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Author Topic: A superpower by default?  (Read 1891 times)
BoardAdmin2
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« on: 13 October 2008, 8:09:47 am »

Must say, i agree with the underlying premise of this article.  I suppose the key question is: how will China react to having two other super-powers hedging it in? India on one side, Russia on the other.  None of those three are natural allies culturally or politically.   The closest relationship maybe, perhaps, the underlying approach to economics between Russia and China, but even then i'd go as far as saying that the US and Russian economic systems have more in common at this stage.  Also not surprised that Kevin Rod missed Russia, he is a little blinkered to anything that isn't Chinese in Asia  Undecided

A superpower by default?
By Sasha Uzunov - posted Monday, 13 October 2008   

Australia’s Prime Minister Kevin Rudd recently warned about an arms race in the Asia pacific region with China the country to watch. But he may have missed out on one key player “bigger” than China: Russia.

With the Wall Street financial crisis, and the US overstretched on two fronts in Iraq and Afghanistan, has Russia become a world superpower by default? Let us take note, that it is also parked in our Asia-Pacific neighbourhood.

Russia starts in Europe and stretches all the way to the Pacific coast. Its Pacific Ocean Fleet (Tikho-okeanski flot) is based at the city of Vladivostok. The Russian empire ran for centuries and in 1917 transformed into the Soviet Union before falling apart in 1991 with the collapse of communism. As a consequence, many new nations obtained their independence, Ukraine, Georgia, Lithuania and so on.

From 1948 to 1989, the Soviet Union and the West, that is the United States, Western Europe and Australia, were engaged in an indirect war - known as the Cold War - over ideological control of the world. Wars by proxy were fought in Korea, Vietnam and so on.

Both the United States and the Soviet Union had nuclear warheads pointed at each other during this tense time. Both the US and Russia still have those nuclear weapons.

Since the fall of the Soviet Union, Russia had been in steep economic decline and its society in meltdown. But the economic turnaround came with oil and gas money and a ruthless President, now Prime Minister, Vladimir Putin.

What does this all mean for Australia’s strategic planners? It means you take Russia seriously. It also means we need to identify what Russia’s strategic goals are in the Asia-Pacific region.

Alarm bells rang when in August of this year during the Beijing Olympics, Russian forces invaded neighbouring Georgia to protect the South Ossetian ethnic group from Georgian persecution.

Georgia is a recent member of NATO, a military alliance ironically founded during the Cold War, as a counter to Soviet expansion. Was the Russian thrust into Georgia a simple test to see if NATO would defend it from being attacked? Well, the Russians discovered that NATO and US troops were not forthcoming when it came to upholding Georgia’s sovereignty.

You could say, Prime Minister Putin, like a good chess player, made the perfect move. In fact, if you want to understand Russian thinking, the game of chess is highly appropriate as opposed to the card game of high risk poker, so popular in the west.

Putin during his reign has used the wealth generated by the oil and gas exports to reinvigorate his armed forces. He has also waged a ruthless war to crush Muslim Chechen separatists from breaking away from Federal Russia.

But what drives Russia to play such an important part on the world stage? An excellent examination of this issue is the documentary, For God, Tsar and the Fatherland (2007). The film centres around Mikhail Morozov, former Soviet Army paratrooper turned man of god, who runs a centre for troubled souls. He is a man of influence within Russia’s political elite.

He tells his followers:

“Being Russian means belonging to God’s anointed Tsar … There is no such thing as democracy; there is only hierarchy and hierarchical behaviour …”

Watching Australian 60 Minutes reporter Liam Bartlett “confront” a Russian soldier on Georgian soil was humorous because of the fact that the soldier could not care less about the camera being shoved in his face. Perhaps that sums up Russia’s attitude towards the west.

As Mikhail Morozov tells his followers:

“But Satan, the enemy of mankind always needs to stir things up with ideas of paradise on earth … that stuff about freedom, brotherhood and equality …”

Russia has weathered a decade long decline; its people are used to hardships and its military has not been burnt out fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq. It has millions of conscripts to man its armed forces, unlike the US which has a professional volunteer military with limited number of replacements for those killed, wounded or seriously injured.

