A Russian
Diplomat’s Take on the World
As the West’s mainstream media portrays Russia as a
crazy rogue state, Moscow’s thoughtful critiques of
world affairs are ignored, not fitting the
propaganda theme. Such was the case when Foreign
Minister Lavrov explained why there would be no more
“business as usual” with the West, as Gilbert
Doctorow describes.
By Gilbert Doctorow
January 30,
2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- "Consortium
News"
- On Jan. 26, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov
held an important year-in-review press conference
before an audience of about 150 journalists,
including the BBC correspondent Steve Rosenberg and
many other well-known representatives of mainstream
Western media. The purpose of this annual event is
to look back at issues faced by his Ministry over
the past year and to give his appraisal of results
achieved.
Lavrov’s
opening remarks were concise, lasting perhaps 15
minutes, and the remaining two hours were turned
over to the floor for questions. As the microphone
was passed to journalists from many different
countries, the discussion covered a great variety of
subjects, including the likelihood of a new “re-set”
with the United States, the negotiations over
re-convening the Syrian peace talks in Geneva,
British Prime Minister David Cameron’s comments on
the findings of a U.K. public inquest into the
Litvinenko murder, the possibilities for
reestablishing diplomatic relations with Georgia,
and prospects for resolving conflicting claims over
the Southern Kurile islands so as to conclude a
peace treaty with Japan.
To the best
of my knowledge, not a single report of the event
has yet appeared on major online American, French,
British and German newspaper portals or television
channels. This was not for lack of substance or
newsworthy sound bites, including Lavrov’s headline
comment that he agreed with Western leaders who said
there would be “no business as usual” between Russia
and the West.
As part of
his opening comments, Lavrov said, “Our Western
colleagues sometimes declare with passion that there
can no longer be ‘business as usual with Russia.’ I
am convinced that this is so and here we agree:
there will be no more ‘business as usual’ when they
tried to bind us with agreements which take into
account above all the interests of either the
European Union or the United States and they wanted
to persuade us that this will do no harm to our
interests. That history is over and done with. A new
stage of history is dawning which can develop only
on the basis of equal rights and all other
principles of international law.”
Regarding a
similar news blackout that followed another major
Russian press briefing, the sharp-tongued Foreign
Ministry spokeswoman Maria Zakharova commented, what
are all these accredited Western reporters doing in
Moscow if nothing gets published abroad? Do they
have some other occupation?
In keeping
with custom, the Russian Foreign Ministry posted the
entire video
recording of Lavrov’s press conference on
youtube.com and posted transcripts in Russian and
English on the
www.mid.ru site. The Russian version takes up 26
tightly spaced printed pages. This is what I have
used, since I prefer to go to the source and do my
own translations when I have the option. The English
version probably takes 40 pages, given the normal
expansion from Russian to English in the translation
process.
What I
noted first in the television broadcast on Russia’s
Pervy Kanal and then in the transcript was
both how well prepared Lavrov was to deal with a
plethora of issues and how he gave detailed answers
that went on for many minutes without making
reference to any notes.
Secondly,
it was obvious he spoke more “freely,” using fewer
diplomatic euphemisms than I have ever seen before.
I conclude that he was given a nod by his boss,
President Vladimir Putin, not to hold back, to speak
with perfect clarity. Given his experience as one of
the longest-serving foreign ministers among the
major powers and his innate intellect, Lavrov
delivered what sounds at times like dictation for
essays in proper written Russian.
For these
reasons, I have decided to divide my treatment of
the press conference into two parts. One will be
Lavrov in his own words. And the other will be my
conclusions about the international environment in
the coming year given Russia’s basic positions,
particularly the possible lifting of sanctions on
Russia by the United States and the European Union
and how the next U.S. administration can best
prepare for relations with Russia, assuming there is
no dramatic change in the thinking of American
elites.
Sergey Lavrov in His Own Words
From the
press briefing, I have extracted several big chunks
of text that characterize the overarching views on
international relations of Lavrov and the Kremlin,
applying their Realpolitik prism and focused
primarily on U.S.-Russian relations. This is
essential if we are not to lose sight of the forest
for the trees.
In
questions and answers dealing with all countries but
one, we hear about separate issues in various
locations around the world holding interest mainly
for discrete national audiences with their private
concerns. With respect to one country, the U.S.,
Russia’s bilateral relations transcend the
minister’s in-basket of contingencies.
