Female-empowerment comparison shopping

Oh, this endlessly fascinating group of leftists in the Obama White House constantly seeks media attention and cosseting.  The White House press secretary, Jay Carney and his wife, Claire Shipman, ABC news contributor, exemplify the successful, well-connected Washington power couple.  To go with their idyllic life are two cute kids, a family dog (cousin to First Dog, Sunny) and of course, the  picture-perfect DC home.  The Washingtonian interviewed this DC power couple to promote Shipman’s latest female-empowerment tome, The Confidence Code: The Science and Art of Self-Assurance—What Women Should Know, written with co-author, Kathy Kay. This latest literary offering follows the much-discussed Sheryl Sandberg’s, Lean In,  Shipman’s previous guide for working women, Womenomics: Write Your Rules for Success and first female press secretary, Dee Dee Myers’ earlier feminist-offering, Why Women Should Rule the World.  What could be better than more expert advice for women on gaining “self-confidence”….

When choosing books, or vacuum cleaners for that matter, I love internet comparison shopping and customer reviews help me make my purchasing decisions, in an informal sort of oh there are 20 reviews and 18 of them say this book wasted perfectly good trees and two (probably written by the author and his/her mom) say the book deserves a Pulitzer Prize for literature. Oh, here’s a helpful amazon.com customer review for Myers’ offering,  “Why women should rule the world” is a book where men get made fun at, poked, insulted, challenged and disrespected.”    Sandberg’s book offers mostly very positive reviews, but here’s a one-star review that made me laugh, “Don’t hold yourself back; don’t be your own worst enemy. I’m pretty sure I was given a fridge magnet with that exact message on it once. Or maybe it was a coaster.)”  Shipman and Kay’s previous book, Womenomics,  received this helpful comment from a female customer , “Here’s the big mystery solved: if you have kids, your career won’t/can’t be first. Wow. Really?”.  Informed shopping wouldn’t be complete without them, so I read the professional reviews too.  The sisterhood  rises to embrace each girl-power addition though, so here’s Shipman’s fellow ABC reporter/morning talk show personality, Diane Sawyer, “A personal, provocative and challenging book for career women who want less guilt, more life.”   See, I told you these customer reviews help make buying decisions, although vacuum cleaner reviews get right to the point, “High suction, low air flow.”

The Washingtonian turned out all the stops to create a glowing puff piece on the Carney/Shipman home life, replete with glossy, staged photo spread.  We get to see this power couple at home with their two photogenic children and the family pooch, who is a cousin to First Dog, Sunny. How warm and cozy, the pajama-clad Mom and kids in a playful kitchen shot, with a counter laden with perfect breakfast food (enough to feed the entire camera crew, plus some), all artfully arranged.   As American as apple pie, oh, wait, the kitchen wall decor, so thoroughly edgy – it’s framed Soviet propaganda posters (The Week story about the story).

Oh hush libertybelle, your kitchen decor remains outdated country-style with an eclectic splash here and there.  The chickens came home to roost , with my cute curtains with a blue chicken-print ruffle and the cute wooden chicken plaque (gift from one of the kids)  that says “Welcome to My Roost Nest” (oops, I remembered it incorrectly).   Hanging on the cup pegs of my hutch, I hung assorted knick-knacky stuff, like right behind my chair at the table is my welcome plaque, an after-Halloween find that I just love:  “Welcome the Witch Is In”.   Even my house has Soviet propaganda posters, a 30 pack of “Wings Of The Motherland” that my one son brought back from his study abroad to Russia long  ago as a gift for my other son.  My other son treasured these propaganda posters so much, that the entire pack is still sitting here in my computer room, gathering dust and he moved out many moons (years) ago. Luckily, I got a very beautiful teapot and a Russian cookbook from that trip.   Of course, my other son (being libertybelle’s offspring) is more concerned with his guns and as he likes to remind us constantly – he is a single issue voter, guess, yep, a 2nd Amendment one, so I suppose these posters will remain here…..  unless I regift them to 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue…or maybe the Carney/Shipman home would like to add to their collection….

