Russia and Ukraine

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Re: Russia and Ukraine

Post by Fat Cat »

DARTH wrote:
Fat Cat wrote:German economy depends on Russian materials, so they are not happy about economic embargoes on Russia.

The truth is that both the Ukrainian and Russian sides are playing dirty, but ultimately, Russians stand to lose far far more from expansion of this conflict. Every country that shares a border with Russia is taking a very close look at their security arrangements, and every pissant nationality within its border pressing its case for internal autonomy. After all, if a Russian minority can have autonomy in Ukraine, why can't they have autonomy in Russia? Russia is starting a fire but it can't control where it will burn, and she has no meaningful allies.

So far all they have taken solidly is the Crimea, and that's mostly Russian.

It's all a clusterfuck made worse by the little entitled checkerbaby in DC.

Dumber shit has lead to total wars before.

I agree with what you say about these other countries and the smart thing for Obozo to do would have been to condemn the Russian invasion while behind the scenes working with them to cut Ukraine into S.E Ukraine (to the Russians) and the rest to the West. NATO them, relaunch the missile shield in Poland and make the new Ukraine the new West Germany with 1-2 complete Army Groups based there.

We cant do shit at present.
My count is different. They took South Ossetia, they invaded Georgia, they broke the Budapest Agreement of 1994, and now Ukraine, and are annexing Crimea. To my way of thinking, it's time to for a strategic readjustment.
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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Fat Cat wrote:
DARTH wrote:
Fat Cat wrote:German economy depends on Russian materials, so they are not happy about economic embargoes on Russia.

The truth is that both the Ukrainian and Russian sides are playing dirty, but ultimately, Russians stand to lose far far more from expansion of this conflict. Every country that shares a border with Russia is taking a very close look at their security arrangements, and every pissant nationality within its border pressing its case for internal autonomy. After all, if a Russian minority can have autonomy in Ukraine, why can't they have autonomy in Russia? Russia is starting a fire but it can't control where it will burn, and she has no meaningful allies.

So far all they have taken solidly is the Crimea, and that's mostly Russian.

It's all a clusterfuck made worse by the little entitled checkerbaby in DC.

Dumber shit has lead to total wars before.

I agree with what you say about these other countries and the smart thing for Obozo to do would have been to condemn the Russian invasion while behind the scenes working with them to cut Ukraine into S.E Ukraine (to the Russians) and the rest to the West. NATO them, relaunch the missile shield in Poland and make the new Ukraine the new West Germany with 1-2 complete Army Groups based there.

We cant do shit at present.
My count is different. They took South Ossetia, they invaded Georgia, they broke the Budapest Agreement of 1994, and now Ukraine, and are annexing Crimea. To my way of thinking, it's time to for a strategic readjustment.
Good point there. I guess I was thinking the current issue, where they actually have the high ground.

But the Georgians started shooting from the jump, not the Crimeans and that pretty much says it all. Those people want the Russians there. If there was measurable resistance to the Russian there I'd have a different view.

Electing someone who makes the average Lib look like Reagan, who wrote a book that shows what a clear anti-American/Anti-West POS he is, and then about sucks Vlad's dick in the first 4 years, has consequences.

Not loving on Putin and I do think we need to assert ourselves more (kind of hard with a muzzie, commie cunt in charge) in dealings with them but I also see that their hood is their hood. They built everything in the Crimea in the first place.

I know the risks looks low and it could all add up to more Obama running his cocksucker with no real effect but I can also see a chance of this turning into a war between us. (small but the stakes could be the highest ever you can have, with the 2 nations with the most powerful and sophisticated nuclear arsenals.)




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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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"They took South Ossetia" - no. is it became part of Russia?
"they invaded Georgia"- no :)
" they broke the Budapest Agreement of 1994" - agreement wich wasn't ratified :) so no any agreement.
(and in any case there wasn't any agreements with those putchists).
And as i remember US and NATO promised do not place their bases in eastern Europe. So US shows real price of any agreements.
"and now Ukraine" - no again, there no Russian army.
" and are annexing Crimea" - no.

"To my way of thinking, it's time to for a strategic readjustment." - this may be true.


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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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What about Scotland? Who annexing them?

