U.S.
Vice President Joe Biden toured several countries in Central Europe last week, including the Czech
Republic and Poland. The trip comes just a few weeks after the United States
reversed course and decided not to construct a ballistic missile defense (BMD)
system in those two countries. While the system would have had little effect on
the national security of either Poland or the Czech Republic, it was taken as a
symbol of U.S. commitment to these two countries and to former Soviet
satellites generally. The BMD cancellation accordingly caused intense concern
in both countries and the rest of the region.
While
the Obama administration strongly denied that the decision to halt the BMD
deployment and opt for a different BMD system had anything to do with the
Russians, the timing raised some questions. Formal talks with Iran on nuclear
weapons were a few weeks away, and the only leverage the United States had in
those talks aside from war was sanctions. The core of any effective sanctions against Iran would be placing limits
on Iran's gasoline imports. By dint of proximity to Iran and massive spare
refining capability, the Russians were essential to this effort -- and they
were indicating that they wouldn't participate. Coincidence or not, the
decision to pull BMD from Poland and the Czech Republic did give the Russians
something they had been demanding at a time when they clearly needed to be
brought on board.
The Biden Challenge
That's
what made Biden's trip interesting. First, just a few weeks after the reversal,
he revisited these countries. He reasserted American commitment to their
security and promised the delivery of other weapons such as Patriot missile
batteries, an impressive piece of hardware that really does enhance regional
security (unlike BMD, which would grant only an indirect boost). Then, Biden
went even further in Romania, not only extending his guarantees to the rest of
Central Europe, but also challenging the Russians directly. He said that the
United States regarded spheres of influence as 19th century thinking, thereby
driving home that Washington is not prepared to accept Russian hegemony in the
former Soviet Union (FSU). Most important, he called on the former satellites
of the Soviet Union to assist republics in the FSU that are not part of the
Russian Federation to overthrow authoritarian systems and preserve their
independence.
This
was a carefully written and vetted speech: It was not Biden going off on a
tangent, but rather an expression of Obama administration policy. And it taps
into the prime Russian fear, namely, that the West will eat away at Russia's
western periphery -- and at Russia itself -- with color revolutions that result
in the installation of pro-Western governments, just as happened in Georgia in
2003 and Ukraine in 2004-2005. The United States essentially now has pledged
itself to do just that, and has asked the rest of Central Europe to join it in
creating and strengthening pro-Western governments in the FSU. After doing
something Russia wanted the United States to do, Washington now has turned
around and announced a policy that directly challenges Russia, and which in
some ways represents Russia's worst-case scenario.
What
happened between the decision to
pull BMD and Biden's Romania
speech remains unclear, but there are three possibilities. The first
possibility is that the Obama administration decided to shift policy on Russia
in disappointment over Moscow's lack of response to the BMD overture. The
second possibility is that the Obama administration didn't consider the effects
of the BMD reversal. U.S. Defense Secretary Robert Gates said the one had
nothing to do with the other, and it is possible that the Obama administration
simply failed to anticipate the firestorm the course reversal would kick off in
Central Europe and to anticipate that it would be seen as a conciliatory
gesture to the Russians, and then had to scramble to calm the waters and
reassert the basic American position on Russia, perhaps more harshly than
before. The third possibility, a variation on the second scenario, is that the
administration might not yet have a coordinated policy on Russia. Instead, it
responds to whatever the most recent pressure happens to be, giving the
appearance of lurching policy shifts.
The why
of Washington decision-making is always interesting, but the fact of what has
now happened is more pertinent. And that is that Washington now has challenged Moscow on the latter's core issues. However
things got to that point, they are now there -- and the Russian issue now fully
intersects with the Iranian issue. On a deeper level, Russia once again is
shaping up to be a major challenge to U.S. national interests. Russia fears
(accurately) that a leading goal of American foreign policy is to prevent the
return of Russia as a major power. At present, however, the Americans lack the
free hand needed to halt Russia's return to prominence as a result of
commitments in Afghanistan and Iraq. The Kremlin inner circle understands this
divergence between goal and capacity all too well, and has been working to keep
the Americans as busy as possible elsewhere.
Distracting Washington While Shoring Up
Security
The
core of this effort is Russian
support for Iran. Moscow has long collaborated with Tehran on Iran's nuclear
power generation efforts. Conventional Russian weapon systems are quite popular
with the Iranian military. And Iran often makes use of Russian international
diplomatic cover, especially at the U.N. Security Council, where Russia wields
the all-important veto.
Russian
support confounds Washington's ability to counter more direct Iranian action,
whether that Iranian action be in Lebanon, Afghanistan, Iraq or the Persian
Gulf. The Obama administration would prefer to avoid war with Iran, and instead
build an international coalition against Iran to force it to back down on any
number of issues of which a potential nuclear weapons program is only the most
public and obvious. But building that coalition is impossible with a
Russia-sized hole right in the center of the system.
The end
result is that the Americans have been occupied with the Islamic world for some
time now, something that secretly delights the Russians. The Iranian
distraction policy has worked fiendishly well: It has allowed the Russians to
reshape their own neighborhood in ways that simply would not be possible if the
Americans had more diplomatic and military freedom of action. At the beginning
of 2009, the Russians saw three potential challenges to their long-term
security that they sought to mitigate. As of this writing, they have not only
succeeded, they have managed partially to co-opt all three threats.
