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SERGEY
V. LAVROV is a member of the Editorial Board of Russia in Global Affairs
magazine. The present article was published in the August issue of this
magazine. Initially, the article was meant for publication in The Foreign
Affairs magazine but was never published there, because the magazine put
forward editing requirements which the author found unacceptable. See an
earlier article in MaximsNews.com.
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CONTAINING
RUSSIA: BACK TO THE FUTURE? by RUSSIAN
MINISTER OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS SERGEY V. LAVROV: 18/8/2007 (MaximsNews.com,
U.N.)
UNITED NATIONS - / www.MaximsNews.com@
U.N./
- 17 August 2007 – Influential
political forces on both sides of the Atlantic seem intent on starting a debate
on “whether or not to contain
Russia”. That appears to reflect actual sentiment and political strategies. I would
like to contribute as much as I can to this discussion.
The
mere posing of the question of containing Russia
appeals to the instincts of the past and suggests not so much the lack of
imagination as the fact that for some almost nothing has changed since the end
of the Cold War. It implies that the vision of the structure of international
relations that took shape in the Western alliance during the Cold War era be
mechanically projected to the rest of the modern-day world. The same motives
that stood behind the choice in favor of the containment policy have re-emerged
at the new stage of history.
Which
Russia to contain?
Indeed,
what does the containment of Russia
mean to achieve in our time? Let me emphasize that we are talking about a Russia
that has abandoned ideology, imperial and any other great designs in favor of
pragmatism and common sense. What is the purpose of containing a country that
has focused on its domestic development and has been successful in doing so? Our
country's internal strength due to the constructive work at home has naturally
translated into strengthening of our international position.
Russia's foreign policy represents a logical extension of the domestic one. We have
realistic and understandable aspirations, namely the maintenance of
international stability as a key condition for advancing our nation's further
development and natural evolution of international relations towards freedom and
democracy.
When
analyzing the ideological inertia that led the US
to the "transformational diplomacy", one may notice a substantial gap
between the foreign policy aspirations of
Washington
and
Moscow. It seems to be the core of the problem, at least a considerable part of it.
Russia
has had more than enough experience of revolutions, which are scattered
throughout the entire twentieth century of our nation's history. This century
has served as a sort of purgatory for the whole European civilization, which was
overcoming evil through exorcising its own ideological demons - various
extremist products of European liberal thought. For this reason, Russia
will never subscribe to any ideology-driven project, let alone borrowing it
from abroad.
The
Westphalian system, which has become a fashionable object of criticism in
certain circles, has placed differences in values beyond the scope of
intergovernmental relations. In this respect, the Cold War was a setback. Should
we really follow this path back, which can only lead to confrontation?
Ideology,
when confused with practical policies, obscures one's vision and reason. This
may be illustrated by the words of Zbigniew Brzezinski, who claimed that it had
been the
US
that provoked the Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. This suggests that the US
played a greater role than usually thought in giving birth to Al-Qaeda. The law
of "unintended consequences" more often than not works in situations
where ideology-inspired enthusiasm comes into play.
What
is the point of containing a country which is not overly ambitious and aspires
for things as simple as trade which the vast majority of our partners have been
successfully doing for centuries? While making use of our natural competitive
advantages, we increase investments in human resources and build up our capacity
of putting our economy onto the path of innovative development. Our economy is
getting back to normalcy in the sense that its growth is largely driven by
domestic consumer demand. We also make part of a world-wide trend of new
transnational corporations emerging in new economies and presenting a
competitive challenge to the "old" TNC. We plan to integrate further
into the global economy on the universally accepted terms and we will continue
to adapt our legislation accordingly.
In
contrast to the Soviet Union, Russia
is an open country that does not intend to be closed to anybody. Therefore,
there is no need for "opening" us. It is not us who erect walls today
- both physical (between and within the countries) and political ones. On the
contrary, we call for the removal of artificial obstacles in international
relations and visa barriers, including in our relations with the European Union.
What else could give more ironclad guarantees against unpredictable development
of a nation?
Russia
has
become a part of the universal consensus to the effect that democracy and free
market should form the basis of a social and political order and economic life.
