Zeal for the Deal

Back in the Bush II heydays, I always thought of Russia's Ambassador to NATO, Dmitry Rogozin, as a tongue-in-cheek answer to the appointment of John Bolton to the United Nations (minus, of course, the overt racism of the former).  Among others, Paul Goble recently told me in an interview that more attention should be paid to the choices the Kremlin makes in its key diplomatic appointments - and that Rogozin is far from a constructive presence.  Russia's NATO ambassador has certainly won the longevity contest compared to Bolton (though this is due to, ya know, America's habit of democratic transfers of power), and currently spends his days giving interviews about Georgia and spearheading the disaggregation strategy of Europe - even proposing that NATO itself is plotting against the reset diplomacy of the Obama Administration.  Removed from officialdom, Bolton spends more time these days enjoying an AEI fellowship and producing regular opinion articles to push a new book.  Below is an excerpt from his latest one in The New York Times, which tries out the new catchphrase "dangerously low warhead levels":

First, the administration's bilateral objectives with Russia play almost entirely to Moscow's advantage, as in arms-control days of yore. Hurrying to negotiate a successor to the second Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty by year's end, which Secretary Clinton has committed to, reflects a "zeal for the deal" approach that benefits only Russia.

We need not be rushed, since simply extending the existing treaty's verification provisions would preserve the status quo. Fortunately, Russia seems likely to save us from the dangerously low warhead levels proposed by Senator John Kerry and others, but the risks of foolish, unnecessary concessions remain high.

Paradoxically, the administration itself might put the entire negotiating process into gridlock by reaching much farther than the Russians are willing to go, such as by trying to negotiate numerical limits on tactical nuclear weapons. More seriously, the administration has pre-emptively conceded to Russia on strategic defensive issues: first by linking the general subject of missile defense with offensive issues, long a Russian goal; and secondly by signaling that specific projects, like the defense system intended for Poland and the Czech Republic, might be abandoned or bargained away.

Second, the Obama administration is seriously weakening both our strategic offensive and defensive capacity. The Defense Department budget proposes major cuts in missile defense programs, returning to an emphasis both in operational and diplomatic terms on "theater" missile defense (mainly for defending deployed military forces), rather than "national" missile defense (for shielding America's population from missile attack). Protecting our forces abroad must remain a top priority, but it need not be at the expense of homeland defense. President Ronald Reagan refused to bargain on missile defense, and President Obama isn't bargaining either. He is simply giving it away.

No TrackBacks

TrackBack URL: http://www.robertamsterdam.com/cgi-bin/mt4/mt-t.cgi/14944

Watch Us

Follow Us

facebook.jpg
twitter.jpg


About this Blog

This blog was created to express views which may stimulate debate and discussion on topics of international interest. I believe that we live in a world of unchallenged impunity, and this blog is ...

Continue reading...

My Firm

Blogs

Singapore White Paper

Official Khodorkovsky Trial Website