Not a lot of new information in this piece by Alastair Gee in US News & World Report, but a succinct summary of what Barack Obama is going to have to deal with in relations with Russia and its inferiority complex:
It’s unclear how much Obama will focus on human rights in Russia, where opposition groups have been excluded from political life. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice notably met with rights activists during visits to Moscow. Taking all that into account, some experts nevertheless say that there’s reason to hope for an improvement in relations. Judging by their biographies, Obama and Medvedev may be able to find common ground, says Rose Gottemoeller, a former adviser to Bill Clinton on post-Soviet nations and head of the Carnegie Moscow Center. “They’re really not trapped by the Cold War mentality,” she suggests, referring to Obama’s coming of age when the Cold War was in its final stages and Medvedev’s career path outside the Communist Party or KGB. “Both have the potential to be very pragmatic, very problem-solving.”
Representatives from Russia’s Foreign Ministry have also sounded a positive note. “We think that this breath of fresh air will lead to a more constructive relationship,” said Grigory Garasin, first deputy director at the ministry, the RIA-Novosti news agency reported.And outside the political sphere, relations are not so chilly. Russian exports to the United States reached $19.4 billion in 2007, more than double the 2002 figure, while U.S. exports to Russia are expected to top $8 billion in 2008, compared with $2.4 billion in 2002, according to the American Chamber of Commerce in Moscow. However, Andrew Sommers, president of the organization, says the current geopolitical problems have given some companies second thoughts about following through on projects planned for Russia.It remains to be seen how much the financial crisis and falling oil prices have slowed Russia’s natural resource-fueled boom and whether a weakened Russia might result in a more compliant partner for Obama. Russia’s stock markets have fallen about 70 percent since April, when investors became anxious about the security of investments here. While some analysts are predicting bleak times ahead, others believe that the effects of the crisis will be limited.
2 Comments
It’s quite true. Medvedev was exceedingly pragmatic when he agreed to be a sham president and let Vladimir Putin pull his strings like a puppet.Just try to name one single action taken by Medvedev in the first six months of his “presidency” to depart from the ways of the cold war. Can’t? Though tnot.According to those trade figures, the U.S. is three times more open to Russian products than Russia is to American ones. Where is Medvedev’s call to change that?If Obama won’t speak up more loudly than George Bush did to defend human rights in Russia, he’ll betray the whole basis of his existence and his presidency.Seems to me that the Carnegie Center is engaging in its same old, same old. Silly pipe dreams about peace and friendship, exactly what Putin was hoping for to induce Obama to drop his guard and allow a further consolidation of KGB rule in Russia.Shame on Carnegie.
“President Dmitry Medvedev ordered police on Friday to stamp out any social unrest arising from the global financial crisis.”– Dmitri Medvedev, 11/7http://www.themoscowtimes.com/article/600/42/372227.htmNope, not a sign of Soviet mentality in that man! I take it all back, the Carnegie Center clearly knows all, tells all.Too bad they kept the bit about the stock market to themselves . . .