Does Putin Not Have a Point?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
DIGG THIS
"A soft answer
turneth away wrath," teaches Proverbs 1:15.
Our new
secretary of defense, Roberts Gates, seems familiar with the verse.
For his handling of Saturday's wintry blast from Vladimir Putin
at the Munich security conference was masterful.
"As an
old Cold Warrior, one of yesterday's speeches almost filled me with
nostalgia for a less complex time," said Gates, adding, "Almost."
A former director of the CIA, Gates went on to identify with Putin:
"I have, like your second speaker yesterday ... a career in the
spy business. And I guess old spies have a habit of blunt speaking.
"However,
I have been to re-education camp, spending the last four-and-a-half
years as a university president and dealing with faculty. And as
more than a few university presidents have learned in recent years,
when it comes to faculty it is either 'be nice' or 'be gone.'"
Gates added
he would be going to Moscow to talk with the old KGB hand, who will
be retiring as Russia's president around the time President Bush
goes home to Crawford. Excellent.
For one
of the historic blunders of this administration has been to antagonize
and alienate Russia, the winning of whose friendship was a signal
achievement of Ronald Reagan and George H.W. Bush. And one of the
foreign policy imperatives of this nation is for statesmanship to
repair the damage.
What did
we do to antagonize Russia?
When the
Cold War ended, we seized upon our "unipolar moment" as the lone
superpower to seek geopolitical advantage at Russia's expense.
Though
the Red Army had picked up and gone home from Eastern Europe voluntarily,
and Moscow felt it had an understanding we would not move NATO eastward,
we exploited our moment. Not only did we bring Poland into NATO,
we brought in Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia, and virtually the whole
Warsaw Pact, planting NATO right on Mother Russia's front porch.
Now, there is a scheme afoot to bring in Ukraine and Georgia in
the Caucasus, the birthplace of Stalin.
Second,
America backed a pipeline to deliver Caspian Sea oil from Azerbaijan
through Georgia to Turkey, to bypass Russia.
Third,
though Putin gave us a green light to use bases in the old Soviet
republics for the liberation of Afghanistan, we now seem hell-bent
on making those bases in Central Asia permanent.
Fourth,
though Bush sold missile defense as directed at rogue states like
North Korea, we now learn we are going to put anti-missile systems
into Eastern Europe. And against whom are they directed?
Fifth,
through the National Endowment for Democracy, its GOP and Democratic
auxiliaries, and tax-exempt think tanks, foundations and "human
rights" institutes such as Freedom House, headed by ex-CIA director
James Woolsey, we have been fomenting regime change in Eastern Europe,
the former Soviet republics and Russia herself.
U.S.-backed
revolutions have succeeded in Serbia, Ukraine and Georgia, but failed
in Belarus. Moscow has now legislated restrictions on the foreign
agencies that it sees, not without justification, as subversive
of pro-Moscow regimes.
Sixth,
America conducted 78 days of bombing of Serbia for the crime of
fighting to hold on to her rebellious province, Kosovo, and for
refusing to grant NATO marching rights through her territory to
take over that province. Mother Russia has always had a maternal
interest in the Orthodox states of the Balkans.
These are
Putin's grievances. Does he not have a small point?
Joe Lieberman
denounced Putin's "Cold War rhetoric." But have we not been taking
what cannot unfairly be labeled Cold War actions?
How would
we react if China today brought Cuba, Nicaragua and Venezuela into
a military alliance, convinced Mexico to sell oil to Beijing and
bypass the United States, and began meddling in the affairs of Central
America and Caribbean countries to effect the electoral defeat of
regimes friendly to the United States? How would we react to a Russian
move to put anti-missile missiles on Greenland?
Gates
says we have been through one Cold War and do not want another.
But it is not Moscow moving a military alliance right up to our
borders or building bases and planting anti-missile systems in our
front and back yards.
Why are
we doing this? This country is not going to go to war with Russia
over Estonia. With our Army "breaking" from two insurgencies, how
would we fight? By bombing Moscow and St. Petersburg?
Just as
we deluded ourselves into believing this war would be a "cakewalk,"
that democracy would break out across the Middle East, that we would
be beloved in Baghdad, so America today has undertaken commitments,
dating to the Cold War and since, we do not remotely have the resources
or will to fulfill. We are living in a world of self-delusion.
Somewhere
in this presidential campaign, someone has to bring us back to earth.
The halcyon days of American Empire are over.
February
13, 2007
Patrick
J. Buchanan [send
him mail] is co-founder and editor of The
American Conservative. He is also the author of seven books,
including Where
the Right Went Wrong, and A
Republic Not An Empire.
Copyright
© 2007 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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