9 Comments

Filed under General Interest, Politics, The Media

Timely quote

Gladius sent a timely quote, in light of the two latest lunatic mass attacks – at Fort Hood and now this high school stabbing rampage in PA.  So, before the government institutes new rules for the Army or some idiot suggests new controls on sharp kitchen utensils, let’s pause and remember :

“We must reject the idea that every time a law’s broken, society is guilty rather than the lawbreaker. It is time to restore the American precept that each individual is accountable for his actions.”
― Ronald Reagan

Leave a comment

Filed under General Interest, Good Advice, Quotes To Ponder

Stay tuned

Pressed for time this morning, so I am keeping this to a short comment and two links.   This is back to President Obama and his red lines and certainty about the source of the alleged chemical weapons attacks in Syria.  You remember, the president definitively pinned a chemical attack last year on the Assad regime, which he used as his justification for US military intervention in Syria.  He changed his mind on the attack at the 11th hour .  Not only was the Syrian resistance mouthpiece, Elizabeth O’Bagy a fraud, but the President’s definitive intelligence on the sarin was bogus too, according to this Seymour Hersh report.  Holy cow, Hersh lays out the Turkish rat line of funneling weapons from Libya to Syria using combined US, Turkish, British and a few other countries’ help.  This report should wake-up the mainstream press in America and maybe we’ll finally get them to pressure this White House to fess up on Benghazi. Here are the links:

First is the August 8, 2013 Nightwatch, the highly-respected open source intelligence report by John McCreary.  Pay attention to the comments on the Syria chemical weapons attack (link here).

Next is the April 6, 2014 Seymour Hersh dynamite piece: “The Red Line and the Rat Line, Seymour M. Hersh on Obama, Erdoğan and the Syrian rebels”. Everything you wanted to know about Benghazi, prior to the attack on that US compound, is in this report.  Mr. Hersh’s report should blow some holes in the White House’s stonewall effort.  Stay tuned.

3 Comments

Filed under Foreign Policy, General Interest, Military, Politics, The Media

Rainy day news

One of those rainy day Sundays here, so this will be short.  Courtesy of JK, here’s a Reuters article on the religion of Peace’s most faithful in action (Syria):  “Apocalyptic prophecies drive both sides to Syrian battle for end of time”

Reuters is full of interesting tidbits today: “Navies of Iran, Pakistan to hold joint drill in Hormuz strait”

Wouldn’t want to neglect the far side of the world: “U.S., in nod to Tokyo, to send more ships to Japan, prods China”

That’s it for today, now it’s time to cook a late breakfast, brunch, if you prefer, then back to reading Minta’s excellent suggestion – Helen MacInnes.  I’m starting with “Assignment in Brittany” and I’m already falling for the noble Hearne, British spy extraordinaire.  Thanks Minta:-)

7 Comments

Filed under Foreign Policy, General Interest, Military, Politics

You can teach an old dog new tricks

Imagine that, the George W. Bush, that the left never tires of dubbing a dimwit talks about personal diplomacy in the most insightful, thoughtful manner imaginable – simple, direct and honest in this video at The Washington Free Beacon.  He relates how two years ago he began to think about ways to live life to the fullest and from that soul-searching, he picked up a paintbrush and began this new adventure.  His paintings of world leaders, a new exhibit at his presidential library in Dallas, TX, go on display today.   (CNN story here)  President Bush got inspired to paint two years ago after reading Sir Winston Churchill writings, he also mentioned another principal mentor in his life, his father, George H. Bush.   One can only guess who our current hope and change champion would list as people who inspired him…… oh wait, we know……. Frank Marshall Davis and Edward Said.

Leave a comment

Filed under Foreign Policy, General Interest, History, Politics

What the hell does that really mean?

