The New American Cold War
By Stephen F. Cohen
07/06/06 "The Nation"
-- [from the July 10, 2006 issue] -- Contrary to established opinion, the gravest threats to
America's national security are still in Russia. They derive
from an unprecedented development that most US policy-makers
have recklessly disregarded, as evidenced by the undeclared cold
war Washington has waged, under both parties, against
post-Communist Russia during the past fifteen years.
As a result of the Soviet breakup in 1991, Russia, a state
bearing every nuclear and other device of mass destruction,
virtually collapsed. During the 1990s its essential
infrastructures--political, economic and social--disintegrated.
Moscow's hold on its vast territories was weakened by
separatism, official corruption and Mafia-like crime. The worst
peacetime depression in modern history brought economic losses
more than twice those suffered in World War II. GDP plummeted by
nearly half and capital investment by 80 percent. Most Russians
were thrown into poverty. Death rates soared and the population
shrank. And in August 1998, the financial system imploded.
No one in authority anywhere had ever foreseen that one of
the twentieth century's two superpowers would plunge, along with
its arsenals of destruction, into such catastrophic
circumstances. Even today, we cannot be sure what Russia's
collapse might mean for the rest of the world.
Outwardly, the nation may now seem to have recovered. Its
economy has grown on average by 6 to 7 percent annually since
1999, its stock-market index increased last year by 83 percent
and its gold and foreign currency reserves are the world's fifth
largest. Moscow is booming with new construction, frenzied
consumption of Western luxury goods and fifty-six large casinos.
Some of this wealth has trickled down to the provinces and
middle and lower classes, whose income has been rising. But
these advances, loudly touted by the Russian government and
Western investment-fund promoters, are due largely to high world
prices for the country's oil and gas and stand out only in
comparison with the wasteland of 1998.
More fundamental realities indicate that Russia remains in an
unprecedented state of peacetime demodernization and
depopulation. Investment in the economy and other basic
infrastructures remains barely a third of the 1990 level. Some
two-thirds of Russians still live below or very near the poverty
line, including 80 percent of families with two or more
children, 60 percent of rural citizens and large segments of the
educated and professional classes, among them teachers, doctors
and military officers. The gap between the poor and the rich,
Russian experts tell us, is becoming "explosive."
Most tragic and telling, the nation continues to suffer
wartime death and birth rates, its population declining by
700,000 or more every year. Male life expectancy is barely 59
years and, at the other end of the life cycle, 2 to 3 million
children are homeless. Old and new diseases, from tuberculosis
to HIV infections, have grown into epidemics. Nationalists may
exaggerate in charging that "the Motherland is dying," but even
the head of Moscow's most pro-Western university warns that
Russia remains in "extremely deep crisis."
The stability of the political regime atop this bleak
post-Soviet landscape rests heavily, if not entirely, on the
personal popularity and authority of one man, President Vladimir
Putin, who admits the state "is not yet completely stable."
While Putin's ratings are an extraordinary 70 to 75 percent
positive, political institutions and would-be leaders below him
have almost no public support.
The top business and administrative elites, having
rapaciously "privatized" the Soviet state's richest assets in
the 1990s, are particularly despised. Indeed, their possession
of that property, because it lacks popular legitimacy, remains a
time bomb embedded in the political and economic system. The
huge military is equally unstable, its ranks torn by a lack of
funds, abuses of authority and discontent. No wonder serious
analysts worry that one or more sudden developments--a sharp
fall in world oil prices, more major episodes of ethnic violence
or terrorism, or Putin's disappearance--might plunge Russia into
an even worse crisis. Pointing to the disorder spreading from
Chechnya through the country's southern rim, for example, the
eminent scholar Peter Reddaway even asks "whether Russia is
stable enough to hold together."
As long as catastrophic possibilities exist in that nation,
so do the unprecedented threats to US and international
security. Experts differ as to which danger is the
gravest--proliferation of Russia's enormous stockpile of
nuclear, chemical and biological materials; ill-maintained
nuclear reactors on land and on decommissioned submarines; an
impaired early-warning system controlling missiles on
hair-trigger alert; or the first-ever civil war in a shattered
superpower, the terror-ridden Chechen conflict. But no one
should doubt that together they constitute a much greater
constant threat than any the United States faced during the
Soviet era.
