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WORLD
POLICY JOURNAL
| CODA:Volume
XVIII, No4, WINTER 20001/02 |
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Asymmetry Is
Not Destiny
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"Military
asymmetry" has become the fashionable cliché among pundits
to characterize a still-unnamed war pitting a high-tech superpower
against bearded holy warriors and cave-dwelling terrorists. Examined
more closely, however, all other aspects of the conflict—psychological,
cultural, territorial, and economic—are also asymmetrical. Consider
for example what one might call the "psycho-geographical-historical
asymmetry" between the United States and its unexpected new
wartime ally, Russia. It is an anomalous coupling, fraught with
difficulties yet alive with promise, including the prospect of working
with Moscow to lessen the oil power of the Persian Gulf sheikdoms.
Or so it occurred
to me during an autumn visit to Moscow and its celebrated ring of
ancient cities: Vladimir, Rostov, Suzdal, and Yaroslav. My wife
and I had left a New York still reeling from the disasters of September
11. Friends confessed to avoiding subways, tunnels, skyscrapers,
and even museums perceived as terror targets. Across the country,
many Americans apprehended for the first time that their coasts
were vulnerable, their freedoms at risk, and their country mortal.
So great was the jolt in Washington that sworn enemies of big government
began voting billions for new federal programs, and a president
hitherto indifferent to foreign affairs began to speak of little
else. (If a special Providence does look after the United States,
as Bismarck reputedly remarked, Providence shows a streak of dry
humor.)
Thus did 9/11
erode the certainties of 9/10—and thus, one is tempted to add, did
Americans move closer to the omnipresent anxieties of half the world’s
inhabitants. The human initial American impulse was to hoist the
flag, and to seek past models of articulate resolution, notably
Teddy Roosevelt and Winston Churchill, both subjects of overnight
bestsellers. Still, as the conflict persists, and as the pundits
move beyond stock phrases like "closure," "wake-up
call," and "defining moment," we will need to think
more boldly about the post-9/11 world.
The Power
of Empathy
We
arrived in Moscow ten days after September 11. What we found attested
to the power of empathy. A landfill of flowers, candles, icons,
and consoling messages smothered the outer wall of the old U.S.
Embassy on Novinsky Boulevard. The language was universal: we are
with you, we know violence, we know fear. Strangers struck up conversations,
most memorably in Suzdal, a city famous for its medieval church
architecture, where a middle-aged local inhabitant hearing us speak
English hove toward us and stabbed the air with a forefinger, "Amerikanskii?
New York! Crash," adding as we waited apprehensively, "World
War Two. FDR. Uncle Joe. Friends again" (a line we were glad
to lend to Dr. Harvey Sloane for his article in this issue). Another
refrain we heard among liberal-minded Muscovites went like this:
"We did some terrible things in Chechnya, and I condemn them,
but perhaps now you will better understand our frustrations."
Colleagues at foreign policy think tanks pored over the fine print
in Russia’s developing entente with Washington. At the Carnegie
Moscow Center, the historian Dmitri Trenin noted that President
Vladimir Putin, while visiting Germany in September, referred for
the first time to Western powers as "allies" rather than
"partners," the accepted usage.
Dr. Trenin
is the author of a prescient new book, The End of Eurasia? (Carnegie
Endowment for International Peace: 2000), in which he analytically
scrutinizes Russia’s western, southern, and eastern borders—in his
own words, the Western Façade, the Southern Tier, and the
Far Eastern Backyard. Writing before 9/11, he asked whether it was
possible or desirable to resurrect the former Soviet empire. Nationalist
believers in "the phoenix model" recall that twice before,
during the Time of Troubles in the seventeenth century, and then
again during revolutionary turmoil in the twentieth century, Russia
endured foreign intervention and loss of territory, only to recover
and become bigger than before. So can it happen again? Dr. Trenin
offers his judgment in his final paragraph:
Russia-Eurasia
is over. To the west of its borders, there lies an increasingly
unified Europe, a natural place for Russia’s own integration as
a European country [author’s italics] in an appropriate form. To
the east lies an increasingly interconnected Asia, where Russia
must either establish itself as a country in Asia [ditto] or face
the mounting pressure to withdraw west of the Urals. To the south,
there is the challenge of Islamic activism whose source is both
internal and external. All of this places Russia in a highly uncomfortable
position, demanding vision and the capacity for action, which is
not very much in evidence at the moment. Yet the end of Eurasia,
a real catastrophe, is no tragedy. It is merely the end of a long
era. But it is not the end of Russia, for which a new and potentially
happier era can now start.