Undoubtedly, we are just at the beginning of the road and far from being
perfect. However, we have chosen our path of development once and for all. As a
result of Russia's embarking upon the path of unprecedented change, which was extremely painful,
our society has reached a broad consensus over the pace and depth of the change.
This is the price of peace, domestic political stability and evolutionary
development free of upheavals. In the final analysis, a more mature democracy,
including a vibrant civil society and a well-structured party system, will be a
natural result of a higher level of social and economic development. I mean
primarily the emergence of a substantial middle class, which cannot come into
being overnight in any nation. It was only "tycoons" who emerged
overnight in the early 1990s, but these times are definitely over.
Global
energy and
Russia
Russia
has been
criticized for its natural role in the global energy sector. This is an obvious
manifestation of the complexes of those countries that cannot overcome
realization of their dependence on external sources of energy. However, energy
dependence is reciprocal. A balance of interests of all energy market players
was achieved on
Russia's initiative at the G8 Summit in
Saint Petersburg. A policy of "sitting on the pipeline" or on one's energy reserves
like a "dog in the manger" is not a wise choice for an
energy-exporting country. As elsewhere in the world, energy is considered to be
a strategic sector in
Russia. This is particularly true today, when we face a negative external reaction to
the strengthening of the country and its role in global politics. After all, Russia
has never failed to fulfill any of its obligations to importing countries or
hydrocarbon-supply contracts.
I
think it would be fair to say that we see our role in the global energy sector
as a means to safeguard our independence in foreign affairs. Are we to be blamed
for that, when, as it seems, the freedom of action and the freedom of speech
that we have secured in international affairs - by the way, we use both of them
in accordance with international law - are the main accusations brought against
us by those who frown upon a stronger Russia?
The
energy policy of the Russian Government is in line with the global trend towards
establishing State control over natural resources. Thus, 90 per cent of the
world's proven hydrocarbon reserves are, in some form, under State control. A
new balance has been struck in the global energy sector, where State-controlled
access to energy resources is offset by the concentration of cutting-edge
technology in the hands of private transnational corporations. Isn't it an
appropriate environment for cooperation based on competitive advantages of the
parties, each having equal rights and sharing the same objective of meeting the
energy requirements of the world economy?
Multilateral
diplomacy in the era of globalization
Russia
has
started pursuing a national foreign policy. This, indeed, is a dramatic
departure from the ideology-motivated internationalism, which used to underlie
foreign policy of the
Soviet Union. Multilateral diplomacy based on international law has become a universal means
governing relations at the global and regional levels.
There
are no objective causes for confrontation in a globalizing world - of course, if
we leave out the attempts to introduce ideology into international relations and
to re-militarize them. As globalization extended beyond the Western
civilization, the competition became truly global in nature. I am convinced that
this is the essence of the paradigm shift in international relations.
Competition now involves values and development patterns. And it must be fair.
This is a fundamental challenge for all.
Francis
the First, having lost the battle of
Pavia, wrote to his mother soon afterwards that "everything is lost save the
honour" (tout est perdu fors l'honneur). Similarly, no one will ever make
the West abandon its values and way of life against its wishes. Yet, it would be
logical to focus on one's competitive advantages, rather than impose one's
values on others. Here, it is appropriate to cite Dr. Eberhard Sandschneider,
Director of the Research Institute of the German Society for Foreign Policy. He
believes that the weakening of the West in this competition has been facilitated
by recent policies of the
United States, which "damaged tremendously the image of the West" in Asia and
Africa. "Over the last eight years, - he believes, - we have done nothing, or
almost nothing, to make our values attractive to the population of these regions
of the Earth". Why then hold Russia
responsible for that?
Global
challenges and threats came to the forefront of the global politics, calling for
a truly global response based on the widest possible international cooperation.
Cumbersome traditional "binding alliances", as well as "holy
alliances" against whoever it may be, fail to achieve these objectives. The
variety of interests and possibilities of participating in relevant
international efforts has given rise to the network diplomacy as the best means
of inter-State interaction within bilateral and multilateral frameworks. It is
logical that diplomacy has adopted the network approach developed by private
corporations and civil society. Unity of the method allows to achieve harmony in
all dimensions of international life.