Nor is a catastrophe involving weapons of mass destruction
the only danger in what remains the world's largest territorial
country. Nearly a quarter of the planet's people live on
Russia's borders, among them conflicting ethnic and religious
groups. Any instability in Russia could easily spread to a
crucial and exceedingly volatile part of the world.
There is another, perhaps more likely, possibility.
Petrodollars may bring Russia long-term stability, but on the
basis of growing authoritarianism and xenophobic nationalism.
Those ominous factors derive primarily not from Russia's lost
superpower status (or Putin's KGB background), as the US press
regularly misinforms readers, but from so many lost and damaged
lives at home since 1991. Often called the "Weimar scenario,"
this outcome probably would not be truly fascist, but it would
be a Russia possessing weapons of mass destruction and large
proportions of the world's oil and natural gas, even more
hostile to the West than was its Soviet predecessor.
How has the US government responded to these unprecedented
perils? It doesn't require a degree in international relations
or media punditry to understand that the first principle of
policy toward post-Communist Russia must follow the Hippocratic
injunction: Do no harm! Do nothing to undermine its fragile
stability, nothing to dissuade the Kremlin from giving first
priority to repairing the nation's crumbling infrastructures,
nothing to cause it to rely more heavily on its stockpiles of
superpower weapons instead of reducing them, nothing to make
Moscow uncooperative with the West in those joint pursuits.
Everything else in that savaged country is of far less
consequence.
Since the early 1990s Washington has simultaneously
conducted, under Democrats and Republicans, two fundamentally
different policies toward post-Soviet Russia--one decorative and
outwardly reassuring, the other real and exceedingly reckless.
The decorative policy, which has been taken at face value in the
United States, at least until recently, professes to have
replaced America's previous cold war intentions with a generous
relationship of "strategic partnership and friendship." The
public image of this approach has featured happy-talk meetings
between American and Russian presidents, first "Bill and Boris"
(Clinton and Yeltsin), then "George and Vladimir."
The real US policy has been very different--a relentless,
winner-take-all exploitation of Russia's post-1991 weakness.
Accompanied by broken American promises, condescending lectures
and demands for unilateral concessions, it has been even more
aggressive and uncompromising than was Washington's approach to
Soviet Communist Russia. Consider its defining elements as they
have unfolded--with fulsome support in both American political
parties, influential newspapers and policy think tanks--since
the early 1990s:
§ A growing military encirclement of Russia, on and near its
borders, by US and NATO bases, which are already ensconced or
being planned in at least half the fourteen other former Soviet
republics, from the Baltics and Ukraine to Georgia, Azerbaijan
and the new states of Central Asia. The result is a US-built
reverse iron curtain and the remilitarization of
American-Russian relations.
§ A tacit (and closely related) US denial that Russia has any
legitimate national interests outside its own territory, even in
ethnically akin or contiguous former republics such as Ukraine,
Belarus and Georgia. How else to explain, to take a bellwether
example, the thinking of Richard Holbrooke, Democratic would-be
Secretary of State? While roundly condemning the Kremlin for
promoting a pro-Moscow government in neighboring Ukraine, where
Russia has centuries of shared linguistic, marital, religious,
economic and security ties, Holbrooke declares that far-away
Slav nation part of "our core zone of security."
§ Even more, a presumption that Russia does not have full
sovereignty within its own borders, as expressed by constant US
interventions in Moscow's internal affairs since 1992. They have
included an on-site crusade by swarms of American "advisers,"
particularly during the 1990s, to direct Russia's "transition"
from Communism; endless missionary sermons from afar, often
couched in threats, on how that nation should and should not
organize its political and economic systems; and active support
for Russian anti-Kremlin groups, some associated with hated
Yeltsin-era oligarchs.
That interventionary impulse has now grown even into
suggestions that Putin be overthrown by the kind of US-backed
"color revolutions" carried out since 2003 in Georgia, Ukraine
and Kyrgyzstan, and attempted this year in Belarus. Thus, while
mainstream editorial pages increasingly call the Russian
president "thug," "fascist" and "Saddam Hussein," one of the
Carnegie Endowment's several Washington crusaders assures us of
"Putin's weakness" and vulnerability to "regime change." (Do
proponents of "democratic regime change" in Russia care that it
might mean destabilizing a nuclear state?)