The punditry experts shrilled on today about the latest Fort Hood shooting.  Having decades of experience with soldiers, naturally, I too shrilled on, but luckily for y’all, I confined mine to an email to a friend.  Okay, so the PTSD diagnosis seems to loom large in many of the conversations and yes, I believe PTSD exists, in that many people face difficulties coping with traumatic events and sometimes these difficulties become long-term, incapacitating and professional help might help.   Being highly skeptical of much that passes for medical certainty amongst the mental health community, lets just say, perhaps building a strong personal support network of family, friends, clergy to turn to in times of trouble might be just as good….. maybe even better.

Alas, we live in a world where we to turn to professionals and experts for everything.  I’ll refer back to a G. Murphy Donovan article, The Psychobabble Bubble :

“Psychiatry and psychology are omniscient when it comes to diagnosis, but incapable of professional restraint or anticipating the unintended consequences of indulgence and quackery. Psych practitioners often plead for equality with other medical specialties and then do their damnedest to court ridicule. Credibility is earned, not assumed, in any discipline. Good intentions are a weak tea.”

From there, it’s time to  follow GMD’s link to one of his favorite writers, Theodore Dalrymple and his article, Everyone on the Couch.  Mr Dalrymple states:

“The word “unhappy” is an implicit call to self-examination; the word “depressed” is, at least nowadays, a call to the doctor. It is no coincidence that the age of the DSM should coincide with a tenth of the population’s taking antidepressants—drugs that, for the most part, are placebos when not outright harmful. None of this excludes the possibility, of course, that some diagnoses will run afoul of pressure-group politics by the time the DSM-6 comes out.”

Here’s a review from last year in The Economist on the DSM-5 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition), By the book worth reading, which states:

“Grief. Indulgence. Unhealthy habits. All, it seems, may be classified as mental derangement, and treated as such. And the sets of symptoms described by the DSM are often common. More than one American child in ten has been diagnosed, using the DSM’s definition, with ADHD—and about two-thirds of those so diagnosed are now prescribed drugs.”

I’m not going to dismiss PTSD, because I do believe traumatic events can incapacitate people or cause obstacles to leading a happy, productive life.  Most assuredly some traumas for some people are harder to cope with.  I’ve had a few that were challenging   in my life, so I am not suggesting people avoid seeking professional help, if they feel that is in their best interests.  Unlike the experts, I believe in thinking for myself and I follow my own battle plan for dealing with trauma – back up and regroup, then fight on.  It’s really the only way to take that hill or move mountains.  In the words of a dear friend of mine, a devout Roman Catholic, “God does not give us more crosses than we can bear!”  That is how I choose to live my life, free of antidepressants, alcohol – fighting on.  I don’t believe in insurmountable obstacles.  I cry, I whine, then I drive on.  Life is measured and I want to treasure as much of mine as possible.  Take that as my inexpert opinion.

Sometimes official statements stick with me and I’ll think about them for days, weeks, sometimes even years later, I’ll remember them and ponder, “what the hell does that even really mean?” or I’ll have a witch moment and channel that expert on all things, HRC, and think, “what difference, at this point, does it make”.  In the end, the shooter in this mass murder (not tragedy) is dead, that’s a fact.  Here’s another fact, military officials rushed to assure us that the shooter had psychiatric problems and had been seeing an Army psychiatrist.  Anyone who took solace from that answer needs his/her head examined is what I was thinking today.  Let me ponder that, a Fort Hood psychiatrist, of the same pond from whence MAJ Nidal Hasan swam, the self-same pond that ignored his radicalized views, yes that assurance from officialdom was uttered yesterday.  And, what was MAJ Hasan’s job, this radical nut who waged jihad against American soldiers on American soil?  Oh, yes, he was a psychiatrist who treated soldiers for PTSD and other mental health issues….  Yes, don’t’ think, just accept that this latest shooter had been seen by “mental health professionals”, all the appropriate career-saving dots have been checked in this chain of command.  Rest easy, don’t question, The shooter’s dead, we will never know what he was thinking, no career-ending negligence in sight, the news cycle will move on faster than the grieving families can bury their dead and after all, “what difference, at this point, does it make?”  The shooter had mental health issues and was being seen by an Army psychiatrist at Fort Hood….

