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Russian-American
Strategic Bankruptcy
Nikolai Zlobin
The
Russian-American summit in
St. Petersburg
went
fairly smoothly. Presidents Bush and Putin smiled for
the cameras and asserted with firm conviction that the
recent sparring over
Iraq
did not
damage the foundation of their partnership. They
exchanged documents ratifying the reduction of their
nuclear arsenals, and jointly condemned
North
Korea
's nuclear
brinkmanship. But they also barely touched upon the
numerous issues where they have had persistent
disagreements -
Iran
, the
rebuilding of
Iraq
,
Afghanistan
and so
on.
Putin
was in no mood to spoil the festivities - an anniversary
celebration that became something like the unofficial
kick-off for his re-election campaign - by turning his
countrymen’s attention to quarrels with the Americans.
The whole purpose of the event, after all, was to
demonstrate his own international importance and
authority to the Russian people.
The facades of houses in downtown
St.
Petersburg
were
renovated and painted, the central streets were repaved,
and every nook and cranny that risked being observed by
a foreign dignitary was washed and swept clean. As
usual, the high-profile soirée produced a Potemkin
village, a place very different from the real
St. Petersburg
.
Similarly,
this meeting was a worrisome symptom of the continuing
Potemkin-like nature of Russian-American relations. On
the surface there are beautiful facades, periodically
refurbished for the latest summit; but underneath is a
policy of ignoring deep-seated problems and serious
mutual disagreements, which have brought today’s
strategic partnership to the verge of bankruptcy.
The
bitter reality is that relations between the two
countries are at their lowest point in the last ten
years. Differences over
Iraq
have
forced us to see what we had previously ignored.
There are sharp, fundamental, perhaps even
intractable, differences between Russia and the United
States--in their approach to building a new world order
and a system of global security, in their understanding
of contemporary threats as well as how the threats must
be met and in their attitude toward international law.
All
these, as well as the unprecedented storm of
anti-American hysteria that squalled over
Russia
, have
moved the country toward the bottom on the American
establishment’s list of countries with which
cultivating relations is considered important. The
Russian foreign policy establishment, for its part, had
to jettison the long-cherished myth that
America
is in
vital need of an alliance with
Russia
and would
be unable to take decisive action anywhere in the world
without it. A moment of mutual honesty is upon us. The
conflict over
Iraq
has
concluded an entire era of our relations. From a period
of searching for a strategic partnership, which has yet
to materialize, we have passed into a period of
potential cooperation on a whole series of issues where
our interests coincide. It’s no secret that
practically all these issues are in the sphere of
security, but this does not yet guarantee a successful
relationship.
At
the end of the Cold War, we stopped seeing each other as
enemies. Today,
Washington
has
completely stopped looking at
Russia
as an
ally and a partner. As a result, the American elite's
interest in
Russia
has
dropped to zero. If you ask a member of the Bush
Administration a question about
Russia
, you are
likely to get a perplexed pause, followed by hollow
words about how yes, it would be nice to be friends, but
you know …. From the Russian side, a strategy toward
the world's remaining superpower is nowhere in sight,
let alone a foreign policy framework in general.
Russian-American
relations remind one of a train that long stopped in its
tracks, and which has used its engine, for the past few
years, to sound the horn while the wheels remain frozen
in its tracks. The train has become immobile.
Russia
's loss of
prestige and importance in the eyes of
Washington
is a result of many factors, but
Iraq
has
catalyzed the process, making it particularly obvious.
Many are now re-examining
Russia
as a
country that is relatively well armed, but useless as a
partner (recall Thatcher's "
Upper
Volta
with
nuclear weapons") and a country that is, moreover,
in the midst of a prolonged economic and demographic
crisis.
Despite
all the harsh criticism lobbied at the Bush
Administration for the way it conducts foreign policy
(and in the case of Russia, we can point to its failure
to deliver a repeal of Jackson-Vanik, protectionism for
the steel industry, etc.), we have to face facts: Russia
took a deeply mistaken stance on Iraq and lost more than
it could afford.
Moscow
's
position was detached from simple pragmatism; it did not
correspond to the country's economic or national
interests. It was, therefore, in direct contradiction
with
Russia
's main
foreign policy principles, as defined repeatedly by
Vladimir Putin.
Russia
's
position on
Iraq
caught
Washington
off
guard.
It
seems that the famous "strategic choice,"
supposedly made by Putin on Sep.11, was not so strategic
after all. For the past twenty months, the Kremlin has
not bothered to explain what Russia's "strategic
choice" for the West means in reality, to justify
the choice to the Russian society and political elites,
or even to take any steps toward realizing that choice.
