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It's time for Russia to choose our side in the Great Game
The Daily Telegraph ^ | April 14, 2003 | Barbara Amiel

Posted on 04/13/2003 4:33:18 PM PDT by MadIvan

The players take their positions for the "Great Game", Kipling's name for the geopolitical contest between Russia and other powers for influence in southern Asia and the approaches to the Middle East.

In leaderless Baghdad, daily life is nasty. Saddam Hussein's regime had the monopoly on looting and lawlessness, but now it is in the hands of disorganised private interests. This is lost on BBC commentators, who blame everything - SARS, if only they could - on the coalition. About the only thing in Saddam's favour was that you could get the death penalty for listening to the BBC.

UN humanitarian agencies wrongly predicted over a million Iraqi refugees, hundreds of thousands of civilian deaths and the severe disabling of electricity and water in the country. Unperturbed by their logistical errors, the same UN agencies now insist that they must be involved in the reconstruction of Iraq. The unsinkable UN Secretary-General, Kofi Annan, explains that "above all, UN involvement does bring legitimacy" to the task of reconstruction.

Given that the UN is little more than an assembly of clapped-out tyrannies, just how it can possibly confer legitimacy on anything is a delusion the now vanished Iraqi minister of information might envy. Having first tried to prevent regime change, the UN and Jacques Chirac now wish to preside over the choice of Saddam's successor. This is one better than the cuckoo that only steals other birds' nests for its offspring: the UN, as super-cuckoo, tries to block attempts by other birds to build a nest, and then takes it over.

In America, people are desperate to blame regimes, rather than the Arab people, for the strong anti-American sentiments they hear. The fact that a number of Arabs are unhappy with the United States is shunted aside. It would be comforting to think the Arab world was like eastern Europe waiting for liberation, but it both is - and isn't.

The Arab world has a split personality over our help: it wants clean water and prosperity, but not us. Having another nation clean your befouled nest is humiliating. But they can't do it themselves and so, like the goat in one of Orwell's essays, try alternately to take a bite of a piece of bread, then to butt the man offering it, hoping that, if the man is driven away, the bread will somehow remain suspended in the air.

The news from Moscow comes via Baghdad. The Sunday Telegraph claims that documents found there reveal that Russian intelligence had been briefing Iraq on British and American secrets before the war. Whatever role in the Great Game President Vladimir Putin is playing, one question must be echoing in St Petersburg and Moscow. Why has the Russian army fought for years, flattened Grozny, taken heavy casualties, and yet not achieved in Chechnya what the Americans achieved in three weeks?

We don't know yet whether the West has achieved all it needed to in Iraq, never mind the Arab world. But in Chechnya, the Russians have only managed to be brutal. They operated on the notion that if you grabbed a people by their vital parts, the hearts and minds would follow. That crude assumption left Russia at the wrong end of asymmetrical warfare - the current term for the guerrilla warfare between a low-tech power and a high-tech one. The Russians are just sufficiently high-tech to have the disadvantages of that status without its advantages, which explains the disaster of the Chechnyen hostage episode in a Moscow theatre. Mr Putin's team had enough technology to rescue hostages by introducing gas into the theatre's ventilation systems, but not enough to do so without asphyxiating a good number of them.

Asymmetrical warfare may become the legacy of Iraq. Fighting the Americans in that country through low-tech terrorist tactics is the next logical step for Islamists, Wahabis, Ba'athists and other anti-American elements in the Middle East and Third World. Already, the strange disappearance of so many of the Ba'athist leadership, what John Keegan referred to as the "chief mystery", has led to a mixed bag of rumours. Did Saddam send his sons and his entourage away to Syria before the war or in its early stages?

Some intelligence networks postulate a route for them through Syria or Iran to Moscow. Conspiratorial as this sounds, it could make some, small sense.

Given the various Ba'athist factions in Syria, Tariq Aziz et al would find Moscow a better base from which to direct operations than Damascus. The relationship between Moscow and Baghdad has many strands, including the $8 billion of debt Iraq owes Russia. Yevgeny Primakov's lengthy visit to Baghdad last February also brought unconfirmed reports of a bizarre Russian proposal to prevent war by allowing Saddam to keep his wealth and live in an internationally protected palace compound in Iraq, if he would agree to resign after one year of a transitional government.

