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A New Cold War?

Conn Hallinan | June 18, 2008

Editor: John Feffer

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Foreign Policy In Focus

Military alliances are always sold as things that produce security. In practice they tend to do the opposite.

Thus, Germany formed the Triple Alliance with Italy and the Austro-Hungarian Empire to counter the enmity of France following the Franco-Prussian War. In response, France, England and Russia formed the Triple Entente. The outcome was World War I

In 1949, the United States and Britain led the campaign to form the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) to deter a supposed Soviet attack on Western Europe. In response, the Soviets formed the Warsaw Pact. What the world got was not security but the Cold War, dozens of brushfire conflicts across the globe, and enough nuclear weapons to destroy the earth a dozen times over.

NATO Lives On

The Cold War may be over, but you would never know it from NATO’s April meeting in Bucharest. The alliance approved membership for Croatia and Albania, and only French and German opposition prevented the Bush administration from adding the former Soviet republics of Ukraine and Georgia.

“NATO,” President Bush told the gathering, “is no longer a static alliance focused on defending Europe from a Soviet tank invasion. It is now an expeditionary alliance that is sending its forces across the world to help secure a future of freedom and peace for millions.”

NATO will soon begin deploying anti-ballistic missile (ABM) systems in Poland and the Czech Republic that are supposedly aimed at Iran, but which the Russians charge are really targeted at them. The alliance has encircled Russia with allies and bases, is increasingly sidelining the United Nations, has added troops to Afghanistan, and is preparing to open shop in the Pacific Basin.

But politics is much like physics: for every reaction there is an equal and opposite reaction.

Shanghai Strikes Back

In this case the reaction is the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO), an organization that embraces one quarter of the world’s population, from Eastern Europe to North Asia, from the Arctic to the vast steppes and mountain ranges of Central Asia. Formed in 2001, its members include China, Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan.

The SCO is, in the words of a Financial Times editorial, “everything that Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger – who sought to keep Russia and China apart – tried to prevent.”

According to Chinese Foreign Minister Yeng Jiechi, last August’s SCO meeting in the Kyrgyz capital of Bishkek, prioritized “mapping out Sino-Russian ties and upgrading bilateral strategic coordination.” The two nations also agreed “to join forces to tackle other major security issues, in a concerted effort to safeguard the strategic interests of both countries.”

It is useful to remember that it was less than 40 years ago that Chinese and Soviet troops clashed across the Ussuri River north of Vladivostok.

According to China’s People’s Daily, SCO discussions included strengthening the UN and “the common challenge facing the two countries, emanating out of the U.S. plans to deploy the missile-defense plans targeting Europe and the East.”

China is deeply concerned about the Bush administration’s anti-ballistic missile system (ABM) which could cancel out Beijing’s modest Intercontinental Ballistic Missile (ICBM) force. This past May 23, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev and Chinese President Hu Jintao issued a joint statement condemning the ABM as a threat to “strategic balance and stability.”

The Bishkek summit adopted a declaration that took direct aim at the Bush administration’s foreign policy, including condemning “unilateralism” and “double standards,” supporting “multilateralism,” and “strict observance of international law,” and underlining the importance of the UN.

Is the SCO evolving into a political alliance with a strong military dimension, like NATO? Not yet, but its member states have carried out joint “anti-terrorist” maneuvers, and the organization is closely tied to the Collective Security Treaty Organization (CSTO).

The Un-NATO

The CSTO, established in 2002, includes Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Tajikistan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Uzbekistan. It is a full-blown military alliance whose members have pledged to come to one another’s support in case of an attack. It is currently developing a rapid-reaction force similar to the one being built by NATO.

M. K. Bhadrakumar, a former career diplomat who served as India’s ambassador to Uzbekistan, argues that that the two organizations may eventually merge. “The SCO may focus on the range of so-called ‘new threats’ [terrorism] rather than on the conventional form of military threats, while the CSTO would maintain a common air-defense system, training of military personnel, arms procurement, etc.”

In the same week that the SCO met in Bishkek, the Russians announced their response to NATO’s ABM system: a resumption of strategic air patrols, improving Moscow’s anti-missile system, modernizing the Topol-M ICBM, and constructing new missile firing submarines.

Next Stop: Central Asia

To counter the SCO’s growing influence – the organization now has official observer status at the UN, and a working relationship with the Association of South East Asian Nations—the United States launched a “Great Central Asia” strategy to try and drive a wedge between Central Asian nations and Russia, and to woo India by playing on New Delhi’s apprehension of China’s growing power.