§ Underpinning these components of the real US policy are
familiar cold war double standards condemning Moscow for doing
what Washington does--such as seeking allies and military bases
in former Soviet republics, using its assets (oil and gas in
Russia's case) as aid to friendly governments and regulating
foreign money in its political life.
More broadly, when NATO expands to Russia's front and back
doorsteps, gobbling up former Soviet-bloc members and republics,
it is "fighting terrorism" and "protecting new states"; when
Moscow protests, it is engaging in "cold war thinking." When
Washington meddles in the politics of Georgia and Ukraine, it is
"promoting democracy"; when the Kremlin does so, it is
"neoimperialism." And not to forget the historical background:
When in the 1990s the US-supported Yeltsin overthrew Russia's
elected Parliament and Constitutional Court by force, gave its
national wealth and television networks to Kremlin insiders,
imposed a constitution without real constraints on executive
power and rigged elections, it was "democratic reform"; when
Putin continues that process, it is "authoritarianism."
§ Finally, the United States is attempting, by exploiting
Russia's weakness, to acquire the nuclear superiority it could
not achieve during the Soviet era. That is the essential meaning
of two major steps taken by the Bush Administration in 2002,
both against Moscow's strong wishes. One was the
Administration's unilateral withdrawal from the 1972
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty, freeing it to try to create a
system capable of destroying incoming missiles and thereby the
capacity to launch a nuclear first strike without fear of
retaliation. The other was pressuring the Kremlin to sign an
ultimately empty nuclear weapons reduction agreement requiring
no actual destruction of weapons and indeed allowing development
of new ones; providing for no verification; and permitting
unilateral withdrawal before the specified reductions are
required.
The extraordinarily anti-Russian nature of these policies
casts serious doubt on two American official and media axioms:
that the recent "chill" in US-Russian relations has been caused
by Putin's behavior at home and abroad, and that the cold war
ended fifteen years ago. The first axiom is false, the second
only half true: The cold war ended in Moscow, but not in
Washington, as is clear from a brief look back.
The last Soviet leader, Mikhail Gorbachev, came to power in
1985 with heretical "New Thinking" that proposed not merely to
ease but to actually abolish the decades-long cold war. His
proposals triggered a fateful struggle in Washington (and
Moscow) between policy-makers who wanted to seize the historic
opportunity and those who did not. President Ronald Reagan
decided to meet Gorbachev at least part of the way, as did his
successor, the first President George Bush. As a result, in
December 1989, at a historic summit meeting at Malta, Gorbachev
and Bush declared the cold war over. (That extraordinary
agreement evidently has been forgotten; thus we have the New
York Times recently asserting that the US-Russian
relationship today "is far better than it was 15 years ago.")
Declarations alone, however, could not terminate decades of
warfare attitudes. Even when Bush was agreeing to end the cold
war in 1989-91, many of his top advisers, like many members of
the US political elite and media, strongly resisted. (I
witnessed that rift on the eve of Malta, when I was asked to
debate the issue in front of Bush and his divided foreign policy
team.) Proof came with the Soviet breakup in December 1991: US
officials and the media immediately presented the purported "end
of the cold war" not as a mutual Soviet-American decision, which
it certainly was, but as a great American victory and Russian
defeat.
That (now standard) triumphalist narrative is the primary
reason the cold war was quickly revived--not in Moscow a decade
later by Putin but in Washington in the early 1990s, when the
Clinton Administration made two epically unwise decisions. One
was to treat post-Communist Russia as a defeated nation that was
expected to replicate America's domestic practices and bow to
its foreign policies. It required, behind the facade of the
Clinton-Yeltsin "partnership and friendship" (as Clinton's top
"Russia hand," Strobe Talbott, later confirmed), telling Yeltsin
"here's some more shit for your face" and Moscow's
"submissiveness." From that triumphalism grew the still-ongoing
interventions in Moscow's internal affairs and the abiding
notion that Russia has no autonomous rights at home or abroad.
Clinton's other unwise decision was to break the Bush
Administration's promise to Soviet Russia in 1990-91 not to
expand NATO "one inch to the east" and instead begin its
expansion to Russia's borders. From that profound act of bad
faith, followed by others, came the dangerously provocative
military encirclement of Russia and growing Russian suspicions
of US intentions. Thus, while American journalists and even
scholars insist that "the cold war has indeed vanished" and that
concerns about a new one are "silly," Russians across the
political spectrum now believe that in Washington "the cold war
did not end" and, still more, that "the US is imposing a new
cold war on Russia."