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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Seriously does this matter? Somebody will start shooting soon and then all hell will break loose.
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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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there already shhoting. Legitimate government throwed away, EU and US supporting rebellions... al as usual :)

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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Fat Cat wrote: My count is different. They took South Ossetia, they invaded Georgia, they broke the Budapest Agreement of 1994, and now Ukraine, and are annexing Crimea. To my way of thinking, it's time to for a strategic readjustment.
Of course it's time. It's always "time". 80% or so of weapons sold around the world are manufactured in the US. Hence the need to continuously invent an enemy.
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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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"along the border with the Russian Federation was dug a trench 4 meters wide and 2 meters deep with a two-meter shaft."

"Taruta said that is a lot was done, but not for PR. In particular, he said, digging trenches is worth more than 50 aircraft."


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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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And that digging was ruled by his brother... And they called Yanukovich a thief :)

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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Smet wrote:
Fat Cat wrote: My count is different. They took South Ossetia, they invaded Georgia, they broke the Budapest Agreement of 1994, and now Ukraine, and are annexing Crimea. To my way of thinking, it's time to for a strategic readjustment.
Of course it's time. It's always "time". 80% or so of weapons sold around the world are manufactured in the US. Hence the need to continuously invent an enemy.
I don't follow you.
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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Wild Bill wrote:"They took South Ossetia" - no. is it became part of Russia?
"they invaded Georgia"- no :)
" they broke the Budapest Agreement of 1994" - agreement wich wasn't ratified :) so no any agreement.
(and in any case there wasn't any agreements with those putchists).
And as i remember US and NATO promised do not place their bases in eastern Europe. So US shows real price of any agreements.
"and now Ukraine" - no again, there no Russian army.
" and are annexing Crimea" - no.

"To my way of thinking, it's time to for a strategic readjustment." - this may be true.
Budapest Agreement is a political agreement, not a treaty and has no ratification process. Here is what the Russian Federation committed to:

Respect Ukrainian independence and sovereignty within its existing borders.
Refrain from the threat or use of force against Ukraine.
Refrain from using economic pressure on Ukraine in order to influence its politics.
Seek United Nations Security Council action if nuclear weapons are used against Ukraine.
Refrain from the use of nuclear arms against Ukraine.
Consult with one another if questions arise regarding these commitments
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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Fat Cat wrote:Budapest Agreement is a political agreement, not a treaty and has no ratification process.
no.


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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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In any case US should comply their agreements with Russia, if it wants Russia to comply agrements with US.


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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Wild Bill wrote:In any case US should comply their agreements with Russia, if it wants Russia to comply agrements with US.
Oh Crimea river, Bill.

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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Interesting speech from Russia. The fringe-y right that's been in love with Putin the last few weeks is about to deal with some conflicting feelings.
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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Grandpa's Spells wrote:Interesting speech from Russia. The fringe-y right that's been in love with Putin the last few weeks is about to deal with some conflicting feelings.

You so desperately want this to be a right vs left issue. With loonie conservatives supporting your designated man in a black hat. I notice you have no comment for our new Ukrainian buddies with connections to European neo Nazis. I guess there are no conflicting feeling for a progressive. Other than their ethnic/racial and nationalist tendencies, the politics sync up quite nicely for a progressive douche bag.

