Wie kann man eine Bevölkerung noch belügen?

28. September 2022

Mit Vor­trä­gen bei der Lan­des­zen­tra­le für poli­ti­sche Bil­dung in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

Dr. Mar­kus Kaim von der Stif­tung Wis­sen­schaft und Poli­tik pro­du­ziert aktiv Fake News.

Not one inch to the west” - Gab es da Zusa­gen, gab es da Ver­spre­chun­gen, oder ist das ins Reich des Mythos der Legen­de ein­zu­ord­nen und da wol­len wir jetzt unse­ren zwei­ten Gast, Dr. Kaim mithinzuziehen.

Dr. Mar­kus Kaim: “Ja, ehm, das ist da -- rhm, das geis­tert ja immer in die­sem Kon­text rum. Also für die­je­ni­gen, die das nicht so im Detail ver­fol­gen, Prä­si­dent Putin behaup­tet, nicht er allei­ne, son­dern vie­le Reprä­sen­tan­ten des put­in­schen Sys­tems unter Prä­si­dent Putin behaup­ten, inter­es­san­ter Wei­se, nicht seit sei­nem Amts­an­tritt 2000, son­dern eher erst in den letz­ten - zehn Jah­ren - es hät­te Zusi­che­run­gen - und jetzt wirds schon strit­tig, der Bun­des­re­gie­rung gege­ben, der ame­ri­ka­ni­schen Regie­rung, der Nato gege­ben, sich nicht nach Osten zu erwei­tern. Wobei ich den Aus­druck eigent­lich unglück­lich fin­de, weil das ist kein bewuss­ter Akt der Nato sich zu erwei­tern, son­dern kei­nes der Miglie­der die um Erwei­te­rung Ansu­chen auf­zu­neh­men, also letzt­lich der gan­ze Groß­kom­plex “Prä­senz der Nato in Mittel- Ost­eu­ro­pa bis hin in den post sowje­ti­schen Raum ist damit stri­tig. Und das ist eigent­lich auch die Grund­la­ge für die­se Sät­ze, wie wir sie in den letz­ten Mona­ten immer wie­der in Varia­ti­on hören - “Russ­land sei betro­gen wor­den”, “Russ­land sei belo­gen wor­den”, ich glau­be das spannt das Feld noch viel wei­ter, aber ich glau­be es geht auch um die­se Frage.

Und ich bin immer durch­aus dafür zu haben, dass Deutsch­land und Euro­pa ne kri­ti­sche Selbst­sicht bezieht [sic!], aber da scheint mir wirk­lich wenig dran zu sein um nicht zu sagen nichts dran zu sein.

Ich will ver­su­chen ver­schie­de Argu­men­te ins Feld zu füh­ren, hof­fe, dass sie ein paar davon über­zeu­gen. Das ers­te Argu­ment das immer ins Fel­de geführt wird, es sei ver­spro­chen wor­den im Kon­text des 2 plus 4 Ver­tra­ges, Stich­wort deut­sche Ein­heit 1990. Das ist in soweit etwas Absei­tig, weil die gesam­te Fra­ge der Nato Ost­erwei­te­rung zu die­sem Zeit­punkt noch gar­nicht auf der Tages­ord­nung gestan­den hat. Es gab sozu­sa­gen die Sub­jek­te über die wir jetzt spre­chen, oder spä­ter gespro­chen haben - die bal­ti­schen Staa­ten, die gabs ja noch gar­nicht. Also natür­lich gab es sie, aber nicht als unab­hän­gi­ge Staa­ten. Die ver­lie­ßen erst 1991 [Ein Jahr spä­ter? Dess­halb hat man natür­lich nicht dar­über gespro­chen?!] die Sowjet­uni­on. Also von daher ist auch - wenn man die Zeit­ach­se ent­lang­schrei­tet, ist das schon ins Reich der Fabel zu verweisen.