Giving succour or asylum to some Ba'athist enemies of America could only be in Russia's interests as a joker in Mr Putin's hand that he could quickly discard. In 2002, the deputy head of Russia's international affairs committee wrote of the possibility of Germany "threatening US domination of world affairs". Mr Putin must decide whether the best opportunity for Russia to counter American uni-power is by joining France and Germany in opposing it or forming an alliance with the US.

In Washington, the Great Game is better understood as football than as realpolitik. President Bush certainly wants to make a deal with Mr Putin, but has failed so far. The White House believes there is a shared interest in deposing Middle East radicals, given Russian problems with Islamists and Chechens. Perhaps Condoleezza Rice, the National Security Adviser, has focused too much on the moral and strategic value of the Iraqi operation, rather than its tangible benefits to Mr Putin. Russia, after all, might be more interested in oil contracts and a pay-off. Its president comes from a KGB culture and Mr Bush and Miss Rice, when all is said and done, are not KGB sort-of-thinkers. Possibly, in spite of Mr Bush's background as an oilman, the deal Mr Putin wanted was too far out of the moral ballpark.

In London, Mr Blair, having won his hand, seems to think it is time now to give it away. His support of the UN and his apparent desire to plant Britain squarely back in the Franco-German camp seem perverse. For all Mr Blair's stellar qualities, his attraction to the miasmic notion of nation states joining together in an international jamboree is junior common room circa the 1960s. Indeed, those holding sway in Europe now, from Gerhard Schröder to Mr Blair, remind me of what Dostoevsky observed about Russian novelists when he said "we all came out of Gogol's Cloak". This lot all emerged from Tom Wolfe's "quasi-Marxist fog".

But Mr Blair stands above most European leaders in having the true courage of his convictions. If the 21st century is going to be less ideological than the 20th, there must still be a place beyond the cynicism of Palmerston's "no eternal friends, only eternal interests". Perhaps what the Great Game needs - and may have in Mr Blair - is a George Canning in Downing Street to help coach Baghdad, Moscow and Washington and win for all.


TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Government; News/Current Events; Russia; US: District of Columbia; United Kingdom; War on Terror
KEYWORDS: amiel; arabstreet; baathists; barbaraamiel; blair; bush; geopolitics; greatgame; ladyblack; middleeast; russia; uk; us
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I disagree with this article. Russia was caught spying on us. Therefore they should get nothing but the back of our hand across their face.

Regards, Ivan


1 posted on 04/13/2003 4:33:18 PM PDT by MadIvan
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To: hoosiermama; Dutchgirl; Freedom'sWorthIt; Carolina; patricia; annyokie; ...
Bump!
2 posted on 04/13/2003 4:33:33 PM PDT by MadIvan
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To: All
There's no need to be deeply saddened !

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3 posted on 04/13/2003 4:34:15 PM PDT by Support Free Republic (Your support keeps Free Republic going strong!)
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To: MadIvan
When I think of Russia, somehow I just don't get a warm, cosy, cumbaya, can't-we-all-just-get-along feeling.
4 posted on 04/13/2003 4:39:55 PM PDT by stripes1776
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To: MadIvan
Didn't the 'Great Game' end with the partitioning of Persia in 1907?
Did they miss something, like say, WWI and WWII?
5 posted on 04/13/2003 4:43:20 PM PDT by dyed_in_the_wool (Syria. Iran. North Korea. Decisions, decisions, decisions...)
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To: MadIvan
Therefore they should get nothing but the back of our hand across their face.

That would be far too kind my friend....

6 posted on 04/13/2003 4:44:29 PM PDT by Madcelt (Yo GWB don't remove those warheads just yet!! We may need them after all.)
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To: MadIvan
Spying is the lesser of their evil offenses.

America was foolish to trust the corrupt deceptive Russian bear.

========= Iraqi television =========

Iraqi TV boasts that they have Russian antitank 'technology,
which was used to kill Americans, and it was
given after OK by Putin himself..


========= Terrorist Enabling Russian =========

On the trail of WMD/cruiseMISSILE/GPS-jammers/-selling Putin,
Putin disingenuously denied that Russian firms sold military equipment to Iraq
because there were intermediaries and retired agents.