Both sides of the ocean saw the publication of many
articles, and even books, about the "revolution in
Russian foreign policy". Everyone, it seems, wanted
to believe that the choice had really been made, but if
such a revolution did take place, it did not extend
beyond the presidential cabinet. Everyone, it seems,
wanted to believe that Vladimir Putin has abandoned
petty pursuits in foreign policy in favor of grand
ambitions. That's why the disappointment is even more
painful.
The
situation with
Iraq
demonstrated that
Russia
not only
lacks an understanding of today's global processes, but
also doesn't even have a strategically focused foreign
policy. One
of the major lessons of
Iraq
is that
Russia
has
neither the infrastructure nor the intellectual
potential to produce adequate analyses of global events,
provide realistic forecasts, or develop a behavior model
for the country on the international arena. The
individuals and institutions assigned to these tasks
were unable to handle them. Moreover, there is no
evidence that Putin is powerful enough to get what he
wants.
Moscow
displayed
a simply unacceptable level of improvisation, and as
everyone knows, an unpredictable friend is worse than a
predictable foe. Taking into account
Russia
's nuclear
status, an improvisational foreign policy is more than a
domestic failure, but also one that could detrimentally
affect other global developments.
By
attempting to prevent the march to war,
Russia
only
marshaled it.
Moscow
's stance
facilitated the split in
Europe
and
weakened the European Union, which is in direct
contradiction to
Russia
's
interests. Moreover, it amplified the contradictions
within NATO and brought about an increased participation
of Central and
Eastern
Europe
within
that alliance, which will create difficulties for the
European line of Russian foreign policy. By attempting
to maintain the UN's status quo,
Moscow
facilitated both the organization's downfall and a deep,
perhaps irreversible, crisis in the Security Council,
Russia
's last
bastion for exerting influence upon the world.
President
Putin has repeatedly emphasized that
Russia
's
geopolitical opportunities are tied to her economic
might. But from that point of view, was it not careless
to quarrel with the largest economy in the world? Since
Russia
was
unable to become friendly with
Japan
, the
world's second-largest economy, its economic future is
bleaker now than it was a few months ago.
Russia
has
already lost the battle for American and Japanese
investments, first to
China
and
Southeastern
Asia
, then to
Latin
America
. If it's
not careful, it may lose to
Africa
next.
A
serious, non-ideological discussion on foreign policy
questions is desperately lacking in
Russia
today.
Putin criticizes the Anglo-American occupation of
Iraq
, but
doesn't provide evidence that a (say) Euro-Russian
occupation would be more successful.
Moscow
is
against a unipolar world because it functions without
Russia
. But
there is no evidence that a multipolar world would
provide
Russia
with more
security than a unipolar one. Multipolarity is less
stable and predictable, and it will not necessarily lead
to a greater global role for
Russia
, which
can no longer be an independent power center.
Unipolarity is no picnic either, especially if you are
carrying a small basket. But if
Russia
and the
United
States
can agree
on a new relationship paradigm, then
Russia
has a
much greater chance of gaining from a unipolar world
without having to concede some undesirable compromises.
I'll
repeat:
Washington
cannot be
held blameless for the crisis in Russian-American
relations. But that is a different issue. Ever since the
end of the Cold War, I protested against the thesis of
"the necessity for improving Russian-American
relations", trying to show that one cannot improve
something that was created by political and
international realities. We should not try to improve
relations that are not, by definition, improvable, but
form new bilateral relations on a fundamentally
different conceptual basis.
The
conflict over
Iraq
became
the coda to a period in Russian-American relations that
ended with the collapse of the
Soviet
Union
. The era
of searching for a strategic partnership is over. There
has been a conceptual bankruptcy of the model of
Russian-American relations that we have used as a
template for the past ten years. And when there is no
overarching conception for relations and when there are
no fundamentals, then any disagreements, whether they
are over Iraq or poultry, expand to an enormous size,
since we have no fulcrum with which to position
ourselves in search for a solution. We can already see
that the nearing conflict over
Iran
has a
chance to become much more troublesome, and the Potemkin
façade over another summit may not be enough to cover
up the scale of the disagreement.
As
important as the Bush-Putin friendship is, it is not
what
Russia
needs. It
needs not only a well-thought-out, solid foreign policy,
and a fresh elite that can develop one, but also a
properly institutionalized structure for its effective
implementation. Presidential calls and hugs are not
sufficient. Otherwise, when
Moscow
makes a
strategic decision, sometime in the future, its
implementation will not extend beyond a friendly
embrace. As the saying goes: you have to see the forest
behind the trees. But there is one important
pre-condition for that to hold - the forest must
actually be there.
Nikolai
Zlobin is the Director of Russian and Asian Programs at
the Center for Defense Information, and editor-in-chief
of the international news agency Washington Profile. His
column on foreign policy appears regularly in the
leading Russian daily Izvestia.
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