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Moscow’s Sinister Brilliance
VictorHanson.com | Frontpagemagazine ^ | August 14, 2008 | Victor Davis Hanson

Posted on 08/14/2008 5:16:56 AM PDT by SJackson

Moscow’s Sinister Brilliance  
By Victor Davis Hanson
VictorHanson.com | Thursday, August 14, 2008

Lost amid all the controversies surrounding the Georgian tragedy is the sheer diabolic brilliance of the long-planned Russia invasion. Let us count the ways in which it is a win/win situation for Russia.

The Home Front

The long-suffering Russian people resent the loss of global influence and empire, but not necessarily the Soviet Union and its gulags that once ensured such stature. The invasion restores a sense of Russian nationalism and power to its populace without the stink of Stalinism, and is indeed cloaked as a sort of humanitarian intervention on behalf of beleaguered Ossetians.

There will be no Russian demonstrations about an “illegal war,” much less nonsense about “blood for oil,” but instead rejoicing at the payback of an uppity former province that felt its Western credentials somehow trumped Russian tanks. How ironic that the Western heartthrob, the old Marxist Mikhail Gorbachev, is now both lamenting Western encouragement of Georgian “aggression,” while simultaneously gloating over the return of Russian military daring.

Sinister Timing

Russia’s only worry is the United States, which currently has a lame-duck president with low approval ratings, and is exhausted after Afghanistan and Iraq. But more importantly, America’s attention is preoccupied with a presidential race, in which “world citizen” Barack Obama has mesmerized Europe as the presumptive new president and soon-to-be disciple of European soft power.

Better yet for Russia, instead of speaking with one voice, America is all over the map with three reactions from Bush, McCain, and Obama — all of them mutually contradictory, at least initially. Meanwhile, the world’s televisions are turned toward the Olympics in Beijing. The autocratic Chinese, busy jailing reporters and dissidents, are not about to say an unkind word about Russian intervention. If anything, the pageantry at their grandiose stadiums provides welcome distractions for those embarrassed over the ease with which Russia smothered Georgia.

Comeuppance

Most importantly, Putin and Medvedev have called the West’s bluff. We are sort of stuck in a time-warp of the 1990s, seemingly eons ago in which a once-earnest weak post-Soviet Russia sought Western economic help and political mentoring. But those days are long gone, and diplomacy hasn’t caught up with the new realities. Russia is flush with billions. It serves as a rallying point and arms supplier to thugs the world over that want leverage in their anti-Western agendas. For the last five years, its foreign policy can be reduced to “Whatever the United States is for, we are against.”

The geopolitical message is clear to both the West and the former Soviet Republics: don’t consider NATO membership (i.e., do the Georgians really think that, should they have been NATO members, any succor would have been forthcoming?).

Together with the dismal NATO performance in Afghanistan, the Georgian incursion reveals the weakness of the Atlantic Alliance. The tragic irony is unmistakable. NATO was given a gift in not having made Georgia a member, since otherwise an empty ritual of evoking Article V’s promise of mutual assistance in time of war would have effectively destroyed the Potemkin alliance.

The new reality is that a nuclear, cash-rich, and energy-blessed Russia doesn’t really worry too much whether its long-term future is bleak, given problems with Muslim minorities, poor life-expectancy rates, and a declining population. Instead, in the here and now, it has a window of opportunity to reclaim prestige and weaken its adversaries. So why hesitate?

Indeed, tired of European lectures, the Russians are now telling the world that soft power is, well, soft. Moscow doesn’t give a damn about the United Nations, the European Union, the World Court at the Hague, or any finger-pointing moralist from Geneva or London. Did anyone in Paris miss any sleep over the rubble of Grozny?

More likely, Putin & Co. figure that any popular rhetoric about justice will be trumped by European governments’ concern for energy. With just a few tanks and bombs, in one fell swoop, Russia has cowered its former republics, made them think twice about joining the West, and stopped NATO and maybe E.U. expansion in their tracks. After all, who wants to die for Tbilisi?

Russia does not need a global force-projection capacity; it has sufficient power to muscle its neighbors and thereby humiliate not merely its enemies, but their entire moral pretensions as well.

Apologists in the West

The Russians have sized up the moral bankruptcy of the Western Left. They know that half-a-million Europeans would turn out to damn their patron the United States for removing a dictator and fostering democracy, but not more than a half-dozen would do the same to criticize their long-time enemy from bombing a constitutional state.

