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	<title>ListeningHead.com &#187; Russia</title>
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	<description>Jonathan Ginsbergs Commentary</description>
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		<title>A US Reapproachment With Iran?</title>
		<link>http://www.listeninghead.com/2010/03/01/a-us-reapproachment-with-iran/</link>
		<comments>http://www.listeninghead.com/2010/03/01/a-us-reapproachment-with-iran/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 01 Mar 2010 21:49:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Ginsberg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[American Foreign Policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[China]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iran]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Obama Administration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Russia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Obama]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.listeninghead.com/?p=130</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p>Stratfor&#039;s George Friedman makes a compelling argument that current American policy towards Iran involves two equally unappetising options &#8211; either pursue a policy of sanctions that has been rendered ineffective by the refusal of China and Russia to participate, or to pursue military action and risk the consequences of outright failure or an indecisive outcome that would leave the region destabilized.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.listeninghead.com/2010/03/01/a-us-reapproachment-with-iran/" class="more-link">Read more on A US Reapproachment With Iran?&#8230;</a></p>


]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Stratfor&#039;s George Friedman makes a compelling argument that current American policy towards Iran involves two equally unappetising options &#8211; either pursue a policy of sanctions that has been rendered ineffective by the refusal of China and Russia to participate, or to pursue military action and risk the consequences of outright failure or an indecisive outcome that would leave the region destabilized.</p>
<p>Friedman argues that the U.S. has previously shown itself willing to ally with an enemy of that enemy had common interests &#8211; examples he cites are Roosevelt&#039;s agreements with Stalin and Nixon&#039;s approach to Mao.   Is such a stunning reversal of course under consideration by the Obama Administration?  Friedman suggests that it just might be.</p>
<p>The United States apparently has reached the point where it must  either accept that Iran will develop nuclear weapons at some point if it  wishes, or take military action to prevent this. There is a third  strategy, however: Washington can seek to redefine the Iranian question.</p>
<p>As we have no idea what leaders on either side are thinking,  exploring this represents an exercise in geopolitical theory. Let’s  begin with the two apparent stark choices.</p>
<h3>Diplomacy vs. the Military Option<br />
by George Friedman</h3>
<p>This report is republished with permission of <a href="http://www.stratfor.com/" target="_blank">STRATFOR</a></p>
<p>The diplomatic approach consists of creating a broad coalition  prepared to impose what have been called crippling sanctions on Iran.  Effective sanctions must be so painful that they compel the target to  change its behavior. In Tehran’s case, this could only consist of blocking Iran’s imports of gasoline. Iran imports  35 percent of the gasoline it consumes. It is not clear that a gasoline  embargo would be crippling, but it is the only embargo that might work.  All other forms of sanctions against Iran would be mere gestures  designed to give the impression that something is being done.</p>
<p>The Chinese will not participate in any gasoline embargo. Beijing  gets 11 percent of its oil from Iran, and it has made it clear it will  continue to deliver gasoline to Iran. Moscow’s position is that  Russia might consider sanctions down the road, but it hasn’t specified  when, and it hasn’t specified what. The Russians are more than content  seeing the U.S. bogged down in the Middle East and so are not inclined  to solve American problems in the region. With the Chinese and Russians  unlikely to embargo gasoline, these sanctions won’t create significant  pain for Iran. Since all other sanctions are gestures, the diplomatic  approach is therefore unlikely to work.</p>
<p>The military option has its own risks. First, its success depends on the quality of intelligence on Iran’s nuclear  facilities and on the degree of hardening of those targets. Second,  it requires successful air attacks. Third, it requires battle damage  assessments that tell the attacker whether the strike succeeded. Fourth,  it requires follow-on raids to destroy facilities that remain  functional. And fifth, attacks must do more than simply set back Iran’s  program a few months or even years: If the risk of a nuclear Iran is  great enough to justify the risks of war, the outcome must be decisive.</p>
<p>Each point in this process is a potential failure point. Given the  multiplicity of these points — which includes others not mentioned —  failure may not be an option, but it is certainly possible.</p>
<p>But even if the attacks succeed, the question of what would happen  the day after the attacks remains. Iran has its own counters. It has a superbly effective terrorist organization, Hezbollah,  at its disposal. It has sufficient influence in Iraq to destabilize  that country and force the United States to keep forces in Iraq badly  needed elsewhere. And it has the ability to use mines and missiles to attempt to close the Strait  of Hormuz and the Persian Gulf shipping lanes for some period —  driving global oil prices through the roof while the global economy is  struggling to stabilize itself. Iran’s position on its nuclear program  is rooted in the awareness that while it might not have assured options  in the event of a military strike, it has counters that create complex  and unacceptable risks. Iran therefore does not believe the United  States will strike or permit Israel to strike, as the consequences would  be unacceptable.</p>
<p>To recap, the United States either can accept a nuclear Iran  or risk an attack that might fail outright, impose only a minor delay on  Iran’s nuclear program or trigger extremely painful responses even if  it succeeds. When neither choice is acceptable, it is necessary to find a  third choice.<span id="more-130"></span></p>
<h3>Redefining the Iranian Problem</h3>
<p>As long as the problem of Iran is defined in terms of its nuclear  program, the United States is in an impossible place. Therefore, the  Iranian problem must be redefined. One attempt at redefinition involves  hope for an uprising against the current regime. We will not repeat our views on this in depth, but in short, we do not  regard these demonstrations to be a serious threat to the regime.  Tehran has handily crushed them, and even if they did succeed, we do not  believe they would produce a regime any more accommodating toward the  United States. The idea of waiting for a revolution is more useful as a  justification for inaction — and accepting a nuclear Iran — than it is  as a strategic alternative.</p>
<p>At this moment, Iran is the most powerful regional military force in  the Persian Gulf. Unless the United States permanently stations  substantial military forces in the region, there is no military force  able to block Iran. Turkey is more powerful than Iran, but it is far  from the Persian Gulf and focused on other matters at the moment, and it  doesn’t want to take on Iran militarily — at least not for a very long  time. At the very least, this means the United States cannot withdraw from Iraq.  Baghdad is too weak to block Iran from the Arabian Peninsula, and the  Iraqi government has elements friendly toward Iran.</p>
<p>Historically, regional stability depended on the Iraqi-Iranian  balance of power. When it tottered in 1990, the result was the Iraqi  invasion of Kuwait. The United States did not push into Iraq in 1991  because it did not want to upset the regional balance of power by  creating a vacuum in Iraq. Rather, U.S. strategy was to re-establish the  Iranian-Iraqi balance of power to the greatest extent possible, as the  alternative was basing large numbers of U.S. troops in the region.</p>
<p>The decision to invade Iraq in 2003 assumed that once the Baathist  regime was destroyed the United States would rapidly create a strong  Iraqi government that would balance Iran. The core mistake in this  thinking lay in failing to recognize that the new Iraqi government would  be filled with Shiites, many of whom regarded Iran as a friendly power.  Rather than balancing Iran, Iraq could well become an Iranian  satellite. The Iranians strongly encouraged the American invasion  precisely because they wanted to create a situation where Iraq moved  toward Iran’s orbit. When this in fact began happening, the Americans  had no choice but an extended occupation of Iraq, a trap both the Bush  and Obama administrations have sought to escape.</p>
<p>It is difficult to define Iran’s influence in Iraq at this point. But  at a minimum, while Iran may not be able to impose a pro-Iranian state  on Iraq, it has sufficient influence to block the creation of any strong  Iraqi government either through direct influence in the government or  by creating destabilizing violence in Iraq. In other words, Iran can  prevent Iraq from emerging as a counterweight to Iran, and Iran has  every reason to do this. Indeed, it is doing just this.</p>
<h3>The Fundamental U.S.-Iranian Issue</h3>
