#2 - RW 259
Kennan Institute
event summary
May 19, 2003
U.S.-Russian Relations in an Emerging World
"Because the level of mistrust between the two sides is extremely high,
the only way improve U.S.-Russian relations is to start with new
fundamentals," noted Nikolai Zlobin, Director of the Russian and Asian
Programs at the Center for Defense Information at a recent Kennan Institute
meeting. Using the U.S. terror alert system as a grading scale, Zlobin
categorized current relations between the two countries as "deeply orange
and approaching code red." He explained that exactly two weeks before
Presidents Bush and Putin meet in St. Petersburg, it appears that U.S.-Russian
relations are at their lowest point in nearly 10 years. Zlobin argued that Iraq
"became a sort of magnifying glass which exposed the tremendous differences
between Russian and American attitudes towards the world." He continued
that "the Russian-American conflict over Iraq ended an epoch in
Russian-American relations," and both sides need to work towards building a
new relationship.
Zlobin posited that people in both Washington and Moscow have misread each
other's intentions and policies. He explained that many people in Washington
were caught off guard by the Russian position on Iraq, while many in Moscow were
taken aback by Washington's push for military action. He noted that Russia's
position was motivated in large part by the unofficial start of President
Putin's re-election campaign. According to Zlobin, Putin's used his address to
the Foreign Consul--in which he outlined Russia's views on Iraq--as an
opportunity to show that his decisions and foreign policy are not run by the
White House. The necessity to protect certain economic interests in Iraq also
proved to be a motivational factor behind the Russian stance on Iraq.
Perhaps more importantly, Zlobin continued, is the fact that Putin has
"become a hostage to his own popularity and high rating." He
attributed Putin's high rating, popularity, and financial backing for his
re-election campaign to many of the businesses in the Russian energy sector.
According to Zlobin, Putin has done very little in foreign policy over the past
year, instead choosing a relatively "indecisive position" on most
foreign policy issues. Zlobin explained that before Iraq such a position was
very beneficial and contributed to his high rating and popularity, but leading
up to and during the Iraq situation, Putin failed to explain the Russian
position, instead allowing Foreign Minister Ivanov to do most of the talking.
The fallout from this, Zlobin contended, is that during and after the war,
the U.S. "has lost essentially all interest in Russia." He mentioned
that the Bush administration's passive and indifferent attitude toward Russia
frustrated Putin. Zlobin argued that Washington failed to recognize the
importance of Putin's overtures toward the West, instead inflaming relations by
developing a missile defense system, establishing military bases in Central
Asia, failing to repeal the Jackson-Vanik amendment and so on. Zlobin explained
that although these things may not seem important in Washington, they are very
important to those back in Moscow.
According to Zlobin, current U.S.-Russian relations are based on current
events, rather than actually solving problems. He stated that both sides
disagree on most foreign policy questions, including the definition of
terrorism, the role of international law, as well as other tactical foreign
policy issues. He argued that while both sides have solved issues such as Iraq
or the Russia debt successfully, the next major crisis could further splinter
relations. Zlobin contended that we must not try to "improve current
relations" but rather try to find new fundamentals, recognizing each
other's geopolitical strategies. He warned that if both sides fail to improve
relations in the next presidential terms of both Putin and Bush, the next
opportunity might not come for a long time.
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