The reason we are in this mess is because we (Dems and Repubs) have insanely maintained our member of NATO; we have stupidly supported expanding NATO (despite promising otherwise) into Russia's backyard; our insistence on a double standard for the West. Where we pick and choose Governments and create states overnight, but for some reason the West believes that Russia is supposed to ignore their national interests; our enabling of the militarily weak Europeans, that so desperately want the USA to subsidize their national defense and fight their battles for them; and lastly, out inability to recognize we have very few short term options in dealing with Russia.
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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Batboy2/75 wrote:
Grandpa's Spells wrote:Interesting speech from Russia. The fringe-y right that's been in love with Putin the last few weeks is about to deal with some conflicting feelings.
You so desperately want this to be a right vs left issue.
I was referring specifically to a relatively small but noisy subset of the right that has been celebrating Putin's "strength" the last couple weeks. It's not the GOP.
I notice you have no comment for our new Ukrainian buddies with connections to European neo Nazis.
Our buddies? Ukraine is a corrupt kleptocracy. Land grabs in Europe are nonetheless a problem.
I guess there are no conflicting feeling for a progressive. Other than their ethnic/racial and nationalist tendencies, the politics sync up quite nicely for a progressive douche bag.
LOL. Sounds like "Freedom Strawman Quarterly" came out with a new issue for their web-zine.
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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Grandpa's Spells wrote:
Batboy2/75 wrote:
Grandpa's Spells wrote:Interesting speech from Russia. The fringe-y right that's been in love with Putin the last few weeks is about to deal with some conflicting feelings.
You so desperately want this to be a right vs left issue.
I was referring specifically to a relatively small but noisy subset of the right that has been celebrating Putin's "strength" the last couple weeks. It's not the GOP.
I notice you have no comment for our new Ukrainian buddies with connections to European neo Nazis.
Our buddies? Ukraine is a corrupt kleptocracy. Land grabs in Europe are nonetheless a problem.
I guess there are no conflicting feeling for a progressive. Other than their ethnic/racial and nationalist tendencies, the politics sync up quite nicely for a progressive douche bag.
LOL. Sounds like "Freedom Strawman Quarterly" came out with a new issue for their web-zine.

"Our buddies" comment is sarcasm.

My comment about Progressive is not. National Socialism and Progressivism are branches of the same tree.
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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Batboy2/75 wrote:You so desperately want this to be a right vs left issue.
Batboy2/75 wrote:National Socialism and Progressivism are branches of the same tree.
One of the downsides of the Internet is that it allows like-minded people to form communities, and sometimes those communities are stupid.

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Re: Russia and Ukraine

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Russia gets invaded on a regular basis from the West, so I get completely their psychological need to have some territorial buffer. This is an excerpt from a 2009 book by George Friedman. Dude was ahead of the game.
We must consider the future of Eurasia after the fall of the Soviet Union. Since 1991, the region has fragmented and decayed. The successor state to the Soviet Union, Russia, is emerging from this period with renewed self-confidence. Yet Russia is also in an untenable geopolitical position. Unless Russia exerts itself to create a sphere of influence, the Russian Federation could itself fragment.

For most of the second half of the 20th century, the Soviet Union controlled Eurasia -- from central Germany to the Pacific, as far south as the Caucasus and the Hindu Kush. When the Soviet Union collapsed, its western frontier moved east nearly 1,000 miles, from the West German border to the Russian border with Belarus. Russian power has now retreated farther east than it has been in centuries. During the Cold War it had moved farther west than ever before. In the coming decades, Russian power will settle somewhere between those two lines.

After the Soviet Union dissolved at the end of the 20th century, foreign powers moved in to take advantage of Russia's economy, creating an era of chaos and poverty. Most significantly, Ukraine moved into an alignment with the United States and away from Russia -- this was a breaking point in Russian history.

The Orange Revolution in Ukraine, from December 2004 to January 2005, was the moment when the post-Cold War world genuinely ended for Russia. The Russians saw the events in Ukraine as an attempt by the United States to draw Ukraine into NATO and thereby set the stage for Russian disintegration. Quite frankly, there was some truth to the Russian perception.

If the West had succeeded in dominating Ukraine, Russia would have become indefensible. The southern border with Belarus, as well as the southwestern frontier of Russia, would have been wide open.

Russia's Resurgence

After what Russia regarded as an American attempt to further damage it, Moscow reverted to a strategy of reasserting its sphere of influence in the areas of the former Soviet Union. The great retreat of Russian power ended in Ukraine. For the next generation, until roughly 2020, Russia's primary concern will be reconstructing the Russian state and reasserting Russian power in the region.

Interestingly, the geopolitical shift is aligning with an economic shift. Vladimir Putin sees Russia less as an industrial power than as an exporter of raw materials, the most important of which is energy (particularly natural gas). He is transforming Russia from an impoverished disaster into a poor but more productive country. Putin also is giving Russia the tool with which to intimidate Europe: the valve on a natural gas pipeline.

But the real flash point, in all likelihood, will be on Russia's western frontier. Belarus will align itself with Russia. Of all the countries in the former Soviet Union, Belarus has had the fewest economic and political reforms and has been the most interested in recreating some successor to the Soviet Union. Linked in some way to Russia, Belarus will bring Russian power back to the borders of the former Soviet Union.