Indeed, the
whole Russian foreign policy really is about
relations with the U.S. as expressed in the first
two of the three passages in quotation marks below.
The third passage, on sanctions, would seem to be
more about relations with the E.U. I selected it
because the issue of lifting sanctions will surely
be a key foreign policy issue facing Russia in the
first six months of this year, and behind it all
looms the U.S. position on the question.
Question:
Is a “re-set” possible in this final year of Barack
Obama’s administration?
Lavrov:
“The question should not be addressed to us. Our
inter-state ties sank very low despite the excellent
personal relations between former U.S. President
George Bush and Russian President Putin. When U.S.
President Barack Obama came to the White House and
former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton
offered a ‘re-set,’ this reflected the fact that
Americans themselves finally saw the abnormality of
the situation wherein Russia and the USA were not
cooperating to solve those problems which could not
be decided without them…
“We gave a
rather constructive response to the ‘re-set.’ We
said that we appreciate the decision of the new
Administration to correct the errors of its
predecessors. We achieved quite a lot: the New START
Treaty, the entry of Russia into the WTO, an array
of new agreements on various conflict situations.
But somehow this quickly began to drop back to zero.
Now everyone, including our American colleagues, is
telling us: ‘Just fulfill the Minsk accords on
Ukraine and immediately everything will return to
normal. We will immediately cancel the sanctions and
tempting prospects of cooperation will open up
between Russia and the United States over much more
pleasant issues, not just in the management of
crises; right away a constructive partnership
program will take shape.’
“We are
open for cooperation with everyone on an equal,
mutually advantageous basis. We, of course, do not
want anyone to build their policy based on the
assumption that Russia and not Ukraine must fulfill
the Minsk accords. It is written there who must
fulfill them. I hope that this is well known to the
USA. At least, my latest contacts with U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry, the contacts of
Deputy Secretary of State Victoria Nuland with
Assistant to the Russian President Surkov indicate
that the USA can sort out the essence of the Minsk
accords. Grosso modo, everyone understands
everything. …
“I have
just mentioned that people have begun to promise a
new ‘re-set.’ If we fulfill the Minsk accords, then
immediately everything will become fine, with
splendid and tempting prospects.
“But the
cooling off of relations with the Administration of
U.S. President Barack Obama and the end of the
period associated with ‘re-set’ began long before
the Ukraine. Let’s remember how this occurred.
First, when we finally got the consent of our
Western partners to terms of our joining the WTO
which were acceptable to Russia, the Americans
understood that it was not in their interests to
keep the Jackson-Vanik amendment. Otherwise they
would be deprived of those privileges and advantages
which are linked to our participation in the WTO.
They began to prepare for the removal of this
amendment.
“But
Americans would not be Americans if they simply
abolished it and said ‘Enough, let’s now cooperate
normally.’ They dreamed up the ‘Magnitsky Act,’
although I am certain that what happened to
Magnitsky was not set up. I very much hope that the
truth will become known to everyone. It is
disgusting how a provocation and speculation were
built up around the death of a man. Nonetheless,
this was done and you know who lobbied for this
‘Magnitsky Act,’ which immediately replaced the
Jackson-Vanik amendment.”
[The Magnitsky
Act was enacted by the U.S. Congress in 2012 with
the goal of punishing Russian officials believed
responsible for the death of Sergei Magnitsky, a
lawyer who died in prison in 2009 amid accusations
and counter-accusations of fraud.]
“This all
began when there was still no Ukraine [crisis],
although they now try to lay the blame on violations
of OSCE principles. Everything that is going on
between the West and Russia is explained by the fact
that Russia did not fulfill its obligations, did not
respect the world order which was put together in
Europe after the Helsinki Act [of 1975], etc. These
are all attempts to justify and find an excuse for
continuing the policy of containment. But this
policy never ended.
“After the
‘Magnitsky Act’ [in 2012], there was the completely
inappropriate, overblown reaction to what happened
to Edward Snowden, who found himself in Russia
against our wishes [in 2013]. We did not know about
this. He did not have a passport – his document was
canceled while he was in flight. He could not go
anywhere from Russia because of decisions taken in
Washington. We could not help but give him the
possibility to remain in Russia so as to stay safe,
knowing which articles of the law they were
threatening him with. The Americans made no secret
about this. This was done simply as an elementary
protection of a person’s right to life.
