The New
Cold War Is Already More Dangerous Than Was Its
Predecessor
Today’s American-Russian confrontation is developing
in unprecedented ways—and the US political-media
establishment seems not to care.
By Stephen F. Cohen
Part 2
October 15,
2017 "Information
Clearing House"
- For
several years, Cohen has argued that the new Cold
War is more dangerous than its 45-year predecessor,
which, it is often said, “we barely survived.” Here
he updates and aggregates evidence for that
argument. Meanwhile, many American participants and
commentators continue to deny—for personal and
political reasons—that there is a new Cold War.
Anyone doubting its existence needs only read
leading US newspapers or watch television “news”
broadcasts; or consult the growing number of
declarations of Cold War against Russia, as, for
example, a
particularly extremist one
produced recently by a professed bipartisan
organization and co-authored by a former Obama
Defense Department official, Evelyn Farkas.
Cohen
identifies six specific factors that make the new
Cold War more perilous than the preceding one:
1. Its
confrontational epicenter is not in faraway Berlin
or what was then called the “Third World” but
directly on Russia’s borders, from the Baltic states
and Eastern Europe to Ukraine and the Black Sea,
where NATO’s military buildup is ever-growing in the
form of more troops, weapons, war planes, ships,
and, not to be overlooked, missile-defense
installations. NATO now characterizes this vast
Eastern front as its “territory.” No such foreign
military power has appeared so close to Russia—and
to its second city, St. Petersburg—since the Nazi
German invasion in 1941. The perception in Moscow is
understandable and predictable. Increasingly it is
said—in the mass media and privately by high
officials—that this constitutes “American aggression
against Russia,” and even that “America is at war
against Russia.” Compare this alarm, Cohen suggests,
with the “Russiagate” allegation that the Kremlin
“attacked America” during the 2016 presidential
election, for which there is as of yet no empirical
evidence, with the tangible evidence Russian
officials plainly see for Washington’s current
“aggression.” And imagine the potential for hot
war—accidental or intentional—in this widespread and
growing Russian perception. The ongoing push in
Washington to send more weapons to Kiev, which has
vowed to use them against the Russian-backed rebels
in Donbass, can only escalate those Russian concerns
and the danger they represent. (Meanwhile, Kiev is
shredding the Minsk peace accords by adopting
incompatible legislation.)
2.
The possibility of a ramifying US-Russian military
conflict may be even more acute in Syria, where
Russian-backed Syrian forces are close to decisively
defeating anti-Assad fighters, several of them
affiliated with terrorist organizations. Russia’s
Ministry of Defense has made clear that it believes
US forces in Syria are actively aiding and abetting
anti-Assad fighters, while putting Russian troops
there at grave risk, and has
openly declared its
willingness to strike against those American units
in Syria. What, Cohen asks, will be the reaction in
Washington if Russia kills any Americans in Syria?
3.
Meanwhile, unlike during the preceding Cold War,
when cooperative US-Soviet relations grew steadily
after the Cuban-missile crisis of 1962, those
ameliorating relations built up over decades are
being shredded. Even more are now gravely
endangered. Congress and the Trump Administration
seem determined to shut down two Russian news
agencies in the United States, RT and Sputnik. If
so, the Kremlin may well adopt reciprocal measures
in Russia, reducing public communication relations,
however “propagandistic” on both sides. A veteran
CNN correspondent reports from Moscow that “arms
control is hanging by a thread.”
And the unprecedented seizure and search of the
Russian consultant in San Francisco last month has
convinced some Russian officials, not unreasonably,
that influential forces in Washington want a
complete rupture of diplomatic relations with
Moscow.
4. During
the preceding Cold War, no Soviet leader was
demonized by the US political-media establishment as
Russia’s leader, Vladimir Putin, has been for nearly
a decade. Russia and relations with Moscow have been
so Putinized that Russia no longer seems to have any
legitimate national interests at home or abroad,
whose acknowledgment is the first premise of
negotiations. For a fresh example of this
unprecedented factor, Cohen cites the relevant
passages in Hillary Clinton’s recent memoir,
What Happened.
5.
