Voters don't trust conservatives with guns after the disaster of the Iraq and Afghanistan nation-building campaigns
By
Spengler
Russia has thrown a monkey wrench into Western
plans for Syria by promising to deliver its top-of-the-line S300 surface-to-air
missile system to the Bashar al-Assad government. Exactly when the missiles
might arrive remains unclear; the last word from Moscow is that the missiles
are not yet in place, which means the matter is up for bargaining.
It is humiliating
for the West to trip over a game-changing Russian technology nearly a quarter
of a century after the fall of the Berlin Wall. The larger scandal is that the
West lacks countermeasures against the Russian system, the result of misguided defense
priorities over the past dozen years. If the United States had spent a fraction
of the resources it wasted in nation-building in Iraq and Afghanistan on
anti-missile technology, Russia would lack the bargaining chip in the first
place. That's spilt milk, however, and the pressing question is: what should
the West do now?
The questions to
ask are:
1. Is Russia a rational actor?
2. If the answer to the first question is affirmative (as the overwhelming majority of analysts believe), what does it have to be rational about?
3. Can the United States do anything in the foreseeable future to change the present regime in Russia?
4. If the answer to the third question is affirmative, then what do we want to negotiate with Vladimir Putin?
The right way to
go about this, I believe, is to draw a bright line between Russia's
opportunistic meddling in Middle Eastern affairs and existential issues for the
Russian state. Much as we may dislike the way the Russians manage their
affairs, it isn't within the power of the West to change the character of the
Russian regime.
What does Moscow
want in the Middle East? It has taken a more active interest in the region's
malefactors of late. Jean Aziz of
Al-Monitor argues that Russian Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov's April 28
meeting with Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah in Lebanon marks a turn in
Russia's relationship with the Hezbollah. Russia's new alliance-that seems to
be the right word-with the Lebanese terrorist organization implies a Russian
commitment to carving out a sphere of influence.
On the other hand,
Russia does not seem to want a full-blown alliance with the Iranian regime and
its Syrian satrap. Iran is present suing Russia for failing to deliver the
promised S300 system at the same time that Russia claims that it is sending the
same system to Syria. Russia's refusal to honor its contract with Tehran is a
signal that the Putin regime would not be heartbroken if someone were to
obliterate Iran's nuclear bomb-making capacity. Russia has no interest in
helping a fanatical regime deploy nuclear weapons on its southern flank.
On the other hand,
Russia's support for the Assad regime is a fact of life. Russia may enjoy the
paralysis of the West in the region and seek to embarrass the United States and
its allies, but that is a secondary matter. It also may want to demonstrate to
the world that it doesn't abandon allies the way that the United States abandoned
former Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak. Again, that is a minor matter.
Russia's interest in the outcome of the Syrian civil war stems from two
critical interests.
The lesser of
these is the naval supply station at Tartus, which supports the expansion of
Russia's naval presence in the Eastern Mediterranean. The more important
concern is Russia's fear of the Sunni jihadists who dominate the rebel
opposition.
Russia has been
fighting a brutal war against jihadists in the northern Caucasus for 20 years,
punctuated by some of the most horrendous terrorist acts ever perpetrated,
including the 2004 slaughter of 380 hostages on North Ossetia, mainly small
schoolchildren. The term "paranoid Russian" may be a pleonasm, but in
this case Russia has a great deal to be paranoid about. Caucasus terrorism
spilled over into the United States with the Boston marathon bombing.
"In Russia, most analysts, politicians and ordinary citizens believe in the unlimited might of America, and thus reject the notion that the US has made, and continues to make, mistakes in the [Middle East]. Instead, they assume it's all a part of a complex plan to restructure the world and to spread global domination,"
wrote Fyodor Lukyanov on the Al Monitor website March 19.
Lukyanov, who
chairs Russia's Council on Foreign and Defense Policy, dismisses this sort of
thinking as a "conspiracy theory". But he is quite serious in his
account of the Putin government's frame of mind. The Russian elite really think
that the United States is creating chaos in the Middle East as a matter of
geopolitical intent. Lukyanov wrote:
From Russian leadership's point of view, the Iraq War now looks like the beginning of the accelerated destruction of regional and global stability, undermining the last principles of sustainable world order. Everything that's happened since - including flirting with Islamists during the Arab Spring, US policies in Libya and its current policies in Syria - serve as evidence of strategic insanity that has taken over the last remaining superpower.
It is impossible
to persuade Vladimir Putin that the Middle East policies of the past two
American administrations were merely stupid, because Putin doesn't believe that
stupid people rule great powers. All the stupid people he met are dead. From the
Obama administration's vantage point, chaos in the Middle East is a matter for
hand-wringing by the likes of anti-genocide crusader Samantha Power, now the
designated ambassador to the United Nations. From the Russian point of view, it
is an existential threat.
The ethnic Russian
population is declining, and Russia well may have a Muslim majority by
mid-century. If chaos envelops the Muslim world on its southern border, it may
spread to Russia via the northern Caucasus. During the Cold War, America supported
jihadis in Afghanistan and elsewhere to make trouble for the Soviet Empire (and
properly so, because the Soviet threat to American security outweighed any
inconvenience the US might suffer at the hands of jihadists). Russia is
convinced that America still intends to promote jihad in order to destabilize
its old Cold War opponent.
