The BRICS have brusquely quashed an early effort by
Australian foreign minister Julie Bishop and prime minister Abbott to exclude
Russia from the Brisbane G20 over its actions in Ukraine. Though diplomatically
phrased, the meaning was clear: ‘The custodianship of the G20 belongs
to all Member States equally and no one Member State can unilaterally determine
its nature and character’.
The G20 needs to find a more effective mechanism to deal with
international security issues. There’s both a positive and a defensive agenda
here. The defensive agenda is simply to not allow geopolitical tensions, which
are on the rise, to interfere with the core financial and economic work of the
G20. The positive agenda is that there are a subset of international security
issues — transnational terrorism, piracy, organised crime, infectious disease,
perhaps even some set of weak or failed states — where the interests of the
great and major powers (the G20 membership more or less) roughly align, and
where the G20 members could drive forward innovation.
The G20 did have to grapple with the Syria crisis during the Russian
presidency, in St Petersburg in 2013. Scholars and practitioners of the G20 had
previously mooted the pros and cons of dealing with international security
issues within the G20, but as always, events trumped theory. The timing of the
crisis involving chemical weapons use by the Assad regime meant that the issue
couldn’t be kept out of the G20 chambers. Perhaps surprisingly, participants in
that discussion report that there was a reasonably mature discussion of Syria,
and that it didn’t derail the economic work of the rest of the Summit — though
it did dominate the headlines and dull the message of the Summit about
continuing to resist protectionist measures.
In Syria, though, the members of the G20 were in proxy competition, but
not in active confrontation. Ukraine is different. Now, the G20 faces a situation
where one of its members, Russia, is in active diplomatic, political and legal
confrontation with other members — it is an active military participant in a
crisis to which the EU and the United States are interested parties and is
under sanctions from the West. And Russia’s annexation of Crimea was not just
an act of conflict: it threatened the most important legal and political
foundation of the international order, namely the non-use of force to acquire
territory.
So it may be understandable that Bishop sought to exclude Russia from
the Brisbane G20. The immediate reaction from the rest of the BRICS, though,
made clear that trying to exclude Russia from Brisbane would be very costly —
that it might not be possible without breaking the G20 itself. For China and
India and other emerging powers, membership of the G20 is not only an important
symbol of their rise, it’s a seat at what many of them view as the top
decision-making table on international affairs, certainly international
economic affairs.
Many commentators in the West saw the BRICS standing behind Russia’s
participation in the G20 as evidence of BRICS support for Russia’s actions in
Ukraine. What actually motivated the BRICS was a firm intent to assert the
principle that they couldn’t be excluded from international decision-making at
the say-so of the West. Those days are behind us.
If that will make for an awkward encounter between the West and Russia
at the G20, there’s nevertheless a silver lining here. Given that we may well
experience over the course of the next decade a simultaneous financial and
security crisis involving the top powers, it may prove useful that there’s
precedent for not excluding one of the G20 members because of a political or
security crisis. Imagine, for example, that we were facing a new round of
financial crisis involving China, but that simultaneously China, the US and
Japan were involved in a tense diplomatic or military stand-off in the East
China Sea. Would it make sense to exclude China?
And Russia may well prove to be reasonable within the G20 — after all,
they have to worry not just about the West’s reactions but also India’s and
China’s, and neither of those countries would take kindly to having Mr Putin
turn the G20 into a platform for grandstanding against the West, at the price
of loss of progress on the economic front.
The Brisbane meeting may be a harbinger of much that’s to come. We may
face a situation where Russia acts as a spoiler within many international
mechanisms. So far, that’s not what we’re seeing: Russia is blocking action on
Syria and Ukraine, where it’s an active party to the conflicts; but it’s
simultaneously supporting other UN Security Council action in Africa. We’re not
seeing Russia move to hamper NATO operations in Afghanistan, which it could. In
the Arctic, it continues to behave like a responsible state. It hasn’t thrown a
wrench in the nuclear negotiations with Iran, which again it easily could.
So far, Russia is containing its clash with the West to the specific
fights in Syria and Ukraine; but if the situation in eastern Europe remains as
it is, or escalates further, if sanctions deepen and if tensions between Russia
and the West mount, that behaviour may change. Ironically, because of the
presence of China and India, and their vested interests in the G20’s
performance, Brisbane may be one place where Putin is better behaved. I still
don’t envy Julie Bishop, though.
Bruce Jones is Deputy Director
for Foreign Policy at the Brookings Institution, Washington.
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