“U.S.
President Barack Obama then canceled his visit to
Russia. They made a huge scandal. Dozens of
telephone calls came in from the FBI, from the CIA,
the State Department. There were direct contacts
with the President. They told us that if we do not
give up Snowden, then relations will be broken off.
The USA canceled the visit. It did not take place
but U.S. President Obama came for the G-20 Summit in
St. Petersburg, where we, by the way, did something
useful – we reached agreement on the principles of
the removal of Syria’s chemical weapons.
“Ukraine
was just a pretext. The Ukrainian crisis is linked
not so much with justified concern over an alleged
violation by Russia of the Helsinki principles
(although everything began with Kosovo, with the
[1999] bombing of Yugoslavia, etc). This was an
expression of irritation that the coup d’etat
did not lead to the results that were expected by
those who supported it.
“I will
tell you honestly that we don’t hold a grudge. We
have no such traditions in relations between states.
We understand that life is tougher than any ideal,
romantic scheme like ‘re-set’ or similar. We also
understand that this is a world in which there are
harsh clashes of interests that come down to us from
the age of the West’s total domination and it is in
the midst of a long transition period to a more
durable system in which there will not be one or
even two dominant poles – there will be several. The
transition period is long and painful. Old habits
die slowly. We all understand this.
“We
understand that the USA is interested in having
fewer competitors even with regards to those
comparable to it in size, influence, military power,
economy. We see this in the relations between the
USA and China, in how the USA works with the
European Union, trying to create a ring around it
via the Transatlantic Partnership, and to the east
of Russia, to create a Trans-Pacific Partnership
which will not include Russia and China. Russian
President Vladimir Putin spoke about this in detail
when he analyzed the processes at work in the world
economy and politics. We understand all of this.
“Surely
every age brings with it new tendencies, frames of
mind in one or another of the elites, especially in
major countries which see in their own fashion the
ways to fight for their interests. It would be very
bad and ruinous for all of us if these processes
moved outside the framework of generally accepted
norms of international law.
“Then,
simply put, everything would be topsy-turvy, and we
would be drawn into a world of anarchy and chaos –
something like what is going on in the Near East,
perhaps without bloodshed. Each would act as he
reckons necessary and nothing good would come out of
this. It is very important to observe some kind of
general rules of play.
“To answer
your question, I would like for the USA to have a
‘re-set’ with the whole world, so that the ‘re-set’
was general, so that we could gather together and
reconfirm our commitment to the UN Charter, to the
principles embodied in it, including
non-interference in internal affairs, respect for
the sovereignty and territorial integrity and the
right of peoples to self-determination, the right of
peoples to choose their own future without
interference from outside.”
Question:
At the Munich Security Conference in 2007 President
Putin said to the West “you need us more than we
need you.” Is that still Russia’s position?
Lavrov:
“Ideally we both need one another to face the
challenges and threats. But, the reality is
different. The West comes to us much more often for
help than we come to the West.”
(Lavrov
said that in response to Western sanctions, Russia
was striving to be self-sufficient and promoting
import substitution, but not trying to cut itself
off from the world and ready for cooperation based
on equality.)
“We must do
everything to ensure we do not depend on the whim of
one or another group of countries, above all from
our Western partners” – as happened when the West
took offense at Russia for supporting ethnic
Russians in Ukraine who did not recognize the 2014
coup d’etat.
“I have
cited Dmitry Yarosh [leader of the radical
nationalists, the Right Sector] that they wanted to
destroy Russian speakers in Ukraine or deprive them
of their rights. We want to insure ourselves against
such situations. …
“I note
that it’s not we who are running to our European
colleagues and saying ‘Let’s do something to remove
the sanctions.’ Not at all. We are focused on not
depending on such zigzags in Western policy, not
depending on Europe’s saluting the USA. But in our
bilateral contacts our European colleagues, when
they come to us or meet us in international forums,
say: ‘Let’s think of something. Help us carry out
the Minsk accords, otherwise these sanctions will do
a lot of damage. We want to turn the page.’
“It turns
out that in this situation we are needed more by
them than they are needed by us. Including for
fulfillment of the Minsk accords. … Yes, we have
influence in Donbass [the ethnic Russian section of
eastern Ukraine] and we support them. Surely,
without our help and humanitarian deliveries Donbass
would be in a pitiful state. But one also has to
exert influence in Kiev. We need the West to
influence the Kiev authorities, but so far this is
not happening.
