Politics
Author,
'The Global Economy in Transition'
Putin's Next Throw of the Dice -- Prepare for the
Unexpected
Posted: 12/16/2014
11:54 pm EST Updated: 12/17/2014 8:59 am EST
Falling oil prices
combined with sanctions push Russia's President Putin into a corner. Do not
expect him willingly to accept that. Judging his actions over recent years, it
is almost certain that he will try to regain the initiative.
For a long time,
indeed years, President Putin has conveyed suspicion of an American design to
subdue Russia, engineer regime change or even plan a war, most recently in his
State of the Union speech December 4, 2014. Belligerent statements have come
from people known to be close to Putin including Foreign Minister Lavrov
upholding the Russian tradition of superb diplomacy on a tactical level. The
proclivity to depict Russia as an innocent victim is evident. As the message
turns more and more vociferous, odds are that Putin draws the conclusion that
he is not being heard, pushed aside, or misunderstood.
The West (the U.S. and
the EU) is analyzing what he is saying; we are blessed with a conveyor belt of
newspaper columns, articles in journals, and analyses of various sorts. Most
depict him as an aggressor determined to roll back some, but not all of
Russia's losses after the end of the Cold War, dividing the Europeans, a person
ready and willing to contest the existing world order, throwing out legal and
moral pledges when opportune.
If that is the case an
appropriate policy answer is on the shelf however unwelcome it may be for
Western democracies surmising that confrontations, conflicts, and wars belonged
to the dustbin of history after the collapse of the Soviet and Russian Empire
in 1991. It consists of tit for tat which is simply speaking to respond with
measures on the same level forcing Putin to escalate further or back down.
Economically and militarily Russia is no match for the West. The Kremlin knows
that. So Putin will blink first provided that the countermeasures are credible
meaning that the West will not eschew armed conflict if so be it. Under the
Cold War the communist leadership did back down every time the West responded
in this way. From the textbook of history: The Berlin crises, the Cuba crisis,
and the NATO Double-Track Decision in 1979 (offer the Warsaw Pact a mutual
limitation of medium-range ballistic missiles and intermediate-range ballistic
missiles combined with the threat that in case of disagreement NATO would
deploy more middle-range nuclear weapons in Western Europe). It worked. Both
sides behaved rationally, accepted common rules of the game, and knew pretty
well where they had each other.
There is, however,
another possibility, which is that Putin genuinely believes that the West and
in particular the US are out to get him in one way or another. According to
reports in the media, Germany's Chancellor Mrs. Merkel tried recently in a
meeting lasting several hours to find out what he wanted in order to
reconnoiter possibilities for a deal. In vain. Putin did not tune into the same
wavelength, but ventured forth repeating accusations.
If the reality is that
Russia under the leadership of Putin with the support of the country's elite
and the large majority of the population takes this view, the West and indeed
the rest of the world are in trouble. So is Russia, but let's put that aside
for a while.
This is unknown
terrain. The two sides' analysis and reading of each other is not congruous and
offer no spectrum of common ground. Russia feels threaten; the West does not
harbor any design of attacking Russia. Russia sees events in Ukraine, Caucasus
and certain other areas part of the Soviet Union before 1991 as a plot
unfolding to draw out its teeth and render it unable to defend itself; the West
looks at it as the wheels of history with people throwing away the yoke after
being subjugated by a political system they intensely disliked and forced into
a Russian sphere of interest -- a Russian world -- foreign to them. Russia more
or less agreed to or acquiesced in a number of Western operations in the former
Yugoslavia, Libya, Iraq, and Syria, but concluded that the West did not honor
what Russia saw as commitments to show restraint and draw the further
conclusion that it must be due to a hidden agenda and that can only be
crippling Russia; the West is perplexed because it did not want to antagonize
Russia, but felt that the two parties shared a strategic design even if not
completely analogous.
The Western analysis
may be summarized in the following way. Russia is a backward country relying on
export of resources -- more than 80 percent of total export -- with the only
hope of getting out of this straitjacket modernizing through entering into a close
economic relationship with the West having the financial resources, the
technology and markets. No other country or countries around the world can
match that. Russia may sell its energy to China and India, but it will take
time to re-orient logistics and they have not so much to offer in return except
of course money to pay for oil and gas. Strategically Russia is living in the
shadow of terrorism and in particular sponsored by Muslim fanatics. As a
reminder an attack in Chechnya linked to radical groups in the Middle East took
place simultaneously with Putin's speech.
The U.S. and EU cannot
understand why Russia does not share that analysis and instead of coming round
to enter into some kind of partnership chooses the exact opposite
interpretation depicting the West as a villain.
In a best case
scenario it is talk at cross-purposes. In a worst case scenario it is a recipe
for disaster.
President Putin has
not given any clues telling which one of the above policies are the one in his
drawer. Maybe he does not know. Maybe he does and finds them not mutually
irreconcilable at least not in the short term pursuing both keeping options
open.
For the West the
dilemma is that any openings for a solution involve concessions deemed
unacceptable, sacrificing principles and beliefs, abandoning, yes betraying,
people and countries. If the West bites this bullet, it will not any longer be
true to moral principles defended with pride during the Cold War.
The best hope for the
West is to continue the sanctions, which combined with the falling oil price,
may entice Putin to change track. Again when flipping the coin we find an ugly
side. Namely that cornered, Putin may react violently.
The Prussian
strategist von Clausewitz writing after the Napoleonic Wars spelled out what may
happen:
When the disproportion
of forces is so great that no modification of our own object can ensure us
safety from a catastrophe, or where the probable continuance of the danger is
so great that the greatest economy of our powers can no longer suffice to bring
us to our object, then the tension of our powers should be concentrated for one
desperate blow; he who is pressed on all sides expecting little help from
things which promise none, will place his last and only reliance in the moral
ascendancy which despair gives to courage, and look upon the greatest daring as
the greatest wisdom -- at the same time employ the assistance of subtle
stratagem, and if he does not succeed, will find in an honorable downfall the
right to rise hereafter.
Putin's next throw of
the dice may conform to this Clausewitzian behavior. It may be desperate, and
designed to take the West with surprise, while not antagonizing China and
India. The West may see Russia more and more isolated, but as long as Russia
maintains good relations with China and India this is not how Moscow sees it.
Or in other words: Chinese and Indian reactions -- not the West -- determine
Putin's room of maneuver. Another
element of a gradually changing world order.
Read more at: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/joergen-oerstroem-moeller/putins-next-throw-of-the_b_6338196.html
No comments:
Post a Comment