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Ivanov's Pursuit of Russian
National Interests
Mark N. Katz
Igor Ivanov played a
key role in persuading three strongmen—Serbia’s
Milosevic, Georgia’s Shevardnadze and Ajaria’s Abashidze—to
leave office and be replaced by democratic governments.
Some have suggested that Ivanov has acted against
Russian national interests by doing this. This,
however, is simply not true. In each of these cases,
Ivanov advanced Russia’s interests.
Milosevic and
Abashidze were both pro-Russian, but both had become
increasingly unpopular. Shevardnadze, of course, wasn’t
even pro-Russian, but he too had become unpopular. In
all three cases, strong democratic movements arose
seeking to oust these unpopular leaders. Moscow is
surely better off in helping these democratic
transformations along than in resisting them.
If Moscow had acted
to help authoritarian leaders remain in power despite
growing popular opposition to them, the result would
have been increasing anti-Russian sentiment in these
societies. If these strongmen had fallen anyway despite
Russian help, Moscow would probably have lost all
influence in these countries. But if Moscow’s help
allowed them to cling on, Russia could have found itself
in the midst of a civil war. Ivanov should be praised
for helping Russia avoid both of these alternatives in
all three situations.
And while all three
of these cases have been portrayed as losses for Russia,
what in fact has Russia actually lost? Democratic
Serbia
has not abandoned its longstanding relationship with
Russia in favor of America. Belgrade’s ties with
Washington have improved, but Serbia has much closer
relations with Russia than with the U.S.
Even more
dramatically, the “Rose Revolution” in Georgia last fall
resulted in the downfall of an authoritarian ruler who
had bad relations with Moscow and the rise of a
democratic leader who has gone out of his way to improve
Russian-Georgian relations. His role in persuading
Abashidze to leave Ajaria – far from a loss for Russia –
has provided further incentive to Saakashvili to value
good relations with
Moscow.
Ivanov’s role in smoothing the democratic transitions in
both of these cases helped bring about these positive
outcomes for Russian foreign policy.
There is an
unfortunate tendency in
Russia
to think that anything which is good for Washington must
automatically be bad for Moscow. In truth, however,
international relations are not necessarily a zero-sum
game. Improved Serbian-American relations have not
harmed Russian interests in Serbia. And Russia is
better off with a democratic Georgia with close ties to
both Washington and Moscow than a civil war-wracked
Georgia that Washington, as with Chechnya, would not
help Moscow stabilize.
And what benefits
Moscow in Serbia and Georgia would benefit it in other
former Soviet republics too. Surely Russia would be
better off if stable democracies emerged in other former
Soviet republics which sought good relations with both
Moscow and Washington than with the current
authoritarian regimes which are vulnerable both to
succession crises in all of them and to Islamic
fundamentalism in several Central Asian ones. Ivanov’s
diplomacy, though, can only aid democratic transitions
where there are strong democratic movements ready to
take power from faltering dictators—a crucial ingredient
that is not present in all that many former Soviet
republics.
It’s impossible to
tell whether Ivanov and/or the new foreign minister, Sergei
Lavrov, will be able to facilitate democratic
transitions anywhere else in the former Soviet Union.
But let there be no mistake: if he can do this, this
will serve
Russia’s true
interests and not hurt them.
Mark N. Katz is a
professor of government and politics at George Mason
University.
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