Das zwei­te Argu­ment das immer gebracht wird - “Ja das sei nicht dchrift­lich fixiert wor­den weil das den Rus­sen immer vor­ge­hal­ten wird, der rus­si­schen Füh­rung es gibt ja kei­ne schrift­li­che Kodi­fi­ka­ti­on die­ses Ver­spre­chens [doch, aber kommt gleich], kein Ver­trag, kein Noten­aus­tausch, … Ja aber das sei ver­spro­chen wor­den! So ein Gen­tle­mens agree­ment. Das ist für mich nicht wirk­lich über­zeu­gend, weil das ist doch eine Fra­ge von - das ist ja kei­ne Lap­pa­lie von der wir hier spre­chen, son­dern eine Fra­ge die die rus­si­sche Füh­rung, wie wir jetzt fest­stel­len die rus­si­sche Füh­rung offen­sicht­lich umtreibt. Umge­trie­ben hat, ihr wich­tig gewe­sen ist. Wie hoch ist die Wahr­schein­lich­keit, dass man eine Fra­ge von sol­chem Gewicht nur mit einer münd­li­chen Zusa­ge ver­han­delt? Son­dern es ist doch viel wahr­schein­li­cher, dass man sagt - das hät­ten wir aber ger­ne doch lie­ber schrift­lich! Also wenn sie sich ein Haus kaufen… […]”

Na gut, dann halt schriftlich.

Natio­nal Secur­tiy Archi­ve, Geor­ge Washing­ton Uni­ver­si­ty, Washing­ton D.C.

German unification talks

Declas­si­fied docu­ments show secu­ri­ty assuran­ces against NATO expan­si­on to Soviet lea­ders from Baker, Bush, Gen­scher, Kohl, Gates, Mit­ter­rand, That­cher, Hurd, Major, and Woerner 

Sla­vic Stu­dies Panel Addres­ses “Who Pro­mi­sed What to Whom on NATO Expansion?”

Washing­ton D.C., Decem­ber 12, 2017 – U.S. Secreta­ry of Sta­te James Baker’s famous “not one inch east­ward” assuran­ce about NATO expan­si­on in his mee­ting with Soviet lea­der Mikhail Gor­ba­chev on Febru­a­ry 9, 1990, was part of a cas­ca­de of assuran­ces about Soviet secu­ri­ty given by Wes­tern lea­ders to Gor­ba­chev and other Soviet offi­cials throughout the pro­cess of Ger­man uni­fi­ca­ti­on in 1990 and on into 1991, accord­ing to declas­si­fied U.S., Soviet, Ger­man, Bri­tish and French docu­ments pos­ted today by the Natio­nal Secu­ri­ty Archi­ve at Geor­ge Washing­ton Uni­ver­si­ty (http://nsarchive.gwu.edu).

The docu­ments show that mul­ti­ple natio­nal lea­ders were con­si­de­ring and rejec­ting Cen­tral and Eas­tern Euro­pean mem­bers­hip in NATO as of ear­ly 1990 and through 1991, that dis­cus­sions of NATO in the con­text of Ger­man uni­fi­ca­ti­on nego­tia­ti­ons in 1990 were not at all nar­row­ly limi­ted to the sta­tus of East Ger­man ter­ri­to­ry, and that sub­se­quent Soviet and Rus­si­an com­p­laints about being mis­led about NATO expan­si­on were foun­ded in writ­ten con­tem­pora­ne­ous mem­cons and tel­cons at the hig­hest levels. 

The docu­ments rein­for­ce for­mer CIA Direc­tor Robert Gates’s cri­ti­cism of “pres­sing ahead with expan­si­on of NATO east­ward [in the 1990s], when Gor­ba­chev and others were led to belie­ve that wouldn’t hap­pen.”[1] The key phra­se, but­tres­sed by the docu­ments, is “led to believe.”