That ominous view is being greatly exacerbated by
Washington's ever-growing "anti-Russian fatwa," as a former
Reagan appointee terms it. This year it includes a torrent of
official and media statements denouncing Russia's domestic and
foreign policies, vowing to bring more of its neighbors into
NATO and urging Bush to boycott the G-8 summit to be chaired by
Putin in St. Petersburg in July; a call by would-be Republican
presidential nominee Senator John McCain for "very harsh"
measures against Moscow; Congress's pointed refusal to repeal a
Soviet-era restriction on trade with Russia; the Pentagon's
revival of old rumors that Russian intelligence gave Saddam
Hussein information endangering US troops; and comments by
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice, echoing the
regime-changers, urging Russians, "if necessary, to change their
government."
For its part, the White House deleted from its 2006 National
Security Strategy the long-professed US-Russian partnership,
backtracked on agreements to help Moscow join the World Trade
Organization and adopted sanctions against Belarus, the Slav
former republic most culturally akin to Russia and with whom the
Kremlin is negotiating a new union state. Most significant, in
May it dispatched Vice President Cheney to an anti-Russian
conference in former Soviet Lithuania, now a NATO member, to
denounce the Kremlin and make clear it is not "a strategic
partner and a trusted friend," thereby ending fifteen years of
official pretense.
More astonishing is a Council on Foreign Relations "task
force report" on Russia, co-chaired by Democratic presidential
aspirant John Edwards, issued in March. The "nonpartisan"
council's reputed moderation and balance are nowhere in
evidence. An unrelenting exercise in double standards, the
report blames all the "disappointments" in US-Russian relations
solely on "Russia's wrong direction" under Putin--from meddling
in the former Soviet republics and backing Iran to conflicts
over NATO, energy politics and the "rollback of Russian
democracy."
Strongly implying that Bush has been too soft on Putin, the
council report flatly rejects partnership with Moscow as "not a
realistic prospect." It calls instead for "selective
cooperation" and "selective opposition," depending on which
suits US interests, and, in effect, Soviet-era containment.
Urging more Western intervention in Moscow's political affairs,
the report even reserves for Washington the right to reject
Russia's future elections and leaders as "illegitimate." An
article in the council's influential journal Foreign Affairs
menacingly adds that the United States is quickly "attaining
nuclear primacy" and the ability "to destroy the long-range
nuclear arsenals of Russia or China with a first strike."
Every consequence of this bipartisan American cold war
against post-Communist Russia has exacerbated the dangers
inherent in the Soviet breakup mentioned above. The crusade to
transform Russia during the 1990s, with its disastrous "shock
therapy" economic measures and resulting antidemocratic acts,
further destabilized the country, fostering an oligarchical
system that plundered the state's wealth, deprived essential
infrastructures of investment, impoverished the people and
nurtured dangerous corruption. In the process, it discredited
Western-style reform, generated mass anti-Americanism where
there had been almost none--only 5 percent of Russians surveyed
in May thought the United States was a "friend"--and eviscerated
the once-influential pro-American faction in Kremlin and
electoral politics.
Military encirclement, the Bush Administration's striving for
nuclear supremacy and today's renewed US intrusions into Russian
politics are having even worse consequences. They have provoked
the Kremlin into undertaking its own conventional and nuclear
buildup, relying more rather than less on compromised mechanisms
of control and maintenance, while continuing to invest miserly
sums in the country's decaying economic base and human
resources. The same American policies have also caused Moscow to
cooperate less rather than more in existing US-funded programs
to reduce the multiple risks represented by Russia's materials
of mass destruction and to prevent accidental nuclear war. More
generally, they have inspired a new Kremlin ideology of
"emphasizing our sovereignty" that is increasingly
nationalistic, intolerant of foreign-funded NGOs as "fifth
columns" and reliant on anti-Western views of the "patriotic"
Russian intelligentsia and the Orthodox Church.
Moscow's responses abroad have also been the opposite of what
Washington policy-makers should want. Interpreting US-backed
"color revolutions" as a quest for military outposts on Russia's
borders, the Kremlin now opposes pro-democracy movements in
former Soviet republics more than ever, while supporting the
most authoritarian regimes in the region, from Belarus to
Uzbekistan. Meanwhile, Moscow is forming a political, economic
and military "strategic partnership" with China, lending support
to Iran and other anti-American governments in the Middle East
and already putting surface-to-air missiles back in Belarus, in
effect Russia's western border with NATO.
