ADAPTED FROM THE
NATIONAL INTEREST
Summer 2002
The Eurasian Dream
Nikolas K. Gvosdev
Putin apparently views George W. Bush (in terms of
his administration, not on a personal level) as an overbearing yet wealthy
uncle whose tedious holiday visits can be endured because he presents a
lucrative gift at the end of the day. Consider this: the United States did
in a matter of weeks what years of Russian aid to the Northern Alliance
was unable to do—decapitate the Taliban regime. Washington removed a
major threat to the stability and territorial integrity of the Russian
Federation. Russia cannot afford to state-build in Eurasia, while the
United States can offer one country, Uzbekistan, long-term financial aid,
loans and investments that could easily reach $8 billion—a sum equal to
Russia’s entire annual military budget. Therefore, while the United
States takes on the lion’s share of the costs to revamp Eurasia’s
security architecture, "we are increasing our security, saving the
lives of our soldiers, and gaining time for our own rearmament,"
declared Putin advisor Gleb Pavlovsky.
Putin is gambling that U.S. guarantees, such as
the one extended to Uzbek president Islam Karimov during his visit to
Washington this past March, will be of short duration, especially as the
threat from Al-Qaeda recedes and the United States seeks to extricate
itself from the region. In other words, post-9/11 developments are simply
one more set of steps in the "Eurasian shuffle", as regional
leaders dance between Moscow and Washington to secure maximum advantage.
Even though the United States can easily outbid Russia, Washington’s
concerns about how its assistance might be misused—either by
authoritarian regimes seeking to crack down on opposition movements, or by
corrupt local officials to improve the quality of the protection they
extend to criminal organizations—means that tensions between Washington
and its new "partners" are inevitable.
Karimov himself is most adept at this waltz. When
it appeared that the United States was prepared to play a more active role
in Central Asia, especially in the energy sector, Karimov declared, in
1995: "The presence of the United States in Central Asia is a
guarantee of stability in [this] part of the world." When no
large-scale Western investment materialized, and when Washington
intensified its criticisms of his unreconstructed authoritarianism,
Karimov made the pilgrimage to the Kremlin, where, in May of last year, he
pronounced: "We favor Russia's presence in Central Asia. This is a
fundamental guarantee of security and stability in the region."
Karimov may be America’s new best friend but when the relationship with
the United States cools (whether over human rights, lack of
democratization, or corruption), Moscow will be waiting to receive the
prodigal back into the common Eurasian home.
Even if the United States intends to establish a
long-term presence in the region, the naval base at Guantanamo Bay is a
telling example of how a military presence in an area can have virtually
no impact at all on events in the host country. Given the U.S. penchant
for "freezing" conflicts indefinitely rather than expending its
own treasure and energy to craft final solutions, Russia can retain its
forward "enclaves" in the region (such as peacekeepers in
Abkhazia or Tajikistan, or the base at Akhalkalaki in southern Georgia) to
counterbalance any American presence.
Moreover, the lack of substantial Western
investment in the region, other than in the hydrocarbons sector in certain
areas, allows Russia to retain a considerable degree of economic and
political leverage in the new Eurasia. The Russian economy remains
underdeveloped by Western standards, but Russia is an El Dorado for
millions of legal and illegal guest workers who send remittances back to
their families in the Caucasus and Central Asia. After years of decline
caused by the Soviet breakup, trade between Russia and other former Soviet
republics grew by more than 40 percent in 2000, totaling over $25 billion.
Finally, several of years of continuous growth in the Russian economy—not
to mention the enormous profits obtained by Russian corporations,
especially in the energy sector—have enabled Russian firms to buy up
assets, at bargain prices, in other Eurasian countries (as well as in
Eastern Europe) where Western investors still fear to tread. An
influential Ukrainian newspaper thus opined, "Moscow will not go
anywhere. The old debts and old links that determine mutual dependence
will stay."
Putin has thus revealed himself as the consummate
pragmatist. While the United States focuses on the open-ended, idealistic
task of rooting out global terrorism (and dispensing its largesse in
pursuit of that lofty goal), Russia has kept its eye firmly on the more
earthy objective of resurrecting its power and influence among its
neighbors. One result of the Russo-American "partnership" in the
war on terrorism is likely to be a revived and strengthened Russia as the
dominant power in Eurasia, and this will cost Russia not a single kopeck
in the coin of its institutional advance toward Europe.
Nikolas K. Gvosdev is editor of In
the National Interest. |