Pre­si­dent Geor­ge H.W. Bush had assu­red Gor­ba­chev during the Mal­ta sum­mit in Decem­ber 1989 that the U.S. would not take advan­ta­ge (“I have not jum­ped up and down on the Ber­lin Wall”) of the revo­lu­ti­ons in Eas­tern Euro­pe to harm Soviet inte­rests; but neit­her Bush nor Gor­ba­chev at that point (or for that mat­ter, West Ger­man Chan­cellor Hel­mut Kohl) expec­ted so soon the col­lap­se of East Ger­ma­ny or the speed of Ger­man uni­fi­ca­ti­on.[2]

The first con­cre­te assuran­ces by Wes­tern lea­ders on NATO began on Janu­a­ry 31, 1990, when West Ger­man For­eign Minis­ter Hans-Dietrich Gen­scher ope­ned the bidding with a major public speech at Tutz­ing, in Bava­ria, on Ger­man uni­fi­ca­ti­on. The U.S. Embas­sy in Bonn (see Docu­ment 1) infor­med Washing­ton that Gen­scher made clear “that the chan­ges in Eas­tern Euro­pe and the Ger­man uni­fi­ca­ti­on pro­cess must not lead to an ‘impairment of Soviet secu­ri­ty inte­rests.’ The­re­fo­re, NATO should rule out an ‘expan­si­on of its ter­ri­to­ry towards the east, i.e. moving it clo­ser to the Soviet bor­ders.’” The Bonn cable also noted Genscher’s pro­po­sal to lea­ve the East Ger­man ter­ri­to­ry out of NATO mili­ta­ry struc­tures even in a uni­fied Ger­ma­ny in NATO.[3]

This lat­ter idea of spe­cial sta­tus for the GDR ter­ri­to­ry was codi­fied in the final Ger­man uni­fi­ca­ti­on trea­ty signed on Sep­tem­ber 12, 1990, by the Two-Plus-Four for­eign minis­ters (see Docu­ment 25). The for­mer idea about “clo­ser to the Soviet bor­ders” is writ­ten down not in trea­ties but in mul­ti­ple memo­ran­da of con­ver­sa­ti­on bet­ween the Soviets and the highest-level Wes­tern inter­lo­cu­tors (Gen­scher, Kohl, Baker, Gates, Bush, Mit­ter­rand, That­cher, Major, Woer­ner, and others) offe­ring assuran­ces throughout 1990 and into 1991 about pro­tec­ting Soviet secu­ri­ty inte­rests and inclu­ding the USSR in new Euro­pean secu­ri­ty struc­tures. The two issu­es were rela­ted but not the same. Sub­se­quent ana­ly­sis some­ti­mes con­fla­ted the two and argued that the dis­cus­sion did not invol­ve all of Euro­pe. The docu­ments publis­hed below show clear­ly that it did.

The “Tutz­ing for­mu­la” immedia­te­ly beca­me the cen­ter of a flur­ry of important diplo­ma­tic dis­cus­sions over the next 10 days in 1990, lea­ding to the cru­cial Febru­a­ry 10, 1990, mee­ting in Moscow bet­ween Kohl and Gor­ba­chev when the West Ger­man lea­der achie­ved Soviet assent in princip­le to Ger­man uni­fi­ca­ti­on in NATO, as long as NATO did not expand to the east. The Soviets would need much more time to work with their domestic opi­ni­on (and finan­cial aid from the West Ger­mans) befo­re for­mal­ly signing the deal in Sep­tem­ber 1990.

The con­ver­sa­ti­ons befo­re Kohl’s assuran­ce invol­ved expli­cit dis­cus­sion of NATO expan­si­on, the Cen­tral and East Euro­pean coun­tries, and how to con­vin­ce the Soviets to accept uni­fi­ca­ti­on. For examp­le, on Febru­a­ry 6, 1990, when Gen­scher met with Bri­tish For­eign Minis­ter Dou­glas Hurd, the Bri­tish record show­ed Gen­scher say­ing, “The Rus­si­ans must have some assuran­ce that if, for examp­le, the Polish Government left the War­saw Pact one day, they would not join NATO the next.” (See Docu­ment 2)

Having met with Gen­scher on his way into dis­cus­sions with the Soviets, Baker repeated exact­ly the Gen­scher for­mu­la­ti­on in his mee­ting with For­eign Minis­ter Edu­ard She­vard­nad­ze on Febru­a­ry 9, 1990, (see Docu­ment 4); and even more import­ant­ly, face to face with Gorbachev.