<p>Iraq, not nuclear weapons, is the fundamental issue between Iran and  the United States. Iran wants to see a U.S. withdrawal from Iraq so Iran can assume its  place as the dominant military power in the Persian Gulf. The United  States wants to withdraw from Iraq because it faces challenges in Afghanistan — where it will  also need Iranian cooperation — and elsewhere. Committing forces to Iraq  for an extended period of time while fighting in Afghanistan leaves the  United States exposed globally. Events involving China or Russia — such  as the 2008 war in Georgia — would see the United States without a  counter. The alternative would be a withdrawal from Afghanistan or a  massive increase in U.S. armed forces. The former is not going to happen  any time soon, and the latter is an economic impossibility.</p>
<p>Therefore, the United States must find a way to counterbalance Iran  without an open-ended deployment in Iraq and without expecting the  re-emergence of Iraqi power, because Iran is not going to allow the  latter to happen. The nuclear issue is simply an element of this broader  geopolitical problem, as it adds another element to the Iranian tool  kit. It is not a stand-alone issue.</p>
<p>The United States has an interesting strategy in redefining problems  that involves creating extraordinarily alliances with mortal ideological  and geopolitical enemies to achieve strategic U.S. goals. First  consider Franklin Roosevelt’s alliance with Stalinist Russia to block  Nazi Germany. He pursued this alliance despite massive political outrage  not only from isolationists but also from institutions like the Roman  Catholic Church that regarded the Soviets as the epitome of evil.</p>
<p>Now consider Richard Nixon’s decision to align with China at a time  when the Chinese were supplying weapons to North Vietnam that were  killing American troops. Moreover, Mao — who had said he did not fear  nuclear war as China could absorb a few hundred million deaths — was  considered, with reason, quite mad. Nevertheless, Nixon, as  anti-Communist and anti-Chinese a figure as existed in American  politics, understood that an alliance (and despite the lack of a formal  treaty, alliance it was) with China was essential to counterbalance the  Soviet Union at a time when American power was still being sapped in  Vietnam.</p>
<p>Roosevelt and Nixon both faced impossible strategic situations unless  they were prepared to redefine the strategic equation dramatically and  accept the need for alliance with countries that had previously been  regarded as strategic and moral threats. American history is filled with  opportunistic alliances designed to solve impossible strategic  dilemmas. The Stalin and Mao cases represent stunning alliances with  prior enemies designed to block a third power seen as more dangerous.</p>
<p>It is said that Ahmadinejad is crazy. It was also said that Mao and  Stalin were crazy, in both cases with much justification. Ahmadinejad  has said many strange things and issued numerous threats. But when  Roosevelt ignored what Stalin said and Nixon ignored what Mao said, they  each discovered that Stalin’s and Mao’s actions were far more rational  and predictable than their rhetoric. Similarly, what the Iranians say  and what they do are quite different.</p>
<h3>U.S. vs. Iranian Interests</h3>
<p>Consider the American interest. First, it must maintain the flow of  oil through the Strait of Hormuz. The United States cannot tolerate  interruptions, and that limits the risks it can take. Second, it must  try to keep any one power from controlling all of the oil in the Persian  Gulf, as that would give such a country too much long-term power within  the global system. Third, while the United States is involved in a war  with elements of the Sunni Muslim world, it must reduce the forces  devoted to that war. Fourth, it must deal with the Iranian problem  directly. Europe will go as far as sanctions but no further,  while the Russians and Chinese won’t even go that far yet. Fifth, it  must prevent an Israeli strike on Iran for the same reasons it must  avoid a strike itself, as the day after any Israeli strike will be left  to the United States to manage.</p>
<p>Now consider the Iranian interest. First, it must guarantee regime  survival. It sees the United States as dangerous and unpredictable. In  less than 10 years, it has found itself with American troops on both its  eastern and western borders. Second, it must guarantee that Iraq will never again be a threat to Iran. Third, it  must increase its authority within the Muslim world against Sunni  Muslims, whom it regards as rivals and sometimes as threats.</p>
<p>Now consider the overlaps. The United States is in a war against some  (not all) Sunnis. These are Iran’s enemies, too. Iran does not want  U.S. troops along its eastern and western borders. In point of fact, the  United States does not want this either. The United States does not  want any interruption of oil flow through Hormuz. Iran much prefers  profiting from those flows to interrupting them. Finally, the Iranians  understand that it is the United States alone that is Iran’s existential  threat. If Iran can solve the American problem its regime survival is  assured. The United States understands, or should, that resurrecting the  Iraqi counterweight to Iran is not an option: It is either U.S. forces  in Iraq or accepting Iran’s unconstrained role.</p>
<p>Therefore, as an exercise in geopolitical theory, consider the  following. Washington’s current options are unacceptable. By redefining  the issue in terms of dealing with the consequences of the 2003 invasion  of Iraq, there are three areas of mutual interest. First, both powers  have serious quarrels with Sunni Islam. Second, both powers want to see a  reduction in U.S. forces in the region. Third, both countries have an  interest in assuring the flow of oil, one to use the oil, the other to  profit from it to increase its regional power.</p>
<p>The strategic problem is, of course, Iranian power in the Persian  Gulf. The Chinese model is worth considering here. China issued  bellicose rhetoric before and after Nixon’s and Kissinger’s visits. But  whatever it did internally, it was not a major risk-taker in its foreign  policy. China’s relationship with the United States was of critical  importance to China. Beijing fully understood the value of this  relationship, and while it might continue to rail about imperialism, it  was exceedingly careful not to undermine this core interest.</p>
<p>The major risk of the third strategy is that Iran will overstep its  bounds and seek to occupy the oil-producing countries of the Persian  Gulf. Certainly, this would be tempting, but it would bring a rapid  American intervention. The United States would not block indirect  Iranian influence, however, from financial participation in regional  projects to more significant roles for the Shia in Arabian states.  Washington’s limits for Iranian power are readily defined and enforced  when exceeded.</p>
<p>The great losers in the third strategy, of course, would be the  Sunnis in the Arabian Peninsula. But Iraq aside, they are incapable of  defending themselves, and the United States has no long-term interest in  their economic and political relations. So long as the oil flows, and  no single power directly controls the entire region, the United States  does not have a stake in this issue.</p>
<p>Israel would also be enraged. It sees ongoing American-Iranian  hostility as a given. And it wants the United States to eliminate the  Iranian nuclear threat. But eliminating this threat is not an option  given the risks, so the choice is a nuclear Iran outside some structured  relationship with the United States or within it. The choice that  Israel might want, a U.S.-Iranian conflict, is unlikely. Israel can no  more drive American strategy than can Saudi Arabia.</p>
<p>From the American standpoint, an understanding with Iran would have  the advantage of solving an increasingly knotty problem. In the long  run, it would also have the advantage of being a self-containing  relationship. Turkey is much more powerful than Iran and is emerging  from its century-long shell. Its relations with the United States are  delicate. The United States would infuriate the Turks by doing this  deal, forcing them to become more active faster. They would thus emerge  in Iraq as a counterbalance to Iran.  But Turkey’s anger at the United  States would serve U.S. interests. The Iranian position in Iraq would be  temporary, and the United States would not have to break its word as  Turkey eventually would eliminate Iranian influence in Iraq.</p>
<p>Ultimately, the greatest shock of such a maneuver on both sides would  be political. The U.S.-Soviet agreement shocked Americans deeply, the  Soviets less so because Stalin’s pact with Hitler had already stunned  them. The Nixon-Mao entente shocked all sides. It was utterly  unthinkable at the time, but once people on both sides thought about it,  it was manageable.</p>
<p>Such a maneuver would be particularly difficult for U.S. President  Barack Obama, as it would be widely interpreted as another example of  weakness rather than as a ruthless and cunning move. A military strike  would enhance his political standing, while an apparently cynical deal  would undermine it. Ahmadinejad could sell such a deal domestically much  more easily. In any event, the choices now are a nuclear Iran, extended  airstrikes with all their attendant consequences, or something else.  This is what something else might look like and how it would fit in with  American strategic tradition.</p>


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		<title>Turkey and Russia on the Rise</title>
		<link>http://www.listeninghead.com/2009/03/17/turkey-and-russia-on-the-rise/</link>
