Pre-Olympic Partnerships Offer Security Hope For Sochi
By: Rachel Marsden
At the London 2012 Olympics, various media outlets probed the notion of the 
Olympic athletes' village being a giant bed-hopping venue -- a phenomenon that 
not only disgusted my mother every time she heard it mentioned (which was often) 
but also puzzled me as a former international-level swimmer who spent every 
night before a race hunkered down doing visualization exercises. What does make 
sense, though, is the kind of pre-Olympic bed-hopping that we're currently 
seeing among nations in the run-up to the Sochi Games.
In 2012, Russian paratroopers visited Fort Carson, Colo., to take part in two 
weeks of training alongside members of the U.S. Special Forces. Steven 
Osterholzer, a spokesman for the 10th Special Forces Group, told the Associated 
Press that mutual understanding between the two nations' military forces is 
essential in joint military and humanitarian operations such as antiterrorism 
measures and disaster relief.
Today, in light of the pre-Olympic bombings in Sochi, such collaboration makes 
all the pragmatic sense in the world.
Last March, Russia decided to reinstate its special operations combat forces 
command -- known as Spetsnaz GRU and under military intelligence control during 
the Soviet years -- which had been disbanded after the 2008 Georgian conflict. 
At the time, observers in Russia and abroad wondered why. Some figured it might 
be due to Europe's missile defense system, or to counter America's Special 
Forces activities abroad.
Keep in mind that, at the time, Russia and the U.S. were continuing to engage in 
military cooperation under a bilateral agreement. It would be naive to think 
that the two countries wouldn't welcome an opportunity to sniff out each other's 
capabilities under the guise of meet-and-greet sessions on military bases. But 
these are trained professionals who have spent their careers picking off Islamic 
terrorists -- not each other. It's hardly a stretch to imagine them working 
alongside each other to target the same terrorists both sides have been trained 
to fight, this time in the context of Olympic security.
What if the joint exercises between Russian and American troops were all about 
the possibility that U.S troops might be put in a position to have to 
potentially kill terrorists in the streets of a Russian city -- to keep 
Americans and other Westerners safe in Sochi?
Speaking of which, France and Saudi Arabia need to get a room. The two countries 
have been playing footsie over everything from their common regime-change agenda 
in Syria to defense deals to, most recently, the Saudis giving Lebanon $3 
billion to buy French weapons. Hollande was just in Riyadh last week, meeting 
with Saudi King Abdullah, Crown Prince Salman bin Abdulaziz, former Lebanese 
Prime Minister Saad Hariri and Syrian opposition leader Ahmad Jarba.
The least Hollande could have done was toss the subject of the Sochi Games onto 
the table, too. Hollande is known for his pragmatism. If anyone with a 
non-ideological agenda is positioned to significantly influence the security of 
the Games, it's Hollande. And if reports from earlier this year are to be 
believed, Olympic security runs through Saudi Arabia.
Granted, Russia has the Saudis' noses out of joint at the moment. Russia 
competes with them for oil. Russia ruined their regime-change plans in Syria by 
making a deal with America to rid the country of weapons. Russia is also tight 
with Iran, whose state media, Al-Alam, reported this little nugget related to a 
purported meeting in Moscow last July between Russian President Vladimir Putin 
and Saudi Arabia intelligence chief Prince Bandar bin Sultan: "Bandar sought 
Russia's cooperation on several Mideast concerns, including Syria, and told 
Putin, 'I can give you a guarantee to protect the Winter Olympics in the city of 
Sochi on the Black Sea next year. The Chechen groups that threaten the security 
of the games are controlled by us.'"
If Hollande can score $3 billion from the Saudis, he certainly has the leverage 
to step up and take one for Team Antiterrorism.
COPYRIGHT 2014 RACHEL MARSDEN