The
foundation of the new international system is the emerging multi-polarity. This
is an undeniable objective reality. President Vladimir Putin stated the obvious
when he said in
Munich
that a "unipolar world" had failed to materialize. Recent experience
shows as clearly as ever that no State or group of States possesses sufficient
resources to impose unipolarity on the world. While this allegedly benign
simplification of inter-State relations - namely, their vertical hierarchy
structure - might seem attractive, it is utterly unrealistic. It is one thing to
respect America's cultural and civilizational identity, and another to profess
Americanocentrism.
Unipolarity,
after all, is an attempt at God's powers. The new system of international
relations is not an anarchy or a chaotic "Brownian motion". With
several leading actors on the global arena, collective leadership is needed to
manage international relations in a flexible way. This requires the ability to
bring various interests of partners to a common denominator and to act in
concert with other leading nations of the world.
Multi-polarity
does not predetermine confrontation in any way. Quoting Anna Akhmatova,
"the future casts its shadow long before it comes in". This future of
the world politics in the era of globalization is the United Nations, which on
many occasions during the Cold War only "cast its shadow". Nowadays,
this universal organization can and should really become pivotal for the entire
international system. The UN Charter provides all the grounds for that.
International
problems: to solve or to procrastinate?
In
their development, the international relations have come to a threshold where,
given the indivisibility of security and prosperity in the world of the 21st
century, any further delay in solving accumulated problems is fraught with
devastating consequences for all nations.
Unfortunately,
having inherited the Cold War problems, the international community embarked on
the course of creating new ones. The inertia of the ideology-motivated
unilateral responses has received its second wind nowadays. Hence "broken
china" everywhere, i.e. stalemates that cannot be resolved within old
approaches.
Again
and again, - be it in real fact in Iraq or Lebanon or at the level of analysis
concerning North Korea, Syria, Iran or the Sudanese province of Darfur, - one
has to admit that there are no force-based solutions for the existing problems.
Security cannot be stored for a rainy day, it is an ongoing vital process that
reveals the "daily bread" truth as regards international relations. It
is only normal relations and cooperation with all the countries, including the
"rogue States", their engagement in dialogue that can provide genuine
security nowadays and in a foreseeable future. One would find it difficult to
disagree with German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier that today's world
should be based on the willingness to cooperate rather than military deterrence.
Moreover, the incident when fifteen British servicemen were captured in the
Persian Gulf demonstrates that the human factor, including behavioral
motivation, is not in line with the objectives of the force-based policies,
defies it at a genetic level. Thus, should one persist in pursuing it and
deluding oneself?
Something
is obviously wrong in
Iraq
as regards purely military aspects of the situation, which is illustrated by
the number of personnel of the so-called "private military companies"
operating there. Those numbers have already reached 30 per cent of the coalition
strength. Those persons act beyond the limits of international humanitarian law,
distort the perception of the genuine role of the force factor in the Iraqi
settlement and inflict irreparable damage to the relations between
civilizations.
Complex
problems require an integrated approach. This is particularly true for the
situation around Iran. Relying only on coercion means running counter to the need of ensuring energy
security of
Europe
and of the entire world. In part, the solution should lie in a normalization by
all the countries of their relations with Tehran, which would also help address the issue of preserving the non-proliferation
regime.
Attempts
are being made to resolve the problem of Kosovo at the expense of the world
community, i.e. through creating a precedent going beyond the existing rules of
international law. Our partners' inclination to give way to the blackmail of
violence and anarchy is in clear contrast with the indifference shown in the
case of
Palestine, where we have witnessed similar situation for decades, while the
Palestinian
State
is still non-existent.
Absolute
security, by definition, is only possible at the expense of all other States.
This was rightfully pointed out by Henry Kissinger in his "Diplomacy".
Such a policy inevitably leads to isolation. Moreover, this absolute security
chimera is a dangerous temptation - when, according to Fyodor Dostoevsky,
"anything is allowed". Putting oneself beyond the international legal
framework is tantamount to an attempt to stand above the moral law, beyond good
and evil.
