Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Russians or Taliban?

By Dr Farrukh Saleem

Who is America’s enemy number 1? Russians or the Taliban? On August 8, 2008, Russia’s 58th Army invaded South Ossetia. Russian Air Force’s 4th Army of Air Forces and Air Defence bombarded America’s eager ally, Georgia. America — the US Army being fully deployed in Iraq and Afghanistan — could only call out for “both sides to show restraint.”
On November 25, 2008, Peter the Great, Russia’s nuclear-powered Kirov-class battle-cruiser along with Admiral Chabanenko, the anti-submarine destroyer, participated in naval exercises with the Venezuelan Navy a mere 1,200 miles from Miami. Now, that hasn’t happened in the past 20 years. Russia is re-exerting itself over Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan. Kyrgyzstan was goaded by the Kremlin to order the US Air Force (USAF) out of the Manas Air Base (being used by the US military to support operations in Afghanistan). Uzbekistan was made to tell the USAF to vacate the Karshi-Khanabad airbase (the US Air Force was using the base to support its war in Afghanistan). In 2008, the Russian-led Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) — with Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan as members — held the largest-ever brigade manoeuvres with armoured vehicles, artillery, aviation, anti-aircraft defence and communications units. The CSTO is planning an airbase in Osh and another one in Khujand. Russia is reviving its military installations in Nurek, Kulyab, Dushanbe, and Kurgan-Tyube. The Russian Air Force is sprucing up its rapid-reaction Kant Air Base and the Russian Navy is doing the same with its 338th Communications Hub in Kara-Balta.
Russia is using Iran — they are perhaps using each other — to limit America’s influence. Russia has threatened to supply Iran with S-300 long-range surface-to-air-missile systems that could potentially pre-empt an air strike by the Israeli Air Force. Russia’s Atomstroyexport is building the first VVER-1000/446 reactor power unit for the Atomic Energy Organisation of Iran. In effect, Russia has managed to defeat America’s attempts to isolate Tehran. Russia is re-exerting itself in the Baltic region — Latvia, Lithuania and Estonia. Russia is re-enforcing in the Caucasus — Georgia, Armenia and Azerbaijan. Russia is fortifying its will in Central Asia — Kazakhstan, Tajikistan, Kyrgyzstan, Turkmenistan and Uzbekistan.
The Russian bear is waking up from its 20-year hibernation. The Russian bear has a window of opportunity because the US Army’s Brigade Combat Teams (the ‘basic deployable unit of manoeuvre in the US Army’) are all deployed; Iraq (45 BCTs), Afghanistan (eight BCTs), Japan (two BCTs), Germany (one BCT), South Korea (one BCT) and Bosnia (one BCT).
Now to the Taliban. The Taliban are essentially a non-extraterritorial entity in the sense that the Taliban do not have transnational ambitions. Al Qaeda, on the other hand, is an extraterritorial entity in the sense that Al Qaeda has transnational ambitions. Strategically, that makes Americans amenable to the Taliban. Furthermore, Al Qaeda’s operational capability, prima facie, has been depleted to an extent that Al Qaeda has failed to launch even a single attack on the mainland US since September 11, 2001.
Obama can continue either the ‘war on terror’ or take on the resurging Russian bear; can’t fight them both. In effect, the insurgent timeline is much, much longer than Obama’s political timeline. For America, 2010 is election year while the insurgents have all the time in the world. For America, 2010 means 440 new members of the House. For America, 2010 means 34 new members of the Senate. For America, 2010 means 37 new governors. For Obama, 2011 will be campaign year. For Obama, 2012 will be election year. The insurgents have all the time in the world. Pakistan-Afghanistan is the Taliban homeland. American BCTs are mere visitors here. Russia has the potential to challenge American hegemony; the Taliban don’t. America will have to decide: who is America’s enemy number 1? Russians or the Taliban?
27 Sep 2009
Courtesy: The News

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