January 16, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
The American public and U.S. policymakers
both have an unfortunate tendency to
conflate Russia with the Soviet Union. That
habit emerged again with the media and
political reaction to the Helsinki summit
between President Trump and Russian
President Vladimir Putin. Trump’s critics
accused him
of appeasing Putin
and even of
committing treason for not doing enough
to defend American interests and for being
far too solicitous to the Russian leader.
They regarded that as an unforgivable
offense because Russia supposedly poses a
dire threat to the United States. Hostile
pundits and politicians charged that
Moscow’s alleged interference in the 2016
U.S. elections constituted an attack on
America akin to
Pearl Harbor and
9-11.
Trump’s supplicant behavior, opponents contended,
stood in shameful contrast to the behavior of
previous presidents toward tyrants, especially
toward the Kremlin’s threats to America and the
West. They trotted out Ronald Reagan’s
“evil empire” speech and his later demand that
Mikhail Gorbachev to tear down the Berlin Wall as
examples of how Trump should have acted.
The problem with citing such examples is that they
applied to a different country: the Soviet Union.
Too many Americans act as though there is no
meaningful difference between that entity and
Russia. Worse still, U.S. leaders have embraced the
same kind of uncompromising,
hostile policies that Washington pursued to
contain Soviet power. It is a major blunder that has
increasingly poisoned relations with Moscow since
the demise of the Union of Soviet Socialist
Republics (USSR) at the end of 1991.
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One obvious difference between the Soviet Union and
Russia is that the Soviet governing elite embraced
Marxism-Leninism and its objective of world
revolution. Today’s Russia is not a messianic power.
Its economic system is a rather mundane variety of
corrupt crony capitalism, not rigid state socialism.
The political system is a conservative autocracy
with aspects of a rigged democracy, not a one-party
dictatorship that brooks no dissent whatsoever.
Russia is hardly a Western-style democracy, but
neither is it a continuation of the Soviet Union’s
horrifically brutal totalitarianism. Indeed, the
country’s political and social philosophy is quite
different from that of its predecessor. For example,
the Orthodox Church had no meaningful influence
during the Soviet era—something that was
unsurprising, given communism’s official policy of
atheism. But today, the Orthodox Church has a
considerable influence in Putin’s Russia,
especially on social issues.
The bottom line is that Russia is a conventional,
somewhat conservative, power, whereas the Soviet
Union was a messianic, totalitarian power. That’s a
rather large and significant difference, and U.S.
policy needs to reflect that realization.
An equally crucial difference is that the Soviet
Union was a global power (and, for a time, arguably
a superpower) with global ambitions and capabilities
to match. It controlled an empire in Eastern Europe
and cultivated allies and clients around the world,
including in such far-flung places as Cuba, Vietnam,
and Angola. The USSR also intensely contested the
United States for influence in all of those areas.
Conversely, Russia is merely a regional power with
very limited extra-regional reach. The Kremlin’s
ambitions are focused heavily on the near abroad,
aimed at trying to block the eastward creep of the
North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and the
U.S.-led intrusion into Russia’s core security zone.
The orientation seems far more defensive than
offensive.
It would be difficult for Russia to execute anything
more than a very geographically limited expansionist
agenda, even if it has one. The Soviet Union was the
world’s number two economic power, second only to
the United States. Russia has an economy roughly the
size of Canada’s and is no longer ranked even in the
global top ten. It also has only three-quarters
of the Soviet Union’s territory (much of which is
nearly-empty Siberia) and barely half the population
of the old USSR. If that were not enough, that
population is shrinking and is afflicted with
an assortment of public health problems
(especially rampant alcoholism).
All of these factors should make it evident that
Russia is not a credible rival, much less an
existential threat, to the United States and its
democratic system. Russia's power is a pale
shadow of the Soviet Union's. The only undiminished
source of clout is the country's sizeable nuclear
arsenal. But while nuclear weapons are the ultimate
deterrent, they are not very useful for power
projection or warfighting, unless the political
leadership wants to risk national suicide. And there
is no evidence whatsoever that Putin and his
oligarch backers are suicidal. Quite the contrary,
they seem wedded to accumulating ever greater wealth
and perks.
Finally, Russia’s security interests actually
overlap substantially with America’s—most notably
regarding the desire to combat radical Islamic
terrorism. If U.S. leaders did not insist on
pursuing
provocative policies, such as
expanding NATO to Russia’s border, undermining
longtime Russian clients in the Balkans (Serbia) and
the Middle East (Syria), and excluding Russia from
key international economic institutions such as the
G-7, there would be relatively few occasions when
vital American and Russian interests collide.
A fundamental shift in U.S. policy is needed, but
that requires a major change in America's national
psychology. For more than four decades, Americans
saw (and were told to regard) the Soviet Union as a
mortal threat to the nation's security and its most
cherished values of freedom and democracy.
Unfortunately, a mental reset did not take place
when the USSR dissolved, and a quasi-democratic
Russia emerged as one of the successor states. Too
many Americans (including political leaders and
policymakers) act as though they are still
confronting the Soviet Union. It will be the
ultimate tragic irony if, having avoided war with a
totalitarian global adversary, America now stumbles
into war because of an out-of-date image of, and
policy toward, a conventional, declining regional
power. Yet unless U.S. leaders change both their
mindsets and their policies toward Russia, that
outcome is a very real possibility.
Ted Galen Carpenter, a senior fellow in
defense and foreign policy studies at the Cato
Institute and a contributing editor at the National
Interest, is the author of 10 books, the
contributing editor of 10 books, and the author of
more than 700 articles on international affairs.
This piece was originally featured in July 2018 and
is being republished due to reader's interest.
This article was originally published by
"The
National Interest" -
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