		<comments>http://www.listeninghead.com/2009/03/17/turkey-and-russia-on-the-rise/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 18 Mar 2009 00:40:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Ginsberg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Asia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iran]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Russia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Turkey]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Moscow]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Ottoman Empire]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[russia]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.listeninghead.com/?p=85</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><strong>By Reva Bhalla, Lauren Goodrich and Peter Zeihan<br />
Reprinted with express permission from <a title="Stratfor" href="http://www.stratfor.com" target="_blank">Stratfor</a></strong></p>
<p>Russian President Dmitri Medvedev reportedly will travel to Turkey in the near future to follow up a recent four-day visit by his Turkish counterpart, Abdullah Gul, to Moscow. The Turks and the Russians certainly have much to discuss.</p>
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<p>Russia is moving aggressively to extend its influence throughout the former Soviet empire, while Turkey is rousing itself from 90 years of post-Ottoman isolation. Both are clearly ascendant powers, and it would seem logical that the more the two bump up against one other, the more likely they will gird for yet another round in their centuries-old conflict. But while that may be true down the line, the two Eurasian powers have sufficient strategic incentives to work together for now.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.listeninghead.com/2009/03/17/turkey-and-russia-on-the-rise/" class="more-link">Read more on Turkey and Russia on the Rise&#8230;</a></p>


]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>By Reva Bhalla, Lauren Goodrich and Peter Zeihan<br />
Reprinted with express permission from <a title="Stratfor" href="http://www.stratfor.com" target="_blank">Stratfor</a></strong></p>
<p>Russian President Dmitri Medvedev reportedly will travel to Turkey in the near future to follow up a recent four-day visit by his Turkish counterpart, Abdullah Gul, to Moscow. The Turks and the Russians certainly have much to discuss.</p>
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<p>Russia is moving aggressively to extend its influence throughout the former Soviet empire, while Turkey is rousing itself from 90 years of post-Ottoman isolation. Both are clearly ascendant powers, and it would seem logical that the more the two bump up against one other, the more likely they will gird for yet another round in their centuries-old conflict. But while that may be true down the line, the two Eurasian powers have sufficient strategic incentives to work together for now.</p>
<h3>Russia’s World</h3>
<p>Russia is among the world’s most strategically vulnerable states. Its core, the Moscow region, boasts no geographic barriers to invasion. Russia must thus expand its borders to create the largest possible buffer for its core, which requires forcibly incorporating legions of minorities who do not see themselves as Russian. The Russian government estimates that about 80 percent of Russia’s approximately 140 million people are actually ethnically Russian, but this number is somewhat suspect, as many minorities define themselves based on their use of the Russian language, just as many Hispanics in the United States define themselves by their use of English as their primary language. Thus, ironically, attaining security by creating a strategic buffer creates a new chronic security problem in the form of new populations hostile t o Moscow’s rule. <span id="more-85"></span>The need to deal with the latter problem explains the development of Russia’s elite intelligence services, which are primarily designed for and tasked with monitoring the country’s multiethnic population.</p>
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<div><img src="http://www.stratfor.com/mmf/133880" alt="Russia and Turkey: Overlapping Spheres of Influence" /></div>
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<p>Russia’s primary challenge, however, is time. In the aftermath of the Soviet collapse, the bottom fell out of the Russian birthrate, with fewer than half the number of babies born in the 1990s than were born in the 1980s. These post-Cold War children are now coming of age; in a few years, their small numbers are going to have a catastrophic impact on the size of the Russian population. By contrast, most non-Russian minorities — in particular those such as Chechens and Dagestanis, who are of Muslim faith — did not suffer from the 1990s birthrate plunge, so their numbers are rapidly increasing even as the number of ethnic Russians is rapidly decreasing. Add in deep-rooted, demographic-impacting problems such as HIV, tuberculosis and heroin abuse — concentrated not just among ethnic Russians but a lso among those of childbearing age — and Russia faces a hard-wired demographic time bomb. Put simply, Russia is an ascending power in the short run, but it is a declining power in the long run.</p>
<p>The Russian leadership is well aware of this coming crisis, and knows it is going to need every scrap of strength it can muster just to continue the struggle to keep Russia in one piece. To this end, Moscow must do everything it can now to secure buffers against external intrusion in the not-so-distant future. For the most part, this means rolling back Western influence wherever and whenever possible, and impressing upon states that would prefer integration into the West that their fates lie with Russia instead. Moscow’s natural gas crisis with Ukraine, August 2008 war with Georgia, efforts to eject American forces from Central Asia and constant pressure on the Baltic states all represent efforts to buy Russia more space — and with that space, more time for survival.</p>
<p>Expanding its buffer against such a diverse and potentially hostile collection of states is no small order, but Russia does have one major advantage: The security guarantor for nearly all of these countries is the United States, and the United States is currently very busy elsewhere. So long as U.S. ground forces are occupied with the Iraqi and Afghan wars, the Americans will not be riding to the rescue of the states on Russia’s periphery. Given this window of opportunity, the Russians have a fair chance to regain the relative security they seek. In light of the impending demographic catastrophe and the present window of opportunity, the Russians are in quite a hurry to act.</p>
<h3>Turkey’s World</h3>
<p>Turkey is in many ways the polar opposite of Russia. After the dissolution of the Ottoman Empire following World War I, Turkey was pared down to its core, Asia Minor. Within this refuge, Turkey is nearly unassailable. It is surrounded by water on three sides, commands the only maritime connection between the Black and Mediterranean seas and sits astride a plateau surrounded by mountains. This is a very difficult chunk of territory to conquer. Indeed, beginning in the Seljuk Age in the 11th century, the ancestors of the modern Turks took the better part of three centuries to seize this territory from its previous occupant, the Byzantine Empire.</p>
<p>The Turks have used much of the time since then to consolidate their position such that, as an ethnicity, they reign supreme in their realm. The Persians and Arabs have long since lost their footholds in Anatolia, while the Armenians were finally expelled in the dying days of World War I. Only the Kurds remain, and they do not pose a demographic challenge to the Turks. While Turkey exhibits many of the same demographic tendencies as other advanced developing states — namely, slowing birthrates and a steadily aging population — there is no major discrepancy between Turk and Kurdish birthrates, so the Turks should continue to comprise more than 80 percent of the country’s population for some time to come. Thus, while the Kurds will continue to be a source of nationalistic friction, they do not constitute a fundamental challenge to the power or operations of the Turkish state, like minorities in Russia are destined to do in the years ahead.</p>
<p>Turkey’s security is not limited to its core lands. Once one moves beyond the borders of modern Turkey, the existential threats the state faced in years past have largely melted away. During the Cold War, Turkey was locked into the NATO structure to protect itself from Soviet power. But now the Soviet Union is gone, and the Balkans and Caucasus — both former Ottoman provinces — are again available for manipulation. The Arabs have not posed a threat to Anatolia in nearly a millennium, and any contest between Turkey and Iran is clearly a battle of unequals in which the Turks hold most of the cards. If anything, the Arabs — who view Iran as a hostile power with not only a heretical religion but also with a revolutionary foreign policy calling for the overthrow of most of the Arab regimes — are practically welcoming the Turks back. Despite both its imperial past and its close security association with the Americans, the Arabs see Turkey as a trusted mediator, and even an exemplar.</p>
<p>With the disappearance of the threats of yesteryear, many of the things that once held Turkey’s undivided attention have become less important to Ankara. With the Soviet threat gone, NATO is no longer critical. With new markets opening up in the former Soviet Union, Turkey’s obsession with seeking EU membership has faded to a mere passing interest. Turkey has become a free agent, bound by very few relationships or restrictions, but dabbling in events throughout its entire periphery. Unlike Russia, which feels it needs an empire to survive, Turkey is flirting with the idea of an empire simply because it can — and the costs of exploring the option are negl igible.</p>
