Who
Started Cold War II?
by
Patrick
J. Buchanan
by
Patrick J. Buchanan
DIGG THIS
The American
people should be eternally grateful to Old Europe for having spiked
the Bush-McCain plan to bring Georgia into NATO.
Had Georgia
been in NATO when Mikheil Saakashvili invaded South Ossetia, we
would be eyeball to eyeball with Russia, facing war in the Caucasus,
where Moscow's superiority is as great as U.S. superiority in the
Caribbean during the Cuban missile crisis.
If the
Russia-Georgia war proves nothing else, it is the insanity of giving
erratic hotheads in volatile nations the power to drag the United
States into war.
From Harry
Truman to Ronald Reagan, as Defense Secretary Robert Gates said,
U.S. presidents have sought to avoid shooting wars with Russia,
even when the Bear was at its most beastly.
Truman
refused to use force to break Stalin's Berlin blockade. Ike refused
to intervene when the Butcher of Budapest drowned the Hungarian
Revolution in blood. LBJ sat impotent as Leonid Brezhnev's tanks
crushed the Prague Spring. Jimmy Carter's response to Brezhnev's
invasion of Afghanistan was to boycott the Moscow Olympics. When
Brezhnev ordered his Warsaw satraps to crush Solidarity and shot
down a South Korean airliner killing scores of U.S. citizens, including
a congressman, Reagan did – nothing.
These presidents
were not cowards. They simply would not go to war when no vital
U.S. interest was at risk to justify a war. Yet, had George W. Bush
prevailed and were Georgia in NATO, U.S. Marines could be fighting
Russian troops over whose flag should fly over a province of 70,000
South Ossetians who prefer Russians to Georgians.
The
arrogant folly of the architects of U.S. post-Cold War policy is
today on display. By bringing three ex-Soviet republics into NATO,
we have moved the U.S. red line for war from the Elbe almost to
within artillery range of the old Leningrad.
Should
America admit Ukraine into NATO, Yalta, vacation resort of the czars,
will be a NATO port and Sevastopol, traditional home of the Russian
Black Sea Fleet, will become a naval base for the U.S. Sixth Fleet.
This is altogether a bridge too far.
And can
we not understand how a Russian patriot like Vladimir Putin would
be incensed by this U.S. encirclement after Russia shed its empire
and sought our friendship? How would Andy Jackson have reacted to
such crowding by the British Empire?
As of 1991,
the oil of Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan and Azerbaijan belonged to Moscow.
Can we not understand why Putin would smolder as avaricious Yankees
built pipelines to siphon the oil and gas of the Caspian Basin through
breakaway Georgia to the West?
For
a dozen years, Putin & Co. watched as U.S. agents helped to
dump over regimes in Ukraine and Georgia that were friendly to Moscow.
If Cold
War II is coming, who started it, if not us?
The swift
and decisive action of Putin's army in running the Georgian forces
out of South Ossetia in 24 hours after Saakashvili began his barrage
and invasion suggests Putin knew exactly what Saakashvili was up
to and dropped the hammer on him.
What did
we know? Did we know Georgia was about to walk into Putin's trap?
Did we not see the Russians lying in wait north of the border? Did
we give Saakashvili a green light?
Joe Biden
ought to be conducting public hearings on who caused this U.S. humiliation.
The war
in Georgia has exposed the dangerous overextension of U.S. power.
There is no way America can fight a war with Russia in the Caucasus
with our army tied down in Afghanistan and Iraq. Nor should we.
Hence, it is demented to be offering, as John McCain and Barack
Obama are, NATO membership to Tbilisi.
The United
States must decide whether it wants a partner in a flawed Russia
or a second Cold War. For if we want another Cold War, we are, by
cutting Russia out of the oil of the Caspian and pushing NATO into
her face, going about it exactly the right way.
Vladimir
Putin is no Stalin. He is a nationalist determined, as ruler of
a proud and powerful country, to assert his nation's primacy in
its own sphere, just as U.S. presidents from James Monroe to Bush
have done on our side of the Atlantic.
A
resurgent Russia is no threat to any vital interests of the United
States. It is a threat to an American Empire that presumes some
God-given right to plant U.S. military power in the backyard or
on the front porch of Mother Russia.
Who rules
Abkhazia and South Ossetia is none of our business. And after this
madcap adventure of Saakashvili, why not let the people of these
provinces decide their own future in plebiscites conducted by the
United Nations or the Organization for Security and Cooperation
in Europe?
As for
Saakashvili, he's probably toast in Tbilisi after this stunt. Let
the neocons find him an endowed chair at the American Enterprise
Institute.
August
19, 2008
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. His latest book is Churchill,
Hitler, and the Unnecessary War.
Copyright
© 2008 Creators Syndicate
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J. Buchanan Archives
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