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Return of the big bad bear

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  • Return of the big bad bear

    The Australian, Australia
    Dec 10 2004


    Return of the big bad bear
    Paul Dibb


    FOR more than a decade, received wisdom in the West has been that
    Russia has changed fundamentally and is now a peace-loving European
    power prepared to keep to itself and live by the rules. If we prove
    to have been wrong about Russia, much of what has been assumed about
    global and European security will need revision, too.

    Moscow's interference in the Ukrainian election, the announcement
    that Russia will deploy a new type of strategic nuclear missile "that
    other nuclear states do not have", and President Vladimir Putin's
    increasingly anti-democratic attitude all point to a reversion to bad
    old habits.

    Putin has openly mourned the passing of the Soviet Union as "a
    national tragedy" for Russia. He has launched a bid to reconstitute a
    "joint economic space" on the ashes of the Soviet Union, taking in
    Russia, Ukraine, Kazakhstan and Belarus. Putin's growing antipathy
    towards the US is reflected in his accusation that Washington is
    running a "dictatorship" over global affairs.

    The visit to Moscow last week of Leonid Kuchma, President of Ukraine,
    to meet Putin looked suspiciously like a Soviet era visit to report
    to head office for new instructions. The West has been accused of
    using the Ukraine as part of "a well-planned strike directed
    primarily at Russia", and to effect "a political takeover of the
    post-Soviet area". There have even been suggestions in the Russian
    press that a Viktor Yushchenko presidency in the Ukraine could
    trigger military intervention.

    Bad habits have been evident for some time in the new Russia. At
    home, the dominance of Kremlin advisers from the former KGB, who now
    occupy 60 per cent of key decision-making positions, the suppression
    of dissent in the media, and the jailing (or killing) of political
    adversaries are all too familiar from the days of the Soviet Union.
    Overseas, the retention of links with former client states (such as
    Syria and North Korea), the suspicion of NATO, and the latent fear of
    China all reflect abiding Soviet geopolitical concerns.









    The days of euphoria over the expectation that a democratic Russia
    would become a member of the Western strategic community are long
    gone. Instead, we are now seeing an attempt by Putin to re-establish
    Russia as a great power.

    Most countries are prisoners of their geography and history -- and
    none more so than Russia. There is a deeply entrenched sense of
    geographical vulnerability in Russia. Invasions by the Mongol hordes,
    and later attacks by Poland, Sweden, France and Germany have left an
    acute sense of paranoia.

    This was reflected in a statement by Defence Minister Sergei Ivanov
    last year, which identifies among the main threats to Russian
    security: "the expansion of military blocs and alliances to the
    detriment of the military security of the Russian Federation" and
    "the introduction of foreign troops onto the territories of states,
    which are adjacent to and friendly toward [Russia]". These are
    scarcely veiled references to the expansion of NATO on Russia's
    western borders and the military presence of the US in states of
    former Soviet Central Asia and the Caucasus.

    Then there is the question of the re-emergence of Russia's imperial
    impulse. As Ilan Berman, who is with the American Foreign Policy
    Council, says in The Washington Quarterly, this concept has been
    present in Russian political life for centuries, and the end of the
    Cold War did little to mute it.

    Alexander Solzhenitsyn advocated calls for a Greater Russia shortly
    after the Soviet Union collapsed. Under Putin, these impulses are
    beginning to be put into practice. As he said in June, Russian
    officials are "now working to restore what was lost with the fall of
    the Soviet Union".

    Russia's strong economic growth is enabling it to spend more on
    defence and increase its military presence in what it calls "the near
    abroad". Russia's real defence expenditure was $US65.2 billion ($86.1
    billion) in 2003 -- an increase of more than 40 per cent from 2001.

    This makes Russia the second-largest defence spender in the world
    after the US, and ahead of China and Japan. Of course, it would be
    wrong to assume that Russia is anywhere near repairing the
    post-Soviet damage to its military. But Russia still has 5000
    operational strategic nuclear warheads and armed forces numbering 1.2
    million. And Russia under Putin is re-establishing a military
    presence in neighbouring countries.

    As Berman points out, the US's new emphasis on Central Asia and the
    Caucasus as part of the global war against terrorism is drawing a
    strong Russian response. In Uzbekistan, Russia has negotiated an
    agreement that effectively puts Moscow in charge of much of
    Tashkent's military policy. Last year, the Russian military opened
    its first foreign base since the fall of the Soviet Union, in
    Kyrgyzstan.

    This year, Tajikistan granted Moscow military basing rights "on a
    free of charge and open-ended basis". Russia and Kazakhstan have also
    inaugurated a joint action plan for security co-operation.

    In the Caucasus, Russia has negotiated the use of military bases in
    Armenia. Moscow continues to foment separatist tendencies within
    Georgia and has threatened to cease gas supplies to Azerbaijan.

    In June, Moscow commenced large-scale military exercises (called
    Mobility 2004) with a clear signal to its neighbours that it
    possesses the will and firepower to project force. The Russian
    Foreign Ministry said they were intended to demonstrate that "any
    place is within our reach".

    So, how did we get to this remove? Not all of it can be levelled at a
    paranoid Russia. Had the West mounted a serious attempt to aid Russia
    after the collapse of the Soviet Union, we might have had a better
    chance of a democratic Russia. Instead, Washington was intent on
    never allowing Russia to emerge again as a major power. The expansion
    of NATO up to the Russian borders, including basing NATO planes in
    Lithuania, NATO activity in the Caucasus, and the prospect of the
    Ukraine joining the EU and NATO, may turn out to be a fatal step in
    the history of the 21st century.

    President Putin has made it clear that Moscow should not allow this
    erosion of Russia's geopolitical space. The Chief of the Russian
    General Staff has written: "A powerful military stationed at our
    borders with no declared objective poses a threat to any non-NATO
    country. Sensible leaders would realise this and prepare to counter
    the threat."

    The problem is that Russia, after 400 years of autocracy, has never
    felt its independence threatened in this way before from European
    hegemony. The forthcoming elections in Ukraine may just provide
    Moscow with the pretext it requires to assert control over what it
    sees as vital geopolitical space.

    Paul Dibb, a former deputy defence secretary, is chairman of the
    Strategic and Defence Studies Centre at the Australian National
    University in Canberra.
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