Putin Fights Back
by Mike Whitney
www.opednews.com. October 9, 2006
The confrontation between Russia and Georgia
looks like a dust-up between neighbors over the arrest of 4 Russian
officers accused of spying. In reality, it is a struggle between
the Bush administration and Russian President Putin for control
of Central Asia. The stakes couldn't be higher and it appears
as though the conflagration could go on for some time to come.__
The standoff began last week when Georgia
President Mikail Saakashvili arrested the 4 officers and charged
them with espionage. Putin protested their detention to the UN
and demanded their immediate release. He then phoned the White
House and issued a terse warning that "any actions taken
by third parties (the Bush administration) would be considered
encouragement of Georgia's destructive policy and were unacceptable
for peace and dangerous for the peace and stability of the region."
(Itar-Tass News agency)__
The phone call shows that Putin knows
where the plan originated and who is ultimately responsible. It
also illustrates how the relationship between Bush and Putin has
steadily deteriorated and is increasingly adversarial.__
Saakashvili has since retreated from his
hard-line position and delivered the 4 officers to the care of
the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE)
The UN group then promptly returned the men to Russia. In the
interim, the United States blocked a resolution that would have
quickly resolved the dispute, a move which further angered Moscow.__
So, what is going on here?__
Saakashvili is an American stooge no different
than Karzai in Afghanistan. He came to power via the American-sponsored
"Rose Revolution" which swept Eduard Shevardnadze from
office and replaced him with the Yale-educated neocon puppet,
Saakashvili. The "color-coded" revolutions have since
been exposed as US-backed charades in which NED-funded NGOs foment
political upheaval by providing financial resources, printing
presses and logistical support to opposition parties within the
given system. It has become the preferred method of "regime
change" for the Western elites who favor spreading American-style
capitalism by peaceful means rather than Iraq-type violence.__
Moscow is on Washington's target-list
and the issues run deeper than Putin's "alleged" departure
from democratic reforms. Putin has joined in a broad-based security
alliance with China and other key nations in Central Asia. Under
the auspices of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) the
member states have set up a parallel NATO-type collective that
threatens to derail Bush's plan to expand American influence throughout
the region. The 19th century Great Game to control Eurasia has
resumed under the rubric of the war on terror and the nations
of the region are realigning themselves to fend off future American
intervention.__
As Michel Chossudovsky notes in a recent
article "The Next Phase of the Middle East War" (Global
Research):__
"Military exercises organized by
Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Tajikistan under the Collective
Security Treaty Organization (CSTO) were launched in late August.
These war games, officially tagged as part of a counter terrorism
program were conducted in response to US-Israeli military threats
in the region including planned attacks against Iran".__
Russia also conducted war games with China
earlier in the year setting aside their traditional differences
and suspicions to achieve the mutual goal of enhanced security
from foreign aggression. Putin clearly has not been hoodwinked
by Bush's fictitious war on terror. Like the other leaders in
the region, he is anticipating that the US will continue to push
into Central Asia, establishing bases and pipeline routes while
trying to gain control the vast reserves of oil and natural gas.__
Political heavyweight, Zbigniew Brzezinski,
clarified the importance of Central Asia to US plans for global
dominance in his book, "The Grand Chessboard". In it
he states:__
"Ever since the continents started
interacting politically, some 500 years ago, Eurasia has been
the center of world power"..."For America, the chief
geopolitical prize is Eurasia-and America's global primacy is
directly dependent on how long and how effectively its preponderance
on the Eurasian continent is sustained"...."How America
manages Eurasia is critical. Eurasia is the globe's largest continent
and is geopolitically axial. A power that dominates Eurasia would
control two of the world's three most advanced and economically
productive regions. A mere glance at the map also suggests that
control over Eurasia would almost automatically entail Africa's
subordination, rendering the Western Hemisphere and Oceania geopolitically
peripheral to the world's central continent. About 75% of the
world's people live in Eurasia and most of the world's physical
wealth as well, both in its enterprises and underneath its soil.
Eurasia accounts for 60% of the world's GNP and about three-fourths
of the world's known energy resources." ("The Grand
Chessboard")__
Brzezinski's book provides the basic blueprint
(which was further elaborated in the Project for the New American
Century) for the administration's present policy in Central Asia.