If American policy and Russia's predictable countermeasures
continue to develop into a full-scale cold war, several new
factors could make it even more dangerous than was its
predecessor. Above all, the growing presence of Western bases
and US-backed governments in the former Soviet republics has
moved the "front lines" of the conflict, in the alarmed words of
a Moscow newspaper, from Germany to Russia's "near abroad." As a
"hostile ring tightens around the Motherland," in the view of
former Prime Minister Evgeny Primakov, many different Russians
see a mortal threat. Putin's chief political deputy, Vladislav
Surkov, for example, sees the "enemy...at the gates," and the
novelist and Soviet-era dissident Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn sees
the "complete encirclement of Russia and then the loss of its
sovereignty." The risks of direct military conflict could
therefore be greater than ever. Protesting overflights by NATO
aircraft, a Russian general has already warned, "If they violate
our borders, they should be shot down."
Worsening the geopolitical factor are radically different
American and Russian self-perceptions. By the mid-1960s the
US-Soviet cold war relationship had acquired a significant
degree of stability because the two superpowers, perceiving a
stalemate, began to settle for political and military "parity."
Today, however, the United States, the self-proclaimed "only
superpower," has a far more expansive view of its international
entitlements and possibilities. Moscow, on the other hand, feels
weaker and more vulnerable than it did before 1991. And in that
asymmetry lies the potential for a less predictable cold war
relationship between the two still fully armed nuclear states.
There is also a new psychological factor. Because the
unfolding cold war is undeclared, it is already laden with
feelings of betrayal and mistrust on both sides. Having welcomed
Putin as Yeltsin's chosen successor and offered him its
conception of "partnership and friendship," Washington now feels
deceived by Putin's policies. According to two characteristic
commentaries in the Washington Post, Bush had a
"well-intentioned Russian policy," but "a Russian
autocrat...betrayed the American's faith." Putin's Kremlin,
however, has been reacting largely to a decade of broken US
promises and Yeltsin's boozy compliance. Thus Putin's
declaration four years ago, paraphrased on Russian radio: "The
era of Russian geopolitical concessions [is] coming to an end."
(Looking back, he remarked bitterly that Russia has been
"constantly deceived.")
Still worse, the emerging cold war lacks the substantive
negotiations and cooperation, known as détente, that constrained
the previous one. Behind the lingering facade, a well-informed
Russian tells us, "dialogue is almost nonexistent." It is
especially true in regard to nuclear weapons. The Bush
Administration's abandonment of the ABM treaty and real
reductions, its decision to build an antimissile shield, and
talk of pre-emptive war and nuclear strikes have all but
abolished long-established US-Soviet agreements that have kept
the nuclear peace for nearly fifty years. Indeed, according to a
report, Bush's National Security Council is contemptuous of arms
control as "baggage from the cold war." In short, as dangers
posed by nuclear weapons have grown and a new arms race unfolds,
efforts to curtail or even discuss them have ended.
Finally, anti-cold war forces that once played an important
role in the United States no longer exist. Cold war lobbies, old
and new ones, therefore operate virtually unopposed, some of
them funded by anti-Kremlin Russian oligarchs in exile. At high
political levels, the new American cold war has been, and
remains, fully bipartisan, from Clinton to Bush, Madeleine
Albright to Rice, Edwards to McCain. At lower levels, once
robust pro-détente public groups, particularly anti-arms-race
movements, have been largely demobilized by official, media and
academic myths that "the cold war is over" and we have been
"liberated" from nuclear and other dangers in Russia.
Also absent (or silent) are the kinds of American scholars
who protested cold war excesses in the past. Meanwhile, a legion
of new intellectual cold warriors has emerged, particularly in
Washington, media favorites whose crusading anti-Putin zeal goes
largely unchallenged. (Typically, one inveterate missionary
constantly charges Moscow with "not delivering" on US interests,
while another now calls for a surreal crusade, "backed by
international donors," to correct young Russians' thinking about
Stalin.) There are a few notable exceptions--also bipartisan,
from former Reaganites to Nation contributors--but
"anathematizing Russia," as Gorbachev recently put it, is so
consensual that even an outspoken critic of US policy
inexplicably ends an article, "Of course, Russia has been
largely to blame."
