Euro-Russian Partnership 
		By Christopher King
		 ccun.org, Redress, November 19, 
		2008
        
Christopher King welcomes the European Union’s resumption of 
		partnership talks with Russia and warns against pressure from new EU 
		members such as Estonia to pursue a US-inspired, dominance-driven 
		agenda, contrary to the European objective to “...make war not only 
		unthinkable but materially impossible” by economic means.
		Happily, the European Union has resumed the partnership discussions with 
		Russia that were suspended following the clash between Russia and 
		Georgia. At that time there were hysterical accusations from most 
		politicians and Western media, particularly in the US and the UK, that 
		Russia was bullying, invading, reverting to Soviet-style behaviour etc 
		and should be punished. George Bush, Gordon Brown and our foreign 
		secretary, David Milliband, led the demands.
 
Now, two former UK 
		army observers for the Organization for Security and Co-operation in 
		Europe who were stationed in Tskhinvali and trapped in the hostilities 
		are to
		
		give evidence that Georgia initiated an unprovoked, indiscriminate 
		and disproportionate attack on Tskhinvali. So the Russian version of 
		events was correct.
We have seen this sort of thing before. 
		Before invading Iraq, George Bush and Anthony Blair claimed that Saddam 
		Hussein was developing nuclear weapons and had chemical weapons and made 
		other wild accusations that were all found to be false. Since our 
		politicians constantly, no, always get things wrong when speaking of the 
		Middle East and Russia, this raises a large number of questions about 
		our security services.
Colin Powell now claims that George 
		Tenant, head of the CIA, assured him that the script that he received 
		from the White House, making the case for the Iraq war to the United 
		Nations, was accurate. Did Tenant lie or was the CIA incompetent? 
		Similarly, Anthony Blair claims that John Scarlett, Chairman of the 
		Joint Intelligence Committee, provided the information on Iraq that 
		formed his “dodgy dossier” and other false information on which he took 
		the UK to war. In view of Mr Scarlett’s appalling incompetence, why was 
		he promoted and given a knighthood? Are the UK’s security services 
		incompetent, are they politicized or did Mr Blair lie? Are all three 
		possibilities true?
Tskhinvali was being shelled and the Russian 
		army entered South Ossetia on 8 August. On 10 August I
		posted an article
		saying that Georgia had militarily provoked Russia over South 
		Ossetia, which was obvious from public information. As it was so readily 
		available, why did Gordon Brown, David Milliband and the rest of our 
		politicians not know of it? They postured for weeks, demanding 
		punishment of Russia for its aggression. Why was George Bush 
		warning the EU about talking to Russia due to its aggressive foreign 
		policy on 14 November, three months later? 
The evidence is that 
		our politicians lie, to the detriment of our national interests. It is 
		enormously encouraging then, to see EU ministers re-engaging with Russia 
		despite UK and US absurd demands for Russia’s punishment. 
The 
		US-Georgian provocation of Russia raises another set of questions 
		regarding those former Soviet countries, Poland, the Czech Republic, 
		Romania and Bulgaria that host US military facilities on Russia’s 
		borders. In the event that one of these countries or the US provokes 
		Russia into a military response, should NATO or the EU come to its aid?
		
Certain former Soviet states such as Poland, Lithuania and Estonia 
		wanted to suspend the partnership talks with Russia as punishment for 
		what they see as aggression. There may be an element of grudge here. One 
		can understand genuine concerns, however, given their experience of the 
		Soviet Union, as well as the existence of substantial ethnic Russian 
		minorities in some states. Nevertheless, they are mistaken both on the 
		facts and the basis on which they view them. 
This difference of 
		view is worth examining closely and fortunately we have some useful 
		information from Estonia. 
The president of Estonia, Toomas Ilves,
		