“Or look at
the question of the Iranian nuclear program. At the
decisive stages of these negotiations we were
literally bombarded with requests when it was
necessary to solve the questions of exporting
enriched uranium in exchange for natural uranium,
which was the key condition for achieving
agreements; when it was necessary to resolve the
question about who will convert the enrichment sites
at Fordu into research for production of medical
isotopes, etc.
“They came
with requests to us, requests which carry a
significant financial burden, or at least which do
not bring any material benefit. But we fulfilled our
part of the work. Now everyone is calling us and our
Chinese colleagues about the North Korean problem:
‘help us do something to make North Korea observe
its obligations.’ Or take the case of Syria….
“I can’t
think of any requests we made to our Western
colleagues recently. We don’t believe it is proper
to make requests. After you sign agreements
following negotiations, you now have to execute
obligations, not to make requests for favors.”
Question on
whether sanctions will end early.
Lavrov:
“I’d say that among a large number of our partners
there is the awareness that they cannot go on this
way any longer, that this is harmful to them. Our
justification for speaking about some possible
positive changes comes down to the following: our
Western partners more and more often begin to
understand that they have fallen into a trap of
their own making when they said that they will lift
the sanctions after Russia fulfills the Minsk
accords. They have now understood that, very likely,
this was a ‘slip of the tongue.’
“But in
Kiev this was heard very often and was interpreted
as an indulgence allowing them not to carry out the
Minsk accords. Their failure to perform not only
means that Kiev does not have to undertake any
actions and fulfill its obligations. It also means
that the West will have to keep the sanctions in
place against Russia. It was necessary to prove all
of this to some gentlemen who are in Kiev fanning
radical attitudes. …
“The West
understands the hopelessness of the present
situation, when everyone pretends that Russia must
fulfill the Minsk accords but Ukraine can do nothing
– not change its constitution, not give a special
status to the Donbass, not put through an amnesty,
not organize elections in consultation with Donbass.
Everyone understands that no one will resolve these
things for Ukraine.
“Everyone
understands that this is abnormal, something
pathological which emerged in turning the Ukrainian
crisis, which arose as a result of an absolutely
illegal, anti-constitutional coup d’etat,
into a measuring stick for all relations between
Russia and the West. This is absolutely abnormal, an
unhealthy situation, artificially fanned from
countries that are far removed from Europe. Europe
no longer wants to be held hostage to this
situation. For me, this is obvious.”
General Conclusions
In
presenting these three long excerpts from Lavrov’s
Jan. 26 press conference, my intention was to give
readers a feel for Lavrov’s method of argumentation
and his somber tone in what was delivered without
notes and in response to questions from journalists
in the audience.
In his
prepared opening remarks, Lavrov had already set out
some of the key points in the overall approach to
international affairs from Russia’s analytical tool
of realism and national interest. The number one
issue facing Russia and the world from his
perspective is to arrive at a new system of managing
international affairs. Russia’s relations with the
West are part and parcel of this broader challenge.
This
wished-for new system would be one built on full
equality of relations between states, respect for
their interests and non-interference in internal
affairs. Lavrov was repeating Vladimir Putin’s call
upon nations to re-dedicate themselves to the
principles of the United Nations Charter that Putin
issued in New York in September 2015 at the 70th
anniversary gathering of the General Assembly. The
new system of global governance will come about as a
result of reforms to the basic international
institutions whereby political and economic power is
reallocated in ways that reflect changes in relative
economic and military power of nations from the days
when these institutions were established.
By itself,
there is nothing particular new in this vision. It
has been in the public domain for years and guided
calls for readjusting the voting powers within the
International Monetary Fund. The novel element,
which will be shocking to many in Washington, was
Sergey Lavrov’s clear and repeated identification of
the United States as the power frustrating the
renewal of world governance by stubbornly defending
its hegemonic control of institutions and seeking to
consolidate still further its control over its
allies in Europe and Asia at the expense of their
national interests and in furtherance of its own
interests.
Hence,
Lavrov’s mention of the TPP and TIPP projects.
Hence, his repeated mention of forces from afar,
meaning the U.S., that have imposed European
sanctions on Russia against the wishes of separate
E.U. member states.
