Russia and America are rediscovering realpolitik
By Eric Walberg
Online Journal Contributing Writer
May 21, 2010, 00:20
As Russia returns to its logical, regional, strategic roots,
the US under Barack Obama is slowly waking up after its neocon nightmare.
The irony in current relations between Russia and America is
that the US has been far more ideological, perversely so, in the past two
decades than Soviet foreign policy ever was.
Russia is now expanding its economic and political relations
with its former comrades both in the �near abroad� and in the Middle East
without any of the scheming subtexts of Washington�s manoeuvring in the recent
past.
One of the many signs of this is the rapid realignment of
Ukraine since the election of President Viktor Yanukovich. Russian Prime
Minister Vladimir Putin not long ago floated the idea of merging Ukraine�s
national energy company Naftogaz Ukrainiy with the Russian gas giant Gazprom --
a move, gasped critics, that would put Ukraine�s strategic network of gas pipelines
effectively under Moscow�s control.
Gazprom Chairman Alexei Miller said Gazprom is considering
asset swaps with Naftogaz that would provide Gazprom with access to control
over the transit pipelines and underground gas storage facilities in exchange for
Naftogaz�s access to production assets inside Russia, as well as the
development of new gas fields. Ukrainian pipelines carry about 80 percent of
Russian natural gas exports to Europe. If the deals go ahead, this would mean
the end of the Nabucco pipeline, and Gazprom would probably abandon or scale
back the South Stream pipeline.
Putin and Ukrainian Prime Minister Mykola Azarov agreed to
create a joint holding company which would give Russia effective control over
the nuclear power industry in Ukraine and provide Russian access to Uranium ore
deposits. Russia and Ukraine would build a nuclear fuel enrichment facility in
Ukraine and provide a $5 billion credit to build two nuclear power generators
at the Khmelnitsk nuclear power plant. There are also acquisition deals in the
works in aviation and shipbuilding and steel and pipe manufacturing.
In addition to the renewal of the lease of the Black Sea
naval base at Sevastopol till 2042, Russia hopes to reopen a Soviet-era
submarine base in the Crimea and establish naval bases at Nikolayev and Odessa
on the Black Sea coast. �The planned expansion of the Black Sea Fleet is
Russia�s response to the NATO expansion to the East,� said Admiral Vladimir
Komoyedov, former Black Sea Fleet Commander, referring to the establishment of
NATO bases in Romania and Bulgaria. Russian President Dmitri Medvedev is
expected to sign an agreement on upgrading the Sevastopol base when he pays an
official visit to Ukraine next week.
Vladimir Belaeff, president of Global Society Institute in
San Francisco, says, �The current rapprochement between Ukraine and the Russian
Federation has been long coming.� Compounded by the Western financial meltdown,
former Soviet states are now turning to Moscow to renew capital and business
ties. Ukrainian-Canadian economist Vlad Ivanenko stated at Russian Profile.org
that it is �inappropriate to say that Russia is trying to buy Ukraine because,
economically, there are few Ukrainian assets worth buying at current market
prices. The need to secure long-term loyalty partially explains why Russia is
ready to pay an upfront premium for the right of exclusive use of Ukrainian
assets.�
This is a �pragmatic, creative and opportunity-driven
relationship� according to Belaeff. The two countries are much closer than,
say, the US and Canada, which are now virtually an integrated market with the
North America Free Trade Association. He sees the Gazprom and Naftogaz negotiations
as �a rescue project for the Ukrainian gas pipeline network considering the
general shortage of capital available,� and along with the other deals will
help stave off collapse of the dysfunctional Ukrainian economy. This is a
win-win situation for a Europe teetering on the brink of financial collapse, if
not for Washington military strategists.
Russian President Dmitri Medvedev�s recent visit to Syria
and Turkey further confirms that international relations are beginning to make
sense again. Medvedev and Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad agreed economic
deals including arms sales, and Russia will upgrade the former Soviet naval
base in Tartus, which along with the Ukrainian naval bases will give Russia a
much higher profile in the region.
From Damascus, Medvedev went to Istanbul, and signed deals
on building gas and oil pipelines, transporting oil from the Black Sea via the
Samsun-Ceyhan pipeline, and building Turkey�s first nuclear power station.
Ukraine, Syria, Turkey -- these rapid developments are a
renewal of Soviet foreign policy, albeit in a very different form. As for
relations between Russia and the West, there is a return to what was
traditionally known as detente, most notably the signing of the renewed START
treaty and the ongoing Nuclear Non-proliferation Treaty conference in New York,
where the main agenda item is to make Israel join, with both the US and Russia
in agreement. This is realpolitik at its best.
The Bush-Clinton-Bush leadership abandoned realpolitik
to try to force the new, weaker Russia to accept a subservient role in the new
world order, � la Britain or Latvia, and when this failed, tried to revive the
Cold War. The Putin/Medvedev policy is to patiently push ahead with a European
project, restructuring the economy along European lines, all the while
maintaining an independent military force, using groupings like BRIC, the SCO
and CSTO to keep from falling into the B-C-B trap. The Gorbachev/Yeltsin
white-flag period is now behind, though it will take decades for Russia to undo
the damage they caused.
Obama is being forced by events in Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran
and Israel to come to terms with this reality. Russia accepted the invasions of
Afghanistan and Iraq in the heat of the post-9/11 frenzy, but will not accept
further NATO encroachment or a US invasion of Iran. It allows NATO supplies to pour
through its territory on their way to Afghanistan, and grudgingly allowed the
US base in Kyrgyzstan a year�s grace period, but its red lines have been
clearly drawn.
It could do little as NATO swallowed up Eastern Europe and
bits of the ex-Soviet Union, and allowed Ukrainian NATOphiles five years to
wreak their havoc until Ukrainians came to their senses themselves. But just as
Napoleon and Hitler were destroyed by overstretch, so NATO and the US itself
are living on borrowed time (and increasingly meaningless US dollars). What
looks like �one step forward, two steps back� in Obama�s relations with Russia
is really an indication that the NATO/US retreat has already begun.
Despite the inertia of the Bush legacy, the world is
rediscovering traditional balance-of-power international relations. The
responsibility of Russia is to make sure the retreat happens in a way that does
not result in all-out war.
Eric Walberg writes for Al-Ahram Weekly. You can reach him at ericwalberg.com.
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