In
the reflection titled “Bush in the Sky”,
published by our newspapers this past March 23rd, I claimed
Bush would get up to his old tricks during the NATO meeting
in the Romanian capital of Bucharest, held from the 1st to
the 3rd of April.
Important
events are taking place in Europe. To ignore them would be
to remain ignorant of today’s dilemmas. With
enough patience to get through the next few pages, readers
will have access to news that were extracted from a sea of
information, news which see the light of day at different times
and on different days, thrown together with other headlines,
vital and not.
Athens, April 3rd (EFE)
According
to the EFE, Greek nationalists celebrated having prevented
Macedonia’s entry into NATO today. At the root
of this is the unresolved Athens-Skopje dispute over Macedonia’s
name, which has been going on for 17 years now.
The
Greek press was unanimous, that Thursday, in calling the
veto that prevented Macedonia’s entry into NATO a success,
a decision that was confirmed today at the summit meeting that
this military organization held in Bucharest.
Above
all else, the media underscored the intense pressures Washington
brought to bear on the organization to have it accept Macedonia’s
entry into NATO, and expressed a sense of nationalist pride
in noting Athens did not yield to these pressures.
As
a headline of the Athenian newspaper Avriani announced, Bush’s blackmail did not go down well, but Kostas Karamanlis
will go down in Greece’s history for the veto against
Bush’s designs.
Bucharest, April 4th (EFE)
The EFE reported that the White House expressed its satisfaction
over the results obtained at the summit, where the allies promised
to base more troops in Afghanistan, backed US plans to set
up an anti-missiles shield in Eastern Europe and promised that
the Ukraine and Georgia would be accepted as members of the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization in the future.
Tirana, April 3rd (EFE)
According
to EFE's article, Albania’s political class
enthusiastically welcomed NATO's official invitation for Albania
to join the organization.
Albanian
members of parliament, who convened for an extraordinary
session, called the day "historical" and extolled
it as the country’s most important event since the proclamation
of Kosovo’s independence this past February 17th and
the creation of the Albanian state in 1912.
President
of Parliament Jozefina Topalli thanked all nations that supported
Albania’s entry in NATO and US President
George W. Bush in particular.
The
invitation, Topalli said, marks the end of Albania’s
political transition and the first step towards Euro-Atlantic
integration the country has taken in these past 17 years of
democracy.
Minister for the Economy Genc Ruli stated that Albania's entry
into NATO means more stability and security and, therefore,
more foreign investment, essential to the economic development
of one of Europe's poorest countries.
The main streets in the Albanian capital were embellished
today with the flags of NATO and Albania.
Madrid, April 4th (DPA)
This
article opens with a question: Isolated from the rest of
the world? The image of José Luis Rodríguez
Zapatero, sitting alone next to empty chairs before the table
at the NATO summit meeting, while George W. Bush and other
leaders speak animatedly nearby, was the front-page photo of
the main Spanish newspapers today and revived debates on the
foreign policies of the Spanish socialist government.
In addition to commenting on the controversial photograph,
newspapers and radio and television talk shows underscored
the absence of a meeting between Zapatero and Bush, which La
Moncloa had announced as a fait accompli after the US leader
phoned his Spanish counterpart to congratulate him for his
electoral victory of March 9th.
Bush's relationship with Zapatero has been cold and distant
since the socialist came to power for, almost immediately after
his election, in April 2004, the latter withdrew the 1,300
thousand Spanish soldiers who were based in Iraq.
At no point did the United States or Bush tried to conceal
their disapproval towards this. Since then, there hasn't been
a single bilateral meeting between the two.
Neither
Bush has officially visited Spain since then, nor Zapatero
been in the White House. Just the contrary occurred with
the previous Spanish president, the conservative José María
Aznar...his was one of four faces which appear in another well-known
photo: the one taken at the Azores summit, in which Great Britain
and the United States hatched the plans for an intervention
in Iraq which Spain supported.
Exchanges
between Bush and Zapatero in Bucharest were limited to a “Hello, hello, congratulations”, from the
US to the Spanish leader, which newspapers satirized as the "three-word
encounter".
Bucharest, April 4th (ANSA)
ANSA reports that in his closing remarks at the NATO summit,
US President George W. Bush handed over the helm to his Russian
counterpart Vladimir Putin on a silver platter.
