
#2
Pragmatic Russia in balancing-act over Iraq: analysts
February 13, 2003
AFP
Russia is playing a finely balanced hand over Iraq, supporting the anti-war
camp led by France and Germany but careful not to put itself in irreversible
opposition to the United States, analysts say.
With the chief UN weapons inspectors to make a crucial report before the UN
Security Council on Friday, President Vladimir Putin has appeared to toughen his
stance, backing a peace initiative by Paris and Berlin during a visit to the two
European capitals.
He even warned Wednesday that Moscow may use its veto in the Security Council
if the United States seeks authorisation for a strike on Baghdad and reiterated
his view that the unilateral use of force against Iraq is "totally
unacceptable."
However, the Russian leader is a pragmatist who attaches huge importance to
his good relationship with US President George W. Bush, and will not try to
block US war plans if Washington pushes ahead with its offensive, commentators
believe. "There will not be any direct support for the US if they go and
attack Saddam. But we will not be as hostile as the French or Germans,"
Maxim Yusin, foreign editor of the Izvestia daily, said.
"The main thing for Putin is not to have a conflict with either the
United States or Europe. He values very highly his friendly ties with Bush and
he won't take any steps that could create serious problems for him," Yusin
told AFP.
Acutely aware of Russia's loss of clout since the collapse of the Soviet
Union, the Russian leader since his election three years ago has sought to
improve ties with the West to get much-needed foreign capital and integrate his
country more closely into the global economy.
Most spectacularly, after the September 11, 2001 attacks, Putin swung behind
the US-led "war on terrorism" and Moscow and Washington have since
built a strong partnership despite US concerns over Russian's military and
nuclear ties with rogue state Iran.
The pro-US policy shift has enfuriated nationalists and hardliners in the
military establishment who believe that Russia has gained little in return for
concessions such as allowing US troops into Central Asia and Georgia.
This means that Putin, who faces parliamentary elections in December and
re-election in March 2004, has to tread carefully in his stand towards US
threats to topple Iraqi leader Saddam Hussein.
"He cannot afford in an election year to give any support to the United
States over Iraq given the domestic opposition that exists," commented
Viktor Kremenyuk, deputy director of the USA-Canada Institute.
Russia, which has called along with Germany and France for UN weapons
inspections in Iraq to be strengthened, is genuinely opposed to a US war in
Iraq, but for very self-interested reasons.
It has huge interests in oil-rich Iraq and is owed billions of dollars in
Soviet-era debts by Baghdad. Most of all, Moscow worries that Washington could
flood the market with Iraqi crude, bringing oil prices crashing.
Reliant on oil and gas exports for 40 percent of its budget revenues,
Russia's economy could suffer severe consequences should oil prices fall as low
as 15 dollars a barrel.
"Russia doesn't want war in Iraq, for purely pragmatic reasons,"
said the Izvestia foreign editor.
"Once this war is over and the Americans have taken control of oil in
Iraq, this oil will find its way onto the market as UN sanctions will be lifted
and price for our oil will drop and this will hit our budget," he added.
But the Russian president knows he has a weak hand and is determined not to
repeat the mistakes of the past and provoke a crisis with the United States, as
his predecessor Boris Yeltsin did in 1999 when he tried to stop NATO from
bombing Yugoslavia.
"Russia has adopted a very favourable position. If it was almost alone,
like over Yugoslavia, it would find itself isolated," said Yury Korgunyuk,
an analyst from the INDEM think-tank.
"Russia's foreign policy has changed. It is no longer the era of great
hopes like after the collapse of the Soviet Union," he added.
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