Tag: United States

Money talks

Charles King (not further identified) says in this morning’s New York Times:

Mr. Putin used a novel justification for his country’s attack on a neighboring state: protecting the interests of both Russian citizens and “compatriots” — code not just for ethnic Russians but for anyone with a political or cultural disposition toward Russia.

Novel is in the eye of the beholder.  Only someone unaware of the dissolution of former Yugoslavia in the 1990s could call this notion novel.  And only someone unfamiliar with the doctrine of responsibility to protect could call it R2P, as King does. Strategic interest is far more important to Putin than protection of civilians, no matter what their nationality. Crimea may be an ethnic mosaic to King, but it offers a nice warm water port with a mostly friendly local population to Putin.

The question is Lenin’s:  what is to be done?  In the Administration they are concluding correctly that there is little the West can do to reverse the situation in the near term.  None of the tough talk includes tough action.  Kicking Russia out of the G8, canceling trade missions, travel bans, visits to Kiev and consultations with allies are all more symbol than substance.  Even reviving missile defense is not something that will force Russia out of Crimea any time soon.  The offer of European observers to protect the Russian-speaking population of Crimea is clever–because Putin will reject it, thereby undermining in Western eyes his rationale for sending in troops–but it will do nothing to alter the situation on the ground.  Russian troops are in Crimea to stay for the foreseeable future. Read more

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It’s all over but the shouting

1.  Former Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich held his first press conference yesterday since fleeing Kiev in Rostov on Don, in southern Russia not far from the Sea of Azov (and Crimea).  He was not in Moscow and has only talked to Russian President Putin by phone.  Putin has not committed to back Yanukovich’s claim to still being President, or his insistence on Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.

2.  President Obama went to the briefing room to warn Russia

the United States will stand with the international community in affirming that there will be costs for any military intervention in Ukraine.

What those costs might be is not clear.  There are rumors of canceling a G-8 meeting, which won’t bring tears to Russian eyes.

3.  The Prime Minister of Crimea has asked Putin for help.  Security contractors who work for the Russian military have taken over Crimea’s airports and pro-Russian paramilitaries have taken over government buildings in the province.  Russian helicopters have flown into Crimea. Read more

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The global chessboard

Barack Obama may not think he is playing on “some global chessboard,” but it is pretty clear Vladimir Putin does.  The contest is no longer an ideological one between the “free world” and Communism.  It is a pragmatic one between democracy and authoritarianism.  Which one can satisfy stakeholders sufficiently to survive the long run?  There is nothing inevitable about the triumph of democracy, though associated with wise economic management it is difficult to beat on the merits.

Authoritarians tend to abuse their political power for economic benefit.  There can be no clearer illustration of this phenomenon than erstwhile Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovich, whose palatial abode and documented graft are now open for all to see, even if the man himself has disappeared.  It isn’t pretty.  He seems to have lost even Russia’s backing, which has now been reduced from a $15 billion loan to a few fulminations from Prime Minister Medvedev.

If Moscow is going to act against the parliamentary takeover that Ukraine has witnessed, it won’t be to put Yanukovich back on his gold-plated toilet seat but rather to seize control of Crimea and perhaps a few provinces of eastern Ukraine.  The precedents are clear:  Trans-Dniester in Moldova as well as South Ossetia and Abkhazia in Georgia host Russian troops, supposedly to protect them from their Russian-speaking inhabitants from the depredations of the authorities elected to serve in their capitals.  Moscow could easily trump up that scenario in Crimea, where most of the population is Russian-speaking and loyal to Moscow rather than Kiev, which has been their capital only since 1954. Read more

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Wait and see

Secretary of State Kerry today urged Russian Foreign Minister Lavrov to accept the Ukrainian parliament’s dismissal of President Yanukovich and its appointment of an acting president and prime minister.  This follows on Susan Rice’s warning yesterday against Russian military intervention.  There is a great deal riding on Moscow’s responses.

