Headlined on 9/1/08:
Wag
<http://www.opednews.com/articles/Wag-the-Dog-by-Eric-Walberg-080901-115.htm
l>  the Dog

by Eric Walberg <http://www.opednews.com/author/author20882.html>      Page
1 of 1 page(s) 

www.opednews.com <http://www.opednews.com/> 

                
                

 

Was an independent Ossetia inevitable after Kosovo or is it a US election
ruse gone wrong?   

Russian President Vladimir Putin gave a gritty, straight-talking 30-minute
interview with CNN this week in Russian. It was not translated or reported
on widely in the US media, which is a shame. He charged that US military
personnel were in South Ossetia during the attack, and lectured about such
topics as Ossetia's long membership in the Russian empire (since 1801) and
Ossetians' age-old resentment of Georgian chauvinism, especially following
the 1917 Russian revolution and the 1990 declaration of Georgian
independence.  A South Ossetian legislator has already mooted the
possibility that it will eventually become part of the Russian Federation.


When asked by CNN if he would stop threatening neighbours now that the
Ossetian crisis was over, he angrily dismissed the question as preposterous,
saying it was up to the US and its new Eastern European clients to stop
threatening Russia. It is the Polish and Czech missile bases and Ukrainian
and Georgian pretenses to join in the nuclear-tipped encirclement of Russia
that are the destabilising developments forcing Russia to batten the
hatches. The Russians see the bases as a precursor to a much larger system
that would undermine the already seriously eroded Russian nuclear deterrent.
"For the first time in history - and I want to emphasise this - there will
be elements of the US nuclear capability on the European continent. It
simply changes the whole configuration of international security. Of course,
we have to respond to that," said Putin at a press conference last year
which was also not reported in the mainstream US media.   

Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov underlined Putin's words Monday, referring to
"the reality of the post-America world" and warning that "in the absence of
a reasonable multilateral dialogue we will be forced to react unilaterally."
Europe's inability to produce a new collective security system, "open for
everyone and taking into account everyone's interests," was to blame for the
Georgia crisis. He added: "There is a feeling that NATO again needs
frontline states to justify its existence."   

As if to make his point, the Russian military carried out a successful test
of a Topol RS-12M nuclear capable stealth rocket from the Plesetsk space
centre. Analysts are already speculating that Putin (OK, Medvedev) may well
"take out" the Polish missile site. "He has no other option. The proposed
system integrates the entire US nuclear arsenal into one operational-unit a
mere 115 miles from the Russian border. It's no different than Khrushchev's
plan to deploy nuclear missiles in Cuba in the 1960s," writes Mike Whitney
at Online Journal. At the very least he "will be forced to raise the stakes
and send warplanes over the construction site. That is the logical
first-step that any responsible leader would take before removing the site
altogether." So if Cold War II keeps accelerating and something like this
happens later this year, what should we make of it? Is this Russia
threatening and even invading its neighbour, or is it a justifiable warning
to the US to back down from its attempts to instigate WWIII?   

Is it possible that all this furfural is really just an early "October
Surprise", in the US electoral tradition that both Reagan and Bush II made
such masterful use of? Recall that Ronald Reagan's advisors orchestrated a
delay in returning US hostages from Iran in 1980, tipping the balance in his
favour in the elections that year. President George W Bush got a letter
purportedly from Osama bin Laden weeks before the elections in 2004,
conveniently reminding Americans that he is their defender against
terrorists. This possibility was the inspiration for the 1998 movie "Wag the
Dog", where a few weeks before the elections, a presidential advisor hires a
Hollywood producer to fabricate and market a war in an ex-socialist bloc
country (Albania) and ensure the incumbent's re-election.   

In the current "reality show" version, discretion is thrown completely to
the wind, with a certain Randy Scheunemann playing both doctor and advisor
to Republican "incumbent" Senator John McCain. Scheunemann's two-man Orion
Strategies lobby firm has been advising Latvia since 2001 and more recently,
Georgia. Georgia hopes to following Latvia's success in joining NATO and -
why not? - the European Union. It has already paid Orion Strategies $300,000
to this end.   