 

11 Comments

Filed under Culture Wars, General Interest, Military, Politics, The Media

Putin/Palin chat

Enough sad news tonight – here’s a very funny video – Sarah Palin and Vladimir Putin shooting the shit and other stuff………

1 Comment

Filed under General Interest, Politics

A picture paints a thousand words….

Repeatedly I’ve argued against escalating the crisis in Ukraine, but the West should act.  The United States should work within the framework of NATO to beef up both NATO’s training and weapons systems.  Revisiting discussions on NATO’s most vulnerable eastern countries defense against Russian aggression, to include the scrapped missile defense systems in Poland and the Czech Republic, should have already been high-profile.  President Obama taking a military option off the table from the start gave Putin a clear message that the West won’t act, setting a dangerous precedent and weakness is more provocative than a show of strength.  A show of strength gives adversaries some second thoughts on using more force, because they know there might be a high cost to further action.  Here are some ideas worth considering, in this USA Today piece, “Ukraine’s military unprepared to hurt Russia”.  They say a picture paints a thousand words and  if the best this administration’s collective brain trust  can muster  is Jen Psaki holding a placard announcing US “support” of Ukraine…… a lame selfie worthy of a 12 year-old on facebook, then we’re in deep, deep trouble!  The world is laughing at us, not with us.

It’s time to get serious and put some real options into play.  Now is not the time for sweeping cuts to our military, with both China and Russia asserting themselves beyond their borders and so many smaller countries falling into disarray.  Iran going nuclear will fuel an entirely more dangerous nuclear weapons proliferation rush, as other Arab states decide that acquiring nuclear capability is in their national defense interests now.  President Obama facilitated Iran going nuclear.  Instability looks to be the trend for the foreseeable future and we’re stuck with this inept clown leading us from behind until 2016, which is a long, long time.

The United States, as I’ve said before, needs to get serious about breaking free of our domestic malaise.  Please, President Obama, let the force of the American entrepreneurial engine roar back to life!  Remove the heavy foot of government from the US energy sector and let it breath again.  Sign the Keystone pipeline deal.  And frack, frack, frack!

19 Comments

Filed under Foreign Policy, General Interest, Military, Politics, The Media

The Orient Express….

Before you listen to one more saber-rattler, please take the time to read David P. Goldman’s wise insights at PJ Media, “Not Even Wrong About Russia”.

Then read his December 22, 2013 pick for the most under-reported foreign news story of 2013 (here).

Okay, here’s a JK link (yes, he’s amazing at coming up with fascinating links – here it is).

The hysterics boggles my mind.  A review of the actual discussions, agreements and history of the immediate post-Soviet period is in order, then start reading back through all the missteps on both sides, and once you’ve done that take a deep breath, calm down and think.  I  read and posted the link previously of an informative piece, “Don’t Kid Yourself about Ukraine”, by G. Murphy Donovan at The American Thinker a couple days ago, in which he quoted open source news reporting to back his points.  In the comments section, he was accused of spreading disinformation, being a communist and working for Mr. Putin.  Is this really what it’s come to in America, when you don’t buy into the political posturing?  A distinguished Air Force officer, who devoted his life to keeping America safe gets accused of being a communist, because he dared to challenge the political hacks in DC and the drivel they are feeding us.  How ridiculous and I was outraged on his behalf!  If we can’t question or discuss events openly, then we are surely in trouble in America.

Why doesn’t the mainstream press report any of these facts that would give us a clearer understanding of the events that led up to this latest crisis?

 

4 Comments

Filed under Foreign Policy, General Interest, Military, Politics

When in doubt, listen to George Friedman

I admit to not knowing enough about Ukraine to feel confident that I’m well-informed on the situation, but I keep reading and listening to reports to try to gain a better understanding of the situation.  Most of the true reporting these days seems to come from amateur bloggers, who dig up everything from old news reports to official government documents, to flesh out the history of  Ukraines’s troubled path during the post-Soviet era.  Here’s a little quiz from the Christian Science Monitor, “How much do you know about Ukraine?  Take our quiz”.  I didn’t know much, because on a lot of these questions – I guessed.  I wonder how our political leaders who rush to the nearest microphone to support various action, regards Ukraine, to include calling for escalation of the crisis, know???