The desired
"capacity for action" is well evidenced by President Putin.
Besides fully collaborating on security matters, Mr. Putin waived
objections to a direct U.S. military role in formerly Soviet Central
Asia. Previous sticking points in Moscow’s relations with the Bush
administration—NATO expansion, even the viability of the ABM treaty
that President Bush has now abrogated, and arms sales to Iran—have
for the present faded into the background. To be sure, it is a courtship
that could turn sour, as Ian Bremmer and Alexander Zaslavsky warn
elsewhere in this issue, given the adverse weight of powerful domestic
constituencies in Moscow and Washington. Polls suggest that most
Russians either oppose or are at best ambivalent about a sharp turn
to the West. Moreover, as Martin Walker reports in his essay, Poles,
Czechs, and Hungarians are less than thrilled about welcoming Russia
as a partner or eventual member of NATO. The more reason, therefore,
to reexamine the asymmetry that has haunted U.S.-Russian relations.
The Past
as Imperfect Prologue
In
their security concerns, the two countries present a mirror image.
Before September 11, Americans assumed almost as a birthright their
relative immunity from overseas attack. No foreign armies have invaded
the continental United States since the War of 1812, when the British
sacked Washington. Pearl Harbor was a profound shock, but Hawaii
was offshore, and after 1945 a nuclear America was able to check
even the threat of hostile nuclear deployment, as shown by the Soviet
withdrawal of its stealthily installed bases from Cuba in 1962.
Few great powers have been so favored for so long, which helps account
for the abiding appeal of isolationism and its current variant,
the quest for a foolproof missile shield that could extend protection
to the very heavens.
Russia’s experience
is the obverse. Save in the north, it enjoys no protective oceans.
The main physical features of its heartland are forest and steppe,
so that Russia (in Sir Bernard Pares’s words) is "the land
of vast horizons, distant dreams, active life, and constant danger."
As Pares elaborates in his classic History of Russia: "With
few natural barriers, the great hosts from the East moved wholesale,
bag and baggage, men, women and children, horses and cattle, and
even habitation. Every such invading people was a vast army, torn
from its bearings, holding land by no title but war, and bound to
fight to the finish." And not just from the East. A short list
of the peoples and countries invading or intervening in Russia would
include: Scythians, Goths, Huns, Magyars, Vikings, Mongols, Teutonic
Knights, Poles, Swedes, Ottoman Turks, France, Japan, Germany, Britain,
the United States. (America’s intervention came about in 1918 when
Woodrow Wilson ordered an expeditionary army to Siberia, purportedly
to extricate a trapped Czech legion, as chronicled by George Kennan
in two volumes, while the British intervened to depose the Bolsheviks
over a far wider front, as described by Richard H. Ullman in three
volumes.)
Expansion has
been Russia’s equivalent of a missile shield. Over three centuries,
the Tsarist realm grew at the formidable average of 55 square miles
a day. The empire crumbled after the Bolshevik Revolution, only
to be stapled together again as the Reds retook Georgia, Armenia,
and Azerbaijan in the Caucasus, then Central Asia and Outer Mongolia.
Stalin partitioned Poland, reannexed the Baltic States, won slices
of Finland in the 1940 Winter War, and in 1945 further shielded
the heartland with a ring of satellite states in Soviet-occupied
Eastern Europe, plus half of Korea and the Kuril Islands that the
Tsars had lost in the 1905 Russo-Japanese War. Even as Indochina
and Cuba joined the world’s "socialist sixth," Moscow
kept pressing outward to arm and aid leftist regimes in Syria, Yemen,
Libya, Algeria, Ethiopia, Angola, Mozambique, and, more fatefully,
Afghanistan. Thus did Russia acquire the "strategic depth"
so coveted by apostles of expansion.
