Saakashvili Sees A “Turning Point”

As US troops are on their way, the Georgian leader appears satisfied:

“We were unhappy with the initial actions of the American officials, because they were perceived by the Russians as green lines, basically, but this one was very strong,” he said in a telephone interview after Mr. Bush’s statement in Washington.

Mr. Saakashvili interpreted the aid operation as a decision to defend Georgia’s ports and airports, though Bush administration and Pentagon officials quickly made it clear that would not be the case. A senior administration official said, “We won’t be protecting the airport or seaport, but we’ll certainly protect our assets if we need to.”

Reckless on Saakashvili’s part? Or is he trying to enmesh the US in his country’s fight with Russia? Sending troops under any humanitarian auspices is a risky strategy, if you ask me. It could easily escalate; and Saakashvili has shown he’d be only too happy to precipitate a wider war. I hope Bush has fully understood the risks he is taking. I mean: he’d never precipitate a war without thinking through the full consequences, would he?

McCain In The Red Zone

He’s despatching Lindsey and Joe as emissaries to the country immediately. He’s on the phone with Sakashvilli daily. He’s giving press conferences. He’s warning of a new Tsarist empire. You can tell what sends him into high-energy zones: a clear enemy abroad. He knows black and white; and he knows war. It gives him clarity and strength. Up next: Iran and China. Oh, the conflicts we can have …

If this is the dynamic you want to see in the next president, McCain is your man.

Uppity McCain

Who does he think he is? Ahem:

How would the trad media have portrayed Barack Obama if he had behaved as John McCain has done since Georgian President Saakashvili sent troops into South Ossetia? Would it have been ‘presumptuous’ to issue proposals to intervene in the fighting even before the President had spoken? To stake out an aggressive position far in front of anything the US wished to adopt? To attack a rival candidate for refusing to do the same? … What if he claimed to be able to speak for the nation?

Handling The New Russia

Putinmandelnganafpgetty

Putin isn’t Yeltsin; but neither is he Brezhnev. Finding a way to contain Russia’s new ambitions without pushing it up against a wall that will only make it more troublesome is the difficult task. It requires the kind of diplomatic nuance that John McCain regards as sissy. A reader writes:

As events unfold, it’s worth looking at what’s beneath this vicious war. a number of key structural drivers are at play. Moscow has a zero-sum view of geopolitics, especially in the Eurasia region.  So for the Kremlin, the threat of Georgian membership in NATO meant simultaneously Ukrainian membership in NATO and this constituted an unfathomable dismemberment of the old empire, and a continuation of the US policy of containment into the post-Cold War era.  It was a nightmare scenario.  If we look at the historical development of the Russian polity in the modern era, one factor was determinant in whether there was a "big Russia" or a "small Russia," and that was the inclusion of Ukraine in the Russian state.  Today we have a "small Russia."  Positioning Ukraine as an independent state is hard for Russian nationalists to swallow, but allowing Ukraine to join a powerful military alliance whose ostensible purpose is the containment of Russia is simply unimaginable.  So the "strong men" like Putin will make it a high priority to block this scenario.

It’s wrong to view this as a reawakening of the Soviet menace or an existential threat to the west.  But on the other hand, it has serious ramifications for the states on Russia’s periphery and for the Europeans.  It presents a new security environment which is far more complex.  Saakashvili emerges as a target particularly because he fully understands these dynamics. Saakashvili speaks Ukrainian and studied in Ukraine; he has close ties with powerful Ukrainian political figures. He also recognized early on the risks of Russian energy policy and championed the Baku-Soupsa-Ceyhan pipeline–which is designed to break Russia’s monopoly on energy transportation out of the Caspian. This is the reason which Putin sees Saakashvili as an utter nemisis and why he is determined to destroy Saakashvili.  At the present stage, the Russian objectives of incorporating South Ossetia and Abkhazia are realized.  The current Russian priority is to eliminate Saakashvili.  They want him out of the picture.

What’s needed now is an effort to craft a new relationship with Russia that makes the most possible of the West’s soft power. The major problem is that seven years of Bush-Cheney foreign policy have undermined the credibility on which Western soft power rests.

But using measured language and having your warning received as credible is essential to this process.  I am increasingly convinced that McCain would be a nightmare scenario.  He reacted to the crisis in Georgia with shrill, provocative rhetoric and he issued serial threats on which he certainly could not act.  Of course this was an election campaign and he was playing to the voters and not the international stage.  But these tactics, whatever effect they have at home, will undermine his credibility on the international stage.  The fact is that the U.S. has ever fewer tools that can be used with Russia.  So far the debate about what to do is badly misdirected.  Creative thinking is called for, but we haven’t heard much of it.  The McCain strategy is to kick Russia out of the G8, to demonize them, and to pursue an aggressive strategy of containment.  This would produce a more menacing and hostile Russia. 

A successful strategy would focus on incorporating Russia progressively into the world economy, convincing Russia that it is not the hostile object of NATO, and convincing Russians that the burdens of empire are greater than the benefits–and thus it should accept the dissolution of the old empire.  Actually, in the period 1992-99, large parts of the Russian population and intelligentsia accepted these ideas, but since Putin’s rise, things have swung in the other direction.

(Photo: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty.)

Churchill-Envy

It’s possible to have differing views on how to handle Russia, although, depressingly, Obama seems to take the maximalist position of bringing Georgia into NATO. But what interests me about McCain’s position is not so much the content as the tone. Check out the video above. McCain clearly believes that a nasty spat in the Caucasus is somehow the defining struggle of the next generation. He speaks in ominous tones about Russia, a state he obviously regards as some dark menace on the verge of dominating the planet. He speaks of faraway countries about which we know nothing in the manner of some Wilderness Years Churchill worrying about Hitler.

All of this is quite potty. Russia is no longer the Soviet Union. You’d think conservatives would understand this distinction. There is a difference between totalitarian states seeking world expansion and authoritarian petro-states in demographic collapse bullying neighboring states because of perceived humiliations.

Look: every Republican wants to be Churchill. But this is not 1938. And Putin’s Russia is not Hitler’s Germany. You’ll have to find another fantasy on which to base a campaign.

Insulting

A reader writes:

I agree with Pete Wehner’s objection that any comparison between Russia’s invasion of Georgia and our invasion of Iraq is insulting. One involved a nation moving troops into an area where it had long-standing and recognized national interests in response to an attack on an ally.  It involved limited civilian deaths and a cease fire was quickly signed and apparently honored.  The other was an unprovoked attack for the purpose of regime change and muscle-flexing (of course, other, false reasons, were fed to the population) which resulted in hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths and the long term occupation of a nation thousands of miles away. 

Andrew, what were you thinking?

Vladimir Cheney

Cheneyalexwonggetty

From my response to Pete Wehner, et al:

Just imagine if the press were to discover a major jail in Gori, occupied by the Russians, where hundreds of Georgians had been dragged in off the streets and tortured and abused? What if we discovered that the orders for this emanated from the Kremlin itself? And what if we had documentary evidence of the ghastliest forms of racist, dehumanizing, abusive practices against the vulnerable as the standard operating procedure of the Russian army – because the prisoners were suspected of resisting the occupying power? Pete Wehner belonged to the administration that did this. It seems to me that, in these circumstances, the question of moral equivalence becomes a live one.

The whole thing here.

(Photo: Alex Wong/Getty.)