Today's
problems, including the controversial implications of globalization, cannot be
solved outside the moral standards. The Sermon on the Mount, the "Golden
Rule", and humility imply a moral law that is valid for international
relations as well. This seemed to be obvious to the current US
administration back at the outset of its term. Thus, in February 2001,
President Bush talked about the need for
America
to display more humility in international affairs (President Bush, addressing
the State Department employees, talked about the need for America
to “project its power with purpose and with humility” – Editors). Only
equality and universal application of international law, "where there is
neither Greek nor Jew", can help gain control over the global development.
If we don't do onto others like good Christians, would they do onto us the same
way?
Perhaps,
it is the collegiality of the Russian vision of the world that makes it easier
for us to understand this precept. The entire tragic history of
Russia
has taught us the ability to coexist. The search for agreement is the way to
strengthen the inter-civilizational accord. By contrast, the attempts aimed at
global inter-civilizational divide mean replication of the experience of
Bolshevism and Trotskyism.
Europe
:
overcoming the Cold War legacy
The
need to overcome the Cold War legacy is especially pressing in
Europe. The bloc-based policy of containment had dominated it for too long. Even now
we are facing a situation that can hardly be perceived as other than
reestablishment of a cordon sanitaire west of the Russian borders. Favoritism in
this part of
Europe
generates an unhealthy environment, it encourages the growth of nationalist
sentiment, which poses the main threat to the unity of the continent. Does it
mean the continued relevance of the old maxim of keeping the Americans in, the
Russians out and the Germans down?
Whatever
the reason, the European project found itself pushed back under the burden of
the politicized enlargement of the European Union. It appears that the policy of
containment was aimed not only at
Russia
but also at the entire
Europe, as one of the centres of the new world order. Moreover, Europe risks to face
an absurd situation when it will have to finance its own divide, given the
inability of the European Union to influence the position of some of its new
members obsessed with the idea of "containing"
Russia
and taking a kind of historical revenge. I am strongly convinced that current
problems faced by the European Union in particular and European politics in
general cannot be solved outside constructive and forward-looking relations with
Russia
based on mutual trust and confidence. This should serve the US interest too.
Instead,
various attempts are being made to contain
Russia. Thus, the NATO expansion continues in violation of previous assurances given
to Moscow
that this scenario would not happen. Today, they try to justify the enlargement
policy with the necessity "to promote democracy". However, such an
argument can only convince naive people. What does democracy have to do with the
military-political alliance, which in the course of its
"transformation" is consistently and increasingly producing scenarios
of a possible use of force?
Meanwhile,
an idea has taken shape to expand the NATO membership, this time, to the CIS
countries as some sort of a "pass" to the club of democracies. (Though
the readiness of various countries to stand the democracy test is invariably
measured by the sole criterion, i.e. the willingness to follow the policy of
others.) One can hardly understand whether such redevelopment of the
"Soviet legacy" is carried out for the sake of moral satisfaction or,
again, to contain
Russia.
As
far as the CIS is concerned, nobody will question the fact that Russia
possesses main resources to maintain social, economic and other forms of
stability in the region.
Moscow's rejection of politicized trade and economic relations and its adoption of
market-based principles – what could prove our determination to normalize
inter-State relations in this space in a more convincing fashion?
Russia
and the
West are well equipped to maintain cooperation in this region. This cooperation,
however, should be based on equality and respect, including respect for the
interests of the CIS countries, which need assistance in developing their
statehood without making them hostages to the notorious geopolitical
"zero-sum games".
The
"containment of Russia" philosophy correlates well with unilateral plans to station a
US
missile defense base in Europe. It is hardly coincidental that this base, like a missing piece of a jigsaw
puzzle, accurately fits into the picture of the
US
global missile defense system, deployed along the perimeter of Russian as well
as Chinese borders. It goes without saying that this strategic challenge will be
dealt with at the strategic level. Nobody can abolish the interrelation between
defensive and offensive strategic weapons. Many in Europe are rightfully
concerned over the fact that the stationing of elements of the US National
Missile Defense System in
Europe
is fraught with negative global consequences for the disarmament processes.