All this provides
one measure of Russia’s historic fears, and the colossal energy
of the response. A visitor to Moscow and its environs everywhere
senses the immanence of this past. In Yaroslav, an industrial city
of 630,000 inhabitants, it is but a few minutes walk from the eleventh-century
walls that were attacked by Mongols, Norsemen, and Poles, past the
statue of Lenin, arms gesturing, in front of the city hall, to a
promontory where one can see the bridge across the Volga that withstood
a Nazi assault in 1942. The old outlook is captured in a saying
of Tsar Alexander III, still emblazoned on the wall of the General
Staff Academy in Moscow: "Russia has only two friends in the
world, its army and its navy." Even among the young, this martial
past as its allure. In the year 2000, at the time of Putin’s election,
students at a Moscow high school were asked if they favored the
restoration of the Russian Empire; more than half said yes.
On its face,
it is a legacy that augurs poorly for a lasting relationship with
the United States. But recent events time and again have confounded
the notion that the future replicates the past. To the surprise
of everyone, and to the consternation of many, the Soviet Union
yielded up its empire without firing a shot; it did nothing as the
Berlin Wall fell, and peacefully withdrew 700,000 troops from its
satellites—and having done that, the USSR itself proceeded to implode,
in defiance of all precedents and prophecies. Experience has not
been kind to the Iron Template theory of history. As Omar G. Encarnación
reminds us elsewhere, Spain, too, was long believed to be prisoner
of its red and black past; it was ostensibly a country lacking the
democratic vocation, with its hard-fisted army, its reactionary
clergy, its extremist politics, and its ethnic brawls. Like Russia,
so observers sagely remarked, and unlike the rest of Europe, Spain
never had its Enlightenment. But mercifully, asymmetry is not destiny.
The Pipelines
That Bind
It
is now conventional wisdom that the Soviet imperial project stunted
Russia’s growth as a nation-state, galvanized a Western counteralliance,
and left as its legacy the dead weight of a bloated bureaucracy.
Given the Soviet doomsday arsenal, its silos stacked with missiles
and its tons of biological weapons, we can all be grateful it did
not end with a bang. How and why it did happen is convincingly related
in an admirable new book by the Princeton scholar Stephen Kotkin,
Armageddon Averted: The Soviet Collapse 1970–2000 (New York: Oxford
University Press, 2001). Ironically, as the author explains, what
indirectly doomed the empire was the quadrupling of world oil prices
in the 1970s, an economic coup engineered by the Organization of
Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) after the 1973 Yom Kippur War.
What was an
"oil shock" to the West and most of the Third World proved
a windfall for the Soviet Union. Its oil industry seemed to rise
from nowhere. Though geologists as early as the 1920s found petroleum
in the marshland forests of West Siberia, not until 1959 did serious
pumping begin. In a decade, the Soviet Union began to export oil,
rapidly becoming the world’s number two producer. From 1973 to 1985,
energy exports accounted for 80 percent of Soviet earnings, and
when OPEC prices spiked, newly rich Arab states embarked on a buying
spree in the Soviet arms bazaar. Flush with cash, the Brezhnev regime
deferred the unpopular and difficult task of reforming a rustbelt
economy, and squandered its oil wealth on improvident Third World
comrades.
That was the
first chapter in a story as interesting as it is commonly unfamiliar.
A second chapter followed during the chaotic 1990s, when the oil
industry fell into decline, the result of predatory swindling, devaluation,
sinking world prices, and persistent neglect. Add to that a war
in Chechnya, which disrupted vital pipelines and refineries, and
the discovery of vast oil and gas fields in and around the Caspian
Sea, no longer under Soviet rule—with the added twist that legal
claims to Caspian oil were disputed by newly independent republics.
At this point, Western companies vied for Caspian options, and as
a carrot jointly proposed a new pipeline from Baku in Azerbaijan
that would bypass Russia and carry petroleum to Ceyhan, on Turkey’s
Mediterranean coast. In Russian eyes, this was an intolerable intrusion,
a replay of the old imperial Great Game, and Moscow did what it
could to frustrate Western pipeline schemes.
Now comes a
new chapter. With an air of surprise, a recent New York Times editorial
commented that Russia "has quietly become a behemoth in the
oil business, a development with important political and economic
implications for the United States." Within two years, Russian
output has jumped by about 15 percent, partly the result of new
technologies and rising world prices. Siberian oil now accounts
for close to 10 percent of world production. The change in attitude
to foreign investment was underscored after September 11, when a
major deal that had been long held up by uncertainty about future
tax rates came to fruition. A consortium led by ExxonMobil announced
agreement on developing an oil field near Sakhalin Island in Russia’s
Far East, with an initial investment of some $4 billion, a record
high for foreign firms since the collapse of communism.
