Memo to Washington: The Cold War is over
As one is led to recall from time to time, generals seem doomed to argue strategy based on their most recent war. But how far back can that adage reach? The matter at hand is the New START nuclear arms reduction treaty with Russia that is awaiting ratification in Washington. As it is, we are ...
As one is led to recall from time to time, generals seem doomed to argue strategy based on their most recent war. But how far back can that adage reach?
The matter at hand is the New START nuclear arms reduction treaty with Russia that is awaiting ratification in Washington. As it is, we are deluged with discussion of binding limitations, secret weapons sites, verifiability, and captive nations. R. James Woolsey, the former director of the Central Intelligence Agency, inquires why President Barack Obama suggests a treaty making the United States “strategically weaker, undefended and clueless about our adversaries’ capabilities.” George Voinovich, a Republican senator from Ohio, suggests that Obama is falling victim to another Yalta, the 1945 agreement in which the Soviet Union grabbed control of Eastern Europe.
Did I miss something? Is the United States — or any other country on the Earth — under threat of a nuclear attack by Russia? Is Russia using its nuclear arsenal as leverage to win a political or military dispute somewhere?
There are serious areas of competition with Russia, as we’ve discussed previously. They include the free transportation of oil and gas from the Caspian Sea region. Russia has used its natural gas as a lever to obtain concessions in Europe, and it is absurd to presume that the West is in a new and permanent era of no-friction “cooperation” with Russia, as some suggest. We get that the New START objections are politics. But that is why they may not hold. As my colleague Josh Rogin writes, not everyone is prepared to indulge that sclerotic old fart in the epaulettes.
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