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Russia vs. America: Is Another Arms Race Afoot?

By Jane M. O. Sharp, MIT Center for International Studies. Posted November 16, 2007.


A lame duck Bush and a belligerent Putin could roll back the diplomatic victories won after the Cold War.

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During the Cold War years we learned that successful arms control agreements with the Soviet Union were those that codified parity, or at least a mutually acceptable status quo. After the collapse of the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Treaty Organization (WTO) in 1991, a much diminished Russia saw all its WTO allies and three former Soviet republics join NATO, making parity harder to achieve. But there are still compelling reasons to shape agreements that satisfy all parties.

During the 1990s, under Boris Yeltsin, Russia strove to be represented as an equal to the United States in arms control diplomacy and in negotiations concerning the future of former Yugoslavia. President Bill Clinton tried to meet Yeltsin's concerns, but there has been little constructive cooperation on arms control between George W. Bush and Vladimir Putin. Indeed, since 2000, Bush has been hostile to any kind of multilateral diplomacy. He began his presidency with a new generation of ballistic missile defenses (BMD) and withdrew from the 1972 Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) treaty, an agreement that had stabilized U.S.-Soviet relations for two decades.

In Russia, an increasingly belligerent Putin, flush with oil money, is now determined to be accorded great power status in his dealings with the West. He is asserting himself in many areas: trying to block independence for Kosovo; countering U.S. sanctions against Iran; and renegotiating arms control agreements concluded when Russia was weak. While Putin is viewed with increasing wariness in the West, on arms control he has some points that need to be taken seriously.

Putin's Proposals

Specifically, the Russian president wants to extend the life of the 1994 START-I agreement (due to expire in December 2009) that constrains U.S. and Russian ICBMs, offensive missiles he cannot afford to upgrade, and would prefer new negotiations to reduce. Putin is also determined to rewrite or abrogate agreements that he claims are unequal and discriminatory. In particular, he is focusing on the bilateral 1987 Intermediate Nuclear Force (INF) treaty banning U.S. and Soviet intermediate-range ballistic and cruise missiles (range 500-5500km), and the multilateral 1990 treaty on Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE), which codified the balance between NATO and the then WTO in five categories of ground force equipment.

The INF treaty resulted in the destruction of 846 U.S. and 1,846 Soviet intermediate-range missiles, including those that caused so much anxiety in Europe, particularly in West Germany in the 1980s. In February 2006, however, at the annual Wehrkunde meeting in Munich, Sergei Ivanov (then Russian defense minister) denounced the INF treaty as "a Cold War relic," while Putin said that Russia could no longer comply with a bilateral treaty that does not constrain non-signatory states that already have or might soon acquire INF. In October 2007, Putin threatened to abrogate the 1987 treaty unilaterally unless it is made global.

The CFE treaty is seen in NATO as the bedrock of post-Cold War stability in Europe because of the transparency and predictability of its compliance mechanism, which mandates regular exchanges of information and on-site inspections. Nevertheless, as an inter-bloc agreement, CFE was overtaken by events when the WTO disintegrated in 1991. Boris Yeltsin started to complain about the impact of NATO enlargement on CFE in 1993 and, soon afterwards, about the constraints CFE imposed on Moscow's ability to deal with unrest in the Caucasus.

After successive amendments in Russia's favor, including more generous ceilings for Russia in the flank zones, a new Adapted CFE (ACFE) treaty was signed in Istanbul in November 1999. Yeltsin also agreed to withdraw Russian forces from Moldova and Georgia -- a precondition for NATO to ratify the new treaty. Putin did not attend the November 1999 meeting, however, and has always denied the link between Yeltsin's commitment to withdraw from Georgia and Moldova and NATO's ratification of the new treaty. He would also exclude Russian "peacekeeping forces" from the withdrawal commitment.


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Jane M.O. Sharp is a visiting senior research fellow in the Department of War Studies, Kings College London, and the author of Striving for Military Stability in Europe: Negotiation, Implementation and Adaptation of the CFE Treaty (Routledge, 2006).

