Challenge Posed by Terrorism Alters Russian Alignments

Published: 17 September 2001 y., Monday
To see why Russia has enthusiastically backed President George W. Bush's call for a global war against terrorism, look at who visited the Kremlin last week. And to see why that enthusiasm shows signs of flagging so soon, look at who did not. The visitor was Ariel Sharon, the third prime minister of Israel to come to Moscow since 1999. Those visits mark a compelling turnabout since the days when Soviet client states trained anti-Israeli terrorists. Indeed, Mr. Sharon took pains during his Moscow trip to say that the two nations were "united in our concern over the spread of Islamic terrorism." The man who stayed home was Ali Shamkhani, the defense minister of Iran. Protesting Mr. Sharon's visit, Mr. Shamkhani postponed his own trip, which was meant to seal the purchase of hundreds of millions of dollars in Russian arms. This time it was the Russian foreign minister, Igor Ivanov, who took pains to show Russia's other side. After meeting with Mr. Sharon, Mr. Ivanov said that Russia was nurturing its relations with Iran "and shall obviously continue to do so." When it comes to terrorism, Israel and Iran are the two faces of Russia's dry-eyed foreign policy. Russia has been increasingly vocal in its own opposition to terror. It surpassed itself Thursday by offering NATO unsolicited support for a global struggle against terrorist groups. Mr. Ivanov even tacitly endorsed U.S. military retaliation, saying the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon justified "all possible means" in the fight against terrorism. But within hours, the Russian military pulled back from those positions. The Russian defense minister, Sergei Ivanov, ruled out "even hypothetical assumptions" that Russia and other former Soviet states would lend troops or bases to any NATO military action. Russian officials also warned the United States that any retaliation that caused civilian suffering would only provoke a greater terrorist response. That is precisely the argument the West has used - and Russians have ignored - in Moscow's own war against Islamic extremists in Chechnya. Russia's view of terrorism's threat has moved much closer to that of Western nations. But where the Bush administration now calls for an us-versus-them coalition, Russia's view of the problem is far more shaded. Good relations with Israel are one interest. Moscow's old policy of propping up an Arab bloc dedicated to Israel's extinction died with the Soviet Union. Russia no longer has the money to ship weapons and aid to its old allies. Nor does it have a good reason: today it is Israel, with Western technology, Western entrщe and 1 million Russian immigrants, that has increasingly become the Kremlin's logical Middle East partner. Chechnya is another reason.
Šaltinis: New York Times
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Sarkisian Says ‘Painful’ Concessions Needed For Karabakh Peace

Defense Minister Serzh Sarkisian said on Wednesday that a peaceful resolution of the Nagorno-Karabakh conflict requires “painful” concessions from both sides and again warned Azerbaijan against resorting to military action more »

Kyrgyz victory for democracy: EU

THE European Union said today the overthrow of Kyrgyzstan's veteran president Askar Akayev was a victory for democracy more »

The Post-Soviet Space

Participants in the international conference on Security in Central Asia in cooperation with the United States believe that the development of Kazakhstan's transit potential is possible only if Astana maneuvers between Moscow, Washington and Beijing more »

The Invitation

Moldova Invites President of Lithuania to Attend GUUAM Summit in Chisinau more »

Kyrgyz Legislators Set New Date For Elections

Kyrgyz parliamentarians today took further steps to erase the remnants of ousted President Askar Akayev's rule as they set 26 June as the date for new presidential polls more »

ARMENIAN LEADERS MEET WITH VISITING RUSSIAN PRESIDENT

President Kocharian and other senior officials met with Russian President Vladimir Putin on 24 March more »

Kyrgyzstan names new leadership

Kyrgyzstan's parliament has appointed an interim leader after President Askar Akayev was toppled in a rebellion more »

President plans April trip to United States

Latvian President Vaira Vīķe-Freiberga plans to visit both coasts of the United States during early April more »

Annan urges gov's to adopt UN reforms

United Nations Secretary-General, Kofi Annan has proposed wide-ranging reforms of the world body more »

The Statement

Tarasiuk, German Foreign Minister Fischer, And Polish Foreign Minister Rotfeld Discuss Ukraine's European Integration more »