Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Worse than the cold war

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Worse than the cold war

    Agency WPS
    What the Papers Say Part B (Russia)
    May 12, 2006 Friday

    WORSE THAN THE COLD WAR

    by Nikolai Zlobin, World Security Institute (US)

    Moscow and Washington don't share the same visions of the future; The
    situation in US-Russian relations is not another Cold War. It is
    worse than that, because the crisis we see unfolding now is not
    ideological. This is a conflict between the world's strongest
    democracy and the world's largest authoritarian country.


    Viewed from Washington, Russia's policy appears to be more and more
    odd and counterproductive. Washington is already used to Moscow's
    reaction to any criticism which it treats with minimum of imagination
    involved. In fact, Moscow has two explanations of criticism it
    applies in turns. Explanation one: lack of understanding of what is
    "really" happening in Russia on the part of Western leaders or their
    advisors (as far as Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov is concerned, for
    example, US Vice President Dick Cheney was let down by his
    subordinates and advisors or he would have spoken differently at the
    Vilnius conference earlier this months). Explanation two: the good
    old anti-Russian campaign. Dismissing everything as hostile
    propaganda was a Soviet technique of the late 1940s. Oddly enough, it
    still works.

    At first sight, one would be hard pressed to find a better
    opportunity than G8 presidency to win sympathies and present oneself
    in the best possible light. Leadership in the club of the most
    democratic, economically advanced, and military strong world powers
    is objectively an unparalleled chance to boost one's respect with the
    international community, to improve the image of the country itself
    and its regime. Last time Moscow wielded such strong leverage with
    the general public worldwide was when it launched Sputnik and then
    sent Yuri Gagarin into space. The USSR became a symbol of success
    then. It was studied, it was emulated - even in the countries on the
    other side of the front line of the Cold War.

    The situation nowadays is different. Russia is setting a definitely
    repellent example. Whenever others study Russia's example, it's only
    in order to avoid becoming like Russia. Anything but a symbol of
    success, Russia is even on the list of 60 failed states compiled by
    Foreign Policy magazine and the Fund for Peace, where it ranks 43rd -
    one slot above Tajikistan but below Nigeria, Turkmenistan, Guinea
    Bissau, or even Moldova and Georgia. Moscow's international influence
    has diminished in the months of its G8 presidency, and the respect it
    commands is fading fast. Trying to come up with at least something
    positive, US leaders point out that Russia is not the USSR, of
    course; though it's hard to understand exactly what they mean by
    that. If this is Russia's major achievement, it's modest indeed,
    since this is also the major achievement of Kyrgyzstan, Armenia, and
    even Belarus.

    Neither can we ascribe Russia's troubles to economic stagnation.
    These days, Russia is exporting more oil and gas than the Soviet
    Union ever did and at the prices the Politburo of old could not even
    imagine possible. Russian gold and hard currency reserves set an
    all-time record, and flow of hard currency into the country makes
    even bankers in the Persian Gulf envious. Russia's international
    economic capacities are much better than the Soviet Union's. Military
    inadequacy cannot be cited either. Russia has retained nuclear parity
    with the United States. It is the only country in the world capable
    of challenging the United States in the military sphere. Like the
    USSR its predecessor, Russia is the second largest arms merchant in
    the world. Russia abandoned communism. It is clear nevertheless that
    Russia nowadays is undeniably less respected, sympathized with, or
    backed than the Soviet Union was. The way Moscow achieved it - and so
    fast - cannot help generating some morbid interest in the United
    States.

    The blame cannot be pinned on the West. The last decade was ideal for
    Russia because the world powers were ruled by the politicians
    sympathizing with Russia. Bill Clinton and George W. Bush have been
    more pro-Russian than any presidents the United States has had in the
    past or is likely to have in the future. The same goes for the
    leaders of Germany, Italy, France, and so on. It is next to
    impossible to imagine more favorable external subjective factors,
    particularly since their pro-Russian stand and sympathies with Moscow
    cost lots of foreign politicians their reputation.