Putin firmly declared in his CNN interview that the attack on Russian
peacekeepers by Georgia was given the green light by US officials as part of
an US election campaign ploy. He was most likely referring to McCain, a
personal friend of Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, and Scheunemann,
McCain's chief foreign policy advisor. Or possibly Joseph Wood, Cheney's
deputy assistant for national security affairs, who was in Georgia shortly
before the war began. Or both.   

But Putin is caught between a rock and a hard place in this US election
year. Even if he's right about Scheunemann, McCain's advisor has his
counterpart in Senator Barack Obama's chief foreign policy advisor, Zbigniew
Brzezinski, who while being no fan of Bush, is rubbing his hands in glee
over the Russian move to protect Ossetia . So whoever wins in November will
undoubtedly push CWII into high gear, come what may.   

Will this "Wag the Dog" Part II bring in the votes for McCain? That is far
from certain considering his admiration for the now-despised Bush, his
endless gaffes and his patent lack of intelligence. However, the key to US
elections - the Israeli lobby - is not happy with Brzezinski, and could
scuttle Obama's candidacy, despite Obama's choice of self-proclaimed Zionist
Senator Joe Biden as his running mate. Recall that Brzezinski was foreign
policy advisor to ex-president Jimmy Carter, whose Camp David accords forced
Israel to give the Sinai back to Egypt.   

Enter Scheunemann. He has no such skeletons in his closet. And he is a big
fan of the current Middle East make-over designed to ensure Israeli
supremacy. As director of Chalabi's Committee for the Liberation of Iraq he
pushed for the invasion in 2003. Mission accomplished, he found his new
warrior prince in Tbilisi. Scheunemann is just one of dozens of US and
Israeli advisors to the trigger-happy Georgian president. Israel has been
actively supporting Saakashvili, eager to see the Georgian pipeline project
bypassing Russia completed. Georgian Defence Minister Davit Kezerashvili and
Minister of Reintegration Temur Yakobashvili are both Israeli citizens who
returned to Georgia to enter politics.   

If in fact the US Israeli lobby has decided on McCain for president, and
passed the word on to Sheunemann, this could well account for the green
light that Saakashvili clearly thought he had to attack Russian peacekeeping
troops and Ossetia civilians, killing hundreds if not the 1,500 claimed by
Russia. And what better way to force both candidates to shore up Bush's
policy of war and death, just in case by some fluke the suspicious Obama
overcomes the many hurdles to a candidate not enjoying the full confidence
(i.e., control) of "the lobby".   

You can't fault Obama for trying to please them, short of firing his patron
Brzezinski. Already, he has dropped his willingness to talk to "the enemy",
which clearly means Russia these days, every bit as much as Iran. Under him,
Iraq will keep its US bases and Afghanistan will absorb any troops who leave
Iraq. Whether or not Washington succeeds in bringing Georgia and Ukraine
into NATO is the only moot point in all this, and this really depends more
on Russia than on who inhabits the White House for the next four years.   

This is all very much like Brzezinski's scheming as advisor to president
Carter. He now boasts that by orchestrating US funding of Islamic extremists
like bin Laden from 1979 on, he was responsible for the Soviet invasion of
Afghanistan and the subsequent collapse of the Soviet Union. This did
nothing to wag Carter's dog back into power in 1980, but that is of little
consequence to these shadowy advisors, who are never without work in the
higher echelons of US politics, just as Scheunemann will not suffer in the
least if his candidate is found to have Aldzheimer's and forgets to show for
his inauguration next January. And if Obama wins, he will merely cede his
White House pass to Brzezinski and continue advising world leaders such as
the hapless Georgian president.   

It's quite possible that this ratcheting up of tensions in the Caucasus is
intentional. It clinched the Polish missile deal in a hurry and put Russia
in a bad light, giving succour to those planning to make the
Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan oil pipeline the key link in a network bypassing Russia.
But the Georgian pipeline was shut down by BP during the recent conflict,
and it is far from clear that spin doctors and tweaking the Russian bear's
nose will bring the US any closer to cutting Russia down to size. What this
episode and Putin's steely evaluation did was to further expose the poison
at the heart of American politics and confirm the world's suspicions that
Russia is not afraid to stand up for itself. 

 

http://www.opednews.com/articles/Wag-the-Dog-by-Eric-Walberg-080901-115.html

Eric is a journalist and writer for Al-Ahram Weekly in Cairo. He specializes
in Russian and Eurasian affairs.

Reply via email to