According
to analysts, the US President’s farewell remarks,
which marked the debut of his French counterpart Nicolas Sarkpozy
and the British Premier Gordon Brown, will be remembered for
Bush’s absurd insistence on requesting the immediate
entry of Georgia and the Ukraine into the alliance, against
the obvious opposition of the remaining members.
It
was "Old Europe", with the French-German axis
at the helm in its criticisms of the war in Iraq, which levelled
a scathing "no" at President Bush.
The
US President appeared unusually nervous at the Bucharest
summit. Diplomatic sources even speak of harsh words spoken
with his Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, who tried to
convince him of abandoning a "lost cause", at least
at that summit.
Bush’s
nervousness was also evident in his sudden interruption of
the press conference held at Romanian President Traian Basescu's
summer residence, when the European head of state was attempting
to answer a question concerning US treatment of Romanians who
seek to travel to the United States.
Bush's irritation over the length of the summit meetings,
where the 26 heads of State took the floor, also came to fore.
The president abandoned the debates on Afghanistan inopportunely,
leaving behind some members of his team and several journalists
who were covering his trip.
Bush
also reacted adversely to a New York Times article which
commented on the “invisibility” of the US White
House chief in the midst of the electoral campaigns and despite
warnings of an economic recession.
Bush
had but one triumph at Bucharest: securing NATO’s
support for his "space shield” plans with a view
to holding a morning meeting with Putin at the Sochi spa, on
the Black Sea.
According
to analysts, Bush will have the opportunity to put some order
to the United State’s conflictive relations
with Russia, which have reached their thorniest point since
the conclusion of the Cold War.
Bucharest, April 4th, 2008 (AFP)
According to the AFP, in a rare cooperative gesture, Russia
arrived at an agreement with NATO in Bucharest on Friday, to
permit the North Atlantic Treaty Alliance to use its territory
to transport non-military equipment to its troops in Afghanistan.
The agreement concerning Afghanistan was the only concrete
step taken by the two parties at the NATO-Russia Council meeting
held on Friday at the Bucharest House of Parliament.
Non-military equipment for ISAF (International Security Assistance
Force based in Afghanistan) may be transported through Russian
territory, NATO Secretary General Jaap de Hoop Scheffer said.
The ISAF, led by NATO since 2003, is today made up of 47,000
officers from 39 countries.
In response to a request for reinforcements for military headquarters,
to combat ferocious Taliban resistance in southern and eastern
Afghanistan, NATO countries offered troops that more than substantially
swell these forces.
France, for instance, will send an additional battalion of
some 700 soldiers that will be deployed in the country's east.
As more troops are deployed and spending increases, the agreement
with Russia should lower costs, as it will make it possible
to transport, by train, supplies which had hitherto been sent
to Afghanistan by air.
Rogozin, the Russian ambassador to NATO, had stated that the
fate of Russia and NATO in Afghanistan were interdependent,
as both stood to lose if the Taliban ever returned to power.
Bucharest, April 4, 2008 (AFP)
Though
President George W. Bush affirmed that the Cold War had ended,
AFP tells us, the summit meeting between NATO and Russia
held in Bucharest this week demonstrated that the former
enemies continue to lock horns over nearly all issues: Georgia
and the Ukraine, Kosovo’s independence, the anti-missiles
shield, Iran and the Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in
Europe.
“NATO cannot guarantee its own security by expanding
to other countries”, Putin told Western leaders.
The
facts are evident: since the end of the Cold War, NATO's
membership has grown from 16 to 28, absorbing nearly all
of the former communist block —Poland, Hungary, the Czech
Republic, Bulgaria, Romania, Slovakia and Slovenia—and
three former Soviet republics: Lithuania, Latvia and Estonia.
In the heat of this geopolitical battle, on Thursday Putin
managed to convince the 26 allies to postpone granting Georgia
and Ukraine the candidacy to join the organization, a move
strongly backed by President Bush and a step towards becoming
full members.
But
Putin’s partial triumph does not dispel Russia’s
concerns over the fact that NATO promised these two former
Soviet republics that they would one day join the Alliance.
NATO’s declaration adds to the questions and preoccupations
in Russia with respect to the direction of NATO’s evolution.
A Russian authority referred to it as an alliance that assumes
global functions, with no limits on its rights to use force.
Zagreb, April 4th (EFE)
The EFE reports that US President George W. Bush arrived today
at 15:00 hours, local time.
The
President’s
visit is his first official visit to Croatia since it declared
independence from the former Yugoslavia.
The US president arrived from Bucharest, where he attended
the NATO summit, in which Croatia and Albania received official
invitations to join the Alliance.
