow.
"The ball is in America's court now. If they want to be friends again,
we're ready. If they want to go back to being enemies, we're ready for that
too."
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