The Russians rightly expect Westerners to turn on themselves, rather than Moscow — and they won’t be disappointed. Imagine the morally equivalent fodder for liberal lament: We were unilateral in Iraq, so we can’t say Russia can’t do the same to Georgia. (As if removing a genocidal dictator is the same as attacking a democracy). We accepted Kosovo’s independence, so why not Ossetia’s? (As if the recent history of Serbia is analogous to Georgia’s.) We are still captive to neo-con fantasies about democracy, and so encouraged Georgia’s efforts that provoked the otherwise reasonable Russians (As if the problem in Ossetia is our principled support for democracy rather than appeasement of Russian dictatorship).

From what the Russians learned of the Western reaction to Iraq, they expect their best apologists will be American politicians, pundits, professors, and essayists — and once more they will not be disappointed. We are a culture, after all, that after damning Iraqi democracy as too violent, broke, and disorganized, is now damning Iraqi democracy as too conniving, rich, and self-interested — the only common denominator being whatever we do, and whomever we help, cannot be good.

Power-power

We talk endlessly about “soft” and “hard” power as if humanitarian jawboning, energized by economic incentives or sanctions, is the antithesis to mindless military power. In truth, there is soft power, hard power, and power-power — the latter being the enormous advantages held by energy rich, oil-exporting states. Take away oil and Saudi Arabia would be the world’s rogue state, with its medieval practice of gender apartheid. Take away oil and Ahmadinejad is analogous to a run-of-the-mill central African thug. Take away oil, and Chavez is one of Ronald Reagan’s proverbial tinhorn dictators.

Russia understands that Europe needs its natural gas, that the U.S. not only must be aware of its own oil dependency, but, more importantly, the ripples of its military on the fragility of world oil supplies, especially the effects upon China, Europe, India, and Japan. When one factors in Russian oil and gas reserves, a pipeline through Georgia, the oil dependency of potential critics of Putin, and the cash garnered by oil exports, then we understand once again that power-power is beginning to trump both its hard and soft alternatives.

Paralysis

Military intervention is out of the question. Economic sanctions, given Russia’s oil and Europe’s need for it, are a pipe dream. Diplomatic ostracism and moral stricture won’t even save face.

Instead, Europe — both western and eastern — along with the United States and the concerned former Soviet Republics need to sit down, conference, and plot exactly how these new democracies are to maintain their independence and autonomy in the next decade. Hopefully, they will reach the Franklinesque conclusion that “We must, indeed, all hang together, or most assuredly we shall all hang separately.”



TOPICS: Editorial; Foreign Affairs; Russia
KEYWORDS: caucasus; geopolitics; georgia; ossetia; russia; southossetia; vdh; victordavishanson

1 posted on 08/14/2008 5:16:56 AM PDT by SJackson
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To: SJackson

If there is one thing about the Russian Invasion that I can’t stand, it is the chattering class’s extolling the “genius” of Putin’s invasion.

Does anyone have any doubt the Georgian Military was penetrated by FIS (the “new” KGB) agents?

It is not very hard to plan such a move when you know it is coming months in advance, and yet here is this article “Putin=Brilliant Leader”

Heh! Euorope=Weenies,limp wristed fops, if Russian was sure the Euroweenies would do nothing, or that Germany refused NATO membership for Georgia giving Putin the green light, this article would have never have been written.


2 posted on 08/14/2008 5:27:31 AM PDT by padre35 (Conservative in Exile/ Romans 10.10/Eze 11.2)
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To: padre35
Apologists in the West

The Russians have sized up the moral bankruptcy of the Western Left. They know that half-a-million Europeans would turn out to damn their patron the United States for removing a dictator and fostering democracy, but not more than a half-dozen would do the same to criticize their long-time enemy from bombing a constitutional state.

The Russians rightly expect Westerners to turn on themselves, rather than Moscow — and they won’t be disappointed. Imagine the morally equivalent fodder for liberal lament: We were unilateral in Iraq, so we can’t say Russia can’t do the same to Georgia. (As if removing a genocidal dictator is the same as attacking a democracy).
This is the crux of the problem.
3 posted on 08/14/2008 6:03:06 AM PDT by AFPhys ((.Praying for President Bush, our troops, their families, and all my American neighbors..))
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To: SJackson

What is so brilliant about Russia? They’re after oil.