		gave a lecture at the London School of Economics on 16 October 2008. 
		Speaking somewhat elliptically, President Ilves suggested that, in 
		tolerating the Russian invasion of Georgian territory, there has been a 
		shift within the EU from a values-based philosophy to a results-based or 
		pragmatic paradigm in its foreign policy. He considers that the EU has 
		condoned bad behaviour by Russia due to Europe’s need for Russia’s oil 
		and in appeasing Russian military power, invoking Chamberlain’s infamous 
		meeting with Hitler at Munich. President Ilves claimed that, by 
		contrast, Estonia and other former Soviet states chose value-based 
		foreign policies. He appeared also to be saying that, because it was 
		democratically elected, the government of Georgia should be supported 
		against the government of Russia which is not democratic. He clearly 
		wishes some form of punitive action against Russia. 
President 
		Ilves’s values appear to be based on the primacy of territorial 
		sovereignty and democracy. A problem with his case is that 150 Estonian 
		troops are in Afghanistan, both violating that country’s sovereignty and 
		attempting to terrorize its population into accepting democracy. With 
		NATO as an example of the way Western democracies behave, that is 
		unlikely to be successful. President Ilves gave no consideration to 
		these contradictions.
Nor did President Ilves suggest how 
		Russia’s attitudes and political system may be constructively influenced 
		by the EU, that is, how the EU can assist Russia to move toward 
		democracy since there is little possibility of invading Russia and 
		forcing democracy on it as in Iraq and Afghanistan. Moreover, it should 
		be evident that if any country is treated punitively as an enemy, it 
		will react in like terms. The only prospect for improving Russia’s 
		political system is to engage with it as the “old Europe” countries are 
		doing.
Since he speaks of values, it must be that President Ilves 
		has misunderstood the values operating in this situation. His wish to 
		punish Russia derives from a confrontational philosophy which 
		extrapolates in the final analysis to violence and warfare. Nor is he 
		alone in this. That is the philosophy of the United States and the 
		United Kingdom. One of the reasons for this is that in their history 
		these countries have greatly benefited from warfare and expansionism.
		
The first settlers, mainly British, in what is now the US, 
		confiscated native American lands. At the time of the declaration of 
		independence in 1776, the US comprised 13 states, having about one 
		quarter of its present area. Armed conflict with the First People and 
		the British government were an integral part of the US’s creation. 
		Subsequently, the US expanded its lands through warfare, purchase and 
		annexation. The US’s 50th state is Hawaii, annexed in 1898 and made a 
		state in 1959.
The US fought Japan in World War II because it was 
		attacked by Japan. It was a lesser but important participant in two wars 
		against Germany, with Russia bearing most of the war effort in World War 
		II. Participation in these military successes are probably the basis of 
		the folk myth that it is the US’s mission to bring freedom and democracy 
		to the world.  
More recently, the Bush administration has 
		taken the US’s oil-orientated Middle East policy to its logical 
		conclusion. Consistent with the country’s culture, it has invaded and 
		occupied Iraq and Afghanistan following a de facto occupation of Saudi 
		Arabia. Militarism and expansionism may be seen as integral to US 
		culture
The UK built its wealth on a world empire that it now has 
		difficulty in accepting no longer exists. It was also one of the victors 
		in world wars I and II. Although it invaded and occupied many countries, 
		the UK has not had an occupier on its territory for a thousand years; 
		nor has the US in its short history.
The UK and US, therefore, 
		have had their experience of warfare and expansionism reinforced by 
		success and have no reason to seek another philosophy. They exemplify in 
		practice the confrontational philosophy that President Ilves advocates.
		
By contrast, warfare and expansionism over many centuries within 
		continental Europe came to be seen as harmful and undesirable. The 
		European Union is a reaction World War I and World War II. There was a 
		conscious attempt to find means of averting future European wars which 
		began with the proposal by France to Germany in 1950 to form the 
		European Coal and Steel Community, with the explicit objective to 
		“...make war not only unthinkable but materially impossible”, by 
		economic means. Economic cooperation was to be the peaceful means to a 
		value-based end. Critically, economic success was not the primary 
		objective. This cannot be over-emphasized: the primary objective was 
		avoidance of warfare. The grouping of six original members evolved into 
		the European Common Market and now the European Union. The EU has been 
		highly successful in terms of its original objective of avoiding 
		warfare, with economic success a fortunate side effect.
President 
		Ilves suggests that there has been a paradigm shift to pragmatism within 
		the EU. That is not the case. The current dissonance between the 
		original EU members and the former Soviet satellites over Russia is 
		because they do not feel the original impetus of the founding states. 
		Their most recent experience is of 50 years of poverty under the Soviet 
		Union so it is understandable that their primary motivations are firstly 
		economic and secondly to gain security through NATO and the backing of 
		the United States. They do not appreciate the US’s culture nor its 
		strategy of world dominance developed by Dick Cheney and Paul Wolfowitz 
		in 1989 as the Defence Planning Guidelines, following the fall of the 
		Soviet Union. The Eastern European countries’ belief that the US’s 
		economic interests coincide with those of Europe is a mistaken one. The 
		US seeks economic dominance. Similarly, it is the dominant partner in 
		NATO, which it is currently using to further its stated vital interests 
		in the Middle East in “pre-emptive” wars. This is far from the original 
		purpose of NATO, which was intended to be purely defensive. 
This 
		misperception by the Eastern European countries, due to their recent 
		history, of the philosophy underpinning the EU, is the reason why they 
		are susceptible to military cooperation with the US against Russia and 
		see no conflict between joining the EU while accepting US military 
		installations on their territory. Indeed, some other EU countries appear 
		to have lost sight of the EU’s original purpose, the UK in particular. 
		Non-members, e.g. Turkey, see accession to the EU purely in terms of 
		economic benefits. The US has pressed for the Eastern European countries 
		to join both the EU and NATO, which it perceives as its route to 
		influence Europe in its own interests.
		I have outlined 
		why NATO is and always has been an illusory defence for Europe. Europe 
		believed in the US’s benign nature immediately following World War II 
		for the same reason that the Eastern European countries currently do.
		
