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After Russian tanks rolled with impunity through the streets of Georgia, scattering that country’s army into humiliating retreat, comparisons were inevitably drawn with the cold war. The difference is that most of the time during the cold war the West knew how to respond to Moscow’s aggression. Nobody could say that this time. What are the new rules of the game?
The ceasefire plan drawn up by Nicolas Sarkozy, the French president, and endorsed by Condoleezza Rice, America’s secretary of state, is a triumph for Vladimir Putin, who is still pulling all the levers, and confirmation of the humiliation of Mikhail Saakashvili, the Georgian president. Russia set a trap for Mr Saakashvili in South Ossetia, which he walked straight into. The Sarkozy-brokered ceasefire plan, which gives Russia the right to roam up to 10km beyond South Ossetia into Georgia, makes a mockery of the Georgian president’s determination to “never, ever” permit the occupation of any of its territory.
Russia’s defiance persists. Moscow cocked a snook at Dr Rice’s insistence that the plan required the immediate withdrawal of its forces. At a joint press conference with Angela Merkel, the German chancellor, Dmitry Medvedev, the Russian president, insisted on his country’s right to intervene, not just in South Ossetia but also Abkhazia. Russia, he said, would continue to be the “guarantor of security” in the Caucasus and continue to take decisions to “unambiguously support” the will of “these two Caucasus peoples”. The claim is that the region is Russia’s sphere of influence.
Mr Medvedev also implicitly endorsed the warning of General Anatoly Nogovitsyn, deputy chief of Russia’s general staff, who said that Poland had exposed itself to the threat of nuclear attack from Moscow by agreeing with America to place a missile shield on Polish soil.
Now the Kremlin is talking of rearming its Baltic fleet with nuclear weapons.
Mr Sarkozy, Mrs Merkel and Dr Rice have made a poor show of it but Britain’s response has been even more feeble. The excuse is that London’s relationship with Moscow was already too strained for any UK-led diplomacy to have been effective. But Britain is poorly represented on the world stage. In such a crisis Margaret Thatcher or Tony Blair would be working in close concert with the White House. As a champion of the accession of former members of the eastern bloc to Nato and the EU, our voice should be heard.
What should the West do? Even if there is an element of bluster in Moscow’s outrageous threats to Poland, the situation in Georgia is real, as is the threat of a new conflict with Ukraine, with the Black Sea port of Sebastopol a potential flashpoint.
Robert Gates, the US defence secretary, is right to say that Russia must face the consequences of her actions. But apart from depriving Moscow of invitations to G8 meetings, or blocking membership of the World Trade Organisation, the list of possible diplomatic consequences is not long and hardly damaging. The fundamental problem is that an undemocratic Russia wants to dominate the democratic states that were once part of the old Soviet Union. Their ambitions, however, lie with Nato and Europe. The West needs a tough but realistic strategy, fast.
If nothing else, this fortnight has confirmed that Europe cannot allow itself to be reliant on Russia for vital energy supplies. Both Shell and BP have been the victims of Russia’s resource nationalism and Ukraine and Georgia have been on the receiving end of Moscow’s use of the energy weapon. Fast forward a few years and Britain and other EU countries could find the lights going out, courtesy of Russia, and there would be little anybody could do about it.
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Just wondering what would be the reaction of the EU, UK if they did depend on Russia’s gas & oil supply????????
Vlad, London,
Coal,yes but in the long term the only realistic option is nuclear power.Time to start building I think,or we will end up "Finlandised" if we are reliant on Russia to stop the lights going out.
sandy, ayrshire,
In addition to the chios created in the Middle East and Asia, Bush is now determined to drop Europe into termoil by installions in Poland, which will never be used. Cant he think of a better way to deal with the Regions on which his country and the best part of the world are dependent for Energy.
J.Zeb, London, UK
"You can't "build relations" with the regime which jails its opponents, muzzles free press, invents threats and interests out of whole cloth and sent assasins to London to dispatch its critic."
Boris, except for the last clause, this sounds an awful lot like the US.
Bush & Rice are the pots, I gues
P.H. Salus, Toronto, Canada
There is alot of misinformation in the western msm about events in Georgia. I sugest you do your own research outside msm to get to the truth of the matter. I suggest you start by watching youtube
watch?v=cRl3qArJO-o
watch?v=mOJiVqg9_20
watch?v=IoazLDu4WSc
watch?v=NABszGOrNkU
Slava, San Francisco, US
Britain and America tore up the UN Charter by invading Iraq without a Security Council mandate, and without any threat to either country on the part of Saddam Hussein. And now, suddenly, we find that we actually need world support for international law to resolve the Georgia issue. What a surprise!
Edmund Burke, Kingston upon Thames, England
You can't "build relations" with the regime which jails its opponents, muzzles free press, invents threats and interests out of whole cloth and sent assasins to London to dispatch its critic. By "building relations" with such power, you become its enabler to do more evil. Russia must be stopped.
Boris, London,
EU should not depend on Russian gas and oil, because this is fuelling Putin's power. West must rely on the west. Don't tease the bear § don't feed him. Strenghten existing NATO nations instead, where necessary. Don't go too far East. Focus on Europe, and don't throw money in Iraq. Adapt quickly.
Michel Xima, Aix en Provence, France
Rubbish. The Georgian leaders must be hauled to the court in The Hague and charged with war crimes.
Britain should seek to build relationships up with Moscow and distance itself from the warmongers in Washington and Israel.
Alan Heaton, Frankfurt, Germany
In the short-term, go back to coal: we have plenty. Fast-track solar power for domestic premises. Appoint Statesmen to the Foreign Office - not nonentities like Beckett and Boy-Moribund. Get a Govt and especially PM who puts British interests first instead of kow-towing to the EU. Call an election.
Donna Walker, Effingham, England