From the Baltics south to the Romanian border there is a region where borders have historically been uncertain and conflict frequent. In the north, there is a long, narrow plain, stretching from the Pyrenees to St. Petersburg. This is where Europe's greatest wars were fought. This is the path that Napoleon and Hitler took to invade Russia. There are few natural barriers. Therefore, the Russians must push their border west as far as possible to create a buffer. After World War II, they drove into the center of Germany on this plain. Today, they have retreated to the east. They have to return, and move as far west as possible. That means the Baltic states and Poland are, as before, problems Russia has to solve.

Defining the limits of Russian influence will be controversial. The United States -- and the countries within the old Soviet sphere -- will not want Russia to go too far.

Russia will not become a global power in the next decade, but it has no choice but to become a major regional power. And that means it will clash with Europe. The Russian-European frontier remains a fault line.

It is unreasonable to talk of Europe as if it were one entity. It is not, in spite of the existence of the European Union. Europe consists of a series of sovereign and contentious nation-states.

In short, post-Cold War Europe is in benign chaos. Russia is the immediate strategic threat to Europe. Russia is interested not in conquering Europe, but in reasserting its control over the former Soviet Union. From the Russian point of view, this is both a reasonable attempt to establish some minimal sphere of influence and essentially a defensive measure.

Obviously the Eastern Europeans want to prevent a Russian resurgence. The real question is what the rest of Europe might do -- and especially, what Germany might do. The Germans are now in a comfortable position with a buffer between them and the Russians, free to focus on their internal economic and social problems. In addition, the heritage of World War II weighs heavily on the Germans. They will not want to act alone, but as part of a unified Europe.

Russia is the eastern portion of Europe and has clashed with the rest of Europe on multiple occasions. Historically, though, Europeans who have invaded Russia have come to a disastrous end. If they are not beaten by the Russians, they are so exhausted from fighting them that someone else defeats them. Russia occasionally pushes its power westward, threatening Europe with the Russian masses. At other times passive and ignored, Russia is often taken advantage of. But, in due course, others pay for underestimating it.

Geographic Handicaps, Energy Assets

If we are going to understand Russia's behavior and intentions, we have to begin with Russia's fundamental weakness -- its borders, particularly in the northwest. On the North European Plain, no matter where Russia's borders are drawn, it is open to attack. There are few significant natural barriers anywhere on this plain. Pushing its western border all the way into Germany, as it did in 1945, still leaves Russia's frontiers without a physical anchor. The only physical advantage Russia can have is depth. The farther west into Europe its borders extend, the farther conquerors have to travel to reach Moscow. Therefore, Russia is always pressing westward on the North European Plain and Europe is always pressing eastward.

Europe is hungry for energy. Russia, constructing pipelines to feed natural gas to Europe, takes care of Europe's energy needs and its own economic problems, and puts Europe in a position of dependency on Russia. In an energy-hungry world, Russia's energy exports are like heroin. It addicts countries once they start using it. Russia has already used its natural gas resources to force neighboring countries to bend to its will. That power reaches into the heart of Europe, where the Germans and the former Soviet satellites of Eastern Europe all depend on Russian natural gas. Add to this its other resources, and Russia can apply significant pressure on Europe.

Dependency can be a double-edged sword. A militarily weak Russia cannot pressure its neighbors, because its neighbors might decide to make a grab for its wealth. So Russia must recover its military strength. Rich and weak is a bad position for nations to be in. If Russia is to be rich in natural resources and export them to Europe, it must be in a position to protect what it has and to shape the international environment in which it lives.

In the next decade, Russia will become increasingly wealthy (relative to its past, at least) but geographically insecure. It will therefore use some of its wealth to create a military force appropriate to protect its interests, buffer zones to protect it from the rest of the world -- and then buffer zones for the buffer zones. Russia's grand strategy involves the creation of deep buffers along the North European Plain, while it divides and manipulates its neighbors, creating a new regional balance of power in Europe. What Russia cannot tolerate are tight borders without buffer zones, and its neighbors united against it. This is why Russia's future actions will appear to be aggressive but will actually be defensive.