President
Putin's offer to use the Gabala radar station in
Azerbaijan
jointly with the
United States
and his recent proposals made in Kennebunkport
with a view to creating regional monitoring and early warning system provide an
opportunity to find a solution to the present situation with each party's
dignity intact. As a starting point of a truly collective effort in this field
we are ready to make an analysis of potential missile threats for the period of
up to 2020 jointly with the
US
and other states concerned, primarily those in
Europe. As President Putin noted, such cooperation could qualitatively transform
Russian-American relations in the security field and propel them to a higher
trust-based level. We would then discover the mutual trust that our countries so
desperately lack at the moment and would embark on a truly global strategic
alliance that would make its way towards a new multilateral collective security
system which was envisioned by the UN founding fathers.
The
intent to contain
Russia
clearly manifests itself in the situation of the CFE Treaty. We comply with the
Treaty in good faith and insist only on one thing for which it was concluded -
equal security. However, the problem is that the equal security principle was
compromised with the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact while NATO was left intact
and even enlarged. In the meantime, the attempts to correct the situation were
met with flat refusal of the NATO member countries to ratify the Agreement on
adaptation of the Treaty on Conventional Forces in
Europe
under pretexts, the legal untenability of which is clear to everybody who is
familiar with the documents of the 1999 Istanbul Conference. Thus, again,
policy, not law, is a case in point. That is to say, the very policy of
containment.
Arms
levels assigned to the Warsaw Pact countries under the CFE Treaty were included
in the NATO quota. This can hardly be called "equal security". Rather,
this is a desire to seize what previously was owned by others. The situation
reveals the attempts to reinvigorate bloc-based instincts and approaches and to
return to the "zero-sum game" logic. The situation with the CFE Treaty
clearly shows that any element of global or European security architecture that
is not based on the principles of equality and mutual benefit is not
sustainable.
In
the final analysis, if we cannot tailor this old instrument to fit the new
realities, perhaps time has come to review the current situation and to start
developing a new system of arms control and confidence-building measures. That
is, of course, if we find that modern
Europe
needs one. Sincere and honest discussions in
Kennebunkport
give us hope that a way can be found to implement the adapted CFE Treaty. This
would be possible if everyone complies with undertaken legal obligations without
false political pretexts.
Maybe,
it would be better to "clean up the site" of the European politics
getting rid of the Cold War legacy? Maybe, it would be better to start creating
new arms control and confidence-building structures that meet the requirements
of our time, given that we are not adversaries any longer and do not wish to
make a false impression that war is still a possibility in
Europe
?
Cooperation
without trust?
The
path to trust lies through candid dialogue and reasoned debate, as well as
interaction implying joint analysis of threats. It is precisely the latter that
Russia
is denied without any reasonable grounds. In fact, Russia
is urged to profess blind faith in the analytical abilities and good intentions
of its partners. But when it comes to national security concerns, this approach
does not look serious to say the least.
We
will respond adequately to safeguard our national security, and in doing so we
will be motivated by the principle of reasonable sufficiency. We will always
keep the door open for positive joint action to safeguard our common interests
on the basis of equality.
In
his Munich
speech President Vladimir Putin invited all our partners to a serious and
substantive discussion of the current status of international affairs, which is
far from satisfactory. We are convinced that a dual, i.e. partner/adversary,
attitude toward
Russia
ought to be a thing of the past. This is not the way of dealing with the
problem of trust and, hence, cooperation. If someone intends to "counter Russia's negative behavior", how could one possibly expect our cooperation in the
areas of interest to our partners? One has to choose between containment and
cooperation, including in such issues as
Russia's accession to the WTO and the Asian Development Bank, or the Jackson-Vanik
amendment, which has outlived its original grounds in the late 1980s.
Regretfully,
many of our Western partners tend to treat even such a crystal-clear issue as
the necessity to stop re-emerging neo-Nazi trends and the desecration of the
memorials to those who defeated fascism, under the influence of the same desire
to "contain"
Russia.
In
the era of globalization of security challenges and threats, there exists a big
difference between the presence of cooperation and the lack of it, between
collective action and the necessity for each State or group of States to stand
on its own and rely upon somebody else's wisdom unappealably presented as the
only possible recipe for dealing with world problems. We bear our responsibility
for world affairs, and nobody will do it for us. We do not have the
exceptionalism complex, nor do we have reasons to consider our analysis or our
ideas inferior to those of others. Interaction with
Russia
is only possible on the basis of full equality, respect for each other's
security interests and mutual benefit.