Judging from past performance–something our stock brokers warn us not to do–Russia will be deaf to American pleas.  When and where pro-Russian populations have managed to carve out an area of territorial autonomy in former Soviet republics, Moscow has been unwavering in its support:  witness Trans-Dniester in Moldova as well as Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia.  If some of the eastern provinces of Ukraine were to resist the new authorities in Kiev and declare themselves autonomous or even independent, Moscow would be tempted to provide what support they require, including troops.  They wouldn’t invade.  That’s so twentieth century.  They could respond to a request for assistance to prevent atrocities. Read more

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Tilting the playing field

We tend to treat adversaries as monolithic, especially when they label themselves an Islamic republic and put at its apex a Supreme Leader.  So I was attracted to the launch today of the Washington Institute’s Leadership Divided by Nima Gerami, with Mehdi Khalaji commenting and Mike Eisenstadt moderating.  Germani maps out the factional differences among Iranian elites:

  • those who unreservedly support Iran’s nuclear program and believe Iran has the right to develop nuclear weapons as a credible deterrent against perceived external threats (nuclear supporters)
  • those who advocate permanently rolling back Iran’s nuclear program in favor of other national interests (nuclear detractors)
  • those who are willing to accept temporary constraints on Iran’s uranium-enrichment-related and reprocessing activities—thereby lowering the degree of nuclear weapons latency—to end Iran’s international isolation (nuclear centrists)

He also maps their influence, based on past experience:

Nuclear centrists have traditionally exerted the greatest influence when Iran is faced with increased internal and external pressures, whereas nuclear supporters have ascended to power when these threat receded. Nuclear detractors have never enjoyed influence equal to the centrists and supporters, primarily because they have been cast out or marginalized from the system as a result of political infighting.

So what, I asked, should the US do and not do to increase the likelihood of a positive outcome to the comprehensive nuclear talks (defined as pushing back nuclear breakout to a year or more)?

Germani was reluctant to respond beyond saying that understanding elite views is useful, but under pressure offered that we should be cautious about letting up on sanctions, which are vital to pushing the Iranians in the right direction (presumably because the pressure strengthens the centrists).  Eisenstadt warned that efforts to game our adversaries’ internal fissures often don’t work out well but also added that the threat of military action should be clear and credible but private.  Putting it out in public doesn’t help.

Khalaji noted that nuclear supporters are feeling pressure to justify the nuclear program as a contribution to Iran’s energy requirements.  Patrick Clawson underlined that the more Iranians know about the nuclear program, including its very large costs and risks, the less likely they are to support it, especially after the Fukushima disaster.  Public pressure may not count for much, but it has some influence on what the Supreme Leader thinks possible and not.

On other factors affecting Iranian decision-making, it was noted that the Stuxnet computer virus and assassinations of Iranian nuclear scientists have discouraged some technically competent people from working in the nuclear program, presumably slowing it.  The Supreme Leader’s fatwa against nuclear weapons has not been important, both because it is ambiguous (still never written down!) and because in the Islamic Republic government authorities can overrule any religious strictures and even constitutional provisions.

So no silver bullets here.  But the Iranian nuclear challenge is in many ways the most serious national security issue we face for the moment.  It could lead to war, or a nuclear arms race in the Gulf, or to Iranian hegemony in the region and an Iranian threat to Israel.  None of that is good from an American perspective.  Tilting the playing field away from the nuclear supporters and towards its centrists and detractors could help enable a comprehensive nuclear agreement that still, however, seems far off.

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Five stars

I am grateful to the five-star reviewers who have commented on Righting the Balance: How You Can Help Protect America at Amazon.com.  So here they are:
A New Diplomatic Power: You, February 14, 2014
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This review is from: Righting the Balance: How You Can Help Protect America (Hardcover)
This is one of those rare books that when you reach the last page you have a moment of shocked disappointment that there isn’t more. I had been completely won over by Serwer’s vision and was ready to see more detail about how to make it happen when my Kindle announced the last page.
After I got over my disappointment that the book was really over, I went back to look at the paragraphs I had bookmarked. Almost all of them related to the role of citizen diplomacy. I had expected that the book would be mostly about government institutions and what they should and shouldn’t be doing. But what was most interesting about his arguments was how much the world has changed to allow individuals to have a greater impact, more even than the foreign affairs bureaucracy and in far more varied ways.  The core of Serwer’s book is about how to take advantage of that change, how to reflect the power of individuals and communities and civil society groups in shaping and implementing a foreign policy agenda. That means not only a major shift for the institutions and the people involved but for the nature of the agenda itself. Read more
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