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He’s KGB And There’s No “Ex” About It — Why Now?
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He’s KGB And There’s No “Ex” About It

McClatchly thinks Bush, aides ‘grossly misjudged Putin’

WASHINGTON — The Bush administration’s failure to win Russia’s consent to install U.S. missile defenses in its European backyard and a growing list of other disputes suggest that President Bush and his aides have misread the man whose “soul” Bush thought he’d divined when they first met six years ago.

Bush’s strategy on Russia assumed that Russian President Vladimir Putin embraced democracy, wanted integration with the West and sought a “strategic partnership” in which Moscow would acquiesce to U.S. policies such as NATO expansion. Feuds could be resolved through the close personal relationship that Bush believed he had with his Russian counterpart.

Instead, fueled by record oil and natural gas prices and resentment of what he lambasted in February as Bush’s “almost uncontained hyper use of force,” Putin has led global opposition to the U.S. war in Iraq, hosted Palestinians on the U.S. list of terrorist groups, sold anti-aircraft missiles and other arms to Iran and stymied Bush’s drive to tighten U.N. sanctions on the Islamic republic for refusing to suspend uranium enrichment.

The Kremlin has steadily increased spending on defense modernization and revived symbolic long-range aerial reconnaissance patrols toward U.S. and European airspace.

Rupert Wingfield-Hayes, BBC News, Moscow looks at How the Kremlin watchers were fooled, discussing Putin’s intentions when his presidential term is over.

Vladimir Putin is KGB. He was trained to play people and hide what he was up to until it was too late. If you haven’t been watching, he’s very good at it. He is a quick study and has learned that energy resources may be more effective than ICBMs in getting your way.

I just don’t see him walking off into the sunset to a dacha so he can go fly fishing, or joining Mikhail Gorbachev on the lecture circuit. He likes power and the Russian people like security after the uncertain times under Boris Yeltsin.

3 comments

1 whig { 10.14.07 at 4:52 am }

The great game is a foot! And so it toes….

2 Cookie Jill { 10.14.07 at 11:42 am }

I thought Condi was “an expert” on the Soviet Union.

3 Bryan { 10.14.07 at 1:18 pm }

The Great Game never ends, Whig.

Condi probably thinks that too, Jill. After reading her book, I wondered about the qualifications of her PhD panel. She made some “interesting” conclusions about was was happening in the Eastern Bloc at the time it was written.