Making these political factors worse has been the "pluralist"
US mainstream media. In the past, opinion page editors and
television producers regularly solicited voices to challenge
cold war zealots, but today such dissenters, and thus the
vigorous public debate of the past, are almost entirely missing.
Instead, influential editorial pages are dominated by resurgent
cold war orthodoxies, led by the Post, whose incessant
demonization of Putin's "autocracy" and "crude neoimperialism"
reads like a bygone Pravda on the Potomac. On the
conservative New York Sun's front page, US-Russian
relations today are presented as "a duel to the death--perhaps
literally."
The Kremlin's strong preference "not to return to the cold
war era," as Putin stated May 13 in response to Cheney's
inflammatory charges, has been mainly responsible for preventing
such fantasies from becoming reality. "Someone is still fighting
the cold war," a British academic recently wrote, "but it isn't
Russia." A fateful struggle over this issue, however, is now
under way in Moscow, with the "pro-Western" Putin resisting
demands for a "more hard line" course and, closely related,
favoring larger FDR-style investments in the people (and the
country's stability). Unless US policy, which is abetting the
hard-liners in that struggle, changes fundamentally, the
symbiotic axis between American and Russian cold warriors that
drove the last conflict will re-emerge. If so, the Kremlin,
whether under Putin or a successor, will fight the new one--with
all the unprecedented dangers that would entail.
Given different principles and determined leadership, it is
still not too late for a new US policy toward post-Soviet
Russia. Its components would include full cooperation in
securing Moscow's materials of mass destruction; radically
reducing nuclear weapons on both sides while banning the
development of new ones and taking all warheads off hair-trigger
alert; dissuading other states from acquiring those weapons;
countering terrorist activities and drug-trafficking near
Russia; and augmenting energy supplies to the West.
None of those programs are possible without abandoning the
warped priorities and fallacies that have shaped US policy since
1991. National security requires identifying and pursuing
essential priorities, but US policy-makers have done neither
consistently. The only truly vital American interest in Russia
today is preventing its stockpiles of mass destruction from
endangering the world, whether through Russia's destabilization
or hostility to the West.
All of the dangerous fallacies underlying US policy are
expressions of unbridled triumphalism. The decision to treat
post-Soviet Russia as a vanquished nation, analogous to postwar
Germany and Japan (but without the funding), squandered a
historic opportunity for a real partnership and established the
bipartisan premise that Moscow's "direction" at home and abroad
should be determined by the United States. Applied to a country
with Russia's size and long history as a world power, and that
had not been militarily defeated, the premise was inherently
self-defeating and certain to provoke a resentful backlash.
That folly produced two others. One was the assumption that
the United States had the right, wisdom and power to remake
post-Communist Russia into a political and economic replica of
America. A conceit as vast as its ignorance of Russia's
historical traditions and contemporary realities, it led to the
counterproductive crusade of the 1990s, which continues in
various ways today. The other was the presumption that Russia
should be America's junior partner in foreign policy with no
interests except those of the United States. By disregarding
Russia's history, different geopolitical realities and vital
interests, this presumption has also been senseless.
As a Eurasian state with 20-25 million Muslim citizens of its
own and with Iran one of its few neighbors not being recruited
by NATO, for example, Russia can ill afford to be drawn into
Washington's expanding conflict with the Islamic world, whether
in Iran or Iraq. Similarly, by demanding that Moscow vacate its
traditional political and military positions in former Soviet
republics so the United States and NATO can occupy them--and
even subsidize Ukraine's defection with cheap gas--Washington is
saying that Russia not only has no Monroe Doctrine-like rights
in its own neighborhood but no legitimate security rights at
all. Not surprisingly, such flagrant double standards have
convinced the Kremlin that Washington has become more
belligerent since Yeltsin's departure simply "because Russian
policy has become more pro-Russian."
Nor was American triumphalism a fleeting reaction to 1991. A
decade later, the tragedy of September 11 gave Washington a
second chance for a real partnership with Russia. At a meeting
on June 16, 2001, President Bush sensed in Putin's "soul" a
partner for America. And so it seemed after September 11, when
Putin's Kremlin did more than any NATO government to assist the
US war effort in Afghanistan, giving it valuable intelligence, a
Moscow-trained Afghan combat force and easy access to crucial
air bases in former Soviet Central Asia.