But, according to Bhadrakumar, the Central Asian part of the strategy is not likely to be very successful, with the possible exception of Turkmenistan. With the United States deeply mired in Iraq and Afghanistan, he says, “U.S. stock is very low” in the region.

Washington may have more success with India, but New Delhi is clearly of two minds about the SCO. On one hand, many Indians are nervous about the growing power of China. On the other, India desperately needs the energy resources of Central Asia.

India will probably chart a middle course, keeping itself free of political alliances, but making sure it doesn’t do anything that might disrupt the flow of gas and oil to its growing industries. For instance, New Delhi sharply rejected the Bush administration’s efforts to halt a pipeline deal between India and Iran.

Whether the SCO will turn into an eastern NATO is by no means clear, but the economic side of the alliance is solidly grounded in self-interest.

NATO in Trouble

NATO, on the other hand, is an alliance in trouble. While the organization has agreed to help bail the United States out of the Afghan quagmire, member nations are hardly enthusiastic about the war. At the April meeting the U.S. plea for more troops turned up 700 French soldiers. As Anatol Lieven, a professor of War Studies at King’s College London, points out, this comes to one for every 400 square miles of Afghanistan.

NATO did back the ABM deployment, but no one besides Washington is breaking out the champagne. Some 70% of the Czech public opposes it, and the Poles are using the issue to blackmail the United States into modernizing its military. As one U.S. policy analyst cynically remarked to Financial Times columnist Gideon Rachman, the ABM is “a system that won’t work, against a threat that doesn’t exist, paid for by money we don’t have.” 

The U.S. ABM program has run up a bill of over $100 billion and, according to a recent Government Accounting Office report, it hasn’t been successfully tested with “sufficient realism.” 

Translation: the tests are rigged.

If NATO falls apart, and the SCO never develops into a military alliance, history suggests that we will probably all be better off. Military alliances have a way of making people miscalculate, and miscalculating in a world filled with nuclear weapons is a dangerously bad idea.

Conn Hallinan is a Foreign Policy In Focus (www.fpif.org) columnist.

 

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Published by Foreign Policy In Focus (FPIF), a project of the Institute for Policy Studies (IPS, online at www.ips-dc.org). Copyright © 2008, Institute for Policy Studies.

Recommended citation:
Conn Hallinan, "A New Cold War?" (Washington, DC: Foreign Policy In Focus, June 18, 2008).

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Author(s): Conn Hallinan
Editor(s): John Feffer
Production: John Feffer

Latest Comments & Conversation Area
Editor's Note: FPIF.org editors read and approve each comment. Comments are checked for content only; spelling and grammar errors are not corrected and comments that include vulgar language or libelous content are rejected.
 
Name Aaron Malcolm Date: Jun 18, 2008
It's a good article. And I agree with your analysis. This new Cold War is already illustrated with almost every issue brought forth at the United Nations Security Council. We only have to look at the East Vs. West voting pattern.
Name James Jones Date: Jun 18, 2008
Cold war is over cause we are now in hot war. Arms race is cold war. Terrorism is hot war. NATO vs. SCO hot war. Hot war is nuclear war or world war 3. US,EU & Israel vs. Russia, China, India & Islam. World war 3 is invetable cause of Global cause of Religion, Business and Politics. Religion and Satanism is the same. Business and Politics making people greedy and beast.
Name Cyrous Moradi Date: Jun 23, 2008
I think the idea of merging Nato and Sco organization is not realistic one. Most important obstacle here is democratic nature of Nato countries and non democtratic political system of Sco nations. During the past 70 years we can remember soviet and west alliance against Hitler. Just after the Germany Surrender, they became foes. Calling Sco as Estern Nato is something that will not happen in the near future.
Name Agilis Lux Date: Jun 29, 2008
The authors hope's in his last paragraph will probably drown in the new administrations dreams about realities. Even people with experience, like e.g. Bill Richardson, will find it hard to swallow the specific realities in the US. Its foreign politics are in ruins.

The UK, still acting as a US poodle for the privatized Pentagon and narcissistic personalities in Rome and Paris, who seem to have forgotten the promises James Baker once gave Gorbachev back in 1990: not to enlarge NATO into former Eastern Block nations.

NATO itself was the midwife helping to give birth to SCO and CSTO.

