
#12
Expert
No. 1
January 13, 2003
A PYRAMID BALANCED IN CHAOS
Russia's new role in the world
Author: not indicated
[from WPS Monitoring Agency, www.wps.ru/e_index.html]
RUSSIA IS SUPPOSED TO TAKE AN ACTIVE PART IN DEVELOPING OF A NEW SYSTEM OF
AGREEMENTS, IN THE CREATION OF NEW RULES OF THE GAME, CREATION OF A NEW BALANCE
OF POWER. THIS INVOLVES ITS NATIONAL INTERESTS AND ITS TRADITIONAL FUNCTION AS
ONE OF THE WORLD'S LEADING NATIONS.
President Vladimir Putin's visit to Japan will be his first official visit in
2003. In the past, long before Russian-Japanese summit meetings, media headlines
featured speculation related to the problem of the South Kurils: whether Russia
would give them to Japan, and if it would - whether it would be by parts and on
what terms. The official sources regularly leaked reports that the matter was
decided and Russia would supposedly give the islands away. The patriots were
objecting, while the liberals were pointing to human values, international
treaties and economic benefits. There's no agitation now, because everybody -
here and there - knows that we won't give up the islands; in particular, this
means that Russia's foreign policy has finally become predictable.
As far as the diverse old treaties to which the most obstinate of the
Japanese refer are concerned, it would be extremely stupid of Russia to refer to
them during the epoch when the entire system of international treaties concluded
previously was totally collapsed and it wasn't Russia to do that, despite its
will and interests.
According to Henry Kissinger, there are three versions of the world order:
chaos, a balance of forces and a pyramid of supremacy of a single power. After
the Soviet Union and the Warsaw Pact disappeared, the balance of forces vanished
either. As everybody seemed to comprehend at first, the time for America's
pyramid of supremacy came for a long time. However, the events of September 11
proved that the pyramid was towering above the chaos and its ability to stand up
against the challenges of terrorism, the anti- globalization movement,
proliferation of the nuclear weapons should yet be vindicated. Moreover, the
pyramid as such was a virtual entity in many aspects. Its only real part is the
stem - the supremacy of the US, which enjoys overwhelming military-technical and
economic superiority above all other countries.
America's strategic unity even with its traditional smaller partners is
becoming more and more dubious. The uniting Europe and the US are demonstrating
a serious gap in approaches to the majority of global problems. The US neither
signed the Kyoto Protocol, nor joined the agreements banning the testing of
nuclear, biological weapons, antipersonnel mines, many other humanitarian
projects. The EU has its own, very much distinguishable view from the one the US
has on the problems of settlement in the Middle East and Iraq.
The EU has almost caught up with America by its main economic indicators and
the euro has been giving the dollar the edge on the continent. Sociologists note
an unprecedented upheaval of the anti- American spirits in Europe.
The Bush's administration, which came to power following a decade of
unprecedented economic growth and world supremacy, was ready to resume and
develop the single-polar policy. However, the economic and political adversities
that followed shortly after made it revise something. Nowadays, two tendencies
are struggling one another in the American elite; the new is realizing that the
US will fail to cope with the role of the world police state and the world
manager all by itself and that resumption of the one-sided policy might result
in the country being isolated, rather than being the leader.
America's activity in the foreign policy scene therefore looks contradictory;
its impudent one-sided actions are alternating with attempts of establishing
equitable cooperation with the countries, which don't want to be parts of the
American pyramid, but are ready to fix the impaired world order jointly with the
US. Russia has proved to be the first among such states.
Contrary to the accustomed opinion, the Cold War didn't end with the collapse
of the Soviet Union. The inertia of the doctrinal Russophobia was continued
through the 1990's and hasn't died away completely nowadays. The West was
continuing surrounding and isolating Russia, expanding NATO; its relation to the
former Soviet republics was inversely as its current political proximity to
Moscow. Keeping the weakening Russia away from nuclear excesses and, in the
long-term outlook, annihilating its strategic and geopolitical potential was
considered to be the chief task.
The Cold War was ended on September 11, 2001, the very day another war
against Islamic terrorism started.
Shortly after the September attacks, the US announced four main targets of
its policy in spheres of international relations and national security. Given
below is how Andrew Kutchins, director of the Russian and Strategic Programs of
the Carnegie Foundation accounted of these tasks:
"On the part of the US, the fundament of the new Russian-American
partnership is based on the revision of the US's targets in the sphere of
foreign policy and security, which include: 1) successful prosecution of war
against international terrorism; 2) intensification of efforts aimed at
preventing proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and means of delivering
them; 3) peaceful management of the upsurge of China as a great power; 4)
stability of the world energy maintenance... Efficient achievement of these
targets is only possible in cooperation with Russia. At bottom of fact, no other
country can offer more for implementation of these targets than Russia."
Indeed, Russia has some decisive advantages as a participant of the
antiterrorist coalition and guarantor of the international order. Firstly, it
still retains the powerful military potential and developed intelligence
network. Secondly, the arc of the world Islamic terrorism is margining Russia's
southern border and even infringes on its territory in some places.
The heroic operation on releasing hostages, captured by a group of Islamic
kamikazes at the Theater Center in the Dubrovka in Moscow proved that the
Russian security structures are capable of resolving the hardest combat tasks
under conditions of the modern total terrorist war.
It also became clear that the process of the country's state degradation has
stopped, society is being consolidated, authority of the central power and
controllability have been restored on all levels.