Not once, but three times, Baker tried out the “not one inch east­ward” for­mu­la with Gor­ba­chev in the Febru­a­ry 9, 1990, mee­ting. He agreed with Gorbachev’s state­ment in respon­se to the assuran­ces that “NATO expan­si­on is unac­cep­ta­ble.” Baker assu­red Gor­ba­chev that “neit­her the Pre­si­dent nor I intend to extract any uni­la­te­ral advan­ta­ges from the pro­ces­ses that are taking place,” and that the Ame­ri­cans unders­tood that “not only for the Soviet Uni­on but for other Euro­pean coun­tries as well it is important to have gua­ran­tees that if the United Sta­tes keeps its pre­sence in Ger­ma­ny wit­hin the frame­work of NATO, not an inch of NATO’s pre­sent mili­ta­ry juris­dic­tion will spread in an eas­tern direc­tion.” (See Docu­ment 6) 

After­wards, Baker wro­te to Hel­mut Kohl who would meet with the Soviet lea­der on the next day, with much of the very same lan­guage. Baker repor­ted: “And then I put the fol­lowing ques­ti­on to him [Gor­ba­chev]. Would you pre­fer to see a united Ger­ma­ny out­side of NATO, inde­pen­dent and with no U.S. for­ces or would you pre­fer a uni­fied Ger­ma­ny to be tied to NATO, with assuran­ces that NATO’s juris­dic­tion would not shift one inch east­ward from its pre­sent posi­ti­on? He ans­we­red that the Soviet lea­ders­hip was giving real thought to all such opti­ons [….] He then added, ‘Cer­tain­ly any exten­si­on of the zone of NATO would be unac­cep­ta­ble.’” Baker added in paren­the­ses, for Kohl’s bene­fit, “By impli­ca­ti­on, NATO in its cur­rent zone might be accep­ta­ble.” (See Docu­ment 8)

Well-briefed by the Ame­ri­can secreta­ry of sta­te, the West Ger­man chan­cellor unders­tood a key Soviet bot­tom line, and assu­red Gor­ba­chev on Febru­a­ry 10, 1990: “We belie­ve that NATO should not expand the sphe­re of its acti­vi­ty.” (See Docu­ment 9) After this mee­ting, Kohl could hard­ly con­tain his exci­te­ment at Gorbachev’s agree­ment in princip­le for Ger­man uni­fi­ca­ti­on and, as part of the Hel­sin­ki for­mu­la that sta­tes choo­se their own alli­an­ces, so Ger­ma­ny could choo­se NATO. Kohl descri­bed in his memoi­rs wal­king all night around Moscow – but still under­stan­ding the­re was a pri­ce still to pay.

All the Wes­tern for­eign minis­ters were on board with Gen­scher, Kohl, and Baker. Next came the Bri­tish for­eign minis­ter, Dou­glas Hurd, on April 11, 1990. At this point, the East Ger­mans had voted over­whel­min­gly for the deutsch­mark and for rapid uni­fi­ca­ti­on, in the March 18 elec­tions in which Kohl had sur­pri­sed almost all obser­vers with a real vic­to­ry. Kohl’s ana­ly­ses (first exp­lai­ned to Bush on Decem­ber 3, 1989) that the GDR’s col­lap­se would open all pos­si­bi­li­ties, that he had to run to get to the head of the train, that he nee­ded U.S. backing, that uni­fi­ca­ti­on could hap­pen fas­ter than anyo­ne thought pos­si­ble – all tur­ned out to be cor­rect. Mone­ta­ry uni­on would pro­ceed as ear­ly as July and the assuran­ces about secu­ri­ty kept com­ing. Hurd rein­for­ced the Baker-Genscher-Kohl mes­sa­ge in his mee­ting with Gor­ba­chev in Moscow, April 11, 1990, say­ing that Bri­tain clear­ly “reco­gni­zed the impor­t­ance of doing not­hing to pre­ju­di­ce Soviet inte­rests and digni­ty.” (See Docu­ment 15)

The Baker con­ver­sa­ti­on with She­vard­nad­ze on May 4, 1990, as Baker descri­bed it in his own report to Pre­si­dent Bush, most elo­quent­ly descri­bed what Wes­tern lea­ders were tel­ling Gor­ba­chev exact­ly at the moment: “I used your speech and our reco­gni­ti­on of the need to adapt NATO, poli­ti­cal­ly and mili­ta­ri­ly, and to deve­lop CSCE to reas­su­re She­vard­nad­ze that the pro­cess would not yield win­ners and losers. Ins­tead, it would pro­du­ce a new legi­ti­ma­te Euro­pean struc­tu­re – one that would be inclu­si­ve, not exclu­si­ve.” (See Docu­ment 17) 