Russia's actions will unfold in three phases. In the first phase, Russia will be concerned with recovering influence and effective control in the former Soviet Union, re-creating the system of buffers that the Soviet Union provided it. In the second phase, Russia will seek to create a second tier of buffers beyond the boundaries of the former Soviet Union. It will try to do this without creating a solid wall of opposition, of the kind that choked it during the Cold War. In the third phase -- really something that will have been going on from the beginning -- Russia will try to prevent anti-Russian coalitions from forming.

If we think of the Soviet Union as a natural grouping of geographically isolated and economically handicapped countries, we can see what held it together. The countries that made up the Soviet Union were bound together of necessity. The former Soviet Union consisted of members who really had nowhere else to go. These old economic ties still dominate the region, except that Russia's new model, exporting energy, has made these countries even more dependent than they were previously. Attracted as Ukraine was to the rest of Europe, it could not compete or participate with Europe. Its natural economic relationship is with Russia; it relies on Russia for energy, and ultimately it tends to be militarily dominated by Russia as well.

These are the dynamics that Russia will take advantage of in order to reassert its sphere of influence. It will not necessarily recreate a formal political structure run from Moscow -- although that is not inconceivable. Far more important will be Russian influence in the region over the next five to 10 years.

The Russians will pull the Ukrainians into their alliance with Belarus and will have Russian forces all along the Polish border, and as far south as the Black Sea. This, I believe, will all take place by the mid-2010s.

There has been a great deal of talk in recent years about the weakness of the Russian army, talk that in the decade after the collapse of the Soviet Union was accurate. But here is the new reality -- that weakness started to reverse itself in 2000, and by 2015 it will be a thing of the past. The coming confrontation in northeastern Europe will not take place suddenly, but will be an extended confrontation. Russian military strength will have time to develop. The one area in which Russia continued research and development in the 1990s was in advanced military technologies. By 2010, it will certainly have the most effective army in the region. By 2015-2020, it will have a military that will pose a challenge to any power trying to project force into the region, even the United States.



Read more: Ukraine and the 'Little Cold War' | Stratfor
Follow us: @stratfor on Twitter | Stratfor on Facebook
Edit: Some more from same site. http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/next-100 ... 20-rematch
Last edited by nafod on Tue Mar 18, 2014 4:26 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Russia and Ukraine

Post by DARTH »

nafod wrote:Russia gets invaded on a regular basis from the West, so I get completely their psychological need to have some territorial buffer. This is an excerpt from a 2009 book by George Friedman. Dude was ahead of the game.
We must consider the future of Eurasia after the fall of the Soviet Union. Since 1991, the region has fragmented and decayed. The successor state to the Soviet Union, Russia, is emerging from this period with renewed self-confidence. Yet Russia is also in an untenable geopolitical position. Unless Russia exerts itself to create a sphere of influence, the Russian Federation could itself fragment.

For most of the second half of the 20th century, the Soviet Union controlled Eurasia -- from central Germany to the Pacific, as far south as the Caucasus and the Hindu Kush. When the Soviet Union collapsed, its western frontier moved east nearly 1,000 miles, from the West German border to the Russian border with Belarus. Russian power has now retreated farther east than it has been in centuries. During the Cold War it had moved farther west than ever before. In the coming decades, Russian power will settle somewhere between those two lines.

After the Soviet Union dissolved at the end of the 20th century, foreign powers moved in to take advantage of Russia's economy, creating an era of chaos and poverty. Most significantly, Ukraine moved into an alignment with the United States and away from Russia -- this was a breaking point in Russian history.

The Orange Revolution in Ukraine, from December 2004 to January 2005, was the moment when the post-Cold War world genuinely ended for Russia. The Russians saw the events in Ukraine as an attempt by the United States to draw Ukraine into NATO and thereby set the stage for Russian disintegration. Quite frankly, there was some truth to the Russian perception.

If the West had succeeded in dominating Ukraine, Russia would have become indefensible. The southern border with Belarus, as well as the southwestern frontier of Russia, would have been wide open.

Russia's Resurgence

After what Russia regarded as an American attempt to further damage it, Moscow reverted to a strategy of reasserting its sphere of influence in the areas of the former Soviet Union. The great retreat of Russian power ended in Ukraine. For the next generation, until roughly 2020, Russia's primary concern will be reconstructing the Russian state and reasserting Russian power in the region.