Well, the same goes for the geopolitical intricacies at play in this Ukraine crisis, which finds the West and Russia at odds and endless advice from experts in the West on how to deal with Putin.

Thanks to JK’s incredible memory and researching ability, here is a 2009 George Friedman analysis that far surpasses anything else I’ve come across to explain the situation – “The Western View of Russia” is republished with permission of Stratfor.”:

The Western View of Russia
Geopolitical Weekly
Monday, August 31, 2009 – 15:11 Print Text Size

By George Friedman

A months-long White House review of a pair of U.S. ballistic missile defense (BMD) installations slated for Poland and the Czech Republic is nearing completion. The review is expected to present a number of options ranging from pushing forward with the installations as planned to canceling them outright. The Obama administration has yet to decide what course to follow. Rumors are running wild in Poland and the Czech Republic that the United States has reconsidered its plan to place ballistic defense systems in their countries. The rumors stem from a top U.S. BMD lobbying group that said this past week that the U.S. plan was all but dead.

The ultimate U.S. decision on BMD depends upon both the upcoming summit of the five permanent U.N. Security Council members plus Germany on the Iranian nuclear program and Russia’s response to those talks. If Russia does not cooperate in sanctions, but instead continues to maintain close relations with Iran, we suspect that the BMD plan will remain intact. Either way, the BMD issue offers a good opportunity to re-examine U.S. and Western relations with Russia and how they have evolved.

Cold War vs. Post-Cold War
There has been a recurring theme in the discussions between Russia and the West over the past year: the return of the Cold War. U.S. President Barack Obama, for example, accused Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin of having one foot in the Cold War. The Russians have in turn accused the Americans of thinking in terms of the Cold War. Eastern Europeans have expressed fears that the Russians continue to view their relationship with Europe in terms of the Cold War. Other Europeans have expressed concern that both Americans and Russians might drag Europe into another Cold War.

For many in the West, the more mature and stable Western-Russian relationship is what they call the “Post-Cold War world.” In this world, the Russians no longer regard the West as an enemy, and view the other republics of the former Soviet Union (FSU) as independent states free to forge whatever relations they wish with the West. Russia should welcome or at least be indifferent to such matters. Russia instead should be concentrating on economic development while integrating lessons learned from the West into its political and social thinking. The Russians should stop thinking in politico-military terms, the terms of the Cold War. Instead, they should think in the new paradigm in which Russia is part of the Western economic system, albeit a backward one needing time and institution-building to become a full partner with the West. All other thinking is a throwback to the Cold War.

This was the thinking behind the idea of resetting U.S.-Russian relations. Hillary Clinton’s “reset” button was meant to move U.S.-Russian relations away from what Washington thought of as a return to the Cold War from its preferred period, which existed between 1991 and the deterioration of U.S.-Russian relations after Ukraine’s 2004 Orange Revolution. The United States was in a bimodal condition when it came to Russian relations: Either it was the Cold War or it was post-Cold War.

The Russians took a more jaundiced view of the post-Cold War world. For Moscow, rather than a period of reform, the post-Cold War period was one of decay and chaos. Old institutions had collapsed, but new institutions had not emerged. Instead, there was the chaos of privatization, essentially a wild free-for-all during which social order collapsed. Western institutions, including everything from banks to universities, were complicit in this collapse. Western banks were eager to take advantage of the new pools of privately expropriated money, while Western advisers were eager to advise the Russians on how to become Westerners. In the meantime, workers went unpaid, life expectancy and birth rates declined, and the basic institutions that had provided order under communism decayed — or worse, became complicit in the looting. The post-Cold War world was not a happy time in Russia: It was a catastrophic period for Russian power.

