How
will the West read Putin’s playbook?
(Kerry’s note: Both the USA and UK leadership smack of hypocrisy
over their positions regarding the Russian presence in Crimea. At least Putin
is trying to protect Russians. Compare this with the USA-UK sponsored invasion of
Iraq, the deaths of more than 100,000 as a result of the fabricated reason for
that invasion and ultimate demise of the Saddam regime).
VLADIMIR PUTIN did not take long to show what he thought of
Barack Obama’s warning shot that there would be “consequences” for continued
Russian military intervention in Ukraine. The prospect of those consequences—Obama
mentioned only the suspension of America’s part in the preparations for the
June meeting of the G8 in Sochi—did not exactly seem to strike terror into
the Russian president’s heart. Within hours he had called on and received
backing in Russia’s upper house of parliament for the authorisation of troops
for an invasion (or “stabilisation force” in Putinspeak). Not just of the
autonomous largely Russian-speaking Crimea, where Russian troops have already
seized key facilities and where Russia has a leased naval base, but
potentially, and more ominously, of the whole of Ukraine.
Nor does it seem likely that the 90-minute telephone call
between the two men that took place in the aftermath of the unanimous Duma vote
will have persuaded Putin to pause for consideration. Although a
transcript of the conversation has not been revealed, it appears that
Obama was trying to nudge Putin towards working through an
internationally mediated process that would involve observers on the
ground to ensure that the rights of Russian-speakers in the country were not
infringed and confidence-building talks with the Ukraine government to
recognise the special status of Crimea. That all sounds perfectly sensible, but
it is far removed from the trajectory that Putin appears to be on.
The reality is that Putin sees holding Ukraine within
Russia’s sphere of influence as a vital national interest that he is willing to
run pretty big risks to secure. What is more, it seems highly probable that he
does not take threats from Obama particularly seriously. He has seen at close
hand the American president’s disastrous vacillation over Syria, culminating in
the scuttling away from his own red line declaring punishment for the Assad
regime if it used chemical weapons. He no doubt also draws conclusions from big
American defence spending cuts in the pipeline and Obama’s extreme sensitivity
to the war-weariness of American voters.
If Putin believes (as he almost certainly does) that Obama
will do little more than deliver a petulant slap on the wrist, he will have no
compunction in putting into operation a familiar playbook. Everything that has
happened so far is almost a carbon copy of the tactics used to occupy and
effectively annex South Ossetia and Abkhazia in 2008: manipulate, provoke,
foment a sense of crisis that prompts an appeal for aid and then send in
Russian “peacekeepers”.
The difference is that Ukraine is a country of 46m people
with by no means insignificant armed forces of its own. It is also bankrupt,
and a majority of its people want to be Ukrainians, not subjects of a Russian
puppet government. Putin is thus unlikely to want to push things so far
that Russian forces get sucked into a hot war in Ukraine against fellow Slavs.
With his own economy stagnating, he will surely have second thoughts about
taking on the burden of an occupation. Furthermore, whereas after the early
1990s Russia never recognised that South Ossetia and Abkhazia were under Georgia's
control, it is a signatory of a 1994 treaty guaranteeing the territorial
integrity of Ukraine.
But Ukraine's size and importance also make the current
crisis a far more threatening security issue for the West than Russia’s
intervention in Georgia. While it is easy to criticise Obama’s infinite
capacity for thoughtful inaction, the dilemmas for Western diplomacy are real
enough. The problem is that like the fox, the West knows lots of different
things but is not sure what it really wants, while Putin is like the hedgehog
that knows just one big thing, namely that Ukraine, especially in the south and
east, is really part of Russia's world.
A military response to Russian aggression or the threat of
fast-track NATO membership for Ukraine are unthinkable. So the West will fall
back on lesser, diplomatic measures in an attempt to isolate Russia within the
international community. First, all seven of the other G8 members could say
they are not going to Sochi unless Putin backs off. Secondly, the US Congress
could substantially widen the application of the so-called Magnitsky Law to
include Putin and his Kremlin cronies. Thirdly, trade sanctions could be
applied including work to begin freezing Russian banks out of the international
financial settlement system. Fourth, a UN Security Council resolution could be
prepared condemning Russia for aggression against an independent country that
might attract the support of China (always first to denounce intervention in
the affairs of a sovereign state) even though Russia would, of course, veto it.
Last, the West needs to show ordinary Ukrainians that it will back the new
government and that it, not Russia, can offer a path to prosperity.
Russia is not the old Soviet Union, which was relatively
impervious to diplomatic and economic censure. Putin knows that Russia could
pay a high price for what it is doing in Ukraine. For now, he believes that the
risk is worth taking because he sees the West as supine and decadent, more
worried about keeping Russian oil and gas exports flowing than about standing
up for the idea of a Europe whole and free. It is now up to Obama whether he
wants to show the leadership that will prove him wrong. ‘The Economist’
No comments:
Post a Comment