"This agreement [on opening U.S. military bases] places Romania within
the global security system -- with an important contribution. After
the signing of this agreement and its validation by the [Romanian]
parliament, Romania will become a pillar of stability in the region," 

http://www.rferl.org/featuresarticle/2005/12/7141a858-dd57-4691-9f77-06b3c78d17d6.html

Wednesday, 07 December 2005

U.S.: What Is Strategy For Bases In Former Soviet Bloc?

By Andrew Tully

Central Asia -- map (western bases)
http://gdb.rferl.org/654082ab-b1d5-43c6-b21d-e03c2d99bf27.jpg

RFE/RL

Romania and the United States have signed an agreement that would
establish the first U.S. military bases in an Eastern European country
from the former Soviet bloc. The United States already has the rights
to a base in the former Soviet republic of Kyrgyzstan, and is in the
process of vacating one in neighboring Uzbekistan. With the United
States already possessing a military presence in much of the world,
what does it want with even more foreign bases?

Washington, 7 December 2005 (RFE/RL) -- Romanian President Traian
Basescu seemed as pleased to be hosting the bases as the Americans are
to have them.

Speaking on 6 December at a Bucharest news conference with visiting
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, Basescu welcomed Romania's
opportunity to play a prominent role in international security.

"This agreement [on opening U.S. military bases] places Romania within
the global security system -- with an important contribution. After
the signing of this agreement and its validation by the [Romanian]
parliament, Romania will become a pillar of stability in the region,"
Basescu said.

Easier Access

The U.S. bases in Romania -- and those expected to be set up in
neighboring Bulgaria -- are intended to give the United States easier
access to the Middle East in what U.S. President George W. Bush calls
the war on terrorism. Sofia says it expects to finalize talks with the
United States by March on setting up U.S. military facilities on its
territory.

The deployments are part of a broader U.S. troop realignment outlined
by Bush last year. As part of the plan, tens of thousands of U.S.
troops based in Germany and elsewhere in Europe will be shifted
further east into smaller, more flexible bases, or redeployed back to
the United States.
"Certainly, we want bases in Central Asia for operations against the
remaining Taliban and Al-Qaeda operatives in that region. But having
bases in Central Asia also sends a message to China and to Russia that
this is now a significant U.S. sphere of influence." -- analyst


Meanwhile, the United States will still have access to the Kyrgyz
base, at least for the foreseeable future. A U.S. presence there has
an obvious motivation, and perhaps one that might not be so obvious.

"With regard to Central Asia, I think we have a dual purpose, maybe a
triple purpose, with those bases," Ted Galen Carpenter, the vice
president for defense and foreign-policy studies at the Cato
Institute, a private Washington think tank, told RFE/RL. "Certainly,
we want bases in Central Asia for operations against the remaining
Taliban and Al-Qaeda operatives in that region. But having bases in
Central Asia also sends a message to China and to Russia that this is
now a significant U.S. sphere of influence."

Carpenter said the U.S. presence in Kyrgyzstan annoys Russia. But he
believes President Vladimir Putin is less annoyed than are the
country's "political elite," many of them left over from the days of
Soviet rule. These elites still view the United States almost as
warily as they did during the Cold War, he said.

Encirclement Strategy

"For many Russians, this looks like an encirclement strategy to
intimidate Russia. And Russia has a lot of issues with many of these
countries [that were once in the Soviet sphere], including the
treatment of Russian-speaking inhabitants, both in the Baltics and in
Ukraine. So this could become a source of very serious friction
between the West -- and especially the United States -- and Russia in
the future," Carpenter said.

Carpenter said this Russian perception is not entirely inaccurate. He
believes part of U.S. strategy is to encircle Russia, which he calls a
recent enemy that must still prove itself as a democracy and a friend
of the West.

James Goodby agrees that Putin and other Russian officials are
concerned about Western influence on its neighbors. Goodby studies
East-West security issues at the Brookings Institution, another
Washington policy research center. He told RFE/RL that he believes
Putin is prepared to respond to the Western "encirclement strategy" --
real or perceived -- by strengthening relations with China and former
Soviet states in Central Asia and the Caucasus.

"Putin's main concern is with what they used to call the 'near
abroad.' As Putin sees it, he's trying to stabilize the region, like
Moldova, Georgia, Azerbaijan. I think you're going to find much less
cooperation with, for example, the [Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe] in those regions. And I think Russia will be a
bit more assertive, partly because that's one of their main strategic
interests and partly in a kind of a response to American activism
elsewhere near their frontiers," Goodby said.

Already, Goodby said, Putin and China have managed to use the Shanghai
Cooperation Organization to exert their influence in Central Asia. But
he expects Putin not to go beyond this sort of reaction.

"Of course, there are things [the Russians] could do to make things a
little bit more unpleasant, but they have a lot of other interests,
for example, membership in the World Trade Organization. They're
having a meeting of the Group of Eight in St. Petersburg [in the
spring]. So they have a lot at stake in their relations with the
West," Goodby said.

Goodby said a stronger reaction might jeopardize Russia's economy and
its prestige.

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