We are not defending any democracy at the Hindukush. That's all rubbish, - bla bla by main stream media monks and has nothing to do with realities. This is why people in Europe are overwhelmingly against all this wars (WOT).

It may have suited the Clinton administration quite good to have Slobodan Milosevic and Yugoslavia as a guinea pig that fitted well for the agenda of this imperial pamphlet "JointVison 2200", but this wars in Yugoland where pussy cat wars! The "cakewalks" & un-accomplished missions in A-Stan and Iraq are not only bleeding our societies & economies out, they exposing us as charlatans. But don't worry, - once the climate change starts demanding its share by sweeping the bases under water, we will not be able to blame Osama for it. He just initiated what Z. Brizinski did to the Kremlin almost 30 years ago, after the US embassy in Pakistan was burned down.

Name Matthew Price Date: Jul 01, 2008
As someone who's been watching the SCO since its creation in 2001, I feel Mr. Hallinan's article makes the organization sound much stronger and cohesive than it really is, and overstates its importance in regard to NATO.

China and Russia are by no means friends, and most of the lofty talk Hallinan quoted from the Chinese Foreign Minister and People's Daily is just that - talk. The SCO is first and foremost a Chinese-initiated foreign policy tool for promoting stability in its backyard. When the organization was created in June 2001, many in the region feared Taliban forces would soon finish their conquest of Afghanistan and start moving straight into Tajikistan. Recent terrorist activity in the region further fueled speculations of instability. China's largest province, Xinjiang, is made up of people ethnically, linguistically, and culturally related to the peoples of the former-Soviet Central Asian states. Since the Soviet breakup, and even before, Beijing has endeavored to thwart a full-fledged separatist movement in Xinjiang. A regional Taliban takeover could have been Xinjiang’s tipping point. By ensuring stability in their neighboring Muslim countries, China ensures stability at home.

The anti-missile talk coming from the SCO is mostly due to Russian influence, but it is not the primary purpose for Russia’s membership. Russia joined the organization to serve its policy objectives in the "near abroad" (the former Soviet states). China and Russia are locked in a battle for access to energy resources in Central Asia (mainly Kazakhstan, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan), and more often than not China was coming out on top. Failing at competition, Russia was ready to try cooperation. Thus the motivations for Chinese and Russian membership in the SCO are focused on regional economic and security concerns. Opposition to the US and NATO is more of an afterthought, albeit one that is growing more pronounced every year, especially due to fears of possible permanent US/NATO bases in Afghanistan.

Additionally, besides their rather modest joint anti-terrorists exercises, the SCO doesn't do much. They mostly hold summits at various regional capitals, where the members reaffirm what good friends they are (all the while eying each other warily), plan the location of the next summit, then stand around taking pictures.

And what of the future of the SCO, or the CSTO? It seems the former Soviet space loves unions and collations. The CIS was created when the USSR was dissolved, but has that organization really done lately (besides holding rather pointless, expensive meetings)? Remember the post-Soviet, anti-Russian organization of GUAM? I didn't think so. And what about that customs union Russia keeps discussing? So far only two other countries are involved, and it’s still theoretical. True, there seems to be some real effort to get the CSTO going again, but who knows if that will bear fruit. Beyond that, I'd be surprised if China would let the CSTO - a Russian-backed initiative and child of the CIS - link up with its only major international organization. Saying the two are "closely tied" reflects a Russian dream, not the reality.

Interestingly enough, the Financial Times article quoted by Hallinan is also not worried about the SCO. Notice the very next sentence after Hallinan’s quote (which he conveniently left out): "But the west should not view the SCO as an antagonist." The piece goes on to explain how the SCO is focused on security and energy affairs, not military, and the west could actually benefit from cooperation with the SCO.

If any part of the FT article should be quoted, it's this: "Europe and the US also need to work more on a central Asian strategy of their own. This is an increasingly important region, for security, economic and political reasons. In the past, the west erred by throwing its lot in with unsavoury characters such as [Uzbek President] Mr. Karimov."

Whatever modest success the SCO has had, it is not due to the military activities of NATO, but the complete lack of any Central Asian strategy by both the US and EU. This failure of diplomacy continues even today – after the US-Uzbek political fallout in 2005, we’re now trying to coddle up to Karimov yet again, and have sickeningly used our recent human rights abuses as justification for his. Until the west starts actively (and positively) engaging in Central Asia, Russia and China’s influence will continue to fill up the vacuum.

 
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