<p>Whereas Russia is a state facing a clear series of threats in a very short time frame, Turkey is a state facing a veritable smorgasbord of strategic options under no time pressure whatsoever. Within that disconnect lies the road forward for the two states — and it is a road with surprisingly few clashes ahead in the near term.</p>
<h3>The Field of Competition</h3>
<p>There are four zones of overlapping interest for the Turks and Russians.</p>
<p>First, the end of the Soviet empire opened up a wealth of economic opportunities, but very few states have proven adept at penetrating the consumer markets of Ukraine and Russia. Somewhat surprisingly, Turkey is one of those few states. Thanks to the legacy of Soviet central planning, Russian and Ukrainian industry have found it difficult to retool away from heavy industry to produce the consumer goods much in demand in their markets. Because most Ukrainians and Russians cannot afford Western goods, Turkey has carved out a robust and lasting niche with its lower-cost exports; it is now the largest supplier of imports to the Russian market. While this is no exercise in hard power, this Turkish penetration nevertheless is cause for much concern among Russian authorities.</p>
<p>So far, Turkey has been scrupulous about not politicizing these useful trade links beyond some intelligence-gathering efforts (particularly in Ukraine). Considering Russia’s current financial problems, having a stable source of consumer goods — especially one that is not China — is actually seen as a positive. At least for now, the Russian government would rather see its trade relationship with Turkey stay strong. There will certainly be a clash later — either as Russia weakens or as Turkey becomes more ambitious — but for now, the Russians are content with the trade relationship.</p>
<p>Second, the Russian retreat in the post-Cold War era has opened up the Balkans to Turkish influence. Romania, Bulgaria and the lands of the former Yugoslavia are all former Ottoman possessions, and in their day they formed the most advanced portion of the Ottoman economy. During the Cold War, they were all part of the Communist world, with Romania and Bulgaria formally incorporated into the Soviet bloc. While most of these lands are now absorbed into the European Union, Russia’s ties to its fellow Slavs — most notably the Serbs and Bulgarians — have allowed it a degree of influence that most Europeans choose to ignore. Additionally, Russia has long held a friendly relationship with Greece and Cyprus, both to complicate American policy in Europe and to provide a flank against Turkey. Still, thanks to proximity and trading links, Turkey clearly holds the upper hand in this theater of competition.</p>
<p>But this particular region is unlikely to generate much Turkish-Russian animosity, simply because both countries are in the process of giving up.</p>
<p>Most of the Balkan states are already members of an organization that is unlikely to ever admit Russia or Turkey: the European Union. Russia simply cannot meet the membership criteria, and Cyprus’ membership in essence strikes the possibility of Turkish inclusion. (Any EU member can veto the admission of would-be members.) The EU-led splitting of Kosovo from Serbia over Russian objections was a body blow to Russian power in the region, and the subsequent EU running of Kosovo as a protectorate greatly limited Turkish influence as well. Continuing EU expansion means that Turkish influence in the Balkans will shrivel just as Russian influence already has. Trouble this way lies, but not between Turkey and Russia. If anything, their joint exclusion might provide some room for the two to agree on something.</p>
<p>The third area for Russian-Turkish competition is in energy, and this is where things get particularly sticky. Russia is Turkey’s No. 1 trading partner, with energy accounting for the bulk of the trade volume between the two countries. Turkey depends on Russia for 65 percent of its natural gas and 40 percent of its oil imports. Though Turkey has steadily grown its trade relationship with Russia, it does not exactly approve of Moscow’s penchant for using its energy relations with Europe as a political weapon. Russia has never gone so far as to cut supplies to Turkey directly, but Turkey has been indirectly affected more than once when Russia decided to cut supplies to Ukraine because Moscow felt the need to reassert its writ in Kiev.</p>
<p>Sharing the Turks’ energy anxiety, the Europeans have been more than eager to use Turkey as an energy transit hub for routes that would bypass the Russians altogether in supplying the European market. The Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline is one such route, and others, like Nabucco, are still stuck in the planning stages. The Russians have every reason to pressure the Turks into staying far away from any more energy diversification schemes that could cost Russia one of its biggest energy clients — and deny Moscow much of the political leverage it currently holds over the Europeans who are dependent on the Russian energy network.</p>
<p>There are only two options for the Turks in  diversifying away from the Russians. The first lies to Turkey’s south in Iraq and Iran. Turkey has big plans for Iraq’s oil industry, but it will still take considerable time to upgrade and restore the oil fields and pipelines that have been persistently sabotaged and ransacked by insurgents during the fighting that followed the 2003 U.S. invasion. The Iranians offer another large source of energy for the Turks to tap into, but the political complications attached to dealing with Iran are still too prickly for the Turks to move ahead with concrete energy deals at this time. Complications remain for now, but Turkey wi ll be keeping an eye on its Middle Eastern neighbors for robust energy partnerships in the future.</p>
<p>The second potential source of energy for the Turks lies in Central Asia, a region that Russia must keep in its grip at all costs if it hopes to survive in the long run. In many ways this theater is the reverse of the Balkans, where the Russians hold the ethnic links and the Turks the economic advantage. Here, four of the five Central Asian countries — Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Turkmenistan — are Turkic. But as a consequence of the Soviet years, the infrastructure and economies of all four are so hardwired into the Russian sphere of influence that it would take some major surgery to liberate them. But the prize is a rich one: Central Asia possesses the world&amp;  #8217;s largest concentration of untapped energy reserves. And as the term “central” implies, whoever controls the region can project power into the former Soviet Union, China and South Asia. If the Russians and Turks are going to fight over something, this is it.</p>
<p>Here Turkey faces a problem, however — it does not directly abut the region. If the Turks are even going to attempt to shift the Central Asian balance of power, they will need a lever. This brings us to the final — and most dynamic — realm of competition: the Caucasus.</p>
<p>Turkey here faces the best and worst in terms of influence projection. The Azerbaijanis do not consider themselves simply Turkic, like the Central Asians, but actually Turkish. If there is a country in the former Soviet Union that would consider not only allying with but actually joining with another state to escape Russia’s orbit, it would be Azerbaijan with Turkey. Azerbaijan has its own significant energy supplies, but its real value is in serving as a willing springboard for Turkish influence into Central Asia.</p>
<p>However, the core of Azerbaijan does not border Turkey. Instead, it is on the other side of Armenia, a country that thrashed Azerbaijan in a war over the disputed Nagorno-Karabakh enclave and still has lingering animosities toward Ankara because of the 1915 Armenian “genocide.” Armenia has sold itself to the Russians to keep its Turkish foes at bay.</p>
<p>This means Turkish designs on Central Asia all boil down to the former Soviet state of Georgia. If Turkey can bring Georgia fully under its wing, Turkey can then set about to integrate with Azerbaijan and project influence into Central Asia. But without Georgia, Turkey is hamstrung before it can even begin to reach for the real prize in Central Asia.</p>
<p>In this, the Turks do not see the Georgians as much help. The Georgians do not have much in the way of a functional economy or military, and they have consistently overplayed their hand with the Russians in the hopes that the West would come to their aid. Such miscalculations contributed to the August 2008 Georgian-Russian war, in which Russia smashed what military capacity the Georgians did possess. So while Ankara sees the Georgians as reliably anti-Russian, it does not see them as reliably competent or capable.</p>
<p>This means that Turkish-Russian competition may have been short-circuited before it even began. Meanwhile, the Americans and Russians are beginning to outline the rudiments of a deal. Various items on the table include Russia allowing the Americans to ship military supplies to Afghanistan via Russia’s sphere of influence, changes to the U.S. ballistic missile defense (BMD) program, and a halt to NATO expansion. The last prong is a critical piece of Russian-Turkish competition. Should the Americans and Europeans put their weight behind NATO expansion, Georgia would be a logical candidate — meaning most of the heavy lifting in terms of Turkey projecting power eastward would already be done. But if the Americans and Europeans do not put their weight behind NATO expansion, Georgia would fall by the wayside and Turkey would have to do all the work of projecting power eastward — and facing the Russians — alone.</p>
<h3>A Temporary Meeting of Minds?</h3>