At one
point, in responding to a journalist from Japan,
Lavrov completely abandoned veiled language. He said
Russia favored in principle giving a permanent seat
on the UN Security Council to Japan, but would do so
only when it was clear Japan will contribute its own
national views to deliberations, broadening the
perspectives on the table, and not merely provide
the United States with an additional voting member
under its control.
It is
interesting that Lavrov explicitly denied that
Russia feels “offended,” or as I have written using
an alternative translation, “holds a grudge” over
how it has been treated by the United States in the
downward spiral of relations from the high point of
the 2009 “re-set” to today’s nadir.
The context
for this remark is the ever-present denunciations in
mainstream Western media of Vladimir Putin’s
speeches on foreign affairs. Putin’s observations on
how things went awry since the end of the Cold War
are regularly categorized as “diatribes” and
“revisionist,” by which is meant aggressive,
threatening and possibly irrational.
Lavrov said
Russia acknowledges it is a tough world out there
and competition is harsh. That is the true sense of
his headline remark that there can be no return to
“business as usual” or the idealistic notions
underlying the “re-set” even when the current
sanctions against Russia are lifted.
Russia is
nonetheless open for business on equal and mutually
advantageous terms where and when possible. In this
regard, Lavrov is in complete agreement with
American experts like Angela Stent at Georgetown
University who advise the incoming U.S.
administration in 2017 against planning some new
“re-set.” They come to that common conclusion from
diametrically opposed premises over who is
responsible for the new reality.
Lavrov
speaks of our being in a long and painful transition
period from a world dominated by the West, which in
turn is dominated by one power, the United States,
to a multipolar world with a number of key
participants in global governance. But that does not
exclude amelioration and he appears to share the
view now spreading in Western media, that U.S. and
European sanctions will be lifted in the near
future.
One recent
example of this expectation that generates euphoria
in Western business circles appeared in Bloomberg
online the day before Lavrov’s news conference:
“Russian Entente Nears as Allies Hint at End of
Ukraine Sanctions.”
The
important message, which Sergey Lavrov delivered on
Jan. 26, is that Russia has not and will not mend
its ways. He told us Russia did not beg for relief
from sanctions and is not trading its support for
Bashar al-Assad in Syria in return for relief over
Ukraine.
We may be
sure that the United States and the European Union
will present the lifting of sanctions as a
trade-off. But the reality will be a retreat from a
policy that is unsustainable because it harms
Western interests far more than Russian interests.
This was the sense of Lavrov’s insistence that the
West needs Russia more than Russia needs the West.
The
present, ongoing economic harm to European farmers
and other select sectors of the economy from
Russia’s tit-for-tat embargo is obvious. The harm to
U.S. interests is more subtle.
It was
recently highlighted in an article published in
Foreign Affairs magazine by a research fellow
of the Cato Institute entitled “Not-So Smart
Sanctions.” There we read that the Washington
establishment is finally worried over the creation
by Russia and China of alternative global financial
institutions to those based in Washington.
The BRICS
Bank, the Asia Infrastructure Development Bank, the
introduction of bank clearing centers competing with
SWIFT: all are intended to end, once and for all,
America’s possibilities for inflicting crippling
economic pain on those falling into its latest list
of enemies as was done to punish the Kremlin over
annexation of Crimea and intervention in Donbass.
Lavrov
spoke repeatedly about defending “national
interests” as the guiding principle of foreign
relations. In this connection, the shadow of Hans
Morgenthau, a founder and major theorist of
America’s Realist School, may be said to have shared
the podium with him. But Lavrov and the Russians
have taken to a new level the principles set out in
Politics Among Nations, Morgenthau’s famous
textbook which generations of American college
students once studied in their Government 101
courses.
Lavrov’s
Russia is calling upon nations to shed their chains,
to stop pushing their national interests to one side
while listening to instructions from Washington.
Nations should compete and jostle for influence in a
free market of ideas and influences, while playing
by generally recognized rules.
If the
rules are followed, the international environment
will not collapse into chaos notwithstanding sharp
contradictions between nations.
Gilbert
Doctorow is the European Coordinator, American
Committee for East West Accord, Ltd. His latest book
Does Russia Have a Future? (August 2015) is
available in paperback and e-book from Amazon.com
and affiliated websites. For donations to support
the European activities of ACEWA, write to
eastwestaccord@gmail.com. © Gilbert Doctorow,
2015
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