Boris Badinov is Not Your Buddy
From Time:
Vladimir Putin is no partner in the War on Terror. Russian arms proliferation to known terrorist states has been a major factor in enabling terrorist networks. Moreover, Putin's disgraceful powermongering within Russia and his attempts to undermine democracy elsewhere have destabilized Eastern Europe and the Black Sea region.
It is folly to cultivate this authoritarian KGB murderer as an ally. In WWII, we had little choice but to suck up to the monstrous Stalin in order to defeat the even more monstrous Hitler.
Why on Earth would we lend our precious credibility (rebuilt after the disastrous Clinton Apology World Tour) to a regime which clearly views itself as our enemy?
Guess where those Russian nukes are pointed right now. It ain't Chechnya, baby.
At Los Angeles International Airport two weeks ago, FBI agents arrested an Irish businessman they had spent a week tailing all over California's Silicon Valley, from the offices of two electronics manufacturers in Sunnyvale to a hotel in Mountain View and down a quiet cul-de-sac to a suburban house in San Jose. The technology exporter, according to court papers, had purchased sophisticated computer components in the U.S. to send to Russia through Ireland. He now stands to be charged in mid-February with "unlawful export of 'defense articles.'" U.S. officials point to this little-noticed case as one manifestation of a troubling reality: although the cold war is long over, Russia is fielding an army of spooks in the U.S. that is at least equal in number to the one deployed by the old, much larger Soviet Union.
Russia runs more than 100 known spies under official cover in the U.S., senior U.S. intelligence and law-enforcement officials say. And those are just the more easily spotted spies working under the classic guise of diplomat. An unknown number of so-called nocs—who work under nonofficial cover as businessmen and -women, journalists or academics—undoubtedly expand the Russian spy force. "They're baaaaack," says a former senior U.S. intelligence official who worked against Moscow during the cold war. "They're busy as hell, but I don't think we've really got what it is that they're doing." The number of Russian spies in the U.S. is especially surprising, given that it was less than four years ago that the Bush Administration expelled 50 of them in retaliation for the humiliating discovery that FBI counterintelligence agent Robert Hanssen had been spying for Russia for 21 years.
In a high-level meeting late last year, officials tell TIME, the National Security Council instructed the FBI, CIA, State Department and other agencies to get a better handle on the Russian espionage threat. While the U.S. might like to eject suspect diplomats to force the Russians to send in their "rookies," as a U.S. official put it, Moscow would probably respond in kind, denting the CIA's corps in Russia.
As the FBI has remade itself in the wake of 9/11 into a counterterrorism agency, the bureau's long-standing counterintelligence mission has been bumped down a notch on the priority list. During this time, Russia has been among the U.S.'s rivals most aggressively exploiting the opening to build up its spying capabilities. Also, it has been using liberalized immigration rules for Russians, instituted after the cold war, to install nocs.
Vladimir Putin is no partner in the War on Terror. Russian arms proliferation to known terrorist states has been a major factor in enabling terrorist networks. Moreover, Putin's disgraceful powermongering within Russia and his attempts to undermine democracy elsewhere have destabilized Eastern Europe and the Black Sea region.
It is folly to cultivate this authoritarian KGB murderer as an ally. In WWII, we had little choice but to suck up to the monstrous Stalin in order to defeat the even more monstrous Hitler.
Why on Earth would we lend our precious credibility (rebuilt after the disastrous Clinton Apology World Tour) to a regime which clearly views itself as our enemy?
Guess where those Russian nukes are pointed right now. It ain't Chechnya, baby.

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