It's beta of the site. Let us know your opinion.
Weather       +5 °C
Currency:  1USD  7.7  1EUR 10.27
Search:  
 
 Sign In   Register

Is it really a Cold War?

21 August 2008, 11:30 | Views:1303 | Comments :5
Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s regime has gone further than the West in using military options against the West.

Ever since the Russian invasion of democratic Georgia, pundits and politicians have been writing extensively about the "new Cold War" that is emerging between Russia and the West.

Though it is clear that the dynamics of the Russia-West relationship has changed dramatically, it has already moved beyond a Cold War. In fact, by launching a full military invasion of democratic, NATO-allied Georgia, Russia has transformed the "cold war" of words to a full-out assault on Western institutions and freedoms.

In the aftermath of World War II, the Big 3 -- the United States, Great Britain and the Soviet Union -- divided up Europe and Germany into spheres of influence with tragic consequences for the Eastern half of Europe and Germany. In the late 1940s, the division of Europe hardened with the Soviet government undermining and destroying any independent political movement in the Eastern half of Europe.

Although the Soviets used extensive force to subdue opposition and destroy the remnants of the military units caught behind in its territory, it displayed severe apprehension of using any military power directly against Western European or American territory.

The first flashpoint of the nascent Cold War was in 1948 when the Soviet army blockaded allied entry to Berlin. Though the military was at high alert, no bullets were fired, much less did the Soviet army advance into Western territory.

In 1949, NATO was formed as a military treaty unifying the West against the Russian military threat. Over the course of the remaining four decades of the Cold War, the Soviet leaders rightfully feared launching an open military attack on Western Europe or the United States. In fact, it was the lack of direct military engagement between the West and the Soviet Union that defined the Cold War era.

Looking back over the past few years of Russian actions, it was clear that Putin had already launched a Cold War against Western institutions. Russia’s role in actively undermining a democratic election in Ukraine, launching cyber-warfare against Estonia and launching gas wars against Western countries were clearly the opening salvos of the new Cold War.

Sadly, there was no Churchillian figure who grand eloquently warned the West of an iron curtain descending on Europe, or perhaps, more aptly, an oil-fused one. While NATO was clearly formed to counter the Soviet military threat, at the most recent conference in Bucharest, NATO members bent over backwards showing deference to Russian sensibilities and accepting its right to have a veto over Ukraine and Georgia’s foreign policy.

Perhaps it was the tepid response by the West to Putin’s cold war tactics against his neighbors that emboldened the Russia Prime Minister to accelerate its Cold War tactics to outright military invasion of a European democratic country.

Georgia may still be a largely unknown country to many in the West, as are Estonia, Latvia and Ukraine, but the great success since the fall of the Berlin Wall has been the expansion of freedom and democracy to new areas in Europe, just as the post-World War II years did so to countries like Greece, Spain and Portugal.

Russia’s military invasion of Georgia is a direct challenge to this expansion. It also clearly goes beyond any actions against the West undertaken by the Soviet Union during the decades of the Cold War.

  Comments (5)
Add your comment
Left 1000 symbols
.
Guest  (Guest) | 18.09.2008, 18:36
Having traveled to Russia numerous times, and having been married to a Russian/German woman, I have to say that my experience with Russian people is that they are exceptional in many ways, and I am sorry to say that my experience also tells me they are exceptional liars...and cheats.

Perhaps their situations demand it, but it's not a pretty thing to experience.

Perhaps it's their lack of moral direction from a lack of spiritual guidance...

I really don't know, but I was shocked by my experiences with the Russian people that I grew to know and in many ways, loved.

There are those in Russia, who are at top levels in the military and in government, who think that some Russia can survive a nuclear exchange with the West.

You may survive the first exchange..

There are ways and means in the West to assure that no fat ass generals or the like in the Russian military or government and his young secretary will survive for long after such an exchange...it is an idle dream....forget it.
Answer  
chris  (Guest) | 14.09.2008, 22:35
if everything continues to escalate at what point does iy become a shooting war.I am a U.S citizen and I do not pretend to understand everything going on but I assume the only way Russia will stop intimidating your region will be when the industrialists in russia have had enough of their stock market being destroyed.The U.S economy is far from perfect but it can weather adversity far better and longer than Russia's.I have always admired the Russian people but I hope that Putin does not underestimate the fact that here in the U.S we feel threatened by russia's actions against it;s neighbors and we believe it in our best interests to support you rather than russia.I have read alot of blogs in russia and I fear they believe the U.S is a bankrupt declining people and I assure you that it is their BIGGEST mistake to believe that we would not defend you .their are to many simularities going on now that began world war 2 and the U.S will not choose isolationism or a direct attack on it again
Answer  
WMClarke   | 12.09.2008, 07:46
What needs to happen is have all the parties sit at a table with everything on the table.
Answer  
Guest  (Guest) | 12.09.2008, 13:59
Russia now is strong than ever, no western puppies in Government and Kremlin, tycoons can't steal money from budget. Communist Eltsin is dead, and everything in Russia is OK.
Answer  
Gecko  (Guest) | 02.01.2009, 07:56
Russian Guest I guess you can believe the hype when your government eliminates any independent thought.

makes you wonder what they are afraid of.

it seems to me that intelligent people like debate.

so draw your own conclusions.
Answer  

About author:

Jed Sunden
  Full Story

Most Popular Articles:

  1. Sarah Palin on Ukraine’s entry to NATO  
    12 September 2008, 15:06 | by
    Jed Sunden
  2. Russia, Georgia and McDonald's  
    5 September 2008, 11:34 | by
    Jed Sunden
  3. Is it really a Cold War?  
    21 August 2008, 11:30 | by
    Jed Sunden
  4. Free press in Russia?  
    15 September 2008, 17:58 | by
    Jed Sunden
  5. Do we really need to advertise the Holodomor?  
    21 November 2008, 14:10 | by
    Jed Sunden
  1. Sarah Palin on Ukraine’s entry to NATO  
    12 September 2008, 15:06 | by
    Jed Sunden
  2. Is it really a Cold War?  
    21 August 2008, 11:30 | by
    Jed Sunden
  3. Do we really need to advertise the Holodomor?  
    21 November 2008, 14:10 | by
    Jed Sunden
  4. Russia, Georgia and McDonald's  
    5 September 2008, 11:34 | by
    Jed Sunden
  5. Free press in Russia?  
    15 September 2008, 17:58 | by
    Jed Sunden
  1. The new Polish Army  
    15 December 2008, 10:20 | by
    Jed Sunden
  2. Do we really need to advertise the Holodomor?  
    21 November 2008, 14:10 | by
    Jed Sunden
  3. Road to hell is paved with good intentions  
    19 November 2008, 16:49 | by
    Jed Sunden
  4. One sign of upcoming elections is that Party of Regions is preparing  
    23 September 2008, 18:32 | by
    Jed Sunden
  5. Free press in Russia?  
    15 September 2008, 17:58 | by
    Jed Sunden
Advertising