Deprecated: Creation of dynamic property WP_Object_Cache::$global_prefix is deprecated in /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-content/object-cache.php on line 468

Deprecated: Creation of dynamic property WP_Object_Cache::$blog_prefix is deprecated in /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-content/object-cache.php on line 469

Deprecated: Creation of dynamic property WP_Object_Cache::$cache_hits is deprecated in /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-content/object-cache.php on line 475

Deprecated: Creation of dynamic property WP_Object_Cache::$cache_misses is deprecated in /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-content/object-cache.php on line 476

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-content/object-cache.php:468) in /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1775

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-content/object-cache.php:468) in /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1775

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-content/object-cache.php:468) in /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1775

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-content/object-cache.php:468) in /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1775

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-content/object-cache.php:468) in /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1775

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-content/object-cache.php:468) in /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1775

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-content/object-cache.php:468) in /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1775

Warning: Cannot modify header information - headers already sent by (output started at /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-content/object-cache.php:468) in /home/aoiusa/public_html/wp-includes/rest-api/class-wp-rest-server.php on line 1775
{"id":7684,"date":"2010-09-13T18:36:26","date_gmt":"2010-09-13T23:36:26","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.aoiusa.org\/?p=7684"},"modified":"2010-09-13T18:37:31","modified_gmt":"2010-09-13T23:37:31","slug":"russia-profile-weekly-experts-panel-another-attempt-to-get-russia-into-nato","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.aoiusa.org\/russia-profile-weekly-experts-panel-another-attempt-to-get-russia-into-nato\/","title":{"rendered":"Russia Profile Weekly Experts Panel: Another Attempt to Get Russia Into NATO?"},"content":{"rendered":"

For those of you interested in this type of thing, the Russia Profile site has a symposium that examines Russian’s relationship with NATO. Most of you will remember that NATO was used to declare war on Serbia (the first time America went to war with an ally; the first time American troops were placed under foreign command) under the Clinton administration. Carl F. Henry, the late Evangelical theologian and a good thinker, remarked at the time (this was the period where discussions on how Clinton’s White House infidelities would affect his “legacy”) that Clinton’s legacy might well turn out to be establishing a Muslim state in the heart of Europe. The author of the piece below is Srdja Trifkovic, an incisive writer who understands and can can explain the relationships and inter-dependencies between culture and politics. He’s worth reading. <\/em><\/p>\n

<\/div>\n

\"RussiaProfile.org\"<\/a><\/p>\n

Source: Russia Profile<\/a><\/p>\n

Dr. Srdja Trifkovic, former Foreign Affairs Editor of Chronicles Magazine, former Director, Rockford Institute Center for International Affairs, Rockford, IL:<\/p>\n

Russia will never join NATO as a full member. Institutional integration is possible either if Russia ceases to exist as an autonomous actor capable of articulating its national interests, which mercifully will not happen (although the threat was real under former President Boris Yeltsin), or if NATO ceases to be an inherently anti-Russian institution, in which case it would lose its key underlying raison d\u2019etre.
\n
\nRussia should not sign any security treaty with NATO, because what is contained in the UN Charter and in Russia\u2019s various bilateral treaties with the U.S. and other NATO members is sufficient. The treaty would be either superfluous, or frivolous, or most likely both. It would unnecessarily grant the alliance a lease of life by enabling NATO-for-ever enthusiasts to pretend that it is more than it is or should be.<\/p>\n

No additional coordinating or steering committees, working groups, expanded missions, or joint projects are necessary or useful. If there is to be a \u201cparadigm shift\u201d in Russia\u2019s relations with NATO, it should be initiated from Washington and Brussels, with the announcement that the membership for Ukraine and Georgia is permanently \u201cad acta.\u201d<\/p>\n

A necessary and successful alliance during the Cold War, NATO is obsolete and harmful today. It no longer provides collective security of limited geographic scope (Europe) against a potentially predatory power (the Soviet Union). It has morphed into a vehicle for the attainment of misguided American objectives on a global scale. Russia\u2019s pandering would merely cement and perpetuate its new, U.S.-invented “mission” as a self-appointed promoter of democracy, protector of human rights, guardian against instability, etc. The result was Bill Clinton’s air war against the Serbs, which marked a decisive shift in NATO’s mutation into a supranational security force based on the doctrine of “humanitarian intervention.” The trusty keeper of the gate of 1949 had morphed into a roaming vigilante five decades later. <\/p>\n

