Whether in Ukraine or Georgia, Vladimir Putin's
actions shouldn't come as a surprise to an
aggressive United States.
By Robert W. Merry
March 04, 2021 "Information
Clearing House" - Suppose China
formed a provocative alliance with Mexico and began
building military bases and stationing troops near
the U.S. southern border. Now suppose it lured Cuba
also into its new hemispheric alliance and imperiled
U.S. control over its Guantanamo naval base on that
island. What would happen? Almost inevitably, the
result would be war because America would never
allow such a potentially hostile entrenchment within
its sphere of influence.
That’s essentially the question Russia faces as
America and NATO continue to flirt with the notion
of pulling Ukraine into the Atlantic alliance (and
Georgia too when circumstances seem right). And
Russia’s answer is essentially the same: It will not
allow that to happen. Any nation has a fundamental
need to fend off potential threats from within its
neighborhood and hence to maintain protective
spheres of influence. The University of Chicago’s
John J. Mearsheimer calls this “Geopolitics 101.”
Yet America’s foreign policy leaders seem to have
skipped that class. Not surprisingly, President
Biden has slipped right into lockstep with his
predecessors since taking office, declaring what
America will and will not accept within Russia’s
sphere of influence, where U.S. meddling has been a
hallmark policy for years. Speaking on the seventh
anniversary of Russia’s annexation of the Crimean
Peninsula, Biden declared, “The United States does
not, and will never, recognize Russia’s purported
annexation of the peninsula, and we will stand with
Ukraine against Russia’s aggressive acts. We will
continue to work to hold Russia accountable for its
abuses and aggression in Ukraine.”
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Biden’s statement demonstrates just how
thick-headed our leaders can be when it comes to
dealing with Russia, how resistant they often
are to stepping back and contemplating the
geopolitical realities involved. He is not
alone. This tendency toward thick-headedness
goes back a lot of years.
Former U.S. ambassador to Russia, William J.
Burns (slated to be Biden’s CIA director), recounts
in his memoir the George W. Bush administration’s
efforts in 2008 to pave the way for Ukraine and
Georgia to become NATO members. Burns reveals that
he warned his superiors in Washington that such
efforts would stir Russian President Vladimir Putin
to “veto that effort”—as Harvard professor Graham
Allison once described Burns’s cable—“by using
Russian troops or other forms of meddling to
splinter both countries.” In other words,
Geopolitics 101 would apply.
Two months before Bush ignored that guidance and
orchestrated a NATO communique vowing eventual
alliance membership for both Georgia and Ukraine,
Burns reiterated his warning that “today’s Russia
will respond. The prospect of subsequent
Russian-Georgian armed conflict would be high.” He
added it also would “create fertile soil for Russian
meddling in Crimea and eastern Ukraine.”
Burns turned out to be prescient. Within months,
Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili, bent on NATO
membership and thinking Bush had his back, took
action to reincorporate two breakaway regions with
strong Russian ties, Abkhazia and South Ossetia.
When fighting broke out between Georgia and South
Ossetian separatists, Russian forces took control of
both regions. Once again, Geopolitics 101 prevailed.
But the obvious lesson for America and the West—that
they should cease meddling inside Russia’s
traditional sphere of influence—didn’t gain any
significant sway within Atlantic Alliance councils.
Five years later, events in Ukraine demonstrated
even more starkly the lessons of Geopolitics 101.
America sought to use economic inducements to wrest
that tragically split country away from Russian
influence and into the Western orbit. One U.S.
foreign policy official estimated with considerable
pride that the United States invested some $5
billion in efforts to sway Ukrainian public opinion
and the nation’s foreign policy direction. American
“NGOs,” meanwhile, had been funneling money and
counsel to opposition leaders for years. Thus it
wasn’t surprising that, when Ukraine’s duly elected
president, Viktor Yanukovych, spurned the Western
offer in favor of a more generous Russian entreaty,
anti-government street demonstrations ensued that
lasted three months and claimed nearly a hundred
lives.
Negotiations between the government and
pro-Western dissidents yielded an accommodation that
allowed Yanukovych to remain in power until new
elections could be held, but it fell apart amidst a
surge of violence from the dissidents. The result
was a coup. Yanukovych fled for his life, and a new
pro-Western government, which included neofascist
elements, took control of the country. No one could
argue that the United States didn’t play a
significant role in unleashing and fostering these
events.
All this posed a powerful crisis for Russia.
Large parts of eastern Ukraine were populated by
ethnic Russians who spoke Russian and favored
continued Russian ties over any thrust to the West
imposed by Kiev. Then there was Crimea, where ethnic
Russians composed some 60 percent of the population
and which was home to Russia’s crucial naval base in
the Crimean port of Sevastopol. Based on the fate of
the ethnic Russians of eastern Ukraine and on its
own strategic interests in its immediate region,
Russia had reasons to act.
But its most crucial interest was in preventing
Ukrainian entry into NATO. The prospect of hostile
Western forces pushing right up to Russia’s
southwestern border and posing an immediate
sphere-of-interest threat was the kind that no
nation could accept. And so, Putin did what was
entirely predictable—and predicted. First, he
annexed Crimea (desired by a large majority of the
people there). Next, he made clear to the new
government in Kiev that he would never allow it to
become a Western stronghold on Russia’s front porch.
Then, he provided extensive aide—military,
financial, and diplomatic—to Russian separatists in
eastern Ukraine engaged in the Ukrainian civil war
that ensued after the coup. And finally, he massed a
large army on the Ukrainian border as an ongoing
threat of what would happen if the country’s eastern
separatists came under any fearsome attack from
Kiev.
All this of course has stirred torrents of
outraged screams from those in America who insist
Putin is the aggressor and that all America wants is
world peace under the soft and benign hegemony it
has practiced so benevolently over the past 75
years. Biden’s statement on Crimea is consistent
with that sensibility. But Josef Joffe, the
newspaper editor and academic, took a different view
back in 2014 when he wrote a Wall Street Journal
piece purporting to be a letter from Niccolo
Machiavelli to Putin. “You did everything right,”
says the imaginary Machiavelli to the real Putin.
“You grabbed an opportunity when you saw it,” and
demonstrated a capacity for being “both ruthless and
prudent.” As Joffe summed up, Putin calculated what
he could get away with, got away with it, and
avoided actions that could destabilize the situation
beyond the havoc already generated.
One tenet of realism in foreign policy is that
nations should always understand and appreciate the
fundamental interests of other nations because that
will inform efforts to predict the reaction of those
other nations to threats and jabs. Sometimes the
fundamental interests of nations clash in ways that
make hostility, even war, inevitable. But when
nations exacerbate tensions with adversarial powers
whose stakes are immense in comparison to their own
less crucial interests, usually the driving force is
ideology or ignorance. Regarding Biden’s declaration
on Russia and Crimea, the driving force seems to be
a combination of the two.
Robert W.
Merry, former Wall Street Journal
Washington correspondent and Congressional Quarterly
CEO, is the author of five books on American history
and foreign policy. "Source"
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