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Letter to the Editor
Dear Editor:
I have followed with interest the discussion of Ira
Straus and Janusz Bugajski about relations between
Russia and the West in Central Asia and the
Caucasus
(In the National Interest, Volume III, Issues
25-27, 2004). The opinion of a Russian political
scientist on this exchange may be interesting to the
readers of ITNI.
I prefer not to use the zero-sum theory of international
relations. In my view, it funnels thinking into a
one-way rut – a kind of a linear direction from negative
to positive sum. If we adopt this model, then one
country will be seen as the leader on the "democracy"
track and the others trying to catch up. In real life,
there are a lot of possibilities for development.
Besides, if one sticks to this way of thinking, the main
principle of his world vision will be opposition.
Director of the Russian and Eurasian Program at the
Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Anders Aslund
writes in In the National Interest (May 19, 2004)
that "no political event in Europe this year is more
important than Ukraine's presidential elections next
October. They amount to two clear-cut choices between
democracy and dictatorship, as well as between a Western
and Eastern geopolitical orientation". Such clear-cut
black-and-white dual choices are in the heads of
culprits and officials, whereas life is a mixture.
I believe democracy is a process and not a status quo.
There may be potholes on the roads of democratic
societies. Watergate, Enron, and Iraq are just a few
examples in modern U.S. history. The Russian way is
paved with much more of them, and it is only natural:
the country is in transition; old and new approaches are
present in its policy. It may happen so that at the
beginning the residues of old adversarial interests will
prevail in number over the new shared interests. But
only a blind person will not notice that the direction
of change in Russia is a democratic one. These new
trends should be sought out and encouraged whereas old
ones understood. New tendencies are often born from
naive idealistic assumptions, and they turn into reality
of state policy afterwards. It is not so simple to
overcome the old views. The poignant example of this
thesis is Bugajski's position. He sees only old Soviet
traits in Russia's foreign policy.
Finding ourselves amid this diversified world, it is
vital to understand why, when and where Russia and the
West are partners or adversaries. Actually, adversity
and partnership are modifications of zero-sum and
positive-sum approaches correspondingly. We should
recognize that today both adversity and partnership
simultaneously makeup part of our foreign policy. The
share of each in the whole is what counts. The task of
Russia and the U.S. would be to broaden the area of
partnership-winning and minimize adversity. Success of
this activity depends on many factors, but the keynote
one is the willingness of political leadership to reach
such an aim. If we follow Bugajski in his vision of
Russia's aim to "undermine our [U.S.] own long-term
interests in Central Asia and the
Caucasus"
we will sit in the trenches forever.
There is tremendous difference between adversity and
partnership. Adversaries count tits and tats as Straus
puts it, while partners look for consolidating idea.
There is no necessity to look for it after 9/11, but, up
to now, we have not managed to use it in full measure.
It sounds cynical to me – like to any Russian citizen –
when Bugajski says America sees international terrorism
as a major security threat while Russia uses it to its
advantage. Thousands of victims of international
terrorism in both countries have the same humane sense.
They make the governors of both states share the same
objective in eradicating international terrorism. And
from this point of view, I would not agree with Straus
about a need to reconcile Russian and Western interests
in Central Asia. Reconciliation means palliation, i.e.
half-measure, destined for a short period of time. What
all the parties concerned need is a common strategic
initiative in the interest of all the actors in the
region.
This last position deserves special attention. It is of
vital importance to take into account the national
interests not only of Russia and the West, but
Kazakhstan's, Turkmenistan's, Georgia's etc. If we don't
do that, our political analysis and ensuing foreign
policy actions will provide the wrong results. During
their short years of independence, the CIS states grew
accustomed to adverse interactions between Russia and
the West in the region. Some Russian politicians call
this approach the "sucking two cows" policy. In case a
new common Russian-Western strategy in the region is
developed, the Central Asian states will have a new
motivation for cooperation. Otherwise a divide may
deepen along the East-West axis, Christians-Muslims,
strong- weak, local- foreign, friend-foe. Bugajski's
vision of the U.S. aim to control or counter regional
instabilities will become illusionary. Regional
development, not stability, will be better achieved
through cooperation rather than control.
Sincerely,
Alexander Mikhailenko,
Russian
Academy of
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