Baker said it again, direct­ly to Gor­ba­chev on May 18, 1990 in Moscow, giving Gor­ba­chev his “nine points,” which inclu­ded the trans­for­ma­ti­on of NATO, streng­t­he­ning Euro­pean struc­tures, kee­ping Ger­ma­ny non-nuclear, and taking Soviet secu­ri­ty inte­rests into account. Baker star­ted off his remarks, “Befo­re say­ing a few words about the Ger­man issue, I wan­ted to empha­si­ze that our poli­ci­es are not aimed at sepa­ra­ting Eas­tern Euro­pe from the Soviet Uni­on. We had that poli­cy befo­re. But today we are inte­res­ted in buil­ding a sta­ble Euro­pe, and doing it tog­e­ther with you.” (See Docu­ment 18)

The French lea­der Fran­cois Mit­ter­rand was not in a mind-meld with the Ame­ri­cans, qui­te the con­tra­ry, as evi­den­ced by his tel­ling Gor­ba­chev in Moscow on May 25, 1990, that he was “per­so­nal­ly in favor of gra­du­al­ly dis­mant­ling the mili­ta­ry blocs”; but Mit­ter­rand con­ti­nued the cas­ca­de of assuran­ces by say­ing the West must “crea­te secu­ri­ty con­di­ti­ons for you, as well as Euro­pean secu­ri­ty as a who­le.” (See Docu­ment 19) Mit­ter­rand immedia­te­ly wro­te Bush in a “cher Geor­ge” let­ter about his con­ver­sa­ti­on with the Soviet lea­der, that “we would cer­tain­ly not refu­se to detail the gua­ran­tees that he would have a right to expect for his country’s secu­ri­ty.” (See Docu­ment 20)

At the Washing­ton sum­mit on May 31, 1990, Bush went out of his way to assu­re Gor­ba­chev that Ger­ma­ny in NATO would never be direc­ted at the USSR: “Belie­ve me, we are not pushing Ger­ma­ny towards uni­fi­ca­ti­on, and it is not us who deter­mi­nes the pace of this pro­cess. And of cour­se, we have no inten­ti­on, even in our thoughts, to harm the Soviet Uni­on in any fashion. That is why we are spea­king in favor of Ger­man uni­fi­ca­ti­on in NATO without igno­ring the wider con­text of the CSCE, taking the tra­di­tio­nal eco­no­mic ties bet­ween the two Ger­man sta­tes into con­si­de­ra­ti­on. Such a model, in our view, cor­re­sponds to the Soviet inte­rests as well.” (See Docu­ment 21)

The “Iron Lady” also pit­ched in, after the Washing­ton sum­mit, in her mee­ting with Gor­ba­chev in Lon­don on June 8, 1990. That­cher anti­ci­pa­ted the moves the Ame­ri­cans (with her sup­port) would take in the ear­ly July NATO con­fe­rence to sup­port Gor­ba­chev with descrip­ti­ons of the trans­for­ma­ti­on of NATO towards a more poli­ti­cal, less mili­ta­ri­ly threa­tening, alli­an­ce. She said to Gor­ba­chev: “We must find ways to give the Soviet Uni­on con­fi­dence that its secu­ri­ty would be assu­red…. CSCE could be an umbrel­la for all this, as well as being the forum which brought the Soviet Uni­on ful­ly into dis­cus­sion about the future of Euro­pe.” (See Docu­ment 22)

The NATO Lon­don Decla­ra­ti­on on July 5, 1990 had qui­te a posi­ti­ve effect on deli­be­ra­ti­ons in Moscow, accord­ing to most accounts, giving Gor­ba­chev signi­fi­cant ammu­ni­ti­on to coun­ter his hard­li­ners at the Par­ty Con­gress which was taking place at that moment. Some ver­si­ons of this histo­ry assert that an advan­ce copy was pro­vi­ded to Shevardnadze’s aides, while others descri­be just an alert that allo­wed tho­se aides to take the wire ser­vice copy and pro­du­ce a Soviet posi­ti­ve assess­ment befo­re the mili­ta­ry or hard­li­ners could call it propaganda.