The Kremlin understandably believed that in return Washington
would give it an equitable relationship. Instead, it got US
withdrawal from the ABM treaty, Washington's claim to permanent
bases in Central Asia (as well as Georgia) and independent
access to Caspian oil and gas, a second round of NATO expansion
taking in several former Soviet republics and bloc members, and
a still-growing indictment of its domestic and foreign conduct.
Astonishingly, not even September 11 was enough to end
Washington's winner-take-all principles.
Why have Democratic and Republican administrations believed
they could act in such relentlessly anti-Russian ways without
endangering US national security? The answer is another
fallacy--the belief that Russia, diminished and weakened by its
loss of the Soviet Union, had no choice but to bend to America's
will. Even apart from the continued presence of Soviet-era
weapons in Russia, it was a grave misconception. Because of its
extraordinary material and human attributes, Russia, as its
intellectuals say, has always been "destined to be a great
power." This was still true after 1991.
Even before world energy prices refilled its coffers, the
Kremlin had ready alternatives to the humiliating role scripted
by Washington. Above all, Russia could forge strategic alliances
with eager anti-US and non-NATO governments in the East and
elsewhere, becoming an arsenal of conventional weapons and
nuclear knowledge for states from China and India to Iran and
Venezuela. Moscow has already begun that turning away from the
West, and it could move much further in that direction.
Still more, even today's diminished Russia can fight, perhaps
win, a cold war on its new front lines across the vast former
Soviet territories. It has the advantages of geographic
proximity, essential markets, energy pipelines and corporate
ownership, along with kinship and language and common
experiences. They give Moscow an array of soft and hard power to
use, if it chooses, against neighboring governments considering
a new patron in faraway Washington.
Economically, the Kremlin could cripple nearly destitute
Georgia and Moldova by banning their products and otherwise
unemployed migrant workers from Russia and by charging Georgia
and Ukraine full "free-market" prices for essential energy.
Politically, Moscow could truncate tiny Georgia and Moldova, and
big Ukraine, by welcoming their large, pro-Russian territories
into the Russian Federation or supporting their demands for
independent statehood (as the West has been doing for Kosovo and
Montenegro in Serbia). Militarily, Moscow could take further
steps toward turning the Shanghai Cooperation Organization--now
composed of Russia, China and four Central Asian states, with
Iran and India possible members--into an anti-NATO defensive
alliance, an "OPEC with nuclear weapons," a Western analyst
warned.
That is not all. In the US-Russian struggle in Central Asia
over Caspian oil and gas, Washington, as even the triumphalist
Thomas Friedman admits, "is at a severe disadvantage." The
United States has already lost its military base in Uzbekistan
and may soon lose the only remaining one in the region, in
Kyrgyzstan; the new pipeline it backed to bypass Russia runs
through Georgia, whose stability depends considerably on Moscow;
Washington's new friend in oil-rich Azerbaijan is an
anachronistic dynastic ruler; and Kazakhstan, whose enormous
energy reserves make it a particular US target, has its own
large Russian population and is moving back toward Moscow.
Nor is the Kremlin powerless in direct dealings with the
West. It can mount more than enough warheads to defeat any
missile shield and illusion of "nuclear primacy." It can shut US
businesses out of multibillion-dollar deals in Russia and, as it
recently reminded the European Union, which gets 25 percent of
its gas from Russia, "redirect supplies" to hungry markets in
the East. And Moscow could deploy its resources, connections and
UN Security Council veto against US interests involving, for
instance, nuclear proliferation, Iran, Afghanistan and possibly
even Iraq.
Contrary to exaggerated US accusations, the Kremlin has not
yet resorted to such retaliatory measures in any significant
way. But unless Washington stops abasing and encroaching on
Russia, there is no "sovereign" reason why it should not do so.
Certainly, nothing Moscow has gotten from Washington since 1992,
a Western security specialist emphasizes, "compensates for the
geopolitical harm the United States is doing to Russia."
