Monday, October 19, 2015

What's Russia really up to?


With ISIS and the Syrian refugee crisis on the news so often, it’s hard for some Americans to relate to the comments of General Joseph Dunford, the new Chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.  Testifying before the U.S. Senate during his confirmation hearing in July, he identified Russia – not Iran, North Korea, China or ISIS – as the greatest threat to US national security.

Many analysts and journalists have speculated on the motives of Russian President Vladimir Putin.  Following the Russian incursion into Ukraine, the Los Angeles Times ran an op-ed piece titled ‘Is Vladimir Putin Insane?  In it, German Chancellor Angela Merkel is quoted as saying that Putin lives in “another world’.  Other pieces have described him as a tyrant and compared him to Hitler.   Meanwhile, General Lloyd Austin, Commander of U.S. forces in the Middle East admitted to Congress that he was completely flummoxed by Russia’s military actions in Syria. 

Yet, I have seen very little said or written about Russia’s compelling national security interests as a key driver of their behavior.  As I see it, there are two geographic factors driving Putin’s and Russia’s behavior. 

Russia is a vast plain that is easy to attack from every angle, except the sea.  So, they have been attacked throughout their history from both the East and West.  Their compelling interest is to create buffers between themselves and potential attackers.


 That said, Putin knows he doesn’t possess the military strength stand up the US.  So, he exploits the vacuum we created in the Middle East to his advantage by becoming the enabler of Iran’s compelling interest.  The consolidation of Shia power from Iran through Iraq to Syria serves them as well as it does Russia, which gains a buffer zone to its south.  It also threatens both Turkey (a NATO member) and Saudi Arabia, an American ally and, like Saddam’s Iraq, an Arab nation ruled by a Sunni minority.  

As for Ukraine, Russia’s actions — from annexing Crimea to carving out a swath of land that gives them access to it — are driven by another compelling interest, access to the sea.  Like all nations, access to sea routes is essential to commerce.  Securing Crimea provides them with access to the Mediterranean.  

There was a bit of coverage about the Arctic Ocean when President Obama visited Alaska a few months ago.  Our Coast Guard has only one icebreaker to Russia’s 27 securing their access to the sea routes that open up as the ice floes melt.  

Americans tend to take our security for granted.  We are geographically too far from Europe and Asia to have suffered from the ravages of war in the last century.  Very few are aware that the US Navy has secured 100% of the world’s waterways since WW II.  We ensure peaceful commercial sea traffic for every nation in the world.


Now, we are reducing our military presence throughout the world and downsizing our navy.  Is it any wonder that Russia sees an advantage and takes it?  Their incursion into Ukraine tests NATO’s resolve while their support of Syria’s Assad advances a refugee crisis that tests the EU’s economic resilience. 

The Obama administration has been criticized in the press for lacking a cohesive foreign policy. Yet, there may be long-term benefit to the U.S. letting the Middle East and Russia be Europe’s problem.  Our so-called ‘pivot to Asia’ will have greater economic benefit through stronger trading and security relationships that challenge China.  Our Asian allies seem to care about that.  

Does Europe care?  Will they stand up for themselves?  They are already sounding like Chamberlain


WHO WILL LEAD?

Monday, October 5, 2015

#Tweeting this blog a la #Trump


When writing this blog, I endeavor to be provocative from time to time and usually get an earful from one end of the political spectrum or the other – or sometimes both at the same time.  However, the biggest complaint is that the blog is “too long”.  I now limit it to 800 words but that is still too long for many whose attention span is no longer than it takes to read the screen on their smartphone without scrolling. 

Perhaps I should emulate Donald Trump.  The New York Times reports that Trump thinks of Twitter as his own personal newspaper.  With a 140-character limit, a tweet has no room for any qualifiers.  You can’t say, “Some may disagree with me and I hope this doesn’t offend anyone; however, I believe….”  You just type the words after “believe”. 

Here are a couple of Trump tweets:

“I have never seen a thin person drinking a Diet Coke.”

“So many ‘politically correct’ fools in our country.  We have to all get back to work and stop wasting time and energy on nonsense!”

He gets his point across without all the research and attention to composition that typically takes up about 6 hours of my time.  Here’s his latest (as of this writing):

“For all my FANTASTIC supporters, and for the U.S.A., we are going to WIN AND MAKE AMERICA GREAT AGAIN, maybe even greater than before.”

I notice that he doesn’t use any hashtags.  He doesn’t need to.  He’s his own hashtag. 

So, I thought I should give it a try (notice it took me more than 300 words to get this far).  Here is my best effort to summarize five years of blogging in 140 (or less) character snippets:

#Capitalism = #prosperity = #freedom


Or how about this one?

#Economics: You don’t get it!  No, really, you don’t!


Lest you think I am a dogmatic, right wing conservative, I offer the following quite liberal views:

My tweet: Open the #border with #Mexico, no really… I mean it!

Or how about this?

My tweet: I don’t care who you #marry

Are you ‘pro-life’?  This will piss you off:

My tweet:  My body, my #choice

From time to time, I get philosophical.  I have to work hard to clarify my thoughts and even harder to articulate them.  One of my favorites got virtually no response:  Hope, Love, Forgiveness… Can Society Achieve It?  Yet, another struck the right chord:  Leadership and the Space Between the Notes.  The first title could be a tweet, the second, not so much.

I could go on.  (I usually do.)  I’m just wondering… should I just tweet it a la Trump?  If you’ve read this far, please let me know.


WHO WILL LEAD?