“Russiagate” is also unprecedented. The ways it
exacerbates the new Cold War are various and
growing. Its multiple “investigations” increasingly
imply that once customary relations with Russia may
be “collusion with the Kremlin,” including financial
ones. Similarly, anti–Cold War opinions are casually
labeled “weaponized Russian disinformation” and
pro-Kremlin “propaganda.” Not surprisingly, very few
such opinions appear in mainstream American
newspapers or on network broadcasts. (More
dissenting views on official foreign policy appear
in mainstream Russian media than can be found in
their American counterparts.) Above all, perhaps,
“Russiagate” has effectively paralyzed President
Trump in any crisis negotiations he may have to
conduct with Putin, no matter how existential.
Imagine, for example, President John F. Kennedy so
assailed as a “Kremlin puppet” during the
Cuban-missile crisis. He would have been unable
politically to make the compromises both he and the
Soviet leader Nikita Khrushchev did in order to end
the crisis without nuclear war. However much US
politicians and media loathe Trump, Cohen adds, they
should fear the possibility of war with Russia more.
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6. And,
also in sharp contrast to policymaking in the 1960s,
1970s, and 1980s, there are virtually no anti–Cold
War media, politicians, or politics in mainstream
America today. Without effective opposition,
including robust public debate, bad policy outcomes
are more likely, even in democracies.
To these
largely unprecedented Cold War factors, Cohen adds
three other new circumstances:
One is the
myth that post-Soviet Russia is too weak to wage a
prolonged Cold War and will eventually capitulate to
Washington and Brussels. This is, of course, the
logic behind the tsunami of sanctions leveled
against Moscow since 2014. Leave aside that several
international financial monitoring institutions have
recorded Russia’s significant economic recovery in
the last two years or so. It is, for example, posed
to become the world’s largest exporter of wheat.
Leave aside Russia’s vast natural, human, and
territorial resources. Recall instead that there is
no such instance of capitulation in modern Russian
history, no matter how devastating and costly the
circumstances. Contrary to marginally representative
Russian voices promoted to say otherwise, neither
the nation’s elites nor its people will
fundamentally change the country’s leadership or
policies under Western pressure. Indeed, many
mainstream Russian policy intellectuals and other
commentators have already accepted that the new Cold
War, for which they hold the West responsible, may
be as long as the preceding one.
Second is
the lingering view in the US establishment,
fostered by an aspiration of former President
Obama, that Russia is “isolated” in world
affairs. The number of foreign meetings and
agreements conducted by Putin in recent years
refutes this notion, but there is something else
novel and important. The “Soviet Bloc” in
Eastern Europe during the preceding Cold War was
an alliance of the unwilling, crisis-ridden, and
economically burdensome. Russia’s emerging
allies and partners today are voluntary and
profitable, from the smaller BRICS states to
China. Indeed, it is the US “sphere of
influence” that seems to be splintering today,
as evidenced by Brexit and Catalonia (whose
referendum additionally may put the 2014
Russian-backed succession referendum in Crimea
in a somewhat different light). And how else can
we interpret the growing rapprochement between
NATO member Turkey and Russia or the historic
recent visit by the Saudi king to Moscow, which
resulted in agreements involving billions of
dollars of purchases and investment in weapons
and energy? Whose trajectory, historians may
ask, was toward isolation in world affairs?
Third,
of course, is the role of China, a great rising
power. During the preceding Cold War, it was a
rival of the Soviet Union and thus a “card” to
be played against Moscow. Today, it is Russia’s
political, economic, and potentially military
partner—a joint Russian-Chinese naval exercise
is scheduled to begin next week—a new
circumstance that is likely to have a profound
effect elsewhere, including in India, Pakistan,
Japan, and even Afghanistan.
Most of
these new and substantially unprecedented Cold
War factors go undiscussed in Washington, not
only because of “Russiagate” hysteria. American
triumphalism since the end of the Soviet Union
in 1991 plays an important role, as does a
lingering American provincialism sometimes
termed “exceptionalism.” Meanwhile, the three
gravest threats to American national
security—international terrorism, nuclear
proliferation, and cyber attacks that could
inadvertently trigger nuclear war—go largely
unattended. As does the essential truth that
none of these can be diminished without a
partnership with Russia. Even those kinds of
realities were recognized during the 45-year
Cold War and sometimes acted upon.
This
article was originally published by The Nation
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