USA-Russia:
equal relationship
US-Russia
ties still benefit from the stabilizing effect of close and honest working
relations between Presidents Vladimir Putin and George W. Bush, which was again
vividly demonstrated by the recent
Walker's Point summit. Our peoples continue to share the memory of their joint victory
over fascism. The common experience of the Cold War and joint exit from it
unites us in its own right.
I
am convinced that should equal partnership prevail in US-Russia relations, then
very little will be impossible for both our nations. What we shouldn't allow to
happen is making US-Russia relations a hostage to electoral cycles in both
countries or, even worse, letting somebody else do it. This would mean
“washing hands off” vital interests of our peoples and the interests of
global stability.
Struggle
against international terrorism, organized crime and drug trafficking, search
for realistic ways of climate protection and nuclear energy development while
strengthening the non-proliferation regime, global energy security, exploration
of outer space and many other things - is it worth to sacrifice all these areas
of evolving practical cooperation at the altar of the containment policy?
It
would be regrettable if the inertia of bloc-based attitudes, all the more so if
they become conceptually codified by the return to the containment policy, and
unnecessary haste in dealing with issues that can wait, provoked alienation
between the
USA
and Russia. That would narrow the space for our interaction. This "shagreen"
effect can set its own dynamic in the relations, particularly if grass-root
Americans are persuaded that
Russia
is to blame for nearly all the troubles of their country.
Anti-American
feelings are not so widespread in Russia
as elsewhere. If we refer to George Kennan, it would be opportune not only to
quote the "Long Telegram", but also to take his advice as to how the
outside world should have behaved - not didactically and without imposing its
will - in the post-Soviet period of
Russia's history. In this regard, the creation of a Working Group "Russia-US:
Glimpse into the Future" co-chaired by H.Kissinger and E.Primakov could not
be more timely. Presidents Vladimir Putin and George W. Bush actively supported
this initiative, as well as establishing Jessica Mathews - Vladimir Lukin group
to discuss impartially the issues concerning development of democracy and
ensuring the human rights and freedoms.
Both
sides should display a broad-minded and unbiased vision. Such an approach could
be represented by the perception of
Russia
and the US
as two branches of the European civilization, each contributing its own share
of value added. We could meet at the “common table” on the basis of the
European view of the world. Tripartite interaction between the
US,
Russia
and the European Union in international affairs could become a practical
formula of preserving the integrity of the Euro-Atlantic space in global
politics. I can't but agree with Jacques Delors who believes that "future
development should lead to reaching a comprehensive agreement" within this
"troika". The ex-European Commission President is quite right in
saying that "America, Russia and the European Union are the three political
forces that are used to debating with each other" and that "every time
discords separate them and every party plays its own game, the risk of global
instability increases significantly".
Georgy
Adamovich, a prominent literary figure of Russian emigration, once noted that
pessimism is generated by dealing with people in respect of whom there remain no
illusions. I am convinced that neither the
US
nor
Russia
falls within that category.
I
believe that we are still capable of amazing the world. Both
Washington
and
Moscow
manage it separately. Why wouldn't we try to do it together? The more so that
all of us are to live in more cramped quarters of global economy and politics.
So why don't we stand together and act in the spirit of cooperation and sound
and fair competition on the basis of common standards and respect for
international law? We have nothing to divide between us, but share together with
other partners responsibility for the future of the world. In doing so we would
be up to the great future foretold for our two nations by A. de Tocqueville and
at the same time we could "contain" those who are attempting to
deprive contemporary world of the benefits brought about by US-Russia as well as
Euro-Atlantic partnership.
The
July meeting of the US
and Russian Presidents involving George Bush Sr. demonstrated the results which
can be achieved by "teamwork". Both leaders agreed to look for common
approaches to the anti-missile defense and the reduction of strategic weapons,
launched a new joint initiative in the field of nuclear energy and
non-proliferation. It is symbolic that they went fishing together, but they did
not “fish in troubled waters”.
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