Croatian authorities announced earlier today that everything
was ready for Bush's visit, which posed the greatest challenge
to the country's security forces that they had faced to date.
While
these news reached us from the Balkans, in Europe's south-east,
where numerous countries are fighting over the "honour" of
being devoured by the empire's economic and financial system
in order to improve their material living conditions, which
have nothing in common with those of the underdeveloped world,
a news cable issued by the EFE on April 2nd reported the following:
World Bank (WB) President Robert Zoellick called today for
coordinated global action to address rising food prices which,
coupled to increasingly high energy prices, threaten to destabilize
33 countries around the world.
Zoellick referred to this coordinated action as one of the
four measures which need to be implemented immediately to secure
a sustainable process of globalization and minimize the effects
of today's international financial crisis on the developing
world.
He
called for a global trade agreement at the Doha round of
negotiations, which must be arrived at “now or never”.
He also called for greater transparency in the raw materials
sector in the developing world, with a view to giving greater
impetus to growth.
His speech, delivered at a hotel in the US capital on the
eve of the WB and IMF spring meeting to be held in Washington
next week, comes at a moment of great economic uncertainty
for the world.
To achieve all this, we must confront problems such as skyrocketing
basic food prices, which result, among other factors, from
energy sector recovery.
Zoellic stressed that basic food prices have gone up by 80
percent since 2005. He pointed out that, last month alone,
the rice and wheat prices reached their highest, reported in
the last 19 and 28 years, respectively.
The World Bank estimates that 33 countries around the world
face potential social or political crises as a result of high
food and energy prices, he stated.
He
pointed out that demographic conditions, a change in people’s
diets, energy and biofuel prices and climate change suggest
that the high and volatile costs of food will be with us in
years to come.
In view of this situation, he proposed the creation of what
he described as a New Agreement for a Global Food Policy, which
ought to focus not only on hunger, malnutrition and access
to food products, but also on other factors such as the connections
those prices have to energy or climate change.
Food policy needs to draw the attention of the top political
circles, because no country or group of countries can face
these interconnected challenges alone, he concluded.
These two institutions, the World Bank and the IMF, are part
of the imperialist system.
The
first news of Bush’s risky trip to Russia came from
the very military plane that took him and his vast entourage
there, to Sochi, a city on the shores of the Black Sea.
Reporters from several western press agencies travelled with
him.
An AFP cable dated April 4th reported:
“President
George W. Bush told NATO allies that the United States would
send more troops to Afghanistan next year, Defense Secretary
Robert Gates said Friday.
"(...) The president indicated that he expected in 2009
the United States would make a significant additional contribution," he
said.
“Gates
said bipartisan support for such a move in the United States
was strong enough to allow Bush to make the pledge even though
he will no longer be president."
From Moscow, an EFE cable dated April 5th reported:
US
President George W. Bush arrived today in Sochi, where he
will consult his Russian counterpart Vladmir Putin and Dimitri
Medvedev, who will become Russia’s head of State next
May 7th.
The
last meeting between Bush and Putin will focus on Washington’s
plans to deploy parts for its anti-missiles shield in Eastern
Europe, a move which had just met with NATO's support and to
which Russia is resolutely opposed.
Tomorrow, Sunday, the Russian and US presidents also plan
on signing a document that will set down a strategic framework
to guide relations between the two countries under the leadership
of their respective successors.
The document must be an honest instrument, for there are problems
that cannot be ignored, said Serguei Prijodko, foreign policy
advisor for the Kremlin chief, as quoted by the Russian agency
Interfax.
He stressed that significant differences still exist between
Moscow and Washington with respect to anti-missile defence
systems, on strategic arms reduction plans following the expiration
of the START-1 Treaty and the inadmissible nature of militarizing
the cosmos.
Among
these differences, Prijodjo also pointed out the differing
stances on NATO’s expansion, particularly into the
former Soviet republics of the Ukraine and Georgia.
Bush’s
visit to Sochi, the last in his tour of Eastern Europe, will
last less than 24 hours.
On April 5th, the German agency DPA reported:
Tying lose ends, getting in step with each other, Presidents
George W. Bush and Vladimir Putin prepare for their meeting
at the Sochi spa, next to the Black Sea, with a view to sparing
their successors political burdens.
It
was Bush who chose Putin's summer residence as the venue
for their last meeting: his parents had been delighted with
their private visit, in 2003, to this mansion, erected following
Stalin’s death. The locality will also host the 2014
Winter Olympics.