As Kohl said to Gor­ba­chev in Moscow on July 15, 1990, as they worked out the final deal on Ger­man uni­fi­ca­ti­on: “We know what awaits NATO in the future, and I think you are now in the know as well,” refer­ring to the NATO Lon­don Decla­ra­ti­on. (See Docu­ment 23)

In his pho­ne call to Gor­ba­chev on July 17, Bush meant to rein­for­ce the suc­cess of the Kohl-Gorbachev talks and the mes­sa­ge of the Lon­don Decla­ra­ti­on. Bush exp­lai­ned: “So what we tried to do was to take account of your con­cerns expres­sed to me and others, and we did it in the fol­lowing ways: by our joint decla­ra­ti­on on non-aggression; in our invi­ta­ti­on to you to come to NATO; in our agree­ment to open NATO to regu­lar diplo­ma­tic con­ta­ct with your government and tho­se of the Eas­tern Euro­pean coun­tries; and our offer on assuran­ces on the future size of the armed for­ces of a united Ger­ma­ny – an issue I know you dis­cus­sed with Hel­mut Kohl. We also fun­da­ment­al­ly chan­ged our mili­ta­ry approach on con­ven­tio­nal and nuclear for­ces. We con­vey­ed the idea of an expan­ded, stron­ger CSCE with new insti­tu­ti­ons in which the USSR can share and be part of the new Euro­pe.” (See Docu­ment 24)

The docu­ments show that Gor­ba­chev agreed to Ger­man uni­fi­ca­ti­on in NATO as the result of this cas­ca­de of assuran­ces, and on the basis of his own ana­ly­sis that the future of the Soviet Uni­on depen­ded on its inte­gra­ti­on into Euro­pe, for which Ger­ma­ny would be the decisi­ve actor. He and most of his allies belie­ved that some ver­si­on of the com­mon Euro­pean home was still pos­si­ble and would deve­lop along­side the trans­for­ma­ti­on of NATO to lead to a more inclu­si­ve and inte­gra­ted Euro­pean space, that the post-Cold War sett­le­ment would take account of the Soviet secu­ri­ty inte­rests. The alli­an­ce with Ger­ma­ny would not only over­co­me the Cold War but also turn on its head the lega­cy of the Gre­at Patrio­tic War.

But insi­de the U.S. government, a dif­fe­rent dis­cus­sion con­ti­nued, a deba­te about rela­ti­ons bet­ween NATO and Eas­tern Euro­pe. Opi­ni­ons dif­fe­red, but the sug­ges­ti­on from the Defen­se Depart­ment as of Octo­ber 25, 1990 was to lea­ve “the door ajar” for East Euro­pean mem­bers­hip in NATO. (See Docu­ment 27) The view of the Sta­te Depart­ment was that NATO expan­si­on was not on the agen­da, becau­se it was not in the inte­rest of the U.S. to orga­ni­ze “an anti-Soviet coali­ti­on” that exten­ded to the Soviet bor­ders, not least becau­se it might rever­se the posi­ti­ve trends in the Soviet Uni­on. (See Docu­ment 26) The Bush admi­nis­tra­ti­on took the lat­ter view. And that’s what the Soviets heard.

As late as March 1991, accord­ing to the dia­ry of the Bri­tish ambassa­dor to Moscow, Bri­tish Prime Minis­ter John Major per­so­nal­ly assu­red Gor­ba­chev, “We are not tal­king about the streng­t­he­ning of NATO.” Sub­se­quent­ly, when Soviet defen­se minis­ter Mar­shal Dmi­tri Yazov asked Major about East Euro­pean lea­ders’ inte­rest in NATO mem­bers­hip, the Bri­tish lea­der respon­ded, “Not­hing of the sort will hap­pen.” (See Docu­ment 28)