<p>There is clearly no shortage of friction points between the Turks and the Russians. With the two powers on a resurgent path, it was only a matter of time before they started bumping into one another. The most notable clash occurred when the Russians decided to invade Georgia last August, knowing full well that neither the Americans nor the Europeans would have the will or capability to intervene on behalf of the small Caucasian state. NATO’s strongest response was a symbolic show of force that relied on Turkey, as the gatekeeper to the Black Sea, to allow a buildup of NATO vessels near the Georgian coast and threaten the underbelly of Russia’s former Soviet peri  phery.</p>
<p>Turkey disapproved of the idea of Russian troops bearing down in the Caucasus near the Turkish border, and Ankara was also angered by having its energy revenues cut off during the war when the BTC pipeline was taken offline.</p>
<p>The Russians promptly responded to Turkey’s NATO maneuvers in the Black Sea by holding up a large amount of Turkish goods at various Russian border checkpoints to put the squeeze on Turkish exports. But the standoff was short-lived; soon enough, the Turks and Russians came to the negotiating table to end the trade spat and sort out their respective spheres of influence. The Russian-Turkish negotiations have progressed over the past several months, with Russian and Turkish leaders now meeting fairly regularly to sort out the issues where both can find some mutual benefit.</p>
<p>The first area of cooperation is Europe, where both Russia and Turkey have an interest in applying political pressure. Despite Europe’s objections and rejections, the Turks are persistent in their ambitions to become a member of the European Union. At the same time, the Russians need to keep Europe linked into the Russian energy network and divided over any plans for BMD, NATO expansion or any other Western plan that threatens Russian national security. As long as Turkey stalls on any European energy diversification projects, the more it can demand Europe’s attention on the issue of EU membership. In fact, the Turks already threatened as much at the start of the year, when they said outright that if Europe doesn’t need Turkey as an EU member, then Turkey doesn’t need to sign off on any more energy diversification projects that transit Turkish territory. Ankara’s threats against Europe dovetailed nicely with Russia’s natural gas cutoff to Ukraine in January, when the Europeans once again were reminded of Moscow’s energy wrath.</p>
<p>The Turks and the Russians also can find common ground in the Middle East. Turkey is again expanding its influence deep into its Middle Eastern backyard, and Ankara expects to take the lead in handling the thorny issues of Iran, Iraq and Syria as the United States draws down its presence in the region and shifts its focus to Afghanistan. What the Turks want right now is stability on their southern flank. That means keeping Russia out of mischief in places like Iran, where Moscow has threatened to sell strategic S-300 air defense systems and to boost the Iranian nuclear program in order to grab Washington’s attention on other issues deemed vital to Moscow’s national security interests. The United States is already leaning on Russia to pressure Iran in return for other strategic concessions, and the Turks are just as interested as the Americans in taming Russia’s actions in the Middle East.</p>
<p>Armenia is another issue where Russia and Turkey may be having a temporary meeting of minds. Russia unofficially occupies Armenia and has been building up a substantial military presence in the small Caucasian state. Turkey can either sit back, continue to isolate Armenia and leave it for the Russians to dominate through and through, or it can move toward normalizing relations with Yerevan and dealing with Russia on more equal footing in the Caucasus. With rumors flying of a deal on the horizon between Yerevan and Ankara (likely with Russia’s blessing), it appears more and more that the Turks and the Russians are making progress in sorting out their respective spheres of influence.</p>
<p>Ultimately, both Russia and Turkey know that this relationship is likely temporary at best. The two Eurasian powers still distrust each other and have divergent long-term goals, even if in the short term there is a small window of opportunity for Turkish and Russian interests to overlap. The law of geopolitics dictates that the two ascendant powers are doomed to clash — just not today.</p>


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		<title>Little Change So Far in U.S. Foreign Policy</title>
		<link>http://www.listeninghead.com/2009/02/21/little-change-so-far-in-u-s-foreign-policy/</link>
		<comments>http://www.listeninghead.com/2009/02/21/little-change-so-far-in-u-s-foreign-policy/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sat, 21 Feb 2009 19:52:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Ginsberg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[American Foreign Policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[G.W. Bush Administration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Iran]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Obama Administration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Russia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[biden]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Munich Security Conference]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Obama]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[u.s. foreign policy]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.listeninghead.com/?p=71</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><strong>By George Friedman<br />
<a title="Stratfor" href="http://www.stratfor.com" target="_blank">Stratfor.com</a></strong></p>
<p><strong>re-published with express permission<br />
</strong></p>
<p>While the Munich Security Conference brought together senior leaders from most major countries and many minor ones last weekend, none was more significant than U.S. Vice President Joe Biden. This is because Biden provided the first glimpse of U.S. foreign policy under President Barack Obama. Most conference attendees were looking forward to a dramatic shift in U.S. foreign policy under the Obama administration. What was interesting about Biden’s speech was how little change there has been in the U.S. position and how much the attendees and the media were cheered by it.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.listeninghead.com/2009/02/21/little-change-so-far-in-u-s-foreign-policy/" class="more-link">Read more on Little Change So Far in U.S. Foreign Policy&#8230;</a></p>


]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>By George Friedman<br />
<a title="Stratfor" href="http://www.stratfor.com" target="_blank">Stratfor.com</a></strong></p>
<p><strong>re-published with express permission<br />
</strong></p>
<p>While the Munich Security Conference brought together senior leaders from most major countries and many minor ones last weekend, none was more significant than U.S. Vice President Joe Biden. This is because Biden provided the first glimpse of U.S. foreign policy under President Barack Obama. Most conference attendees were looking forward to a dramatic shift in U.S. foreign policy under the Obama administration. What was interesting about Biden’s speech was how little change there has been in the U.S. position and how much the attendees and the media were cheered by it.</p>
<p>After Biden’s speech, there was much talk about a change in the tone of U.S. policy. But it is not clear to us whether this was because the tone has changed, or because the attendees’ hearing has. They seemed delighted to be addressed by Biden rather than by former Vice President Dick Cheney — delighted to the extent that this itself represented a change in policy. Thus, in everything Biden said, the conference attendees saw rays of a new policy.<span id="more-71"></span></p>
<h3>Policy Continuity: Iran and Russia</h3>
<p>Consider Iran. The Obama administration’s position, as staked out by Biden, is that the United States is prepared to speak directly to Iran provided that the Iranians do two things. First, Tehran must end its nuclear weapons program. Second, Tehran must stop supporting terrorists, by which Biden meant Hamas and Hezbollah. Once the Iranians do that, the Americans will talk to them. The Bush administration was equally prepared to talk to Iran given those preconditions. The Iranians make the point that such concessions come after talks, not before, and that the United States must change its attitude toward Iran before there can be talks, something Iranian Majlis Speaker Ali Larijani emphasized after the meeting. Apart from the emphasis on a willingness to talk, the terms Biden laid out for such talks are identical to the terms under the Bush administration.</p>
<p>Now consider Russia. Officially, the Russians were delighted to hear that the United States was prepared to hit the “reset button” on U.S.-Russian relations. But Moscow cannot have been pleased when it turned out that hitting the reset button did not involve ruling out NATO expansion, ending American missile defense system efforts in Central Europe or publicly acknowledging the existence of a Russian sphere of influence. Biden said, “It will remain our view that sovereign states have the right to make their own decisions and choose their own alliances.” In translation, this means the United States has the right to enter any relationship it wants with independent states, and that independent states have the right to enter any relationship they want. In other words, the Bush administration’s commitment to the principle of NATO expansion has not changed.</p>
