RUSSIAN ROULETTEThe
major media have
taken note of
the poor state of Russian-American relations in the past week and the
increasingly dark cast that Putin's siloviki regime has taken
at home and
abroad. However, neither condition is exactly new. On the one hand, American policy toward Russia has been unimaginative, erratic, shortsighted and occasionally neglectful at least since the re-election of
Boris Yeltsin; on the other hand,
Vladimir Putin has been exercising
a "soft" dictatorship for stabilitarianism and the reconstruction of state power since Russia's liberals and democrats politically self-destructed in 2004.
That moment would have been a good time for the Bush administration to consider the results American and Western policy toward Russia but the administration, engrossed with Iraq, was content to continue to leave policy on autopilot, following the the lead of the EU and of the State Department experts who were running relations into the ground. In a nutshell, we have managed a trifecta of appearing to Moscow to be at once meddlesome and overbearing, ineffectual (in the face of Russian bullying of its "near abroad" neighbors) and uninterested in any kind of strategic partnership with Russia. This is not a recipe for diplomatic success.
In fairness to the Bush administration, our poor foreign policy record in regard to post-Soviet Russia stretches back through Clinton-Gore to the last years of Bush I. where
Richard Nixon was virtually tearing his hair out in frustration. Moreover, American policy can only effect Russia on the margin. The locus of choice lies with Putin and his siloviki circle who have opted for creeping authoritarianism; but the U.S. might have made it a good deal easier for them to choose to move forward rather than to turn the clock back.
A few articles across the spectrum that are worth your time to read if you are interested in Russian-American affairs:
"
Why Putin is determined to make Russia strong again" by
Trevor Royle"
Russia Redux" by
Vladimir Popov in
The New Left Review ( hat tip to
Lexington Green)
"
Post-Weimar Russia? There Are Sad Signs." by
Dr. Andreas Ulmand at
HNNLabels: foreign policy, russia, vladimir putin