7 posted on 04/13/2003 4:45:44 PM PDT by Diogenesis (If you mess with one of us, you mess with all of us.)
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To: Diogenesis
bttt
8 posted on 04/13/2003 4:52:18 PM PDT by lainde
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To: MadIvan
The spying is ok. Everybody always spies

Russia is broke and sells anything it can including intelligence. Dumb move to sell to Iraq before the conquest. The assumption was nothing changes. Even after the destruction of the Soviet Union, they did not learn that there is change.

9 posted on 04/13/2003 4:54:35 PM PDT by bert (Don't Panic !)
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To: Diogenesis
Just look at that face (Putin). Who couldn't trust an honest, sincere face like that????
10 posted on 04/13/2003 4:57:26 PM PDT by dvan
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To: bert
Whoever chooses sides with the French is automatically an enemy. Seriously, the KGB still runs Russia and the Soviet mentality still exists. They cannot be trusted.
11 posted on 04/13/2003 5:09:00 PM PDT by whadizit
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To: dvan
"Just look at that face (Putin). Who couldn't trust an honest, sincere face like that????"

Actually, on seeing this photo, my first thought was how much Putin looks like a young John Paul II.

12 posted on 04/13/2003 5:13:43 PM PDT by Wonder Warthog (The Hog of Steel)
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To: MadIvan
"...For all Mr Blair's stellar qualities, his attraction to the miasmic notion of nation states joining together in an international jamboree is junior common room circa the 1960s..."...
"Late High Tea at 8 O'clock!"....Chocolate cake, hot tea, Socialist Dogma, and some unappreciated talent banging out R&B on an upright piano over in the corner. OOOHH, those were heady days......
13 posted on 04/13/2003 5:15:03 PM PDT by Renfield
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To: MadIvan
"...For all Mr Blair's stellar qualities, his attraction to the miasmic notion of nation states joining together in an international jamboree is junior common room circa the 1960s..."...
"Late High Tea at 8 O'clock!"....Chocolate cake, hot tea, Socialist Dogma, and some unappreciated talent banging out R&B on an upright piano over in the corner. OOOHH, those were heady days......
14 posted on 04/13/2003 5:16:24 PM PDT by Renfield
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To: MadIvan
Given that the UN is little more than an assembly of clapped-out tyrannies, just how it can possibly confer legitimacy on anything is a delusion the now vanished Iraqi minister of information might envy.

Anyone who thinks the UN can confer legitimacy on anything is delusional. The UN is a global socialist mafia, corrupt to the core. It's not only irrelevant at this point, it is illegitimate. "International law" is just code for the global socialist agenda. For the UN to pretend they have the moral high ground and to portray the coalition as rogues is akin to gangsters claiming to be the law and portraying the police as the criminals. They refused to enforce their own resolutions, and they have the audacity to accuse the coalition of breaking the law by enforcing them. The UN has absolutely NO credibility whatsoever as any kind of governing body. They should stick to being nothing more than an international humanitarian aid agency, and stop pretending they're some kind of global cop. The US will handle the role of global cop.

15 posted on 04/13/2003 5:37:55 PM PDT by laz17 (Socialism is the religion of the atheist.)
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To: bert
I gave the Russians too much credit in the past. I honestly they thought they were a lot shrewder than to align themselves with a bunch of losers like France and Germany.
16 posted on 04/13/2003 5:42:41 PM PDT by Welsh Rabbit
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To: MadIvan
Spying wasn't the issue. Actively arming and supporting our enemy in a active war is.

Perhaps arming the Chechnyens would make the connection a little clearer for Putin.
17 posted on 04/13/2003 5:45:46 PM PDT by DB (©)
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To: Welsh Rabbit
I did too.
18 posted on 04/13/2003 5:46:17 PM PDT by DB (©)
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To: MadIvan
We need to pull ALL ($) Aid from Russia, France, and Germany. We need to assist only countries who back the coalition.

This would set a few back on their heels..

D

19 posted on 04/13/2003 6:16:39 PM PDT by Pee_Oui
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To: Diogenesis
John Nyquist has been writing and trying to warn the people about Russia for years.

Don't know why he's not still on the WND Op-Ed staff. They're "never" to be trusted.

D

20 posted on 04/13/2003 6:19:27 PM PDT by Pee_Oui
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