Two sides are required for a
New Cold War — and there is no obvious need
for an adversarial system in post-Soviet
Europe
By Peter Hitchens
March 12, 2015 "ICH"
- "The
Spectator" - Just for once, let us try
this argument with an open mind, employing
arithmetic and geography and going easy on
the adjectives. Two great land powers face
each other. One of these powers, Russia, has
given up control over 700,000 square miles
of valuable territory. The other, the
European Union, has gained control over
400,000 of those square miles. Which of
these powers is expanding?
There remain 300,000
neutral square miles between the two, mostly
in Ukraine. From Moscow’s point of view,
this is already a grievous, irretrievable
loss. As Zbigniew Brzezinski, one of the
canniest of the old Cold Warriors, wrote
back in 1997, ‘Ukraine… is a geopolitical
pivot because its very existence as an
independent country helps to transform
Russia. Without Ukraine, Russia ceases to be
a Eurasian empire.’
This diminished Russia
feels the spread of the EU and its armed
wing, Nato, like a blow on an unhealed
bruise. In February 2007, for instance,
Vladimir Putin asked sulkily, ‘Against whom
is this expansion intended?’
I have never heard a clear
answer to that question. The USSR, which
Nato was founded to fight, expired in August
1991. So what is Nato’s purpose now? Why
does it even still exist?
There is no obvious need
for an adversarial system in post-Soviet
Europe. Even if Russia wanted to reconquer
its lost empire, as some believe (a belief
for which there is no serious evidence), it
is too weak and too poor to do this. So why
not invite Russia to join the great western
alliances? Alas, it is obvious to everyone,
but never stated, that Russia cannot ever
join either Nato or the EU, for if it did so
it would unbalance them both by its sheer
size. There are many possible ways of
dealing with this. One would be an adult
recognition of the limits of human power,
combined with an understanding of Russia’s
repeated experience of invasions and its
lack of defensible borders.
But we do not do this.
Instead we have a noisy pseudo-moral
crusade, which would not withstand five
minutes of serious consideration. Mr Putin’s
state is, beyond doubt, a sinister tyranny.
But so is Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s Turkey,
which locks up far more journalists than
does Russia. Turkey is an officially
respectable Nato member, 40 years after
seizing northern Cyprus, which it still
occupies, in an almost exact precedent for
Russia’s seizure of Crimea. If Putin
disgusts us so much, then why are we and the
USA happy to do business with Erdogan, and
also to fawn upon Saudi Arabia and China?
Contrary to myth, the
expansion of the EU into the former
communist world has not magically brought
universal peace, love and prosperity.
Croatia’s economy has actually gone
backwards since it joined. Corruption still
exists in large parts of the EU’s new
south-eastern territories, and I am not sure
that the rule of law could be said to have
been properly established there. So the idea
that the recruitment of Ukraine to the
‘West’ will magically turn that troubled
nation into a sunny paradise of freedom,
probity and wealth is perhaps a little
idealistic, not to say mistaken.
It is all so much clearer
if we realise that this quarrel is about
power and land, not virtue. In truth, much
of the eastward expansion of Nato was caused
by the EU’s initial unwillingness to take in
backward, bankrupt and corrupt refugee
states from the old Warsaw Pact. The policy
could be summed up as ‘We won’t buy your
tomatoes, but if it makes you happy you can
shelter under our nuclear umbrella’. The
promise was an empty assurance against a
nonexistent threat. But an accidental
arrangement hardened into a real
confrontation. The less supine Russia was,
the more its actions were interpreted as
aggression in the West. Boris Yeltsin
permitted western interests to rape his
country, and did little to assert Russian
power. So though he bombarded his own
parliament, conducted a grisly war in
Chechnya, raised corruption to Olympic
levels and shamelessly rigged his own
re-election, he yet remained a popular guest
in western capitals and summits. Vladimir
Putin’s similar sins, by contrast, provide a
pretext for ostracism and historically
illiterate comparisons between him and
Hitler.
This is because of his
increasing avowal of Russian sovereignty,
and of an independent foreign policy. There
have been many East-West squabbles and
scrimmages, not all of them Russia’s fault.
But the New Cold War really began in 2011,
after Mr Putin dared to frustrate western —
and Saudi — policy in Syria. George
Friedman, the noted US intelligence and
security expert, thinks Russia badly
underestimated the level of American fury
this would provoke. As Mr Friedman recently
told the Moscow newspaper Kommersant,
‘It was in this situation that the United
States took a look at Russia and thought
about what it [Russia] wants to see happen
least of all: instability in Ukraine.’
Mr Friedman (no Putin
stooge) also rather engagingly agrees with
Moscow that overthrow last February of
Viktor Yanukovych was ‘the most blatant coup
in history’. He is of course correct, as
anyone unclouded by passion can see. The
test of any action by your own side is to
ask what you would think of it if the other
side did it.
If Russia didn’t grasp how
angry Washington would get over Syria, did
the West realise how furiously Russia would
respond to the EU Association Agreement and
to the fall of Yanukovych? Perhaps not.
Fearing above all the irrecoverable loss to
Nato of its treasured naval station in
Sevastopol, Russia reacted. After 23 years
of sullenly appeasing the West, Moscow
finally said ‘enough’. Since we’re all
supposed to be against appeasement,
shouldn’t we find this action understandable
in a sovereign nation, even if we cannot
actually praise it? And can anyone explain
to me precisely why Britain, of all
countries, should be siding with the
expansion of the European Union and Nato
into this dangerous and unstable part of the
world?
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