Since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Russia has been trying to articulate its goals and define its policies in terms of “traditional” national interests. The old Soviet dual-track policy of having “normal” relations with America, on the one hand, while seeking to subvert it, on the other, gave way to na\u043fve attempts by Yeltsin and his Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev to forge a “partnership” with the United States. <\/p>\n

By contrast, the early 1990s witnessed the beginning of America’s attempt to assert its status as the only “hyperpower.” The justification for the project was as ideological, and the implications were as revolutionary, as anything concocted by Grigory Zinoviev or Lev Trotsky in their heyday. America adopted its own dual-track approach. When Gorbachev’s agreement was needed for German reunification, President George Bush Senior gave a firm promise that NATO wound not move eastward. Within years, however, instead of declaring victory and disbanding the alliance, the Clinton administration redesigned it as a mechanism for open-ended out-of-area interventions, at a time when every rationale for its existence had disappeared. Following the war against Serbia, NATO’s area of operations became unlimited, its “mandate” entirely self-generated. Washington accepted that NATO faced “no imminent threat of attack,” yet asserted that a larger NATO would be “better able to prevent conflict from arising in the first place,” which is dangerous nonsense. <\/p>\n

The threat to Europe’s security does not come from Russia or from a fresh bout of instability in the Balkans. The real threat to Europe’s security and to its survival comes from Islam, from the deluge of inassimilable Third World immigrants, and from collapsing birth rates. All three are due to moral decrepitude and cultural degeneracy, not to any shortage of soldiers and weaponry. NATO\u2019s structures can do nothing to alleviate these problems, because they are cultural, moral and spiritual. <\/p>\n

At the same time, NATO forces America to assume at least nominal responsibility for open-ended maintenance of a host of disputed frontiers that were drawn, often arbitrarily, by communist dictators, long-dead Versailles diplomats, and assorted local tyrants, and which bear little relation to ethnicity, geography, or history. NATO makes eventual adjustments \u2013 which are inevitable \u2013 more hazardous by pretending to underwrite an indefinite status quo in the region. <\/p>\n

Today\u2019s NATO represents the global extension of the Leonid Brezhnev Doctrine \u2013 which, to its credit, applied only to the “socialist community,” as opposed to the unlimited, potentially world-wide scope of the Clinton-Bush Doctrine. The “socialist community” stopped on the Elbe, but this \u201cnew NATO\u201d stops nowhere. It is the agent of revolutionary dynamism with global ambitions, in the name of ideological norms of \u201cdemocracy, human rights and open markets.\u201d<\/p>\n

That neurotic dynamism can and should be resisted by the emerging coalition of weaker powers \u2013 including Russia and China \u2013 acting on behalf of the essentially “conservative” principles of state sovereignty, national interest, and reaffirmation of the right to their own spheres of geopolitical dominance. The doctrine of global interventionism is bound to produce an effective counter-coalition.<\/p>\n

The neoliberal-neoconservative duopoly still refuses to grasp this fact. Russia should do absolutely nothing to postpone its coming to terms with reality. <\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

For those of you interested in this type of thing, the Russia Profile site has a symposium that examines Russian’s relationship with NATO. Most of you will remember that NATO was used to declare war on Serbia (the first time America went to war with an ally; the first time American troops were placed under […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[1784],"tags":[69,48,219,463],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.aoiusa.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7684"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.aoiusa.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.aoiusa.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.aoiusa.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/2"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.aoiusa.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=7684"}],"version-history":[{"count":3,"href":"https:\/\/www.aoiusa.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7684\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":7688,"href":"https:\/\/www.aoiusa.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/7684\/revisions\/7688"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/www.aoiusa.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=7684"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.aoiusa.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=7684"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/www.aoiusa.org\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=7684"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}