<p>Nor could the Russians have been pleased with the announcement just prior to the conference that the United States would continue developing a ballistic missile defense (BMD) system in Poland and the Czech Republic. The BMD program has been an issue of tremendous importance for Russians, and it is something Obama indicated he would end, or change in some way that might please the Russians. But not only was there no commitment to end the program, there also was no backing away from long-standing U.S. interest in it, or even any indication of the terms under which it might end.</p>
<p>Given that the United States has asked Russia for a supply route through the former Soviet Union to Afghanistan, and that the Russians have agreed to this in principle, it would seem that that there might be an opening for a deal with the Russians. But just before the Munich conference opened, Kyrgyzstan announced that Manas Air Base, the last air base open to the United States in Central Asia, would no longer be available to American aircraft. This was a tidy little victory for the Russians, who had used political and financial levers to pressure Kyrgyzstan to eject the Americans. The Russians, of course, deny that any such pressure was ever brought to bear, and that the closure of the base one day before Munich could have been anything more than coincidence.</p>
<p>But the message to the United States was clear: While Russia agrees in principle to the U.S. supply line, the Americans will have to pay a price for it. In case Washington was under the impression it could get other countries in the former Soviet Union to provide passage, the Russians let the Americans know how much leverage Moscow has in these situations. The U.S. assertion of a right to bilateral relations won’t happen in Russia’s near abroad without Russian help, and that help won’t come without strategic concessions from the United States. In short, the American position on Russia hasn’t changed, and neither has the Russian position.</p>
<h3>The Europeans</h3>
<p>The most interesting — and for us, the most anticipated — part of Biden’s speech had to do with the Europeans, of whom the French and Germans were the most enthusiastic about Bush’s departure and Obama’s arrival. Biden’s speech addressed the core question of the U.S.-European relationship.</p>
<p>If the Europeans were not prepared to increase their participation in American foreign policy initiatives during the Bush administration, it was assumed that they would be during the Obama administration. The first issue on the table under the new U.S. administration is the plan to increase forces in Afghanistan. Biden called for more NATO involvement in that conflict, which would mean an increase in European forces deployed to Afghanistan. Some countries, along with the head of NATO, support this. But German Chancellor Angela Merkel made it clear that Germany is not prepared to send more troops.</p>
<p>Over the past year or so, Germany has become somewhat estranged from the United States. Dependent on Russian energy, Germany has been unwilling to confront Russia on issues of concern to Washington. Merkel has made it particularly clear that while she does not oppose NATO expansion in principle, she certainly opposes expansion to states that Russia considers deeply within its sphere of influence (primarily Georgia and Ukraine). The Germans have made it abundantly clear that they do not want to see European-Russian relations deteriorate under U.S. prodding. Moreover, Germany has no appetite for continuing its presence in Afghanistan, let alone increasing it.</p>
<p>NATO faces a substantial split, conditioned partly by Germany’s dependence on Russian energy, but also by deep German unease about any possible resumption of a Cold War with Russia, however mild. The foundation of NATO during the Cold War was the U.S.-German-British relationship. With the Germans unwilling to align with the United States and other NATO members over Russia or Afghanistan, it is unclear whether NATO can continue to function. (Certainly, Merkel cannot be pleased that the United States has not laid the BMD issue in Poland and the Czech Republic to rest.)</p>
<h3>The More Things Change …</h3>
<p>Most interesting here is the continuity between the Bush and Obama administrations in regard to foreign policy. It is certainly reasonable to argue that after only three weeks in office, no major initiatives should be expected of the new president. But major initiatives were implied — such as ending the BMD deployment to Poland and the Czech Republic — and declaring the intention to withdraw BMD would not have required much preparation. But Biden offered no new initiatives beyond expressing a willingness to talk, without indicating any policy shifts regarding the things that have blocked talks. Willingness to talk with the Iranians, the Russians, the Europeans and others shifts the atmospherics — allowing the listener to think things have changed — but does not address the question of what is to be discussed and what is to be offered and accepted.</p>
<p>Ultimately, the issues dividing the world are not, in our view, subject to personalities, nor does goodwill (or bad will, for that matter) address the fundamental questions. Iran has strategic and ideological reasons for behaving the way it does. So does Russia. So does Germany, and so on. The tensions that exist between those countries and the United States might be mildly exacerbated by personalities, but nations are driven by interest, not personality.</p>
<p>Biden’s position did not materially shift the Obama administration away from Bush’s foreign policy, because Bush was the prisoner of that policy, not its creator. The Iranians will not make concessions on nuclear weapons prior to holding talks, and they do not regard their support for Hamas or Hezbollah as aiding terrorism. Being willing to talk to the Iranians provided they abandon these things is the same as being unwilling to talk to them.</p>
<p>There has been no misunderstanding between the United States and Russia that more open dialogue will cure. The Russians see no reason for NATO expansion unless NATO is planning to encircle Russia. It is possible for the West to have relations with Ukraine and Georgia without expanding NATO; Moscow sees the insistence on expansion as implying sinister motives. For its part, the United States refuses to concede that Russia has any interest in the decisions of the former Soviet Union states, something Biden reiterated. Therefore, either the Russians must accept NATO expansion, or the Americans must accept that Russia has an overriding interest in limiting American relations in the former Soviet Union. This is a fundamental issue that any U.S. administration would have to deal with — particularly an administration seeking Russian cooperation in Afghanistan.</p>
<p>As for Germany, NATO was an instrument of rehabilitation and stability after World War II. But Germany now has a complex relationship with Russia, as well as internal issues. It does not want NATO drawing it into adventures that are not in Germany’s primary interest, much less into a confrontation with Russia. No amount of charm, openness or dialogue is going to change this fundamental reality.</p>
<p>Dialogue does offer certain possibilities. The United States could choose to talk to Iran without preconditions. It could abandon NATO expansion and quietly reduce its influence in the former Soviet Union, or perhaps convince the Russians that they could benefit from this influence. The United States could abandon the BMD system (though this has been complicated by Iran’s recent successful satellite launch), or perhaps get the Russians to participate in the program. The United States could certainly get the Germans to send a small force to Afghanistan above and beyond the present German contingent. All of this is possible.</p>
<p>What can’t be achieved is a fundamental transformation of the geopolitical realities of the world. No matter how Obama campaigned, it is clear he knows that. Apart from his preoccupation with economic matters, Obama understands that foreign policy is governed by impersonal forces and is not amenable to rhetoric, although rhetoric might make things somewhat easier. No nation gives up its fundamental interests because someone is willing to talk.</p>
<p>Willingness to talk is important, but what is said is much more important. Obama’s first foray into foreign policy via Biden indicates that, generally speaking, he understands the constraints and pressures that drive American foreign policy, and he understands the limits of presidential power. Atmospherics aside, Biden’s positions — as opposed to his rhetoric — were strikingly similar to Cheney’s foreign policy positions.</p>
<p>We argued long ago that presidents don’t make history, but that history makes presidents. We see Biden’s speech as a classic example of this principle.</p>


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		<title>Private Performance for Russia&#039;s Powerful Putin</title>
		<link>http://www.listeninghead.com/2009/02/06/private-performance-for-russias-powerful-putin/</link>
		<comments>http://www.listeninghead.com/2009/02/06/private-performance-for-russias-powerful-putin/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 06 Feb 2009 16:06:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Ginsberg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Russia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Abba]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Bjorn Again]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Putin]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.listeninghead.com/?p=55</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><a title="Putin orders Abba cover band set" href="http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,489127,00.html" target="_parent">Australia&#039;s news.com.au reports</a> that Russia&#039;s Vladamir Putin arranged for an Abba cover band called &#034;<a title="Bjorn Again" href="http://www.bjornagain.com/" target="_blank">Bjorn Again</a>&#034; to fly form London to Moscow, then from Moscow via a 9 hour bus ride to a remote military barracks to play a 1 hour set of Abba tunes for former Russian president Putin and a female companion seated behind a curtain.  For its services, the band was paid $45,000, reportedly paid for by the Russian government.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.listeninghead.com/2009/02/06/private-performance-for-russias-powerful-putin/" class="more-link">Read more on Private Performance for Russia&#039;s Powerful Putin&#8230;</a></p>