Herein lies the gulf between the West and the Russians. The West divides the world between the Cold War and the post-Cold War world. It clearly prefers the post-Cold War world, not so much because of the social condition of Russia, but because the post-Cold War world lacked the geopolitical challenge posed by the Soviet Union — everything from wars of national liberation to the threat of nuclear war was gone. From the Russian point of view, the social chaos of the post-Cold War world was unbearable. Meanwhile, the end of a Russian challenge to the West meant from the Russian point of view that Moscow was helpless in the face of Western plans for reordering the institutions and power arrangements of the region without regard to Russian interests.

As mentioned, Westerners think in term of two eras, the Cold War and the Post-Cold War era. This distinction is institutionalized in Western expertise on Russia. And it divides into two classes of Russia experts. There are those who came to maturity during the Cold War in the 1970s and 1980s, whose basic framework is to think of Russia as a global threat. Then, there are those who came to maturity in the later 1980s and 1990s. Their view of Russia is of a failed state that can stabilize its situation for a time by subordinating itself to Western institutions and values, or continue its inexorable decline.

These two generations clash constantly. Interestingly, the distinction is not so much ideological as generational. The older group looks at Russian behavior with a more skeptical eye, assuming that Putin, a KGB man, has in mind the resurrection of Soviet power. The post-Cold War generation that controlled U.S.-Russian policy during both the Clinton and Bush administrations is more interesting. During both administrations, this generation believed in the idea that economic liberalization and political liberalization were inextricably bound together. It believed that Russia was headed in the right direction if only Moscow did not try to reassert itself geopolitically and militarily, and if Moscow did not try to control the economy or society with excessive state power. It saw the Russian evolution during the mid-to-late 2000s as an unfortunate and unnecessary development moving Russia away from the path that was best for it, and it sees the Cold War generation’s response to Russia’s behavior as counterproductive.

The Post-Post Cold War World
The U.S. and other Westerners’ understanding of Russia is trapped in a nonproductive paradigm. For Russia, the choice isn’t between the Cold War or the Post-Cold War world. This dichotomy denies the possibility of, if you will, a post-post-Cold War world — or to get away from excessive posts, a world in which Russia is a major regional power, with a stable if troubled economy, functional society and regional interests it must protect.

Russia cannot go back to the Cold War, which consisted of three parts. First, there was the nuclear relationship. Second, there was the Soviet military threat to both Europe and the Far East; the ability to deploy large military formations throughout the Eurasian landmass. And third, there were the wars of national liberation funded and guided by the Soviets, and designed to create powers allied with the Soviets on a global scale and to sap U.S. power in endless counterinsurgencies.

While the nuclear balance remains, by itself it is hollow. Without other dimensions of Russian power, the threat to engage in mutual assured destruction has little meaning. Russia’s military could re-evolve to pose a Eurasian threat; as we have pointed out before, in Russia, the status of the economy does not historically correlate to Russian military power. At the same time, it would take a generation of development to threaten the domination of the European peninsula — and Russia today has far fewer people and resources than the whole of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact that it rallied to that effort. Finally, while Russia could certainly fund insurgencies, the ideological power of Marxism is gone, and in any case Russia is not a Marxist state. Building wars of national liberation around pure finance is not as easy as it looks. There is no road back to the Cold War. But neither is there a road back to the post-Cold War period.

There was a period in the mid-to-late 1990s when the West could have destroyed the Russian Federation. Instead, the West chose a combined strategy of ignoring Russia while irritating it with economic policies that were unhelpful to say the least, and military policies like Kosovo designed to drive home Russia’s impotence. There is the old saw of not teasing a bear, but if you must, being sure to kill it. Operating on the myth of nation-building, the West thought it could rebuild Russia in its own image. To this day, most of the post-Cold War experts do not grasp the degree to which Russians saw their efforts as a deliberate attempt to destroy Russia and the degree to which Russians are committed never to return to that time. It is hard to imagine anything as infuriating for the Russians as the reset button the Clinton administration’s Russia experts — who now dominate Obama’s Russia policy — presented the Russian leadership in all seriousness. The Russians simply do not intend to return to the Post-Cold War era Western experts recall so fondly.

