Is a ‘resurgent’ Russia a threat to the United States?
By Ivan Eland
Online
Journal Guest Writer
Nov 5, 2008, 00:18
The Russian military was clearly superior to that of a small
country in its “near abroad” -- Georgia -- but is a “resurgent” Russia a threat
to the United States? If the United States insists on expanding its informal
empire into Russia’s nearby sphere of influence, it has to expect some pushback
from a Russia that is no longer as weak as it once was and is resentful at
having been trampled on during the 1990s and early 2000s.
At the end of the Cold War, the United States pledged
verbally to Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev that if the U.S.S.R. allowed
Germany to reunite and embed in NATO, the U.S. would not expand the alliance,
which the bear perceives as hostile. The United States, however, violated this
promise and repeatedly expanded NATO -- inducting former Soviet Warsaw Pact
allies in Eastern Europe and even former Soviet republics (the Baltic states).
(Incredibly, even after the U.S. and NATO were proved impotent in helping
Georgia during its recent war with Russia, the Bush administration is still
pressuring its reluctant European allies to admit Georgia and the Ukraine, an
even more important former Soviet republic on Russia’s border). Further showing
that the U.S. foreign policy elite never ended the Cold War have been repeated
acts by both Democratic and Republican presidents to thumb their nose at a
weakened Russia -- for example, winning U.S. access to military bases in former
Soviet Central Asia, rerouting energy pipelines from the oil-rich Caspian Sea
around Russian territory, and planning to build missile defense installations
in the territories of former Soviet allies Poland and the Czech Republic.
But the bear is now coming out of a long hibernation a bit
rejuvenated. Using increased petroleum revenues from the oil price spike, the
Russians will hike defense spending 26 percent next year to about $50 billion
-- the highest level since the collapse of the Soviet Union. Yet as the oil price
declines from this historic high, Russia will have fewer revenues to increase
defense spending and rebuild its military.
Even the $50 billion a year has to be put in perspective.
The United States is spending about $700 billion per year on defense and
starting from a much higher plain of capability. After the collapse of the
Soviet Union, the Russian military fell apart and was equivalent to that of a
developing country. Even the traditionally hawkish U.S. military and defense
leaders and analysts are not worried about Russia’s plans to buy modern arms,
improve military living standards to attract better senior enlisted personnel,
enhance training, and cut back the size of the bloated forces and officer
corps. For example, Eugene B. Rumer of the U.S. National Defense University was
quoted in the Washington Post as saying that Russian actions are “not a
sign, really, of the Russian military being reborn, but more of a Russia being
able to flex what relatively little muscle it has on the global scale, and to
show that it actually matters.” [1]
In addition, the Russian military is very corrupt -- with an
estimated 40 percent of the money for some weapons and pay for personnel being
stolen or wasted. This makes the amount of real defense spending far below the
nominal $50 billion per year.
U.S. analysts say, however, that increased military spending
would allow Russia to have more influence over nations in its near abroad and
Eastern Europe. Of course, throughout history, small countries living in the
shadow of larger powers have had to make political, diplomatic, and economic
adjustments to suit the larger power. Increased Russian influence in this
sphere, however, should not necessarily threaten the security of the faraway
United States. It does only because the United States has defined its security
as requiring intrusions into Russia’s traditional sphere of influence. By
expanding NATO into Eastern Europe and the former Soviet Union, the United
States has guaranteed the security of these allied countries against a
nuclear-armed power, in the worst case, by sacrificing its cities in a nuclear
war. Providing this kind of guarantee for these non-strategic countries is not
in the U.S. vital interest. Denying Russia the sphere of influence in nearby
areas traditionally enjoyed by great powers (for example, the U.S. uses the
Monroe Doctrine to police the Western Hemisphere) will only lead to unnecessary
U.S.-Russian tension and possibly even cataclysmic war.
Note
1. Quoted in Thom Shanker, “Russia Is Striving to Modernize
Its Military, the U.S. Notes With Interest, Not Alarm,” New York Times, October 20, 2008, p. A8.
Ivan
Eland is Director of the Center
on Peace & Liberty at The Independent Institute and Assistant
Editor of The
Independent Review. Dr. Eland is a graduate of Iowa
State University and received an M.B.A. in applied economics and Ph.D. in
national security policy from George Washington University. He has been
Director of Defense Policy Studies at the Cato Institute, Principal Defense Analyst
at the Congressional Budget Office, Evaluator-in-Charge (national security and
intelligence) for the U.S. General Accounting Office, and Investigator for the
House Foreign Affairs Committee and Principal Defense Analyst at the
Congressional Budget Office. He is author of the books, The Empire
Has No Clothes: U.S. Foreign Policy Exposed, and Putting
“Defense” Back into U.S. Defense Policy.
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