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Russia,
the United Nations, and the Fate of Iraq
Nikolas
K. Gvosdev
Last-ditch
efforts to win Russian support for a UN resolution
authorizing the use of force against Iraq are likely to
fail. It is
no longer a matter of sending a high level envoy like
Condoleezza Rice to Moscow, or offering to restructure
Soviet era Iraqi debt, or cutting Russian firms a piece
of the action in the postwar Iraqi oil industry.
Russia has committed itself to playing a
high-stakes game of chess, triangulating the United
States against its erstwhile continental European
allies.
For
this strategy to succeed, however, Russia cannot abandon
its European partners.
The Russians have concluded that close support of
the United States on the Iraq issue brings no real
additional benefits that pre-existing Russian
cooperation with Washington in the war on terror has
already produced. Instead,
Russia feels can only gain by opposing a U.S.
resolution--it will cement its ties to Paris and Berlin
(especially the crucial economic ones) without provoking
an overall rupture of its special relationship with
Washington that has developed in the wake of 9/11.
Russia
needs Europe in some ways more than it needs the United
States--after all, more than 60 percent of its trade is
with Europe (and its leading trade partner is Germany,
and Germany is the top holder of Russian debt).
Europe, not the United States, is the primary
source of foreign capital for the Russian economy.
Despite the expansive rhetoric of U.S.-Russia
partnership, it is Europe's euros, not America's
dollars, that are providing the basis for Russia's
development. Closer
ties with Europe is parcel of Putin's strategy to
modernize Russia, and it appears that some in the
Russian government believe that partnership on an equal
basis is more likely with "Europe" than with
the United States.
It also reflects a fundamental shift from Gregory
Yavlinsky's earlier observation that the road to good
relations with Europe lay through the United
States--rather, it now appears that by distancing itself
from Washington, Moscow can engender closer ties with
the leading continental powers.
Since
Russia is no longer a "great power" in the
military sense, its usefulness to Washington in any
armed action against Iraq is primarily political.
For its part, Russia is seeking to project itself
as a mediator, straddling the major divides in the
Western alliance, and presenting itself as the trusted
voice to which all sides listen.
It is ironic that it is Putin who calls Bush to
brief him on talks with his German and French
counterparts, not the other way around.
We
should not be surprised, therefore, if the Russians
(perhaps working in tandem with the British) begin to
circulate new proposals that would purport to achieve
full Iraqi disarmament without requiring a war.
There are also indications that the
Administration still sees value in Russia's role as a
"back channel" to Baghdad and the Europeans.
Moscow assumes that the United States does want
the imprimatur of the UN before undertaking any action
(certainly they are aware that this is a sine qua non
for London). Thus,
they have concluded that the best strategy is to slow
down the U.S. drive to war in order to reassert the
primacy of the UN Security Council in setting the Iraq
agenda. This
is in keeping with Igor Ivanov's own view of
international relations; writing in his New
Russian Diplomacy, he observed:
"In the UN Security Council, Russia achieves
consensus with the other permanent members of this body
(the United States, Great Britain, France and China) on
the majority of issues, which makes possible
constructive solutions that are in the interests of the
world community."
Yet,
the Russians are also running an enormous risk.
Hamstringing the Security Council may play well
in Berlin and Paris, but it also strengthens sentiment
in the United States that Washington should abandon the
entire UN process (not to mention the cumbersome NATO
requirements of unanimity) and forge ahead with an ad
hoc "coalition of the willing" to deal with
Saddam Hussein. Ivanov's
vision of the UN Security Council as the pinnacle of the
international security architecture would be gravely
compromised if the United States decides in the future
not to consult with the United Nations.
Russia's veto is meaningless (and hence its
importance lessened) if Washington sets a precedent by
acting outside of the UN vis-à-vis Iraq.
Washington
has begun to make this clear, by drawing a clear
distinction between a Russian abstention in the vote on
a new Security Council resolution as opposed to a veto.
The Bush Administration can accept Russian
neutrality, for neutrality is a form of indirect
support. It
does not believe, however, that open opposition
constitutes simply a mere "disagreement." On
the contrary, it could jeopardize the entire future of
the Russo-American relationship, which could collapse
under the weight of mutual recriminations.
And this would be very problematic for Russia.
Despite its interest in Europe, Russia needs a
partnership with the United States in a way the Western
allies do not. The
commercial and economic relationship between Washington
and Moscow is still very much linked to political
issues. A
potential energy partnership between Russia and the
United States, for example, is not something that can be
insulated from politics.
For
better or for worse, Iraq has become a make-or-break
issue for the Bush Administration, and the president and
his senior officials will remember Russia's vote for a
long time to come.
Nikolas
Gvosdev is editor of In
the National Interest.
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