The US has spent trillions on the war on terror coupled with the Wall Street meltdown and may need to take a rest from being the international policeman.

It looks as though the Russians are in a good position.
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« on: 13 October 2008, 8:09:47 am »



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working_dad
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« Reply #1 on: 06 November 2008, 18:03:32 pm »

It would be interesting to see how Russia maintains its position in the face of dwindling human resources. Last time I checked birth rate is close to Singapore (and just like in Singapore I expect all those monetary incentives to fail).

So all in all I wouldn't be betting on Russia maintaining its position medium to long term. Population continues to dwindle and that looks like irreversible trend.
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TheWrathOfGrapes
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« Reply #2 on: 07 November 2008, 10:56:33 am »

Nah, this potential superpower has already defaulted before it even began. It is even more adversely affected by the financial crisis.
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Vulcanl
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« Reply #3 on: 07 November 2008, 13:09:10 pm »

"...that stuff about freedom, brotherhood and equality …”

I think it is clear after Obama's uplifting victory and Worldwide reception that humanity agrees that these are important ideals that the World's Superpower(s) should uphold. 

Russia needs to start giving to the World and stop taking so much.  That is only a start toward true leadership in World affairs.
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chitown
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« Reply #4 on: 07 November 2008, 19:32:40 pm »

Like the PP, maybe I’m still coming down from my Obama victory euphoria.

It’s so disappointing to have to view the world presented in terms of ‘super-powers,’ and what: ‘powers,’ or ‘weaklings’. 

I wish we can move beyond the chauvinistic attributes we give to nations based on their economic wealth and their weaponry. 

What a buzz kill…

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Old Mike
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« Reply #5 on: 07 November 2008, 20:15:49 pm »

Russia already has the noose around the EU's throat.They have allowed themselves to become dependent on it for energy.
It merely needs to tighten that noose and Russia will not JOIN the EU, it will annex it.
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Dr. Phil
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« Reply #6 on: 09 November 2008, 21:21:12 pm »

I am surprised at how easily we can turn against Russia for no apparent reason other than mere suggestion, not at all subtle and worthy of being described as US propaganda.
 
There is in reality, no valid reason whatsoever for us to fear Russia.

Over the past 10 years Russia has continued to develop its economy integrating with EU. We are trading partners and Russia now exhibits and sells its bounty of nature, rather than weapons of destruction.

Let us not forget, in contrast, China has also moved further along the road to a market economy but unlike Russia has no democracy and has no plans to become a democracy.

China also is rapidly accumulating USD and selling the world its toxic wares but this appears to be ok because it allows US partners to profit from joint ventures; to sate their gluttonous appetites at the expense of their own US domestic economy.

China is also arming at an alarming rate, but this appears to be acceptable to US interests.

Over the next four years we must be even more vigilant against US mischief overseas especially in Europe.
 
I can envisage an African-American president of limited ability, grateful for his place at the "top table", all too willing to embark on foreign misadventures with Russia-baiting, if only to distract from a deteriorating global economy.

Fundamentally the USA will never accept any nation to prosper more, or challenge its perceived supremacy. Forget the rules of cricket, this is the real world of Washington, packaged in Hollywood for a gullible public.

Indeed Obama has already laid the groundwork by sewing the seeds of suspicion in our minds, warning of an imminent challenge to his authority soon after his inauguration.

Let us remember over the past 10 years Russia has not attacked any other nation apart from an intervention in Georgia on what is now accepted were humanitarian grounds, much the same as when USA bombed Serbia (a sovereign European country) and subsequently dispossessed her of Kosovo, which we all applauded on cue.
 
We Europeans must have more confidence in Russia and our future destiny together.

The current global economic ills which are affecting/infecting us all, and on-going Iraqi war, and an on-going Afghanistani (and why exactly are we in Afghanistan?) all have their origins in USA.

Lets think before we over-react.
 
« Last Edit: 09 November 2008, 21:49:43 pm by Dr. Phil » Logged
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