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merriefollowshare
9-17-2009 9:13 AM
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merrie says:
Analysis: Demise of U.S. shield may embolden Russia hawks

The U.S. move on the shield -- due to be announced later on Thursday but already flagged by Czech and Polish officials -- removes at a stroke the biggest outstanding obstacle to bilateral relations between the former superpowers and will be hailed by the Kremlin as a big victory.

Russia's leaders have fiercely resisted the missile shield, saying it would upset regional security because it could be used to neutralise Moscow's vast nuclear arsenal.

Ignoring U.S. assurances that the system was not targeted at Russia, President Dmitry Medvedev threatened last year to station missiles in a Russian enclave near Poland if the United States implemented the plan.

But the shield's demise in its originally planned form may also have unintended consequences in the former Soviet bloc.

Russian diplomacy is largely a zero-sum game and relies on projecting hard power to force gains, as in last year's war with Georgia over the . .
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9-17-2009 9:21 AM
merrie
. . rebel regions of Abkhazia and South Ossetia or the gas dispute with Ukraine at the start of this year.

Western concepts of "win-win" deals and Obama's drive for 21st century global partnerships are not part of its vocabulary.

Diplomats here say Moscow hardliners could read the shield backdown as a sign of Washington's weakness. Far from doing the bidding of the United States, they may instead press for further gains to shore up Russian power in the former Soviet bloc.

Ukraine, Georgia and other Kremlin foes in the ex-Soviet Union may be the first to feel the consequences.

Poland and the Czech Republic are also nervous. In Warsaw, the timing of the U.S. move is particularly delicate...
9-17-2009 9:21 AM
merrie
But with plenty of troops and heavy weapons stationed in South Ossetia, less than 100 km (60 miles) from the Georgian capital, Russia is in a potentially strong position to deal with its "unfinished business" in Georgia if it so chooses.

The shifting U.S. position is already unnerving some of the pro-Western countries in the former Soviet bloc.

Ex-communist states have already noticed that the unwavering support provided to them by the Bush administration and its tough rhetoric against Russia has been replaced in Washington by a more pragmatic, conciliatory stance.

In an open letter to Obama in July, senior figures from central and eastern Europe urged the U.S. leader not to be swayed by ...
9-17-2009 9:25 AM
jatfla
Disgusting.
9-17-2009 1:00 PM
n2sooners
And for his next trick, he will revive East Germany....
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