The deal coincided
with the opening of a $2.6 billion pipeline from Kazakhstan to Russia’s
Black Sea port at Novorossiysk. Constructed by a consortium led
by ChevronTexaco, the pipeline will bring oil from huge Caspian
reserves through Russia into world markets at a significant level—the
initial pumping capacity is 600,000 barrels a day. At the same time,
Transneft, the state-owned pipeline company, announced the opening
of a Baltic Sea terminal with a capacity of 240,000 barrels a day.
Yet within
all this news lies the basic asymmetry of the global oil economy.
America, the industrial West, and Third World nations alike all
benefit from low world oil prices, but Russia does not. Every dollar
per barrel decline in oil prices results in a loss of $1 billion,
plus or minus 20 percent, in Russia’s gross revenues. Thus after
9/11, as softening world demand drove prices down, Russia opened
its spigots wider both to recoup lost income and to expand its market
share. OPEC exporters joined with non-OPEC members Mexico and Norway
to plead for a reduction in Russian output. Yet as Thane Gustafson,
the Eurasian expert at Cambridge Energy Research Associates, declared
in mid-November (as quoted in yet another eye-widening New York
Times account), there was no sign of a willingness to do so by either
oil companies or the government: "If Russia were to slam on
the brakes now, it would be Ben Hur pulling back suddenly on his
chariot while it’s going full speed ahead."
On December
5, Russia threw a sop to OPEC. Prime Minister Mikhail Kasyanov announced
that Russia would cut exports by about 150,000 barrels a day in
the next four months, in the hope that others would follow suit
and that oil prices would stabilize at roughly $20 to $25 a barrel.
Oil experts were quick to note that in harsh winter months Russian
exports always decline by about that much, and that Moscow’s gesture
simply buys time and avoids a confrontation with OPEC. These few
months thus offer an extraordinary chance for the United States
to strike an imaginative grand bargain with Russia that would provide
an underpinning of solid shared interest to a new partnership.
The most ingenious
idea I have seen has been put forward by Ira Straus, a Fulbright
professor of international relations at Moscow State University
and U.S. coordinator of the Committee on Eastern Europe and Russia
in NATO. He begins by pointing out that OPEC has quietly invited
Russia to join the oil cartel, a step favored by some Russian companies,
and that Russia is very likely to follow a pro-OPEC policy "unless
the West does something to change the structure of its incentives,
so that low oil prices cease to cost Russia." And how can that
happen? He suggests: First, bring Russia into the Paris-based International
Energy Association (IEA), an autonomous body with 26 member countries,
whose mission is to disseminate information and promote rational
energy policies. Next, set up a price-compensation scheme within
IEA so that oil-exporting members would have an incentive to keep
prices low. A likely scheme would be to agree on a fair price, say
$20 a barrel, and for Russia to be compensated by all other IEA
members who gain from cheap oil: Europe, the United States, Japan,
with possible compensation to other non-OPEC members. This would
free Russia to compete ruthlessly against OPEC, and it would lead
to a surge in Western imports from Russia. In return, Russia would
grant Western countries control over some pipelines and renounce
the right to restrict the flow of oil from those pipelines, thereby
guaranteeing Russia a huge market and ensuring the West stable supplies
independent of Gulf sheikdoms.
This strategy,
says its advocate, is a win-win proposition since with each drop
in oil prices, importers would gain ten times as many dollars as
the compensation paid to Russia: "It’s an investors dream:
for each $1 put into compensation transfers, we lock in a $10 return
for the long run. It’s a net profit for both Russia and the West."
Additionally, as an IEA member, Russia would get a full role in
planning global energy strategy together with the West—a well-earned
role, not a make-believe one. To be sure, as Martin Walker says
in his sobering final paragraphs, any such Russo-Western alliance
risks galvanizing a Chinese-Islamic-Third World counteralliance.
That and much else needs to be discussed. Suffice it to say that
we need bold thinking in this changed world, and Ira Straus’s intriguing
idea belongs on the drawing board.
—Karl
E. Meyer
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