4 posted on 08/14/2008 7:19:22 AM PDT by nikos1121 (The first black president of the US should be at least a "Jackie Robinson.")
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To: padre35

You can look at it as genius, or you can look at it as a plum, slowly ripening in the sun, and Ivan resisting as long as he could before gobbling it up. In other words, the opportunity was there, the downside was small (unless you care what bleeding hearts think and say), and he went for it.

The question now is, is that all Ivan wants?


5 posted on 08/14/2008 7:52:01 AM PDT by ichabod1 (If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it, and if it stops moving, subsidize it.)
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To: ichabod1

The Georgian leadership totally and completely miscalculated the effect of an incursion by force into Ossetia. No one disputes (except Russia) the de jure reality that Georgia’s internationally recognized borders include Ossetia and Abkhazia. Whether Georgia was goaded or not, they created a maelstrom around their heads and didn’t learn the lessons of the past humiliation which occurred in Abkhazia. They didn’t learn the flip side of what could happen when you try to put down by force populist opinion regarding separation when you have world powers looking over your shoulders (the former Yugoslavia).

You pick your friends but not your enemies. This friend (Georgian current leadership) didn’t exercise the restraint needed to play power politics or if he calculated that the West was ready to risk nuclear winter for his internecine problems he was seriously mistaken and questions of his competence have to be asked.


6 posted on 08/14/2008 8:48:31 AM PDT by Lent
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To: ichabod1
"The question now is, is that all Ivan wants?"

No, Georgia is the beginning.

7 posted on 08/14/2008 8:54:02 AM PDT by penowa
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To: Lent

But the question of whether we rise to the occasion militarily is larger than the Georgian Question. The Real Question is whether we’re willing to go to war to support the so-called orange democracies of the former soviet bloc.


8 posted on 08/14/2008 9:14:35 AM PDT by ichabod1 (If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it, and if it stops moving, subsidize it.)
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To: SJackson
Attention Nancy Pelosi:

Take away oil and Saudi Arabia would be the world’s rogue state, with its medieval practice of gender apartheid. Take away oil and Ahmadinejad is analogous to a run-of-the-mill central African thug. Take away oil, and Chavez is one of Ronald Reagan’s proverbial tinhorn dictators.

9 posted on 08/14/2008 9:22:14 AM PDT by CaptRon (Pedicaris alive or Raisuli dead)
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To: ichabod1
But the question of whether we rise to the occasion militarily is larger than the Georgian Question. The Real Question is whether we’re willing to go to war to support the so-called orange democracies of the former soviet bloc.

Too late for direct military action. However, how can you give military aid, training, etc. to a state like Georgia and not insure they are armed to the teeth? They weren't. And how can you insure that its leadership is not after their ego building aspirations?

If you have a half-ass approach then you get half-ass results. Being world-policeman carries an enormous cost particularly if it's not in your hemisphere. What's more astonishing to me is that after getting rid of a despot like Hussein and the other despots in Afghanistan, what is put in their place - Islamic states as intolerant to the practice of freedom of religion and thought as their fore bearers. Time to get out of those *hit-holes and concentrate on states like Georgia (with majority Christian populations) and democracies or republics more worthy of sacrificing Western blood. But as long as we allow our leadership to pursue reckless and feckless policies of supporting Islamic type states - Kosovo, Bosnia-Herzegovina, Afghanistan, etc. then our foreign policy is not worth the blood of our children.

10 posted on 08/14/2008 9:49:58 AM PDT by Lent
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To: SJackson
.....tired of European lectures, the Russians are now telling the world that soft power is, well, soft. Moscow doesn’t give a damn about the United Nations, the European Union, the World Court at the Hague, or any finger-pointing moralist from Geneva or London....

....Putin & Co. figure that any popular rhetoric about justice will be trumped by European governments’ concern for energy. With just a few tanks and bombs, in one fell swoop, Russia has cowered its former republics, made them think twice about joining the West, and stopped NATO and maybe E.U. expansion in their tracks. After all, who wants to die for Tbilisi?

Russia does not need a global force-projection capacity; it has sufficient power to muscle its neighbors and thereby humiliate not merely its enemies, but their entire moral pretensions as well.


11 posted on 08/14/2008 10:05:53 AM PDT by Donald Rumsfeld Fan
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