The two presidents availed themselves of many of their 23
meetings to compliment each other in public.
But, beneath such personal sympathies, there are more than
enough reasons for political friction. One of them is the United
States' controversial plan to erect an anti-missiles defence
system in the Czech Republic and Poland. In Kiev, Bush had
cautiously stated he hoped to find common ground in this dispute.
The Vice-President of Russia's Academy for Security, Defence
and Order, General Viktor Yessin, affirmed there were reasons
for cautious optimism.
Different
kinds of speculations also surround Bush and Putin’s
last meeting: some believe the presidents plan on an agreement
to construct a means of transportation that will connect the
two countries via Alaska, a project which had already been
conceived in the time of the tsars.
The media began to speculate on this when the rich governor
of Chukotka, Roman Abramovich, ordered the largest tunnel boring
drill in the world from the construction company Herrenknecht.
A Kremlin spokesperson commented on the rumours surrounding
the 42 billion-euro (66 million-dollar) 100-kilometer tunnel.
On April 6th, the French agency AFP reported:
Putin declared that he was prudently optimistic about a definitive
agreement and that he felt it was feasible.
Bush stated he wants to establish a personal relationship
with elected Russian President Dimitri Medvedev that will allow
the two of them to work together on common problems.
Bush, who participated at the NATO summit in Bucharest on
Friday, arrived in Sochi with the support of the Alliance for
the US anti-missile shield project.
Plans exist to expand the US defence system with a battery
of 10 interceptor missiles in Poland and an ultra-modern radar
in the Czech Republic, which would be in operations until 2012.
Upon his return to the US capital, the EFE reported in a cable
dated April 6th:
US President George W. Bush returned to Washington today with
much pending work in his agenda as regards relations with Russia,
as he himself has recognized.
The
US – Russia
meeting closed with the signature of a strategic framework
agreement which sets down the major lines that are to guide
future bilateral relations in such areas as the struggle
against terrorism and the economy.
But the document also clearly reveals the profound differences
that persist between Washington and Moscow with respect to
the anti-missiles shied that the United States plans on constructing
in Eastern Europe, one of the thorniest issues in the bilateral
relations of recent months.
Putin declared that the devil hides in the small-print. It
is important for experts to decide what the guarantee measures
will be and how they will be implemented.
There is also discussion surrounding matters such as the expansion
of NATO towards the east, particularly towards the former Soviet
republics of the Ukraine and Georgia.
When
they met 7 years ago, Bush stated he had looked into Putin’s
eyes and had been able to glimpse his soul. The two leaders
have maintained a good personal relationship, despite the
deterioration of their country's relations.
Now,
Bush and Medvedev have got off on a different foot. While
at their first meeting the US president welcomed Putin with
an embrace, he only shook his successor's hand. And if he
looked into his eyes and glimpsed his soul, he certainly
didn’t
say so, the cable ironically concluded.
For an immense country such as Russia, Eastern Europe is not
only a place of culture, art, history and refined sciences
or a producer of well-known wines, goose liver, all imaginable
types of cheese and other exquisite and costly products from
the countryside and city. It is also a consumer of Russian
oil, gas, gold, nickel and raw materials, an instrument for
capital flight and brain drain, for the squandering of food
products, converted into the ethanol used by their luxurious
and unaffordable automobiles. The whole world knows this.
Asia,
however, is far more important than Europe for Russia, for
Asia’s
international trade institutions, through the Shanghai Group,
open more doors to the World Trade Organization, where Bush
has offered to support Putin in his aim to have Russia join
this organization.
What interest does the United States have in setting up space
bases, radars and launching platforms in Europe and everywhere,
if it is not in using these to threaten Russia? Obviously,
the weapons it could aim at Russia could also be aimed at China
and all other countries, without exception, to turn them into
the allies or enemies of an empire whose economic and political
system is unsustainable.
The United States is heading towards trade protectionism to
maintain employment indices at home, where its employees cannot
compete against the millions of people in the Third World who,
through great sacrifices, produce quality consumer goods at
much lower costs, goods which transnational corporations later
sell in search of surplus value.
All the while, Bush declares terrorist whatever countries
he pleases.
I decided not to divide this reflection into two parts, risking
a lengthy text.
I have still to address an issue which, though less significant,
I would like to analyze separately because of its concrete
relationship to our country. I shall do so on a different occasion.
Fidel Castro Ruz
April 6, 2008
6:45 p.m. |