The current maneuverings in Georgia are the predictable flare-ups
that result from a policy that is rooted in hostility and expansion.__
Washington has used the cover of the Rose
and Orange revolutions to push its "cat's paw" NATO
further into Eurasia, establish more military bases, and to surround
Russia. NATO in Ukraine and Georgia is the equivalent of fully-equipped
Russian bases in Toronto and Tijuana. No American president would
even consider allowing that to take place.____
The growing distrust between Washington
and Moscow goes beyond Bush's plan to deploy NATO to the former
Soviet republics. Washington is also unhappy with Putin's nationalizing
the oil industry (Gazprom) and ditching the dollar in the oil
trade. Just months ago, Putin announced that he would switch from
the "international currency" (the greenback) to the
ruble. Presently, Russia provides 15.4% of world daily output
of oil; second only to Saudi Arabia. Previously, oil transactions
had been denominated exclusively in dollars. This de-facto monopoly
in the oil trade is a great boon to the American economy. It forces
central banks around the world to stockpile mountains of dollars.
By some accounts, there could be as much as $4.6 trillion either
in central banks or circulating in oil transactions.__Putin's
conversion to the ruble poses a direct threat to America's dollar
hegemony and could potentially send hundreds of billions of dollars
back to the United States triggering massive hyper-inflation and
an economic meltdown. (this may explain why the Federal Reserve
cancelled publishing the M-3 report so that dollar holders will
not know how many billions are being returned)__
The US must maintain its dominance in
the oil trade or the dollar will plummet and the over-leveraged
American empire will disappear in an ocean of red ink.__
After Putin signaled that he would abandon
the dollar, it was clear that Washington would retaliate to defend
its interests.__
Some readers will remember that 2 months
ago Henry Kissinger paid an unexpected visit to Putin in Moscow.
At that time the public was unaware that Kissinger secretly advising
Bush and Cheney on a regular basis. Kissinger most likely warned
Putin about the potential dangers of converting to the ruble.
He may have pointed out how Saddam was attacked just 6 months
after he switched to the euro. Hugo Chavez and Ahmadinejad have
been threatened as well. Maintaining the Petrodollar Empire is
as critical to US supremacy as is controlling the last dwindling
supplies of oil.__
Two months after Kissinger's visit, Saakashvili
swung into action and arrested the 4 Russian officers. There's
little doubt that Washington was behind the incident.__In order
to grasp the growing tension between the Kremlin and White House,
we have to understand how Russia fits into the neocon cosmology
of dependent states. The National Security Strategy (NSS) gives
us a idea of where Bush and co. place Russia in the imperial order.__
It says: (Russia must) "understand
that Cold War approaches do not serve their national interests
and that Russian and American strategic interests overlap in many
areas...We are facilitating Russia's entry into the World Trade
Organization to promote beneficial trade and investment relations.
We have created the NATO-Russian Council with the goal of deepening
security cooperation among Russia, our European allies and ourselves.
We will continue to bolster the independence and stability of
the states of the former Soviet Union in the belief that a prosperous
and stable neighborhood will reinforce Russia's growing commitment
to integration into the Euro-Atlantic community...Russia's uneven
commitment to the basic values of free market democracy and dubious
record in combating the proliferation of WMD remain matters of
great concern".__
Since the NSS was written, Russia has
been blocked (by the US) from joining the WTO and reproached for
trying to maintain its authority within its traditional sphere
of influence. (Ukraine, Georgia, Belarus etc) The NSS clearly
outlines what it takes to stay in Bush's "good graces";
to allow NATO to militarize the states surrounding Russia, to
submissively comply with the edicts from Washington, and to integrate
the Russian economy with the American-dominated global economic
system.__
The fiercely nationalistic Putin has chosen
to preserve Russia's sovereignty and independence which has put
him on a collision course with the Bush administration.__
The powerful Council on Foreign Relations
(CFR) recently released a report that urges Bush to "stop
regarding Russia as a strategic partner." It further states
that "Russia has become increasingly authoritarian state
with a foreign policy that is sometimes at odds with the interests
of the United States and its allies." (The report was co-authored
by former Senator John Edwards and ex-politician Jack Kemp)__
The battle lines have been drawn and Russia
has been placed on the ever-expanding list of "axis of evil"
states whose defiance make them the logical targets of US intervention.
We can expect that a variety of strategies will be used to destabilize
Russia and, ultimately, affect regime change in Moscow. The Bush
administration's long-range objectives are already clear. They
aim to privatize the Russian oil industry, convert the ruble to
the dollar, remove Putin from office, and prevent Russia from
controlling the huge oil reserves in the Caspian Basin. America's
success in the region depends on its ability to weaken, disrupt,
or dissolve the Russian state. Traditionally, these goals are
achieved by covert operations, inciting ethnic tensions, providing
military assistance to rebels (in Chechnya or wherever) and grooming
dissident groups to foment political turmoil. We expect to see
these same tactics employed here.__
The Bush administration has big plans
for Central Asia. It is a critical part of the ongoing global
resource war. The arrest of Russian officers is just one small
skirmish in what will undoubtedly be a much larger and more lethal
war.
Mike is a freelance writer living in Washington
state.
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