]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><a title="Putin orders Abba cover band set" href="http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,489127,00.html" target="_parent">Australia&#039;s news.com.au reports</a> that Russia&#039;s Vladamir Putin arranged for an Abba cover band called &#034;<a title="Bjorn Again" href="http://www.bjornagain.com/" target="_blank">Bjorn Again</a>&#034; to fly form London to Moscow, then from Moscow via a 9 hour bus ride to a remote military barracks to play a 1 hour set of Abba tunes for former Russian president Putin and a female companion seated behind a curtain.  For its services, the band was paid $45,000, reportedly paid for by the Russian government.</p>
<p>To quote Mel Brooks from History of the World Part I &#8211; &#034;<a title="Its good to be the king" href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hwAiotTksDA" target="_blank">its good to be the king</a>.&#034;</p>


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		<title>The Russians Welcome President Obama With Immediate Crisis</title>
		<link>http://www.listeninghead.com/2009/01/20/the-russians-welcom-president-obama-with-immediate-crisis/</link>
		<comments>http://www.listeninghead.com/2009/01/20/the-russians-welcom-president-obama-with-immediate-crisis/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Jan 2009 20:31:51 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Jonathan Ginsberg</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Afghanistan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[American Foreign Policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[European Foreign Policy]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[India-Pakistan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Obama Administration]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Russia]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[The Presidency]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[afghanistan]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[russia]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.listeninghead.com/?p=47</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[<p><strong>By George Friedman<br />
Reprinted with permission from <a title="Stratfor" href="http://www.stratfor.com" target="_blank">Stratfor</a></strong></p>
<p>U.S. President-elect Barack Obama will be sworn in on Tuesday as president of the United States. Candidate Obama said much about what he would do as president; now we will see what President Obama actually does. The most important issue Obama will face will be the economy, something he did not anticipate through most of his campaign. The first hundred days of his presidency thus will revolve around getting a stimulus package passed. But Obama also is now in the great game of global competition — and in that game, presidents rarely get to set the agenda.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.listeninghead.com/2009/01/20/the-russians-welcom-president-obama-with-immediate-crisis/" class="more-link">Read more on The Russians Welcome President Obama With Immediate Crisis&#8230;</a></p>


]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>By George Friedman<br />
Reprinted with permission from <a title="Stratfor" href="http://www.stratfor.com" target="_blank">Stratfor</a></strong></p>
<p>U.S. President-elect Barack Obama will be sworn in on Tuesday as president of the United States. Candidate Obama said much about what he would do as president; now we will see what President Obama actually does. The most important issue Obama will face will be the economy, something he did not anticipate through most of his campaign. The first hundred days of his presidency thus will revolve around getting a stimulus package passed. But Obama also is now in the great game of global competition — and in that game, presidents rarely get to set the agenda.</p>
<p>The major challenge he faces is not Gaza; the Israeli-Palestinian dispute is not one any U.S. president intervenes in unless he wants to experience pain. As we have explained, that is an intractable conflict to which there is no real solution. Certainly, Obama will fight being drawn into mediating the Israeli-Palestinian conflict during his first hundred days in office. He undoubtedly will send the obligatory Middle East envoy, who will spend time with all the parties, make suitable speeches and extract meaningless concessions from all sides. This envoy will establish some sort of process to which everyone will cynically commit, knowing it will go nowhere. Such a mission is not involvement — it is the alternative to involvement, and the reason presidents appoint Middle East envoys. Obama can avoid the Gaza crisis, and he will do so.</p>
<h3>Obama’s Two Unavoidable Crises</h3>
<p>The two crises that cannot be avoided are Afghanistan and Russia.<span id="more-47"></span> First, the situation in Afghanistan is tenuous for a number of reasons, and it is not a crisis that Obama can avoid decisions on. Obama has said publicly that he will decrease his commitments in Iraq and increase them in Afghanistan. He thus will have more troops fighting in Afghanistan. The second crisis emerged from a decision by Russia to cut off natural gas to Ukraine, and the resulting decline in natural gas deliveries to Europe. This one obviously does not affect the United States directly, but even after flows are restored, it affects the Europeans greatly. Obama therefore comes into office with three interlocking issues: Afghanistan, Russia and Europe. In one sense, this is a single issue — and it is not one that will wait.</p>
<p>Obama clearly intends to follow Gen. David Petraeus’ lead in Afghanistan. The intention is to increase the number of troops in Afghanistan, thereby intensifying pressure on the Taliban and opening the door for negotiations with the militant group or one of its factions. Ultimately, this would see the inclusion of the Taliban or Taliban elements in a coalition government. Petraeus pursued this strategy in Iraq with Sunni insurgents, and it is the likely strategy in Afghanistan.</p>
<p>But the situation in Afghanistan has been complicated by the situation in Pakistan. Roughly three-quarters of U.S. and NATO supplies bound for Afghanistan are delivered to the Pakistani port of Karachi and trucked over the border to Afghanistan. Most fuel used by Western forces in Afghanistan is refined in Pakistan and delivered via the same route. There are two crossing points, one near Afghanistan’s Kandahar province at Chaman, Pakistan, and the other through the Khyber Pass. The Taliban have attacked Western supply depots and convoys, and Pakistan itself closed the routes for several days, citing government operations against radical Islamist forces.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, the situation in Pakistan has been complicated by tensions with India. The Indians have said that the individuals who carried out the Nov. 26 Mumbai attack were Pakistanis supported by elements in the Pakistani government. After Mumbai, India made demands of the Pakistanis. While the situation appears to have calmed, the future of Indo-Pakistani relations remains far from clear; anything from a change of policy in New Delhi to new terrorist attacks could see the situation escalate. The Pakistanis have made it clear that a heightened threat from India requires them to shift troops away from the Afghan border and toward the east; a small number of troops already has been shifted.</p>
<p>Apart from the direct impact this kind of Pakistani troop withdrawal would have on cross-border operations by the Taliban, such a move also would dramatically increase the vulnerability of NATO supply lines through Pakistan. Some supplies could be shipped in by aircraft, but the vast bulk of supplies — petroleum, ammunition, etc. — must come in via surface transit, either by truck, rail or ship. Western operations in Afghanistan simply cannot be supplied from the air alone. A cutoff of the supply lines across Pakistan would thus leave U.S. troops in Afghanistan in crisis. Because Washington can’t predict or control the future actions of Pakistan, of India or of terrorists, the United States must find an alternative to the routes through Pakistan.</p>
<p>When we look at a map, the two routes through Pakistan from Karachi are clearly the most logical to use. If those were closed — or even meaningfully degraded — the only other viable routes would be through the former Soviet Union.</p>
<ul>
<li>One route, along which a light load of fuel is currently transported, crosses the Caspian Sea. Fuel refined in Azerbaijan is ferried across the Caspian to Turkmenistan (where a small amount of fuel is also refined), then shipped across Turkmenistan directly to Afghanistan and through a small spit of land in Uzbekistan. This route could be expanded to reach either the Black Sea through Georgia or the Mediterranean through Georgia and Turkey (though the additional use of Turkey would require a rail gauge switch). It is also not clear that transports native to the Caspian have sufficient capacity for this.</li>
<li>Another route sidesteps the issues of both transport across the Caspian and the sensitivity of Georgia by crossing Russian territory above the Caspian. Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan (and likely at least a small corner of Turkmenistan) would connect the route to Afghanistan. There are options of connecting to the Black Sea or transiting to Europe through either Ukraine or Belarus.</li>
