Subscribe to Waco Trib XML RSS Feed E-Newsletter WacoTrib on your PDA
Register Now.  It's Free!  |  Log In
Classifieds
Wacotrib Cars
Real Estate
Employment
Merchandise
OPINION
Editorials| Letters to the Editor | Archives | Blogs


Rowland Nethaway: A new look into Putin's eyes


Wednesday, August 13, 2008

A few months after he was sworn into office, President Bush flew to Slovenia where he met with Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The meeting was closely watched around the world because Bush had talked tough about missile defense plans and relations with Russia during his presidential campaign.

Coming out of their first meeting, Bush embarrassingly told the world, “I looked the man in the eye. I found him to be very straight forward and trustworthy and we had a very good dialogue. I was able to get a sense of his soul.”

Fortunately, Putin, a career KGB super spy, had the experience and training to not burst out laughing.

Hidden behind Putin’s baby blues is an unswerving autocrat who will not let small matters such as national sovereignty or Russia’s constitution stand in the way of his designs to restore Russia to a dominant superpower.

Few people doubt that Putin, who is now prime minister, still pulls the strings in Russia through his puppet President Dmitri Medvedev, who now claims that Russia invaded the sovereign nation of Georgia to prevent the genocide of Russian citizens.

Russia and the democratically elected government of Georgia lurched into a mismatched shooting war over South Ossetia, a largely ignored Georgian province that has long sought its independence.

New Russian passports

Georgia has another province, Abkhazia, that also seeks independence. Russia sent “peacekeeping” troops there as well to protect “their” citizens — Georgian citizens who had been given Russian passports.

It’s unlikely that the Russian “peacekeepers” have any intention of pulling out of these two provinces or that the United States, NATO or the United Nations can do anything about it.

Bush has sternly warned his soul-mate that it is not gentlemanly to invade a sovereign nation and claim territory recognized to be a part of Georgia by the United Nations, NATO, the European Union, the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe and other sovereign nations around the globe.

Both presidential candidates have condemned Russia’s military invasion. That and a fiver will get you a venti white chocolate mocha.

The West-leaning government of Georgia has asked to join NATO, a move that angers Putin. A few months ago NATO announced that it would allow Georgia to join at some point.

The Russian invasion, which essentially cut Georgia in half, may have been a partial response to NATO’s announcement. The invasion certainly sends a sledge-hammer clear message to other nearby neighbors that the Russian bear will not readily accept Western encroachment within the its expanding sphere of influence.

NATO would have found itself in a pickle if it had already accepted Georgia into its international organization. Would NATO really send in troops to defend a fellow member? If not, NATO would be seen as little more than a paper tiger.

The United Nations, which should be a natural to handle this sort of international violation, has already proven itself to be a paper tiger. There are such things as U.N. sanctions but that is not possible when Russia, as one of five permanent members of the Security Council, can easily veto any attempt to impose sanctions on Putin’s surging autocracy.

The United States is the only nation capable of doing more than talking the talk. It is highly unlikely, however, that the American people have the will to walk the walk with Russia over some tiny province in the Caucasus. A seven-year, two-pronged war in Iraq and Afghanistan will do that.

Putin knows all this, of course. Russia can continue to expand its influence into neighboring countries with little to fear except words.

Since Bush gazed into Putin’s eyes to read his soul, Russia has used its oil and gas supplies as a weapon against the West, ordered trade blockades, sent assassins into foreign nations, launched campaigns to destroy the free press and redefined its constitution and rule of law.

So far, Putin sees no reason to blink.

Rowland Nethaway’s column appears Wednes- day and Friday. E-mail: RNethaway@wacotrib.com

Comments

By Donna

Aug 13, 2008 10:15 AM | Link to this

Fair and Balanced,

Oh yes. It would matter. Greatly. This isn't just about an oil pipeline. Blaming two or three Democrats (or Republicans) on energy independence when talking about that area of the world is profoundly short sighted.

By Fair and Balanced

Aug 13, 2008 10:10 AM | Link to this

Had the Clinton's, Pelosi, Reid, and McCain not voted against energy independence in 1995, it might not matter what Putin does.

Commenting is open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. M-F, except on Tuesday when it's open until 9 p.m.

Post a comment



Remember me?

You may use the following formatting:
Bold: **this text will be bolded** = this text will be bolded
Italic: *this text will be italic* = this text will be italic
Link: [text to be linked](http://www.wacotrib.com) = text to be linked



There will be a delay of up to 5 minutes before your comment appears.


*HTML not allowed in comments. Your e-mail address is required.

 
Waco Tribune-Herald Top Cars
Ford Mustang 2004. 3.8L, 6 CYL., Automatic, FI, Orange. $10750 Call (254)82......(more)
Driver Air Bag|Passenger Air Bag|A/C|AM/FM Stereo|CD Player|4-Wheel Disc Br......(more)
Driver Air Bag|Passenger Air Bag|A/C|AM/FM Stereo|CD Player|Front Disc/Rear......(more)
Traction Control|Power Windows|Intermittent Wipers|Power Passenger Mirror|V......(more)
Auto-On Headlights|Daytime Running Lights|Keyless Entry|Power Door Locks|Po......(more)
Ford F-150 2006. 5.4L, 8 CYL., Automatic, FI, White. $20975 Call (254)826-3......(more)
Dodge Durango, 2006, 3.7L V6 12V SOHC Magnum 210hp 235 lb-ft torque, Special Purpose Vehicle...(more)
Chevrolet Silverado 2500HD, 2006, 6.0L V8 16V MPFI OHV, Standard Pickup Truck...(more)
Ford F-250 Super Duty 2001. 7.3L, 8 CYL., Automatic, DI, Green. $12450 Call......(more)
Chevrolet Silverado 1500, 2003, 5.3L V8 SFI, Standard Pickup Truck...(more)
-View All Top Cars-
-Place an Ad-
 

Wacotrib News | Wacotrib Weather | Sports | Living | Business News | Wacotrib Schools | Opinions | Baylor Football
Wacotrib Cars | Wacotrib Real Estate | Wacotrib Jobs | Classifieds | Sitemap

Copyright 2008 Waco Tribune-Herald. All rights reserved. - The Waco Tribune-Herald - Our Partners

By using this service, you accept the terms of our visitor agreement and privacy policy.
Registered site users, you may edit your profile.
Having trouble? Visit our help & FAQ.