According to today's
New York Times, influential [ethnic] Russians want to break of f relations with the United States, restart the Cold War, and reestablish the Soviet Union.
Influential US Senators, e.g., McCain, Graham, and Cruz, want the same thing, though their reasons differ. McCain and Graham wanted the US to go to war with Russia over Russia's dispute with Georgia over South Ossetia's secession from Georgia; and want war with Russia over Crimea's presumed secession fro Ukraine.
The Russian faction sees the US gaining power in all the former members of theSoviet Union, and believes Russia should regain he influence it once had, and join or rejoin China in a struggle with he West for World Supremacy.
I believe thee Russian critics are right that ethnic Russians are losing power in Russia and have cause for alarm, just as ethnic Europeans are losing power in the United States, causing alarm among Republicans, who are overwhelmingly ethnic Europeans.
A quotation from the
Times article:
Virulently anti-American, Mr. Dugin has urged a “conservative revolution” that combines left-wing economics and right-wing cultural traditionalism. In a 1997 book, he introduced the idea of building a Eurasian empire “constructed on the fundamental principle of the common enemy,” which he identified as Atlanticism, liberal values, and geopolitical control by the United States.
Consider, from the Russian point of view:
•• The Russian South Caucasus is filled with ethnic nonRussian Muslims who are willing to die to establish Sharia in their Republics [a "Republic" is similar to a"State" in he US.]. Ethnic Russians are willing to kill Muslims by the thousands to prevent that change. Dagestan is the current flash-point.
•• Five of Russia's Republics have a majority of folks who accept the Dali Lama as their spiritual and temporal leader . These republics, if Tuva is typical, seem indifferent to whomever the current "ruler" of Russia happens to be.
•• Six Turkic-speaking nations were once members of he Soviet Union. Four of the most sable of hem now have formed the Turkic Council with Turkey and are aligned with Turkey, a NAATO member. If Azerbaijan has its way, Turkic-speaking nations will become a third power in central Asia, controlling vast flows of oil and natural gas, standing ready to be a countervailing power between Russia, China, and the US for control of the mild of Asia...
The Turkic Council - Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Turkey.
Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan are not currently official members of the council due to their neutral stance; however, they are possible future members of the council.
Variations in Turkic-speaking peoples
•• Turkmenistan, which has the last remaining Soviet dictator, has the world's second largest reservers of natural gas. The US is pushing hard to convince affected nations to create a pipe line froTurkmenistan to India, as an alternative to the Iran-Pakistan Pipeline.
The pipeline has the unenviable task
of' crossing Pashtun and Baloch territories.
TheTurkmenistan pipeline, if built, would align Turkmenistan with US interests.
•• Georgia is on Russia's troubled southern border; is home to US air and troop facilities; has applied for NATO membership; and -- along with former Soviet Union member Azerbaijan -- expressed an interest in joining the European Union.
•• Azerbaijan, once loyal to Russia and also on its southern border, is enjoying great relations with American oil companies, to whom it sells billions in oil each year. It is the most European of the former Soviet countries.
Azeris speak Turkic intelligible in Turkey, and have some two million countrymen living in North-Azerbaijan, a rich province in Iran: feet in many fires.
•• The US rings Russia with military bases.
American might doesn't look so ominous until you look at the World from the North Pole, with Canada and Greenland near neighbors to Russia.
Compare Russia's foreign bases. From Wikipedia:
Wikipedia misses the naval base in Syria, and may miss others.
•• Russia still has enough Bombs to destroy the world and so enjoys a mandatory deference, but so do many nations now. Mutual Assured Deterrence still seems to work.
•• Most important: Russia is out of the running for world leadership.
The Great Game, which Russia and Britain played for a century, is now played between the US and the Han in China, and Russia and Britain watch, envious, on the sidelines. See, e.g., a well-written article in
The Hindu, reprinted after he jump.
The Han are set to rival the US in economic power in the near future, and economic power has replaced trench warfare as the way to World Control.
A Han dance troupe in North Carolina
I think because the Han are so homogenous and tribal, they have no use for anyone but other Han [if you doubt, ask any Uighur, Tibetan,or Formosan]. Russia might be able to play second fiddle to the Han, but will not be an equal partner, which will not sit well with Russophiles who want a new Cold War.
I want the US to come out on Top in the New Great Game, because it is a polyglot nation -- like it or not, ye Doubters -- and China is not. A polyglot nation is at a disadvantage when it comes to taking unified stances, and at an advantage when taking advantage of the many points of view its populace brings to the table means more congruence to the Wold. If the US can only get its economic house in order, it'll prevail. I look to Obama more than to Cruz for guidance on how to do that.
Sit tight, World. The Game is again afoot. We might yet have our Nuclear Winter, so longed for by Hawks around the Globe.
The Hindu articles is after the jump.