American crusaders insist it is worth the risk in order to
democratize Russia and other former Soviet republics. In
reality, their campaigns since 1992 have only discredited that
cause in Russia. Praising the despised Yeltsin and endorsing
other unpopular figures as Russia's "democrats," while
denouncing the popular Putin, has associated democracy with the
social pain, chaos and humiliation of the 1990s. Ostracizing
Belarus President Aleksandr Lukashenko while embracing tyrants
in Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan has related it to the thirst for
oil. Linking "democratic revolutions" in Ukraine and Georgia to
NATO membership has equated them with US expansionism. Focusing
on the victimization of billionaire Mikhail Khodorkhovsky and
not on Russian poverty or ongoing mass protests against social
injustices has suggested democracy is only for oligarchs. And by
insisting on their indispensable role, US crusaders have all but
said (wrongly) that Russians are incapable of democracy or
resisting abuses of power on their own.
The result is dark Russian suspicions of American intentions
ignored by US policy-makers and media alike. They include the
belief that Washington's real purpose is to take control of the
country's energy resources and nuclear weapons and use
encircling NATO satellite states to "de-sovereignize" Russia,
turning it into a "vassal of the West." More generally, US
policy has fostered the belief that the American cold war was
never really aimed at Soviet Communism but always at Russia, a
suspicion given credence by Post and Times
columnists who characterize Russia even after Communism as an
inherently "autocratic state" with "brutish instincts."
To overcome those towering obstacles to a new relationship,
Washington has to abandon the triumphalist conceits primarily
responsible for the revived cold war and its growing dangers. It
means respecting Russia's sovereign right to determine its
course at home (including disposal of its energy resources). As
the record plainly shows, interfering in Moscow's internal
affairs, whether on-site or from afar, only harms the chances
for political liberties and economic prosperity that still exist
in that tormented nation.
It also means acknowledging Russia's legitimate security
interests, especially in its own "near abroad." In particular,
the planned third expansion of NATO, intended to include
Ukraine, must not take place. Extending NATO to Russia's
doorsteps has already brought relations near the breaking point
(without actually benefiting any nation's security); absorbing
Ukraine, which Moscow regards as essential to its Slavic
identity and its military defense, may be the point of no
return, as even pro-US Russians anxiously warn. Nor would it be
democratic, since nearly two-thirds of Ukrainians are opposed.
The explosive possibilities were adumbrated in late May and
early June when local citizens in ethnic Russian Crimea
blockaded a port and roads where a US naval ship and contingent
of Marines suddenly appeared, provoking resolutions declaring
the region "anti-NATO territory" and threats of "a new Vietnam."
Time for a new US policy is running out, but there is no hint
of one in official or unofficial circles. Denouncing the Kremlin
in May, Cheney spoke "like a triumphant cold warrior," a
Times correspondent reported. A top State Department
official has already announced the "next great mission" in and
around Russia. In the same unreconstructed spirit, Rice has
demanded Russians "recognize that we have legitimate
interests...in their neighborhood," without a word about
Moscow's interests; and a former Clinton official has held the
Kremlin "accountable for the ominous security
threats...developing between NATO's eastern border and Russia."
Meanwhile, the Bush Administration is playing Russian roulette
with Moscow's control of its nuclear weapons. Its missile shield
project having already provoked a destabilizing Russian buildup,
the Administration now proposes to further confuse Moscow's
early-warning system, risking an accidental launch, by putting
conventional warheads on long-range missiles for the first time.
In a democracy we might expect alternative policy proposals
from would-be leaders. But there are none in either party, only
demands for a more anti-Russian course, or silence. We should
not be surprised. Acquiescence in Bush's monstrous war in Iraq
has amply demonstrated the political elite's limited capacity
for introspection, independent thought and civic courage. (It
prefers to falsely blame the American people, as the managing
editor of Foreign Affairs recently did, for craving
"ideological red meat.") It may also be intimidated by another
revived cold war practice--personal defamation. The Post
and The New Yorker have already labeled critics of their
Russia policy "Putin apologists" and charged them with
"appeasement" and "again taking the Russian side of the Cold
War."
The vision and courage of heresy will therefore be needed to
escape today's new cold war orthodoxies and dangers, but it is
hard to imagine a US politician answering the call. There is,
however, a not-too-distant precedent. Twenty years ago, when the
world faced exceedingly grave cold war perils, Gorbachev
unexpectedly emerged from the orthodox and repressive Soviet
political class to offer a heretical way out. Is there an
American leader today ready to retrieve that missed opportunity?
Copyright The Nation
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