The resurrection of talks on the reduction of nuclear stockpiles provides an example of the post-Cold generation’s misjudgment in its response to Russia. These START talks once were urgent matters. They are not urgent any longer. The threat of nuclear war is not part of the current equation. Maintaining that semblance of parity with the United States and placing limits on the American arsenal are certainly valuable from the Russian perspective, but it is no longer a fundamental issue to them. Some have suggested using these talks as a confidence-building measure. But from the Russian point of view, START is a peripheral issue, and Washington’s focus on it is an indication that the United States is not prepared to take Russia’s current pressing interests seriously.

Continued lectures on human rights and economic liberalization, which fall on similarly deaf Russian ears, provide another example of the post-Cold War generation’s misjudgment in its response to Russia. The period in which human rights and economic liberalization were centerpieces of Russian state policy is remembered — and not only by the Russian political elite — as among the worst periods of recent Russian history. No one wants to go back there, but the Russians hear constant Western calls to return to that chaos. The Russians’ conviction is that post-Cold War Western officials want to finish the job they began. The critical point that post-Cold War officials frequently don’t grasp is that the Russians see them as at least as dangerous to Russian interests as the Cold War generation.

The Russian view is that neither the Cold War nor the post-Cold War is the proper paradigm. Russia is not challenging the United States for global hegemony. But neither is Russia prepared simply to allow the West to create an alliance of nations around Russia’s border. Russia is the dominant power in the FSU. Its economic strategy is to focus on the development and export of primary commodities, from natural gas to grain. In order to do this, it wants to align primary commodity policies in the republics of the former Soviet Union, particularly those concerning energy resources. Economic and strategic interests combine to make the status of the former Soviet republics a primary strategic interest. This is neither a perspective from the Cold War or from the post-Cold War, but a logical Russian perspective on a new age.

While Russia’s concerns with Georgia are the noisiest, it is not the key Russian concern in its near abroad — Ukraine is. So long as the United States is serious about including Ukraine in NATO, the United States represents a direct threat to Russian national security. A glance at a map shows why the Russians think this.

Russia remains interested in Central Europe as well. It is not seeking hegemony, but a neutral buffer zone between Germany in particular and the former Soviet Union, with former satellite states like Poland of crucial importance to Moscow. It sees the potential Polish BMD installation and membership of the Baltic states in NATO as direct and unnecessary challenges to Russian national interest.

Responding to the United States
As the United States causes discomfort for the Russians, Russia will in turn cause discomfort for the United States. The U.S. sore spot is the Middle East, and Iran in particular. Therefore, the Russians will respond to American pressure on them where it hurts Washington the most.

The Cold Warriors don’t understand the limits of Russian power. The post-Cold Warriors don’t understand the degree to which they are distrusted by Russia, and the logic behind that distrust. The post-Cold Warriors confuse this distrust with a hangover from the Cold War rather than a direct Russian response to the post-Cold War policies they nurtured.

This is not an argument for the West to accommodate the Russians; there are grave risks for the West there. Russian intentions right now do not forecast what Russian intentions might be were Moscow secure in the FSU and had it neutralized Poland. The logic of such things is that as problems are solved, opportunities are created. One therefore must think forward to what might happen through Western accommodation.

At the same time, it is vital to understand that neither the Cold War model nor the post-Cold War model is sufficient to understand Russian intentions and responses right now. We recall the feeling when the Cold War ended that a known and understandable world was gone. The same thing is now happening to the post-Cold War experts: The world in which they operated has dissolved. A very different and complex world has taken its place. Reset buttons are symbols of a return to a past the Russians reject. START talks are from a world long passed. The issues now revolve around Russia’s desire for a sphere of influence, and the willingness and ability of the West to block that ambition.

Somewhere between BMD in Poland and the threat posed by Iran, the West must make a strategic decision about Russia, and live with the consequences.

“The Western View of Russia” is republished with permission of Stratfor.”

 

 

6 Comments

Filed under Foreign Policy, General Interest, History, Military, Politics