First,
there is Ukraine, which is tightly integrated into the Russian industrial and
agricultural heartland. A strong Ukrainian-Russian partnership (if not outright control of Ukraine by Russia)
is required to maintain even a sliver of Russian security. Five years ago,
Western forces managed to short-circuit a Kremlin effort to firm up Russian
control of the Ukrainian political system, resulting in the Orange Revolution
that saw pro-Western President Viktor Yushchenko take office. After five years
of serious Russian diplomatic and intelligence work, Moscow has since managed
not just to discredit Yushchenko -- he is now less popular in most opinion
polls than the margin of error -- but to command the informal loyalty of every
other candidate for president in the upcoming January 2010 election. Very soon,
Ukraine's Western moment will formally be over.
Russia
is also sewing up the Caucasus. The only country that could challenge Russia's
southern flank is Turkey, and until now, the best Russian hedge against Turkish
power has been an independent (although certainly still a Russian client)
Armenia. (Turkish-Armenian relations have been frozen in the post-Cold War era
over the contentious issue of the Armenian genocide.) A few months ago, Russia
offered the Turks the opportunity to improve relations with Armenia. The Turks
are emerging from 90 years of near-comatose international relations, and they
jumped at the chance to strengthen their position in the Caucasus. But in the
process, Turkey's relationship with its heretofore regional ally, Azerbaijan
(Armenia's archfoe), has soured. Terrified that they are about to lose their
regional sponsor, the Azerbaijanis have turned to the Russians to
counterbalance Armenia, while the Russians still pull all Armenia's strings.
The end result is that Turkey's position in the Caucasus is now far weaker than
it was a few months ago, and Russia still retains the ability to easily
sabotage any Turkish-Armenian rapprochement.
Even on
the North European Plain, Russia has made great strides. The main power on that
plain is the recently reunified Germany. Historically, Germany and Russia have
been at each other's throats, but only when they have shared a direct border.
When an independent Poland separates them, they have a number of opportunities
for partnership, and 2009 has seen such opportunities seized. The Russians
initially faced a challenge regarding German Chancellor Angela Merkel. Merkel
is from the former East Germany, giving her personal reasons to see the
Russians as occupiers. Cracking this nut was never going to be easy for Moscow,
yet it succeeded. During the 2009 financial crisis, when Russian firms were
snapping like twigs, the Russian government still provided bailout money and
merger financing to troubled German companies, with a rescue plan for Opel even
helping Merkel clinch re-election. With the Kremlin now offering to midwife --
and in many cases directly subsidize -- investment efforts in Russia by German
firms such as E.On, Wintershall, Siemens, Volkswagen and ThyssenKrupp, the Kremlin
has quite literally purchased German goodwill.
Washington Seeks a Game Changer
With
Russia making great strides in Eurasia while simultaneously sabotaging U.S.
efforts in the Middle East, the Americans desperately need to change the game.
Despite its fiery tone, this desperation was on full display in Biden's speech.
Flat-out challenging the Central Europeans to help other FSU countries recreate the revolutions they launched
when they broke with the Soviet empire in 1989, specifically calling for such
efforts in Belarus, Moldova, Georgia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan and Armenia, is as
bald-faced a challenge as the Americans are currently capable of delivering.
And to ensure there was no confusion on the point, Biden also promised --
publicly -- whatever support the Central Europeans might ask for. The Americans
have a serious need for the Russians to be on the defensive. Washington wants
to force the Russians to focus on their own neighborhood, ideally forgetting
about the Iranians in the process. Better yet, Washington would like to force
the Russians into a long slog of defensive actions to protect their clients
hard up on their own border. The Russians did not repair the damage of the
Orange Revolution overnight, so imagine how much time Washington would have if
all of the former Soviet satellites started stirring up trouble across Russia's
western and southern periphery.
The
Central Europeans do not require a great deal of motivation. If the Americans
are concerned about a resurgent Russia, then the Central Europeans are
absolutely terrified -- and that was before the Russians started courting
Germany, the only regional state that could stand up to Russia by itself. Things
are even worse for the Central Europeans than they seem, as much of their
history has consisted of vainly attempting to outmaneuver Germany and Russia's
alternating periods of war and partnership.
The
question of why the United States is pushing this hard at the present time
remains. Talks with the Iranians are under way; it is difficult to gauge how
they are going. The conventional wisdom holds that the Iranians are simply
playing for time before allowing the talks to sink. This would mean the
Iranians don't feel terribly pressured by the threat of sanctions and don't
take threats of attack very seriously. At least with regard to the sanctions, the Russians have everything to do
with Iran's blase attitude. The American decision to threaten Russia might
simply have been a last-ditch attempt to force Tehran's hand now that
conciliation seems to have failed. It isn't likely to work, because for the
time being Russia has the upper hand in the former Soviet Union, and the
Americans and their allies -- motivated as they may be -- do not have the best
cards to play.
The
other explanation might be that the White House wanted to let Iran know that
the Americans don't need Russia to deal with Iran. The threats to Russia might
infuriate it, but the Kremlin is unlikely to feel much in the form of clear and
present dangers. On the other hand, blasting the Russians the way Biden did might force the Iranians to reconsider their
hand. After all, if the Americans are no longer thinking of the Russians as
part of the solution, this indicates that the Americans are about to give up on
diplomacy and sanctions. And that means the United States must choose between
accepting an Iranian bomb or employing the military option.
And
this leaves the international system with two outcomes. First, by publicly
ending attempts to secure Russian help, Biden might be trying to get the
Iranians to take American threats seriously. And second, by directly
challenging the Russians on their home turf, the United States will be making
the borderlands between Western Europe and Russia a very exciting place.
By George Friedman and Peter Zeihan Stratfor, USA
|