Interestingly, the geopolitical shift is aligning with an economic shift. Vladimir Putin sees Russia less as an industrial power than as an exporter of raw materials, the most important of which is energy (particularly natural gas). He is transforming Russia from an impoverished disaster into a poor but more productive country. Putin also is giving Russia the tool with which to intimidate Europe: the valve on a natural gas pipeline.

But the real flash point, in all likelihood, will be on Russia's western frontier. Belarus will align itself with Russia. Of all the countries in the former Soviet Union, Belarus has had the fewest economic and political reforms and has been the most interested in recreating some successor to the Soviet Union. Linked in some way to Russia, Belarus will bring Russian power back to the borders of the former Soviet Union.

From the Baltics south to the Romanian border there is a region where borders have historically been uncertain and conflict frequent. In the north, there is a long, narrow plain, stretching from the Pyrenees to St. Petersburg. This is where Europe's greatest wars were fought. This is the path that Napoleon and Hitler took to invade Russia. There are few natural barriers. Therefore, the Russians must push their border west as far as possible to create a buffer. After World War II, they drove into the center of Germany on this plain. Today, they have retreated to the east. They have to return, and move as far west as possible. That means the Baltic states and Poland are, as before, problems Russia has to solve.

Defining the limits of Russian influence will be controversial. The United States -- and the countries within the old Soviet sphere -- will not want Russia to go too far.

Russia will not become a global power in the next decade, but it has no choice but to become a major regional power. And that means it will clash with Europe. The Russian-European frontier remains a fault line.

It is unreasonable to talk of Europe as if it were one entity. It is not, in spite of the existence of the European Union. Europe consists of a series of sovereign and contentious nation-states.

In short, post-Cold War Europe is in benign chaos. Russia is the immediate strategic threat to Europe. Russia is interested not in conquering Europe, but in reasserting its control over the former Soviet Union. From the Russian point of view, this is both a reasonable attempt to establish some minimal sphere of influence and essentially a defensive measure.

Obviously the Eastern Europeans want to prevent a Russian resurgence. The real question is what the rest of Europe might do -- and especially, what Germany might do. The Germans are now in a comfortable position with a buffer between them and the Russians, free to focus on their internal economic and social problems. In addition, the heritage of World War II weighs heavily on the Germans. They will not want to act alone, but as part of a unified Europe.

Russia is the eastern portion of Europe and has clashed with the rest of Europe on multiple occasions. Historically, though, Europeans who have invaded Russia have come to a disastrous end. If they are not beaten by the Russians, they are so exhausted from fighting them that someone else defeats them. Russia occasionally pushes its power westward, threatening Europe with the Russian masses. At other times passive and ignored, Russia is often taken advantage of. But, in due course, others pay for underestimating it.

Geographic Handicaps, Energy Assets

If we are going to understand Russia's behavior and intentions, we have to begin with Russia's fundamental weakness -- its borders, particularly in the northwest. On the North European Plain, no matter where Russia's borders are drawn, it is open to attack. There are few significant natural barriers anywhere on this plain. Pushing its western border all the way into Germany, as it did in 1945, still leaves Russia's frontiers without a physical anchor. The only physical advantage Russia can have is depth. The farther west into Europe its borders extend, the farther conquerors have to travel to reach Moscow. Therefore, Russia is always pressing westward on the North European Plain and Europe is always pressing eastward.

Europe is hungry for energy. Russia, constructing pipelines to feed natural gas to Europe, takes care of Europe's energy needs and its own economic problems, and puts Europe in a position of dependency on Russia. In an energy-hungry world, Russia's energy exports are like heroin. It addicts countries once they start using it. Russia has already used its natural gas resources to force neighboring countries to bend to its will. That power reaches into the heart of Europe, where the Germans and the former Soviet satellites of Eastern Europe all depend on Russian natural gas. Add to this its other resources, and Russia can apply significant pressure on Europe.

Dependency can be a double-edged sword. A militarily weak Russia cannot pressure its neighbors, because its neighbors might decide to make a grab for its wealth. So Russia must recover its military strength. Rich and weak is a bad position for nations to be in. If Russia is to be rich in natural resources and export them to Europe, it must be in a position to protect what it has and to shape the international environment in which it lives.