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Note to author
Posted by: redstarwraith on Nov 16, 2007 6:36 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
*How many times throughout history has the west invaded Russia? Uh-huh. . .and you still want to lable Putin as belligerent?

*the Russian stake in Iran is higher than ours is. They have enjoyed good diplomatic/trade relations for years. do you not think if 'something big' were going down in Canada or Mexico that the U.S. wouldn't be keenly interested (to say the least)?

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Oh, great!
Posted by: monkeywrench on Nov 16, 2007 8:38 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The trashing of our Constitution and our freedoms, the threat of environmental collapse, resource depletion, water shortages, future mass migrations, Britney Spears' custody battle – and now a possible resurgence of the threat of global thermonuclear war?!

Time for a cocktail. . .make mine a hemlock, on the rocks. . .a double. . .

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How many times throughout history has the west invaded Russia?
Posted by: Ignatz deFyre on Nov 16, 2007 10:24 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
None, I think, unless in "west" you include the Mogols, China, France and Germany.

That said, and I have posted this previously in discussions of Russia: the Russians are genetically programmed towards ruthless self-interest, which oscillates between the individual and the collective, depending on economic ansd social circumstances. Typically, they have been interested in preservation of territorial integrity and a blanket of continental security, as opposed to the global colonial style imperial ambitions of the likes of GB, France, Spain, etc., and now the USA. The only Russian colony was in Alaska in 1784, which they sold to the USA in 1867 at 2 cents an acre.

If I were to have a preference regarding a balance of coutervailing global forces, it would be USA-Russia, as opposed to USA-Middle East. The Russians at least are not religious fanatics unconcerned about self-destruction.

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» Yeah Posted by: Bbear41
Who will win the next one?
Posted by: civilized european on Nov 16, 2007 11:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
..

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Predictable Western approach to Russia
Posted by: Phenix on Nov 16, 2007 11:57 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Putin is not hostile or belligerent towards any Western power. He is reacting to aggressive moves from the West especially the United States. The author does not place any of Putin's actions into context which suits Western interests perfectly.

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How did this make it to Alternet?
Posted by: pig on Nov 16, 2007 12:58 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article is utter rubbish.

Putin "increasingly beligerent"? Nato "membership expansion" (like it's just a club that anyone can join despite the Gorbachev - Reagan/Bush agreements.

Come on Alternet, this is western imperialist propaganda.

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The Cold War IS Over
Posted by: NoPCZone on Nov 17, 2007 12:29 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Peace won and the nukes never flew...

Maybe that pisses of some in Defense Contractor Land, NeoCons and Warmongers. Screw Em.

The world lost in many other ways.

The poison legacy of the production of Nuclear Weapons, the waste of literally trillions of dollars that could have been repurposed in countless good ways.

In the end it wasn't the mighty tanks and missiles that brought it to an end- it was people. When they had enough they took to the streets.
Don't forget the lesson- it may become useful if the DLC and NeoCons keep selling us out.

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Look at things rationally
Posted by: Anyse on Dec 5, 2007 8:11 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I thought that back in the early '60's that we do not place missiles near other countries without the consensus of all concerned. Putin offered an alternative site that would have been just as, if not more effective, than missile sites near the Russian Federation borders of Poland and Czechoslovakia. Is that belligerent? Bush said that it was a good proposal, yet I could see that squirrelly mind of Bush reasoning that "Hell will freeze over before I can take any suggestions from you or anyone else." [Case in point: recent news on Iran's nuclear ambitions stopped 4 years ago and Bush's recent reply of "no change in policy."] Bush is all the more predictable as a hardened fighter for democracy only of the American kind that he has so well put together during his tenure in office and, most certainly, reduced to lower levels than what he perceives as those of his "rivals." This is not a question for "trust" on the part of Putin; it is a matter of national security, which is real as opposed to Bush's perceived sense of what "national security is. {Note his use of the NSA to ferret out American citizens who certainly must be anti-American and deserve the contempt of the national government and, therefore, must give up their constitutional liberties as a result.] If you can't put nuclear weapons in Cuba, then you can't put them at the borders of the Russian Federation in a multi-national allied group called NATO. It's really as simple as that.

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