Yesterday, I gave a talk at a meeting of the Ottawa Kiwanis Club as I was asked to make sense of the response to Ukraine’s Crisis. I am pretty sure the members of the club did not expect me to be so … depressing. I argued that there are limits to power especially when the adversary—and Vladimir Putin is an adversary—is engaged in irredentism. How so? The key are two dynamics at work—irredentism and alliance politics.
Irredentism refers to the effort to take “back” “lost”
territory inhabited by ethnic kin—such as in the case of Crimea, which had been
Russian far longer than it had been Ukrainian.
Such efforts are always costly because the targeted country resists,
usually leading to war. In For Kin or
Country, Bill Ayres and I argued that these efforts can happen when those
making the decisions are not bearing the costs.
Indeed, we argued that there are those who benefit from international
isolation—globalization is not everyone’s friend—so that the nationalists
advocating policies that might lead to their country being alienated have
allies in those who are hurt by ties to the international economy or who are
helped by having greater isolation.
President Obama did promise/threaten that Russia would incur
significant costs for its actions. This
was not false bravado but recognition of the reality of the circumstances. Russia has spent much in resources and effort
in its war in Ukraine. The sanctions
have had a significant bite, leading to the dramatic decline in the ruble
and deepening Russia’s recession. Yes,
Putin has created his own sanctions, limiting sales from the West, but the reality
is that his country is not a very important market for Western goods. The problem is that most of these economic
costs are hitting those who have little power to influence Putin. Despite the appearances of Russian democracy,
Putin does not rely on democratic institutions, such as a parliament for
support. He relies on a network of
like-minded individuals who he has helped put at the commanding heights of the
Russian economy and political system.
They have a stake in his rule AND they are not suffering from the
consequences of Western sanctions. Which
means there is little we can do for now.
And this leads to the second dynamic: that to confront
Putin, we need consensus, which is mighty hard to achieve. NATO only operates by consensus—this does not
require everyone to agree to do something but that no members object
strenuously. The problem is that members
of NATO face very different threats and interests. The US and Canada are distant, so they do not
have to fear so much the Russian bear so they can talk a more aggressive game. Germany is much closer and is more concerned
about escalation. The US and Canada are
distinct in a second way: they have key domestic audiences that care about
Ukraine, Poland and the Baltics—those whose origins are in this region. Ukrainian-Canadians are relevant politically,
especially in an election year—so Harper talks quite aggressively, confronting
Putin at the G20 meeting.
In Europe, the politics are quite different. Instead of considering the voting intentions
of members of the East European diaspora, the politicians face a surprising
amount of agreement on the left and the right that Putin is a hero. How so?
Putin is challenging the hegemonic, the imperialist Americans. That those who celebrate Edward Snowden and the
fight against American secrecy and surveillance are also celebrating Snowden’s
host—Putin. So, rather than seeing the
Ukrainian Crisis as an act of Russian aggression, they blame the west for destabilizing
Ukraine with its support of regime change.
Of course, the fundamental problem with that story is that
the first response to a questionable regime is to seize hunks of its
territory. A genuine concern about what
a nationalist Ukraine government might due should have led to other steps, such
as confidence building measures, deployment of observers, and the like, rather
than annexation and war. Still, these
delusions of Europe’s left and right, perhaps built on the justifiable
grievance that the austerity measures have done far more harm than good, pose a
critical challenge to European leaders, making it far more difficult to
confront Putin.
Of course, even consensus at NATO has its limits, as no one
has the stomach for fighting Ukraine’s war for the Ukrainians—not after
Afghanistan, not while Iraq/Syria are going on, and not if it means a
confrontation with a nuclear armed Russia.
All we can do is strengthen the commitments to NATO’s most vulnerable
members, maintain the sanctions and prepare for the long run. This sounds a lot like the Cold War, as the
current crisis requires patience, tenacity and humility. That is, there is not much we can do to roll
back Russia’s gains, but we can try to limit the trouble Russia causes beyond
this current status quo.
A new cold war which recognizes the limits of what we can
and should do? Not a happy message for a
lunchtime meeting of a group that aims to make a difference and improve the
world. Sorry about that.
http://opencanada.org/features/blogs/roundtable/putins-cynical-nationalism/
No comments:
Post a Comment