Accordingly, President Ilves suggests that NATO undertook 
		military action with the US in Afghanistan and Iraq in order to maintain 
		its existence following the collapse of the Soviet Union. That is a 
		completely pragmatic reason not compatible with his claim to have a 
		value-based foreign policy.
Following the collapse of the Soviet 
		Union, the narrative of the US and EU is that they assisted Russia both 
		economically and in setting up fully democratic institutions. Jeffrey 
		Sachs of Columbia University was a key consultant who worked with the 
		Russian authorities on the economic changeover from a command to a 
		market economy, simultaneously with the change to a democracy. He had 
		been successful in doing this in Poland where he obtained US loans for 
		the purpose and wanted the US government to support the Russian economic 
		changeover. He resigned from this assignment because he learned that 
		Dick Cheney did not want to help Russia. Sachs says, “...he [Cheney] 
		wanted Russia brought to its knees”. The reason is not difficult to see. 
		A strong Russia, particularly in concert with the EU, would be 
		independent of the US and would be a rival economic and military power. 
		In the event, the Russian economy collapsed along with its new 
		democratic institutions, to became an oligarchy. Monarchy may be 
		considered to be a form of oligarchy, so Russia returned to these 19th 
		century pre-revolution roots that are its only experience of government 
		as an alternative to communism.
The 10 years or so of Russia’s 
		post-Soviet economic weakness was a period that the US used to advantage 
		in ignoring its agreement not to bring the Eastern European countries 
		into NATO and in unilaterally abrogating the anti-ballistic missile 
		treaty with Russia. Over this period, Russia has strengthened its ties 
		with the EU. Its humiliating economic collapse and the US’s contempt for 
		its treaties has caused resentments. Georgia’s unwise decision to 
		resolve by military means its territorial dispute with Russia over South 
		Ossetia was clearly an opportunity for the Russians to respond with 
		substantial justice on their side and simultaneously send a message that 
		they had been pushed too far.  
Russia’s experience of World 
		War II, or the Great Patriotic War, in which it lost 22 million dead, or 
		13 per cent of its total population, underlies its present security 
		concerns. This shared experience and a shared European culture gives 
		Russia a common interest with the EU in moving towards a closer 
		partnership based on avoidance of war. As for the former Soviet 
		satellites, the generation that remembers the privations of occupation 
		and oppression might well find it difficult to work with Russia. It is 
		nevertheless essential that they should do so, as France did with 
		Germany only five years after World War II.
This motivation to 
		avoid war is not felt by the US. It is a European matter and the US 
		should stay out of matters concerning EU membership, which it has not 
		done to date. It should also cease pressing for further enlargement of 
		NATO in disregard of Russia’s concerns.
		As I have outlined, 
		the EU needs to revise the terms of its NATO membership, possibly 
		forming an independent European force as France proposes and possibly 
		leaving NATO. 
The US’s involvement on the Georgian side in the 
		South Ossetian debacle, together with US bases and missiles in Eastern 
		Europe, are clear indications of its objectives. They also highlight the 
		necessity to raise awareness within Europe and especially within the 
		Eastern European states that the primary purpose of the EU is not 
		economic. It is the avoidance of warfare by economic means. From that 
		perspective, every effort should be made to achieve treaties aimed at 
		bringing Russia’s institutions into convergence with those of the EU. 
		The EU’s success to date both in avoiding warfare between its states 
		and, largely as a consequence, achieving economic prosperity, 
		demonstrates the importance of that endeavour. 
		Christopher King is a retired consultant and lecturer in management 
		and marketing. He lives in London, UK.
		
		http://www.redress.cc/global/cking20081117 
      
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