<li>Iran could provide a potential alternative, but relations between Tehran and Washington would have to improve dramatically before such discussions could even begin — and time is short.</li>
</ul>
<p>Many of the details still need to be worked out. But they are largely variations on the two main themes of either crossing the Caspian or transiting Russian territory above it.</p>
<p>Though the first route is already partially established for fuel, it is not clear how much additional capacity exists. To complicate matters further, Turkmen acquiescence is unlikely without Russian authorization, and Armenia remains strongly loyal to Moscow as well. While the current Georgian government might leap at the chance, the issue is obviously an extremely sensitive one for Moscow. (And with Russian forces positioned in Armenia and the Georgian breakaway regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia, Moscow has troops looming over both sides of the vulnerable route across Georgia.) The second option would require crossing Russian territory itself, with a number of options — from connecting to the Black Sea to transiting either Ukraine or Belarus to Europe, or connecting to the Baltic states.</p>
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<p>Both routes involve countries of importance to Russia where Moscow has influence, regardless of whether those countries are friendly to it. This would give Russia ample opportunity to scuttle any such supply line at multiple points for reasons wholly unrelated to Afghanistan.</p>
<p>If the West were to opt for the first route, the Russians almost certainly would pressure Azerbaijan and Turkmenistan not to cooperate, and Turkey would find itself in a position it doesn’t want to be in — namely, caught between the United States and Russia. The diplomatic complexities of developing these routes not only involve the individual countries included, they also inevitably lead to the question of U.S.-Russian relations.</p>
<p>Even without crossing Russia, both of these two main options require Russian cooperation. The United States must develop the option of an alternative supply route to Pakistan, and in doing so, it must define its relationship with Russia. Seeking to work without Russian approval of a route crossing its “near abroad” will represent a challenge to Russia. But getting Russian approval will require a U.S. accommodation with the country.</p>
<h3>The Russian Natural Gas Connection</h3>
<p>One of Obama’s core arguments against the Bush administration was that it acted unilaterally rather than with allies. Specifically, Obama meant that the Bush administration alienated the Europeans, therefore failing to build a sustainable coalition for the war. By this logic, it follows that one of Obama’s first steps should be to reach out to Europe to help influence or pressure the Russians, given that NATO has troops in Afghanistan and Obama has said he intends to ask the Europeans for more help there.</p>
<p>The problem with this is that the Europeans are passing through a serious crisis with Russia, and that Germany in particular is involved in trying to manage that crisis. This problem relates to natural gas. Ukraine is dependent on Russia for about two-thirds of the natural gas it uses. The Russians traditionally have provided natural gas at a deep discount to former Soviet republics, primarily those countries Russia sees as allies, such as Belarus or Armenia. Ukraine had received discounted natural gas, too, until the 2004 Orange Revolution, when a pro-Western government came to power in Kiev. At that point, the Russians began demanding full payment. Given the subsequent rises in global energy prices, that left Ukraine in a terrible situation — which of course is exactly where Moscow wanted it.</p>
<p>The Russians cut off natural gas to Ukraine for a short period in January 2006, and for three weeks in 2009. Apart from leaving Ukraine desperate, the cutoff immediately affected the rest of Europe, because the natural gas that goes to Europe flows through Ukraine. This put the rest of Europe in a dangerous position, particularly in the face of bitterly cold weather in 2008-2009.</p>
<p>The Russians achieved several goals with this. First, they pressured Ukraine directly. Second, they forced many European states to deal with Moscow directly rather than through the European Union. Third, they created a situation in which European countries had to choose between supporting Ukraine and heating their own homes. And last, they drew Berlin in particular — since Germany is the most dependent of the major European states on Russian natural gas — into the position of working with the Russians to get Ukraine to agree to their terms. (Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin visited Germany last week to discuss this directly with German Chancellor Angela Merkel.)</p>
<p>The Germans already have made clear their opposition to expanding NATO to Ukraine and Georgia. Given their dependency on the Russians, the Germans are not going to be supporting the United States if Washington decides to challenge Russia over the supply route issue. In fact, the Germans — and many of the Europeans — are in no position to challenge Russia on anything, least of all on Afghanistan. Overall, the Europeans see themselves as having limited interests in the Afghan war, and many already are planning to reduce or withdraw troops for budgetary reasons.</p>
<p>It is therefore very difficult to see Obama recruiting the Europeans in any useful manner for a confrontation with Russia over access for American supplies to Afghanistan. Yet this is an issue he will have to address immediately.</p>
<h3>The Price of Russian Cooperation</h3>
<p>The Russians are prepared to help the Americans, however — and it is clear what they will want in return.</p>
<p>At minimum, Moscow will want a declaration that Washington will not press for the expansion of NATO to Georgia or Ukraine, or for the deployment of military forces in non-NATO states on the Russian periphery — specifically, Ukraine and Georgia. At this point, such a declaration would be symbolic, since Germany and other European countries would block expansion anyway.</p>
<p>The Russians might also demand some sort of guarantee that NATO and the United States not place any large military formations or build any major military facilities in the former Soviet republics (now NATO member states) of Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania. (A small rotating squadron of NATO fighters already patrols the skies over the Baltic states.) Given that there were intense anti-government riots in Latvia and Lithuania last week, the stability of these countries is in question. The Russians would certainly want to topple the pro-Western Baltic governments. And anything approaching a formal agreement between Russia and the United States on the matter could quickly destabilize the Baltics, in addition to very much weakening the NATO alliance.</p>
<p>Another demand the Russians probably will make — because they have in the past — is that the United States guarantee eventual withdrawal from any bases in Central Asia in return for Russian support for using those bases for the current Afghan campaign. (At present, the United States runs air logistics operations out of Manas Air Base in Kyrgyzstan.) The Russians do not want to see Central Asia become a U.S. sphere of influence as the result of an American military presence.</p>
<p>Other demands might relate to the proposed U.S. ballistic missile defense installations in the Czech Republic and Poland.</p>
<p>We expect the Russians to make variations on all these demands in exchange for cooperation in creating a supply line to Afghanistan. Simply put, the Russians will demand that the United States acknowledge a Russian sphere of influence in the former Soviet Union. The Americans will not want to concede this — or at least will want to make it implicit rather than explicit. But the Russians will want this explicit, because an explicit guarantee will create a crisis of confidence over U.S. guarantees in the countries that emerged from the Soviet Union, serving as a lever to draw these countries into the Russian orbit. U.S. acquiescence on the point potentially would have ripple effects in the rest of Europe, too.</p>
<p>Therefore, regardless of the global financial crisis, Obama has an immediate problem on his hands in Afghanistan. He has troops fighting there, and they must be supplied. The Pakistani supply line is no longer a sure thing. The only other options either directly challenge Russia (and ineffectively at that) or require Russian help. Russia’s price will be high, particularly because Washington’s European allies will not back a challenge to Russia in Georgia, and all options require Russian cooperation anyway. Obama’s plan to recruit the Europeans on behalf of American initiatives won’t work in this case. Obama does not want to start his administration with making a massive concession to Russia, but he cannot afford to leave U.S. forces in Afghanistan without supplies. He can hope that nothing happens in Pakistan, but that is up to the Taliban and other Islamist groups more than anyone else — and betting on their goodwill is not a good idea.</p>
<p>Whatever Obama is planning to do, he will have to deal with this problem fast, before Afghanistan becomes a crisis. And there are no good solutions. But unlike with the Israelis and Palestinians, Obama can’t solve this by sending a special envoy who appears to be doing something. He will have to make a very tough decision. Between the economy and this crisis, we will find out what kind of president Obama is.</p>
<p>And we will find out very soon.</p>


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