    The idea of an anti-Russian campaign that is so popular in Moscow is
    actually misleading. The concept only flatters the egos of the
    Russian political establishment. There are people in Washington who
    dislike Russia, and they cannot be silenced. Yet they are greatly
    outnumbered by people who like Russia and find it interesting.
    Practically all of them, however, agree that Russia is not playing
    any substantial role in American policy nowadays, and it's not a
    factor deserving a great deal of attention - let alone the effort of
    anti-Russian campaigns.

    Russia's problems are direct corollaries of Russian policy. Once
    Russia ceased to be a democracy, Washington saw this as fundamentally
    changing the general trend of global development and Russia's own
    role in it. Once it ceased to be a democracy, Russia made a strategic
    partnership with the United States impossible. For Washington,
    cooperation with Russia is becoming more and more difficult - even in
    areas where their interests actually coincide - because the deepening
    discord over perception of values prevent Moscow and Washington from
    sharing visions of the future. Sure, Russia is a sovereign state and
    therefore entitled to the right to choose its own path. Yet it's the
    height of folly to believe that the West will tolerate every twist of
    Russia's foreign policy, just because everyone needs oil, gas, and
    international security. Anyone who doubts that ought to look back at
    Brezhnev and his era.

    The hopes that Washington needs Russia so much that it would overlook
    Russia's evolution had better be abandoned. In fact, the Bush
    Administration has been sending precisely this message to the Kremlin
    for several years. It was and is a mistake, a political fallacy which
    the White House is trying now to correct. This is what Cheney said in
    Vilnius, and some advisors tried to smooth it out (that's for you,
    Mr. Lavrov!). The United States became convinced that the
    authoritarian trend in Russia directly affects its foreign policy.
    The more authoritarian Russia becomes, the less constructive its
    foreign policy gets. As a result, Washington itself is making a
    transition now from the policy of limited cooperation with Russia to
    the policy of its limited deterrent. This is Washington's reaction to
    the policy Moscow has pursued with regard to the United States these
    last three years. This state of affairs affects both countries and
    the international community as such, and only benefits (of that is
    what it is) the national elites in the two countries providing them
    with an excuse to be used to explain their own foreign policy
    failures.

    It seems that Washington means business now and the American-Russian
    relations will only sour in the foreseeable future. The policy of
    limited in Eurasia is already balancing on the verge of a limited
    confrontation between the two countries, a conflict between them
    currently defined by certain geographic margins. The boundaries of
    the limited confrontation will expand into new and new regions in
    Eurasia and beyond it. American policy on Russia is largely a
    reaction to Russia's own actions. This is a more appropriate concept
    than limited cooperation ever was - much less the attempts to
    establish partnership.

    Despite the opinion held by some specialists, this is not another
    Cold War. It is worse than that, because the crisis we see unfolding
    now is not ideological. This is a conflict between the world's
    strongest democracy and the world's largest authoritarian country -
    intensified by the fundamental difference in their geopolitical
    views, preferences, and objectives, and intensified again by the
    mutual dislike between the elites, distrust, the inertia of
    hostility, and colossal ambitions on the part of both countries.

    The Cold War was simpler than that. There could be a winner in it,
    and there was. There was the concept of peaceful co-existence and
    there was understanding of what essentially the warring sides were
    after. The United States is no longer an enemy of Russia, and victory
    over Russia is not what Washington is after. Neither does Moscow
    aspire to see America destroyed. More complicated instruments are
    needed. What is needed is a strategy more intricate that the
    straightforwardness of the Cold War. What is needed is an entirely
    different level of responsibility for national leaders. Neither the
    United States nor Russia can hope to win in this conflict, but both
    may lose. Moreover, Russia may lose much more than it hopes to gain
    nowadays with its deterrent policy.

    Source: Nezavisimaya Gazeta, May 12, 2006, p. 11

    Translated by A. Ignatkin
Working...
X