How should America
respond?
First, the US should back the partition of Syria into a Sunni majority state and an Alawite rump state in the northwestern quadrant of the country, where the Russian navy station happens to be located. The Kurds should get autonomy, just like their Iraqi compatriots.
First, the US should back the partition of Syria into a Sunni majority state and an Alawite rump state in the northwestern quadrant of the country, where the Russian navy station happens to be located. The Kurds should get autonomy, just like their Iraqi compatriots.
Turkey will object
vociferously because it would advance Kurdish independence, which Prime
Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan views the way Captain Hook viewed the crocodile.
Too bad for the Turks: someone has to lose here, and it might as well be they.
Partition is the only way to stop the civil war and avoid mass murder in its
wake. Total victory by either side would be followed by massacres. The most
humane solution is a breakup on the precedent of the former Yugoslavia. Assad
can remain in power in a rump state where the Alawites will be safe from Sunni
reprisals, and the Russians can keep their fueling station. One wonders why the
"responsibility to protect" crowd in Washington hasn't considered
that.
Second, the US
should use its influence with Turkey, Saudi Arabia and Qatar to clean out the
nastier jihadist elements among Syria's Sunni rebels. It should also make clear
to the Russians that it will not interfere with their counter-terrorist
operations in the Caucasus, grisly as these might be.
Third, the US
should attack Iran and destroy its nuclear weapons capability and key
Revolutionary Guard bases (and perhaps a few other things; various American
flag officers have they own list of druthers).
Neutralizing Iran
is the key: it eliminates the pipeline of support from Iran to Assad and
various terrorist organizations, and reduces them to obnoxious but
strategically unemployed local players.
Russia evidently
has fewer objections to an American air strike on Iran than on Damascus. It has
signaled this as clearly as it can by refusing to deliver the S300 system to
the Iranian regime while promising to deliver it to the Syrian regime. The bad
news is that we cannot extract Russia from the region; America has made too
many blunders in the region to turn the clock back.
The good news is
that the problems occasioned by Russia's enhanced role can be localized and
contained. Basher al-Assad and his Alawite army bottled up in a redoubt would
be an annoyance, not a strategic threat. A Sunni regime with a Kurdish autonomy
zone in the remainder of the country would be susceptible to Western pressure
to purge the more dangerous jihadists.
In fact, Russia has
fewer objections to an American attack on Iran's nuclear program and foreign
subversion capacity than does the Obama administration. It is painful to read
American conservative Jeremiads against the resurgence of Russian influence in
the Middle East, when few American conservatives openly propose a strike
against Iran. They are afraid that voters don't trust them with guns after the
poor results of the Iraq and Afghanistan nation-building campaigns.
It is much easier
to rally the troops by shouting "The Russians are coming!" than to
point out that the Obama administration's ideological aversion to using force
against Iran is the core problem. In fact, Putin's position is more amenable to
America's strategic requirements than Obama's, counterintuitive as that might
sound.
More broadly, the
US should draw a bright line between areas of the world where it has inviolable
interests and areas subject to bargaining. It was a supreme act of stupidity to
abandon the deployment of anti-missile systems in Poland and the Czech Republic
as the Obama administration did in September 2009. Russia didn't like it, but
Russia is not supposed to like it. Showing weakness to the Russians merely
elicits contempt. The US should make clear that ties of culture and blood link
the Poles and Czechs to the American people, and that we will stand behind them
no matter what.
Ukraine is a
different matter. Russians comprise half the population of Ukraine, and Russia
cannot walk away from them, nor from the rest of the 22 million Russians left
outside the Federation in the so-called near abroad after the 1991 collapse of
the Soviet Union.
As I reported in a
2008 essay (Americans Play Monopoly,
Russians Chess, Asia Times Online, August 19, 2008),
"The desire of a few hundred thousand Abkhazians and South Ossetians to remain in the Russian Federation rather than Georgia may seem trivial, but Moscow is setting a precedent that will apply to tens of millions of prospective citizens of the Federation - most controversially in Ukraine."
America has no
strategic interest in Ukraine. Nine years after the so-called Orange
Revolution, the pro-Moscow Party of the Regions remains firmly in charge. The
opposition is tainted with an ugly strain of anti-Semitism, as Rachel Ehrenfeld, director of the American
Center of Democracy, reported May 30.
The nationalists
whom Washington backed in the heady days after the invasion of Iraq are not
exactly the good guys. What we have learned from a decade of bumbling is that
Russia can have Ukraine if it wants it badly enough, and that we really don't
want it anyway. Except for Hungary, Ukraine has the lowest fertility rate of
any country in Europe. Its strategic importance will deteriorate along with its
demographics.
The proposals
above are stopgap measures to limit damage in a deteriorating situation. If the
US really want to get Russia's attention, it needs to do precisely what Ronald
Reagan and his team set out to do in 1981: convince the Russians that America
would leapfrog them in military technology. That means aggressive funding of
basic research on model of the old DARPA (Defense Advanced Research Projects
Agency). If Putin is persuaded that his residual advantage in surface-to-air
missile technology has reached its best-used-by-date, he will be far more
flexible on a range of negotiating issues.
I
am painfully aware that the political environment is not conducive to this
approach. That does not change the fact that it is what needs to be done.
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