Tuesday, January 17, 2017

How Close Are Trump's Actions To Putin's Priorities?

Is Putin pulling Trump's strings?  Let's look at some of the signs.

What are Putin's biggest obstacles?

1.  NATO, as weak as it is, is still a threat.  Anything he can do weaken NATO would help him restore the Soviet era power balance in Eastern Europe - Ukraine, Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, etc.

2.   China has a long, long border with Russia and there's always been conflict on that border.  Anything he can do to weaken China's ties with the US would be helpful.

3.   Turkey holds the key to the waterway from southern Russia.  Good relations with Turkey is to Putin's advantage.  Putin's performance in Syria contributed to refugees into Turkey and Europe, destabilizing the EU and threatening Turkey's acceptance into the EU partnership.  But Putin forgave quickly Turkey shooting down a Russian military plane and is making nice to Turkey.

4.   The US Intelligence agencies are always keeping watch on Russia.  The less capable they are, the more power Russia has.

Now, what are some of the things Trump has been promising to do?

1.  NATO is obsolete and doesn't pay its bills according to Trump.  He's going to shake things up.

2.  Trump's been riling China - congratulations call from Taiwan's president,  Secretary of State nominee Tillerman is challenging China's access to nearby islands.   All this looks aimed at making the US-China relations much more fragile and making China's border with Russia weaker.

3.  Trump supports Erdogan and his strongman ways.

4.  National-Security Republican elite fear they are being kept out of Trump administration.



OK, Trump is anti-establishment and we can expect some of his views to be a big change from the past.  But these all seem to line up in one direction - supportive of Putin's agenda.  They are pretty big deals.

And given the help Russia gave Trump in the campaign, and all the Russia friendly appointments, and the most recent news about Russia's leverage on Trump, I'd say that the evidence is lining up to a very dire conclusion.

It took a lot of [for] people to give up their support of Nixon.  They couldn't believe the president would lie, and it meant a change of their whole way of thinking.  But the Watergate committee in the Senate was made up of Republicans as well as Democrats.  While the Republicans made the Democrats prove things, they weren't in denial, and they didn't stonewall the hearings.  This is going to be 'interesting times.'

5 comments:

  1. I'd argue that Putin did have a role in the Brexit vote. After all, his support of Asad kept the flow of refugees to Turkey and then Europe going. While Syrians are a small percentage of refugees actually making it to Europe, the news reports of so many Syrian refugees on top of images of other refugees camped and waiting to get into the UK surely played a role in the Brexit vote.

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  2. You're there and know the local details so I defer to your judgment. Not saying Putin did it, but I'd guess he helped the already ripe situation. Turkey baiting? He's been doing all he could to keep Turkey out of the EU and in his own sphere. He needs friends controlling the Bosphorus Strait.
    And dissolving the EU is another goal for him.
    If he had Russian hackers spreading fake news to influence the US elections, I'm sure they were doing the same in the UK. He has (for now) complete power in Russia and all the resources he needs to spend on his projects.
    I'm not disagreeing with you, nor, I think you with me. I'm just saying I see Putin's fingerprints are on some of the actions you're describing.

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