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Wednesday, August 05, 2009
Austin Bay :: Townhall.com Columnist
Russo-Georgia One Year On: From Reset to Repeat?
by Austin Bay
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Is it reset or repeat?

This past week's rhetorical exchanges between Russia and the Republic of Georgia is a definite reminder that the complex political, historical and geographic issues at play in the Russo-Georgia War of August 2008 still plague both nations and affect Russia's relations throughout Europe.

Likewise, the "reset" of U.S.-Russian relations, touted by the Obama administration as a demonstrable change from Bush administration diplomacy, is, well, quite unsettled.

Take the U.S.-Russia "reset" first. The alleged "reset" of bilateral relations began last March with Secretary of State Hillary Clinton's disastrous photo op, involving a large button that she and Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov were to push. The act would symbolize the Obama administration's new, enlightened diplomatic approach to Moscow. The button featured the Russian word for "reset."

Except it didn't. Pity the State Department translator who made the mistake; the Russian word really translated as "overload."

It became the prop that exploded, a bit like a trick cigar in a Three Stooges comedy, and deservedly so -- the entire "reset" pitch by Obama and Clinton was based on the false proposition that somehow the aggressive, knucklehead (fill-in the slur) Bush administration was at fault for coolish, semi-Cold War Washington-Moscow relations.

That was twaddle, repeated by a U.S. national press disinterested in real diplomatic history. Russia's war with Georgia was the primary coolant in Moscow's increasingly bad relations with the U.S. and Western Europe. Russian anger over Kosovo's 2008 unilateral declaration of independence from Serbia was another iceberg in the punch bowl. For at least six years, Russian diplomats had called Kosovo independence, without Serb consent, a "red line" issue that Moscow viewed as a fundamental interest. Secretary Clinton's husband, former President Bill Clinton, had waged the 1999 Kosovo War, which set those conditions. The Bush administration largely stuck with President Clinton's Kosovo policy.

The Kremlin, however, viewed the "Kosovo Precedent" as a bad, United Nations-approved precedent for spinning off ethnic statelets throughout the world.

Defenders of the Obama administration’s "reset" ploy said that the new administration wanted to soothe Russian pride wounded by the loss of the Cold War and their Soviet-era empire as well as endemic economic woes. OK, but note both prior administrations (Clinton and Bush) at times curried favor with coos, calling Russia a partner in peace, a great state, etc.

Count on Vice President Joe Biden to push another wrong button, or at least push his foot into his mouth. In an interview last month, Biden described Russia as suffering from a "shrinking population base" and "a withering economy." Moreover, Russia's "banking sector and structure" probably will not "withstand the next 15 years." This weakened, rapidly declining Russia must make "calculated" decisions. Biden implied those would include security deals accommodating the U.S. and Western Europe. Moscow's acquiescence to NATO membership for Ukraine and Georgia would be an example of an accommodating deal made by a desperate Russian state. Continued...

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About The Author

Austin Bay Austin Bay is author of three novels. His third novel, The Wrong Side of Brightness, was published by Putnam/Jove in June 2003. He has also co-authored four non-fiction books, to include A Quick and Dirty Guide to War: Third Edition (with James Dunnigan, Morrow, 1996).
 
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WHAT'S UP WITH THE HANDSHAKE REJECTION
Will a Russia watcher please explain what the video of BHO being snubbed handshake wise was all about? Inquiring minds want to know more.

Aqaki, I know
you are a Stalinist - but couldn't you try to hide a little better? Russia deliberately sent its citizens into those two areas to provoke trouble - which they did. Long live free Georgia which is pro Western. As for Taft, he is just being his daft self.
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