On the threshold of a big war in the Persian Gulf, the role of Russia as the
largest exporter of energy resources has increased. Russia, which has acquired
the top place in oil extraction and is confidently holding the palm in the
sphere of natural gas extraction is now capable of giving the West a hand in
case the state of the Persian Gulf declare an energy blockade.
Particularly, this was the point under negotiation at the conference of
ministers of fuel and energy of the G-8 member states held in Detroit and the
Russian-American energy summit meeting in Houston. Having the entire complex of
nuclear armaments, technologies and control systems for them along with the US,
Russia remains the key guarantor of nonproliferation of weapons of mass
destruction.
The matter whether or not China has the most state-of-the-art military
hardware, technologies and armaments primarily depends on Russia, since it has
been the chief supplier of these to China.
Moscow's unspent diplomatic resources have proved to be claimed for.
At a regular G-8 summit in Canada, Russia was granted powers in the cause of
Indian-Pakistani settlement. Russia's role in the Middle East, where it enjoys
the trust of both the Arabs, the Jews and is confided in the Korean dialog, is
unique.
Russia remains on the top ten of the world's largest economies and has been
demonstrating dynamic growth for the fourth consecutive year, against the
background of stagnation in the Western economies. In the receded 2002, both the
EU and America conferred the status of market economy on Russia; the Council
Russia-NATO was created in May. All of this enables many of the domestic and
Western politicians say that our relations are as good as never before in
history.
The parties continue doubting the opportunity of stable strategic cooperation
and give one another a sufficient amount of grounds for that. Despite abrupt
objections on the part of the US, Russia is continuing its nuclear cooperation
with Iran, political contacts with the regime of North Korea and, in its own
turn, is criticizing America for its preparation of a military operation in
Iraq. Washington has highlighted its presence in the post-Soviet states -
Uzbekistan, Kyrgyzstan and Georgia, using the anti-terror tasks to account for
it.
The official Moscow is trying to offer quiet response to that, but it doesn't
obviously like this. Having visited Bishkek in December, Vladimir Putin attended
the ceremony of opening a military base of the Collective Security Treaty member
states (Russia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan, Armenia). The salt
of the situation is that an American-French military base is located in the
vicinity.
At the same time, the Russian generals have shown their sheer anxiety for the
fact that "a vacuum may emerge" in the region after their Western
colleagues withdraw when the UN mandate elapses, even though the colleagues
haven't expressed their willingness to leave.
The heated debate with the EU surrounding a rather simple issue of granting
an opportunity to travel to other areas of Russia for residents of the
Kaliningrad enclave, a flat refusal of the majority of Europe's political forces
to understand Russia's problems in Chechnya, occasionally emerging
"anti-dumping scandals" surrounding the Russian exports prove that
nobody intends to make concessions or give an easy time for Russia and nobody
intends to let it enter any markets.
There was an opinion in Russian society in early 1990's (which was supported
by the obscure promises of the leaders of the advanced Western states) that
Russia should be "rewarded" for the victory over communism, voluntary
and early withdrawal from Germany, dismissal of the social camp, refusal of
confrontation, etc.; that it would be given assistance in restructuring its
economy, its debts will be remitted, etc. Nowadays, Russia is expecting a reward
for participation in the world anti-terror campaign.
After all, it has done everything to suit its own goals, rather than for the
West or the East. Russia has come to a sad understanding that no reliable
friends could be achieved in the outer world; that a place both in the new world
order and the world economy should be struggled for. In this aspect, the matter
can only deal with tactical alliances.
Even if they wanted, neither America, nor Europe and the UN could guarantee
security and observation of its economic interests to Russia. Without special
favor to nobody, Russia chose the tactics of "multilateral
bipolarity," which was displayed in late 2002 when within three weeks Putin
held bilateral negotiations with leaders of the EU, the US, China, India and
finished his tour in Kyrgyzstan, with discussing cooperation between CIS states.
This series of agreements now remains the only reliable medium of ensuring the
country's security and interests.
The new American National Security Strategy was published in September 2002.
As this document has it, in case the US government determines that any state can
pose a threat to America in the future or in case a state is concealing in its
territory a group which is posing a potential threat, the US would hold a
forestalling action in that state to eliminate the threat by means of changing
the ruling regime if necessary.
This marked the end of the entire system of the world order, existing since
the adoption of the Treaty of Westphalia in 1648, which recognized absolute
sovereignty and legal equality of the states. Thus far, these principles have
been considered unshakable, although they have been violated many times.
Abrogation of the national sovereignty as the basis of legality and legal
order is threatening with a new redistribution of the world, experts in the
sphere of international law assume. The Strategy caused a deep agitation among
European politicians and lawyers, whereas it faced almost no objections in
Russia.
The post-Soviet Russia interpreted the preceding cancellation of the Yalta
Agreements of 1944 and the mass reformation of borders, which the exultant
Europe perceived as the triumph of justice. A new America's step in this
direction was quite predictable and, taking into account the new challenges to
the mankind, even indispensable.
Moscow's doctrine of foreign policy should lie in the following: a collapse
of the world order should neither cause chaos, nor war against everybody and
pyramid-like supremacy. Russia is supposed to take an active part in the
elaboration of a new system of agreements, in the creation of the new rule of
the game, creation of the new balance of forces. This involves its national
interests and its traditional function of one of the world leaders.
(Translated by Andrei Ryabochkin)
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