In the next decade, Russia will become increasingly wealthy (relative to its past, at least) but geographically insecure. It will therefore use some of its wealth to create a military force appropriate to protect its interests, buffer zones to protect it from the rest of the world -- and then buffer zones for the buffer zones. Russia's grand strategy involves the creation of deep buffers along the North European Plain, while it divides and manipulates its neighbors, creating a new regional balance of power in Europe. What Russia cannot tolerate are tight borders without buffer zones, and its neighbors united against it. This is why Russia's future actions will appear to be aggressive but will actually be defensive.

Russia's actions will unfold in three phases. In the first phase, Russia will be concerned with recovering influence and effective control in the former Soviet Union, re-creating the system of buffers that the Soviet Union provided it. In the second phase, Russia will seek to create a second tier of buffers beyond the boundaries of the former Soviet Union. It will try to do this without creating a solid wall of opposition, of the kind that choked it during the Cold War. In the third phase -- really something that will have been going on from the beginning -- Russia will try to prevent anti-Russian coalitions from forming.

If we think of the Soviet Union as a natural grouping of geographically isolated and economically handicapped countries, we can see what held it together. The countries that made up the Soviet Union were bound together of necessity. The former Soviet Union consisted of members who really had nowhere else to go. These old economic ties still dominate the region, except that Russia's new model, exporting energy, has made these countries even more dependent than they were previously. Attracted as Ukraine was to the rest of Europe, it could not compete or participate with Europe. Its natural economic relationship is with Russia; it relies on Russia for energy, and ultimately it tends to be militarily dominated by Russia as well.

These are the dynamics that Russia will take advantage of in order to reassert its sphere of influence. It will not necessarily recreate a formal political structure run from Moscow -- although that is not inconceivable. Far more important will be Russian influence in the region over the next five to 10 years.

The Russians will pull the Ukrainians into their alliance with Belarus and will have Russian forces all along the Polish border, and as far south as the Black Sea. This, I believe, will all take place by the mid-2010s.

There has been a great deal of talk in recent years about the weakness of the Russian army, talk that in the decade after the collapse of the Soviet Union was accurate. But here is the new reality -- that weakness started to reverse itself in 2000, and by 2015 it will be a thing of the past. The coming confrontation in northeastern Europe will not take place suddenly, but will be an extended confrontation. Russian military strength will have time to develop. The one area in which Russia continued research and development in the 1990s was in advanced military technologies. By 2010, it will certainly have the most effective army in the region. By 2015-2020, it will have a military that will pose a challenge to any power trying to project force into the region, even the United States.



Read more: Ukraine and the 'Little Cold War' | Stratfor
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Batboy2/75
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Re: Russia and Ukraine

Post by Batboy2/75 »

Grandpa's Spells wrote:
Batboy2/75 wrote:You so desperately want this to be a right vs left issue.
Batboy2/75 wrote:National Socialism and Progressivism are branches of the same tree.
Yeah except neither quote is related.

All one has to do is read the history of the Western Progressive left to see that both National Socialism and Progressivism are kindred spirits.
Arms are the only true badge of liberty. The possession of arms is the distinction of the free man from the slave.

I prefer dangerous freedom over peaceful slavery.


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DrDonkeyLove
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Re: Russia and Ukraine

Post by DrDonkeyLove »

Grandpa's Spells wrote:Interesting speech from Russia. The fringe-y right that's been in love with Putin the last few weeks is about to deal with some conflicting feelings.
The fringe-y right despises Obama for many reasons - most of them correctly so. One of those reasons is they believe he is a feckless fool who has diminished the perception of American power in the world. They are not in love with Putin and probably don't care very much about Ukraine & Crimea, but they love the feeling of the "I told you so" moment.

The whole situation is quite sad so it's best to just turn it into a caricature laden joke with a platitudinous weak Obama vs. shirtless stud Putin. His comical sanctions against 7 Russians makes the US into a laughingstock.

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Mao wrote:Political power grows out of the barrel of a gun. Our principle is that the Party commands the gun, and the gun must never be allowed to command the Party

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Re: Russia and Ukraine

Post by Fat Cat »

Wild Bill wrote:
Fat Cat wrote:Budapest Agreement is a political agreement, not a treaty and has no ratification process.
no.
Yes.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Budapest_M ... Assurances
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It is our job to see that it stays there." - George Orwell

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