Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Why Moscow Doesn't Have A Lot Of Friends

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Why Moscow Doesn't Have A Lot Of Friends

    WHY MOSCOW DOESN'T HAVE A LOT OF FRIENDS
    By Georgy Bovt

    The Moscow Times
    April 10 2008
    Russia

    Some members of Moscow's political establishment considered the recent
    NATO summit in Bucharest a partial victory since Georgia and Ukraine
    were not invited to join the alliance. But far from saying "no,"
    NATO promised that these countries would eventually become members.

    But the main questions for Moscow are: Why are two members of the
    Commonwealth of Independent States so eager to join NATO? Why do
    our allies want to establish closer ties with the West? Why does the
    prospect of better relations with Russia hold so little appeal?

    Russia currently has only two staunch allies among CIS countries. The
    first is Armenia -- a country that is going through difficult
    economic times, is dependent upon Russia for its energy supplies
    and has chilly relations with most of its other neighbors. Russia's
    other ally is Belarus, a rogue state ruled by a dictator with whom
    even Moscow sometimes has difficulty maintaining a dialogue.

    The Kremlin has a few theories as to why the former Soviet republics
    find NATO membership so appealing. The most popular explanation is
    the conspiracy theory. This scenario has the United States continuing
    its Cold War struggle for global influence by displacing Russia as
    the dominant player in the CIS region. According to this theory,
    Washington wins the favor of the political elite in the republics
    and then foments color revolutions against Moscow to prevent it from
    regaining power. Conspiracy theorists believe that the United States'
    main objective is to seize Russia's limitless natural resources and
    take direct control of the country, or else to exercise indirect
    control by reducing Russia to an "appendage of the West" that
    submissively supplies it with raw materials.

    According to this theory, the foreign policy of the United States
    and its allies reflects a single aim: to encroach upon Russia using
    every weapon in its arsenal -- propaganda, economic pressure and even
    direct military intervention.

    A competing theory holds that the political elite in the former
    Soviet republics are the ones pushing for NATO's expansion. These
    leaders supposedly view their countries as being too small to have any
    voice among European nations unless they gain membership in powerful
    international organizations such as NATO or the European Union. Some
    among the Russian elite believe that Ukraine and Georgia fear losing
    their status as independent countries unless they join NATO or the
    European Union.

    These different views reflect the worldviews of the various factions
    within Russia's political elite. Any attempt to dissuade them from
    these convictions is futile. Anti-Western, and especially anti-U.S.,
    sentiment has reached such heights that the Kremlin summarily dismisses
    worthy arguments without even listening.

    While these theorists heap scorn on the West, they don't bother
    to ask whether Russia could be a more appealing partner for its
    neighbors. Using the energy card as a negotiating tool against other
    countries clearly won't do the trick. Neither will preaching about the
    virtues of a multipolar world and the vices of a U.S.-led unipolar
    world, and taking every possible opportunity to criticize the West
    while rejecting any constructive proposals it puts forward.

    Russia must first offer its own society -- and only later the world
    -- an attractive model for development that other countries would
    want to follow. The government should formulate a set of political
    principles that it would be able to manifest in actual deeds, not
    just words. Only then can these values and principles gradually take
    root in Russian society.

    Then, Moscow's foreign policy would serve as a logical continuation
    of those principles practiced at home. Unfortunately, this strategy
    is not part of the Kremlin's agenda.

    Georgy Bovt is a political analyst and hosts a radio program on
    City-FM.
Working...
X