There are some pertinent worries of Putin that the West disregards and downplays. Why is Nato expanding threateningly towards Russia? Was not one Cold War enough for the world? Is the US not militarily exploiting a unipolar world? To Putin’s mind, Russia needs no lecturing. Especially with its 1,000 years of history and a former status of a world power that not very long ago, as part of the Soviet Union, not only matched and challenged US military dominance but led, controlled and directed important world affairs. Russia continues to be bitter and resents the independence of the Baltic states and their quick ascendance as Nato member states. The current and ongoing efforts of the West to bring Georgia and Ukraine into the Nato fold also do not go down well with Putin’s Russia.
Putin, like any Western leader today, fights the security challenges that his country confronts. Russia rightly fears encirclement by Western powers. If it allows Ukraine to join the EU and Nato, its western borders will be directly threatened. It will also put to risk the security of one of the most important Russian naval bases located at Sevastopol in the Crimean Peninsula.
People in Crimea may have voted under the barrel of the gun but what about the opinion of the people in Poland where, according to a recent poll, 57 per cent people oppose the deployment of US missile system there? Half of the people in the Czech Republic oppose the deployment of US radars. Have the US or the EU given any importance to the public opinion in these countries?
If the referendum in Crimea is an unpopular political act conducted under the shadow of Russian military power, then the anti-Russian Nato expansion and other US military ventures are equally unpopular political and military acts that earn no favours from the people of Russia. Kremlin, on its part, has a duty to protect Russian sovereignty and also the lives of the Russian people. President Putin is doing just that.
The rapidly unfolding events concerning Ukraine clearly suggest that military confrontation between the Russians and the West is most unlikely, but the economic confrontation is definitely on. Leading the Western world, the US may impose economic sanctions, including an oil and gas embargo on Russia. It may shun Russia from the G-8 Summit and may also suspend its membership. But Russia sits on 50 billion barrels of oil and the world’s largest gas reserve. Even the annual trade that Russia conducts with the US and EU countries is momentous. This means that not just Putin’s Russia but the West, too, will feel the “return address heat” of the economic sanctions.
Lastly, despite American political and military resolve, it is the Russians who have prevailed and sought favourable solutions in a military conflict, at least, on two occasions. Firstly, President Bush in 2008 provided military aid to Georgia, even airlifted Georgian troops from Iraq and sent them home to fight Russian aggression. Result: Russia took control of a fifth of the Georgian territory and controls it to this day. Secondly, last year, the US threatened Syria with military strikes if it used chemical weapons in the ongoing civil war. That was the red line that President Barack Obama warned Syria not to cross. It did. Instead of initiating strikes, the US president conceded to the Russian offer to help dismantle Syrian stocks of poison gas. Result: the US preferred to avoid fighting a proxy in a Russian satellite state — Syria.
Arizona Senator John McCain’s recent statement that “Nobody believes in America’s strength any more,” aptly sums up why the Russian bear may again be waking up from its deep slumber. If pushed to a corner — it will fight back and bite.
Published in The Express Tribune, March 25th, 2014.
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COMMENTS (15)
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@Rex Minor: Dear Rex, We are more or less on the same wavelength. President Obama's European trip appeared to have all the glitter of a Hollywood set piece, such as lights, camera, action, as he met up with increasingly low caliber political figures. Added to this, his role which varied between a Knight straight out of Camelot coming to the rescue of European damsels in distress, and extracts from American mythology which was all about saving democracy from the brutal Russians in spite of the fact that 97.5 % of Crimean Ukrainians voted for Russia. Unfortunately for President Obama he has been out-maneuvered by Mr Putin, and is becoming yesterdays man. President Obama would be well advised to spend more of his time on domestic matters such as attempting to lift the US economy, which is on a downward spiral. An international statesman he is not.
@Sexton Blake
Mr Obama did put up a good show in his speaches in Hague and Brussels, considering that there is nothing that Mr Obama or the defunkt NATO can do anything against Vladamir Putin, the new heavy weight in the world. Now he is seeking audience with the Papa Francis to avoid humiliation at home. If only his NSA had not spied on the European leadership, things might have taken a different course.
Rex Minor
The key to the new Russia's rise was the renationalization key parts of soviet-built infrastructure. All major banks, all the oil industry and all the power supply is all state owned. Putin is restoring the Soviet Union and the Soviet system under a new flag and this time it has previous rivals China and Iran on it's side. This time its taking care to keep the upper hand in the struggle for hearts and minds.
All western protests against Russia are merely appeals to legalism made by hypocrites who happily lorded over the world and ended up making a bloddy mess of it in the past two decades and are now unwilling to accept the new reality.
@US CENTCOM: Dear Abdul, The US makes up new rules as it goes along, but only for other countries. It is difficult to keep up with the US, because nobody really knows what quaint new rules it will come up with next.
This is the 21st Century. No country can claim that just because this part of land was part of the “old country”, one day it would be annexed by force. On that pretext any country with a powerful military can annex any part of an independent nation, they would feel is strategically important for them. The world does not work that way and Mr. Putin should understand that quickly. President Obama said in Hague today, “He said that the US was committed to the defense of its NATO allies but that for non-member states along Russia's borders, Washington and the rest of the international community would use non-military pressure to counter Russian encroachment.” "Russia is a regional power that is threatening some of its immediate neighbors, not out of strength but out of weakness," the president said.
Abdul Quddus DET – United States Central Command
Great analysis completely agree with the author.Russia is a super power ,at the moment sleeping though.Recent decade of world politics suggests come back of Russia as a great super power playing responseble role in world politics.The notion -there is no free lunch, may not necessarily be true with Russia, an essential for a true super power.
@Parvez: Dear Parvez, What tremendous problems does Russia face? Russia is doing very well economically and is several billion dollars in surplus. Compare this with America which is 17 trillion dollars in debt on the current account and has hundreds of trillion of dollars in unfunded liabilities. So far Russia has out maneuvered America on several fronts with the latest being the American designed Ukraine.disaster.
Good, concise article. Why has NATO not disbanded? Instead it is spreading eastward? Given the history and population of Crimea; and indeed the referendum itself, I think the US has no locus standi to lecture Russia on Crimea
At last. A writer bringing a note of sanity into the US/EU created Ukrainian disaster..
That was a great read......... spelling out the story of the other side that in todays western dominated media, rarely comes out. What is becoming very apparent is that despite the tremendous problems Russia faces.........its pride seems to be intact but under wraps waiting to be freed. Lets see how successful Putin will be in doing that.