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Filed: Timeline
Posted

Global Times | 2013-8-19 19:43:01
By Charles A. Kupchan

On August 7, the White House cancelled the planned September summit between President Barack Obama and President Vladimir Putin, citing Russia's decision to grant asylum to NSA leaker Edward Snowden and the "lack of progress" on missile defense and a range of other issues.

Two days later, Secretary of State John Kerry and Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel hosted their Russian counterparts in Washington, smoothing over relations between Washington and Moscow and vowing to deepen ties between the US and Russian militaries.

Despite the mixed messages, it was a decidedly bad week for US-Russian relations. The "reset" with Russia that Obama successfully pursued during his first term is now on ice.

With the White House and the Kremlin now openly estranged, cooperation on Syria, Iran, arms control, and other pressing matters will be harder to come by.

To be sure, officials in Washington and Moscow have built up durable networks of communication at the working level, and the two countries have compatible interests on many fronts, insuring against a return to the entrenched hostility of the past. But the prospects for a lasting rapprochement between the former Cold War adversaries have nonetheless been dealt a serious setback.

Obama was right to cancel his summit with Putin. Indeed, the White House has shown impressive patience with a Kremlin that has grown increasingly confrontational of late.

Since returning to the Russian presidency, Putin has been on a collision course with Obama, taking issues with Washington on one front after the other. Asylum for Snowden was the last straw, giving the White House good reason to express its exasperation and to view the scheduled summit as an exercise in futility.

What is most troubling about Putin's combative behavior is that it seems to have become purely obstructionist and gratuitous.

If his persistent readiness to take on Washington was in the pursuit of clear Russian interests, it would be easier to justify. But at least for now, picking fights with Washington seems to have become an end in itself.

It used to be that Moscow's protestations toward the US were not without reason.

The Kremlin's objections to NATO expansion were understandable; a formidable alliance was moving its frontier closer to Russia's borders. And there were legitimate reasons for Moscow to be upset with NATO's intervention in Libya; the operation ultimately went beyond the UN mandate's focus on protecting civilians.

But now Putin seems to be motivated primarily by spite toward Washington, not strategic interest.

In Syria, the Kremlin is aiding and abetting government forces. In response to recent US sanctions against human rights violators, Putin banned US parents from adopting Russian children. Giving Snowden asylum in Russia serves no national purpose other than angering Washington.

And it is certainly ironic that a leader who spent years in the KGB would give safe harbor to an intelligence agent who so flagrantly violated the profession's code of conduct.

...

The author is a professor of international affairs at Georgetown University and a senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations.

http://www.globaltimes.cn/content/804915.shtml

Filed: AOS (apr) Country: Canada
Timeline
Posted (edited)

Putin is trying deflect interest from his girlfriend problems.

You know sometimes people's motives do go beyond them being secretly gay or bad with the ladies. Just sayin'

Edited by GandD
Filed: Timeline
Posted

He's trying to score points with his people by giving the U.S. the middle finger.

Well the U.S. has been flipping the bird to pretty much every other country by creating a system to spy on every internet-using John, João, Juan, Jožin, Jean, Gian, Ἰωάννης, יוֹחָנָן, Johan, Jan, Hans, Иван, and 約翰 Doe worldwide.

What would Xenu do?

 

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