When Rus­si­an Supre­me Soviet depu­ties came to Brussels to see NATO and meet with NATO secretary-general Man­fred Woer­ner in July 1991, Woer­ner told the Rus­si­ans that “We should not allow […] the iso­la­ti­on of the USSR from the Euro­pean com­mu­ni­ty.” Accord­ing to the Rus­si­an memo­ran­dum of con­ver­sa­ti­on, “Woer­ner stres­sed that the NATO Coun­cil and he are against the expan­si­on of NATO (13 of 16 NATO mem­bers sup­port this point of view).” (See Docu­ment 30)

Thus, Gor­ba­chev went to the end of the Soviet Uni­on assu­red that the West was not threa­tening his secu­ri­ty and was not expan­ding NATO. Ins­tead, the dis­so­lu­ti­on of the USSR was brought about by Rus­si­ans (Boris Yelt­sin and his lea­ding advi­so­ry Gen­na­dy Bur­bu­lis) in con­cert with the for­mer par­ty bos­ses of the Soviet repu­blics, espe­cial­ly Ukrai­ne, in Decem­ber 1991. The Cold War was long over by then. The Ame­ri­cans had tried to keep the Soviet Uni­on tog­e­ther (see the Bush “Chi­cken Kiev” speech on August 1, 1991). NATO’s expan­si­on was years in the future, when the­se dis­pu­tes would erupt again, and more assuran­ces would come to Rus­si­an lea­der Boris Yeltsin.

The Archi­ve com­pi­led the­se declas­si­fied docu­ments for a panel dis­cus­sion on Novem­ber 10, 2017 at the annu­al con­fe­rence of the Asso­cia­ti­on for Sla­vic, East Euro­pean and Eura­si­an Stu­dies (ASEEES) in Chi­ca­go under the tit­le “Who Pro­mi­sed What to Whom on NATO Expan­si­on?” The panel included: 

* Mark Kra­mer from the Davis Cen­ter at Har­vard, edi­tor of the Jour­nal of Cold War Stu­dies, who­se 2009 Washing­ton Quar­ter­ly arti­cle argued that the “no-NATO-enlargement pledge” was a “myth”;[4]

* Joshua R. Itko­witz Shif­rin­son from the Bush School at Texas A&M, who­se 2016 Inter­na­tio­nal Secu­ri­ty arti­cle argued the U.S. was play­ing a dou­ble game in 1990, lea­ding Gor­ba­chev to belie­ve NATO would be sub­su­med in a new Euro­pean secu­ri­ty struc­tu­re, while working to ensu­re hege­mo­ny in Euro­pe and the main­ten­an­ce of NATO;[5]

* James Gold­gei­er from Ame­ri­can Uni­ver­si­ty, who wro­te the aut­ho­ri­ta­ti­ve book on the Clin­ton decisi­on on NATO expan­si­on, Not Whe­ther But When, and descri­bed the mis­lea­ding U.S. assuran­ces to Rus­si­an lea­der Boris Yelt­sin in a 2016 WarOnThe­Rocks arti­cle;[6]

* Svet­la­na Sav­rans­ka­ya and Tom Blan­ton from the Natio­nal Secu­ri­ty Archi­ve, who­se most recent book, The Last Super­power Sum­mits: Gor­ba­chev, Rea­gan, and Bush: Con­ver­sa­ti­ons That Ended the Cold War (CEU Press, 2016) ana­ly­zes and publis­hes the declas­si­fied tran­scripts and rela­ted docu­ments from all of Gorbachev’s sum­mits with U.S. pre­si­dents, inclu­ding dozens of assuran­ces about pro­tec­ting the USSR’s secu­ri­ty inte­rests.[7]

[Today’s pos­ting is the first of two on the sub­ject. The second part will cover the Yelt­sin dis­cus­sions with Wes­tern lea­ders about NATO.]

src: click
Alle refe­ren­zier­ten Doku­men­te sind in einer elek­tro­ni­schen Ver­si­on im Quel­len­link einsehbar.

Der Herr ist Geschichts­wis­sen­schaft­ler bei der Stif­tung Wis­sen­schaft und Poli­tik und berät die deut­sche Bundesregierung!

Der hat wohl noch Karriereambitionen.









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