By Harun Yahya
Everything began in
November 2013 when former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych refused to
sign the EU Partnership Agreement. Currently despite the ceasefire signed in
Minsk, the guns have not fallen silent in the eastern parts of Ukraine where
the death toll is some six thousand people. Now the shadow of a second Cold War
has fallen over the region.
Toward a New Cold War?
Recently the U.S.
Army sent heavy weapons and military equipment to Lithuania on the Russian
border. It was also announced that the U.S. and NATO countries had planned four
separate maneuvers in Ukraine, together with bilateral and multilateral
maneuvers in Poland and the Baltic countries.
In the face of the
developments in the Baltic area, Russia initiated a giant exercise in 19 wide
areas with the simultaneous participation of 8,000 troops in bases in Crimea, South Ossetia, Abkhazia and Armenia. Special forces in
the Russian Central Military District began a five-day exercise in the region
of Sverdlovsk, where more than 600 troops and 300 armored vehicles took part.
In the Black Sea, the missile
carrying amphibious ship Bora, the warship
Ivanovets and R-109 boats carried out a simulated attack using real rockets. A
continuing exercise by NATO warships in the Black Sea at the same time led to a
rise in tensions. The message from both sides was clear; 'we are in charge in
the region.'
A statement from
Moscow while the exercises were going on revealed the full scale of the
tension. Putin announced that he was annulling the European Conventional Forces
Agreement (ECFA), the most important document signed at the end of the Cold War
between Russia and the West. NATO described this as a worrying
development.
Tensions between
Russia and the West are again rising to resemble those during the Cold War.
Both sides clearly need to take steps to repair the damage without delay. Blocs
are forming fast, with the U.S. and the EU countries lining up against Russia.
Sanctions Are No Solution
Experts from the
Carnegie Center state that; "Sanctions will create a perception among the
Russians that they are under constant pressure from the U.S. This stimulates
patriotism and nationalism and also forges a foreign enemy image embodied by
America. New sanctions would only solidify this perception and consolidate the
government"1. Indeed, the level of support for Putin's policies has
risen by 5-10% each month, reaching 88% in October 2014.
The fact is that both
the Russians and objective thinkers do not believe that Moscow is seeking to
build a new Soviet Empire. Putin
regards NATO's Open Door policy as a violation of the promises
given to them following the break-up of the Warsaw Pact. The Russians
therefore think that Russia has a natural and legitimate right to protect
itself and the surrounding area against the plan to surround Russia by way of
Georgia, Ukraine and the Baltic countries and to isolate it. In a statement in
the early days of the Minsk negotiations, Putin said that their aim was not to
wage war but that they would not accept a world order in which the U.S. was the
only leader.
The EU countries,
being encouraged towards polarization under pressure from the U.S., are aware
that prolonging tensions with Russia will wreak serious harm to their own
economies. For example Germany,
the largest economy in Europe, has more than 6,000 companies doing business
with Russia, with investments of more than 20 billion Euros made
over the last 20 years. These sanctions are having a serious effect on Germany,
the main pillar of the EU economy, as they are on other European countries. Not
for nothing did Merkel make intense efforts during the Minsk talks to bring
about a ceasefire between Russia and Ukraine. Merkel was aware of the need to
halt the $21 billion losses suffered in the EU countries because of the crisis.
It was no surprise that Holland would support Merkel in the talks. France,
which ended 2014 in a position of almost zero growth, is currently in the
unenviable position of being the sick man of Europe. Replacing the French
Economics Minister did not stop France, with the world's fifth largest economy,
taking a step back in that ranking. The Dutch demand a relaxation of the
sanctions against Russia stemming from its largest oil companies being active
in Russia.
On the other hand,
European countries are 90% dependent on Russian natural gas. Europe has no way
of responding to retaliation by Russia in the form of cutting off natural gas
supplies in the long term in the face of the sanctions.
Russia is in turn
looked to deepen relations with Asian countries in order to show that it is not
dependent on the West. The 30-year natural gas sales agreement signed with
China, estimated to be worth some $400 billion, is one outcome of this Russian
search for alternative markets. In addition to China, negotiations over new
energy projects are also taking place with Egypt and Turkey.
It is therefore
expected that Moscow,
which is determined to use all the cards it holds against
the sanctions, will not be making concessions on such fundamental issues as
Crimea. So it is essential for both sides to take the requisite
steps for establishing lasting peace and security while the road is still near.
A determination of the position of Ukraine, the main fault line between the two
sides, will play a critical role in resolving the crisis. Only an independent
Ukraine that is controlled neither by Russia nor by the West, yet that is
inclusive of both without excluding either side, and that can play the role of
a buffer zone in a temporary process, can unite the two sides on common ground.
The Cold War was of
no benefit to anyone. A second Cold War will mean nothing but destruction and
disaster, and it is therefore essential for world peace for NATO and Russia to
adopt balanced policies of reconciliation.
Harun Yahya
The writer has
authored more than 300 books translated in 73 languages on politics, religion
and science. He may be followed at @Harun_Yahya and www.harunyahya.com
Source: English
Pravda 07-04-2015