Center for Citizen Initiatives

Bringing Russian and American citizens together in Peace since 1983.

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New Changes at CCI

August 1, 2022

Dear CCI Followers,

I explained earlier that I would be in touch with you about changes occurring at CCI. I am in my 85th year and it is imperative that my workload be reduced.

We are setting up a new Board of Directors for CCI.

Fortunately, I’ve had the advantage of close relations with VIP Americans and numerous other top-end professionals who have traveled on CCI’s Russia trips since 2010.  Several of them have communicated weekly and some daily at specific times. They have been a God-send to me. It’s past time for a few of them to become CCI’s new Board Members. The first two who have been loyal supporters are as follows: Paula Day and Krishen Mehta.

Their responsibilities will be established in the near future.

[Continue Reading]

Does Ukraine Materially Affect U.S. National Interests?

July 19, 2022

There Are No Core U.S. National Interests at Stake in Ukraine

Ordinary Americans can be forgiven for thinking Ukraine must be especially meaningful for U.S. foreign policy.

National Interest
July 9, 2022
By
William Ruger

Somebody has to say it: the war in Ukraine does not materially affect the permanent national interests of the United States or the geopolitical landscape in which we advance those interests. This conclusion—for good or bad or anywhere in-between—shouldn’t significantly impact the future of U.S. foreign policy. The war may tug on our heartstrings for sure, but it should not dissuade us from making the necessary changes to our grand strategy that position our country for long-run success, like our recent withdrawal from Afghanistan. These changes include increasing our focus on China as our most important strategic competitor, extricating ourselves from Europe and the Middle East, and emphasizing domestic renewal over ostensible altruism abroad.

However, there are important lessons for the future of U.S. foreign policy that can be learned from the conflict, especially regarding the offense-defense balance and Russia’s revealed conventional capability. But these aren’t the ones that you’ll hear from the foreign policy establishment, which will always spin positive outcomes or trouble overseas as reasons to redouble our commitment to the primacist status quo they favor.

Heads, I win; tails, you lose.

Ordinary Americans can be forgiven for thinking Ukraine must be especially meaningful for U.S. foreign policy. As the war unfolded, they could see red ink signifying Russian forces spreading across the map of Ukraine as Vladimir Putin’s aggression threatened Kyiv and other parts of the country. Prompted by hawkish commentators, they worried about whether Russia would stop at the western border. Daily, they were treated to intense battlefield videos of the most devastating war in Europe since World War II, some showing the cruelty of Russian soldiers while others the heroism of Ukrainian patriots.

But those worried by events in Ukraine can rest assured that they mean less to the United States than it might seem, especially if they have been listening only to the play-by-play commentary provided by Washington mandarins who tell Americans they must do more while ignoring the dangers of doing so and lack of vital interests to justify growing risks of involvement. Fortunately, the permanent features of the world that support America’s safety and the conditions of our prosperity remain largely unaffected by the conflict.

[Continue Reading]

Changes in Motion at CCI

July 15, 2022

Dear CCI Friends,

I’ve missed being in touch with you over the past months. I had to take time out to see if my body and mind could heal itself after working around the clock for too many years. In my 85th year constant work finally caught up with me!

After taking time off, getting plenty of sleep and downtime, I’m feeling considerably better. However at my age, I’m told that it’s not wise to continue this pace to which I’ve been accustomed. So I’m trying to figure out how to slow down. My sons, who are already retired, think it’s time for me to be a family Mom! I love them and my grandchildren, but I was always so involved with CCI that I allowed my work to come first before family events. Thankfully they still want me to be part of their lives. If I don’t do this now, I’ll never have the chance again. I’m increasingly aware of how fast the years pass and soon life is over. So I’ve had to make some tough decisions.

Fortunately we have a number CCI volunteers who are top professionals. Three of them are now ready to become bonafide CCI Board Members. They traveled on one or more of my trips to Russia and have been dedicated to our work since then. Fortunately they are considerably younger than I am. In the past several years, they have operated like Board members for me. When I needed advice I called on one or more of them. They are skilled in fields in which I have no expertise. Two are attorneys, one a former PricewaterhouseCoopers partner, another a businessman and a decades-long Rotarian.

Of course I will mentor them, travel to Russia with them to share our 40 years of work there, and help them begin to build relations with our Russian experts and coordinators across the country. We are planning a small trip for them this coming October. CCI’s larger trip for 100 persons will be rescheduled again, this time for June of 2023. I will travel with both trips. I’m sure COVID won’t be an issue by that time.

I will continue to write for CCI, but I also want our new Board Members to begin writing or sending articles that experts in the field forward to us.

Meanwhile I plan to move from Silicon Valley to Bend, Oregon where my sons and families live. I’m really looking forward to this more sensible lifestyle as I go toward my 90s!

In any case, I’ll continue to stay in touch with you. Please know that I greatly appreciate your interest in CCI over the years, your friendships and support as we have tried to bring Americans and Russians into successful working relations during these past decades.

Thank you, thank you!!!

Sharon (signature)

PS:  In closing I want to admit, we are in an extremely difficult and dangerous period at this moment. However, I still think there may be a way out. More on this to follow within a week.

Ukraine is the Latest Neocon Disaster

July 5, 2022

Dear CCI Friends,

Several of us at CCI want the following article by Jeffrey Sachs, an expert in U.S. political economics, to be read today by as many Americans as possible.

Sachs’ keen perspective on the current debacle in U.S./Russia relations comes from his decades of experience between the two countries starting with mistakes made in the 1990s.

We live in very uncertain times and fortunately voices like Sachs’ remind us how we got where we are, and what to do differently in the immediate future.

Please forward to your colleagues and friends.

[Continue Reading]

Direct Discussion: James Carden and MEP Clare Daly, European Parliament

July 1, 2022

CCI Friends,

It is encouraging to know that intelligent persons in other parts of the world are searching for ways to penetrate the veil between their top bureaucrats and citizens of their countries regarding the Ukraine/NATO war. Read below for insights and solutions as we try to educate mainstream Americans concerning the very real potential for a full-scale nuclear war if we don’t settle for workable solutions.

Sharon (signature)

Sharon Tennison
Center for Citizen Initiatives

[Continue Reading]

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