TRANSFORMATION WATCH #12: ‘PLUS ÇA CHANGE…’ RUSSIA REVERTS TO FORM, HOW WILL CLINTON RESPOND?
(Washington, D.C.): Even as Russian
President Boris Yeltsin is insisting that
the United States and its G-7 partners
immediately reschedule his country’s $80
billion-plus foreign debt and provide
large new cash infusions, he has embraced
policies that raise serious questions
about the wisdom of such assistance.
Specifically, Yeltsin’s regime has served
notice in recent days that it has adopted
a new foreign policy course that
threatens, in important ways, to
undermine crucial U.S. and Western
foreign policy objectives.
These unfolding Russian foreign policy
initiatives, authored by resurgent
hardline forces, appear to amount to
“old wine in new bottles” —
the sort of behavior that many had hoped
Moscow would permanently forego with the
passing of Mikhail Gorbachev and the
“Cold War.” They include the
following:
- When asked in a press conference
on 25 January about the use of
force against Saddam Hussein in
lieu of diplomacy, President
Boris Yeltsin unceremoniously
responded that “The United
States has a certain tendency to
dictate its own terms.” - Vice President Alexander Rutskoi
— whose doctrinaire
authoritarianism seems
increasingly the order of the day
in Moscow — put it even more
bluntly in an interview with
Radio Liberty last weekend.
According to Rutskoi, Russia
would use its U.N. Security
Council veto at the next
opportunity to block further
military action against Iraq.
Such a step would be consistent
with Russian Foreign Ministry
statements issued last week which
decried U.S. and British air
strikes against Iraq as
“inappropriate” and
“out of proportion” to
the transgressions that provoked
them. - According to the
“Vesti” evening news on
26 January, Yeltsin “has
signed an instruction to the
Russian Ministry to boost work
with Iraq in order to create
conditions for the restoration of
Iraqi oil deliveries to repay
credits of the former Soviet
Union.” - In the 25 January press
conference, Yeltsin went on to
denounce U.S. objections to
Russia’s agreement last summer to
sell $250 million sale of rocket
engines (cryogenic boosters) and
related technology to India. As
he put it: “No other state
can command such a great nation
as Russia to terminate its
obligations.” The sale to
the Indian Space Research
Organization represents a blatant
violation of the Missile
Technology Control Regime, a
multilateral agreement to which
Russia is a party which is
designed to slow the
proliferation of rocket
technology. - Yeltsin made a point of saying
that, “Although the West,
and especially the United States,
has taken a guarded view of this
contract, I take this opportunity
to reaffirm our commitment to
honoring this contract.”
Yeltsin also noted that, in the
course of his visit, he would not
be raising the issue of India’s
refusal to sign the Nuclear
Non-Proliferation Treaty. - Interestingly, on 15 January, the
head of the Russian Defense
Industries Committee, Victor
Glukhikh, told reporters that
India and China would be Russia’s
chief customers for sophisticated
military equipment in 1993.
Glukhikh also boasted that Moscow
planned to display scores of
items — including highly
classified military equipment —
at a major arms exhibition in Abu
Dhabi next month in an effort to
capture a still greater share of
the world’s arms trade. - Deputy Foreign Minister Vitaly
Churkin also warned on 25 January
that Moscow would propose at the
United Nations the introduction
of sanctions against Croatia
“if the Croatian side does
not stop military activities
against the Serbs.” - On 26 January, President Yeltsin
took the Foreign Ministry out of
its leadership role in foreign
policy and gave the Security
Council — which is prominently
staffed with military officials
— the principal coordinating
function for international
affairs. At his news conference
on Monday, Yeltsin averred:
“There have been
accusations that our
Foreign Minister’s
orientation is
pro-Western, that he is
always looking left and
cannot turn his head to
the right. It seems to me
that now our policy is
more or less balanced.
After all, we are a
Euro-Asian state. We do
not want axes, triangles
or blocs. We would not
wish for an alliance with
India to the detriment of
other countries. I would
call this policy the
specialty of the new
Russia.”
You Heard It Here First
Clearly, the United States cannot
expect that its foreign policy interests
will always coincide with those of Russia
— even a genuinely democratic, free
market-oriented Russia. Nonetheless,
cooperation on Iraq, the former
Yugoslavia and missile proliferation have
been pointed to as proof positive of the
more cooperative relationship that Russia
and the United States have developed over
the past two years.
Indeed, in a just-leaked and
extraordinary transcript of the
Bush-Yeltsin meeting in Moscow on 3
January, the Russian president
underscored the importance of this
cooperation: “I can…tell you that
we intend to retain Russian bench-marks
in foreign policy, we will come out for
stronger relations of partnership with
the United States and subsequently for
forging allied relations with the United
States.”
Unfortunately, despite such sentiments
and in light of the Russians’ actual
behavior, the Center for Security Policy
foresees a pronounced downward spiral in
bilateral U.S.-Russian ties. In the days
ahead, it believes that the Clinton
Administration will be obliged to deal —
among other, pressing foreign policy
problems — with the following:
- Russia will resume within
thirty days its active
undermining of the United States’
ability to use force against
Saddam Hussein in
response to his continuing
violations of U.N. resolutions —
a gambit similar to that
attempted by Gorbachev prior to
the start of the Gulf War. - Within the next
thirty days, Russia will
also make overt what Russian
Foreign Minister Andrei Kozyrev
recently acknowledged has been
its “covert veto”
of Western military intervention
in Bosnia-Hercegovina.
An early indication of Moscow’s
more brazen policy can be found
in its announced intention to
seek U.N. sanctions in response
to Croat efforts to liberate part
of Serbian-held Croatia. Such an
action would help obscure
Russia’s determination to support
Belgrade even as it further
delays allied efforts to halt
“ethnic cleansing,”
rape camps and genocide. - Russia will seek to
isolate and vilify Ukraine on the
basis of the latter’s ostensible
obstruction of START I and II.
Within three months, it
will be insisting that the U.S.
and other Western nations suspend
all assistance efforts to Ukraine
— unless and until Kiev
capitulates to Russian (and
others’) demands. - Russian economic and
military relations with Iran,
Iraq, China, India, Syria, Cuba,
Vietnam, North Korea, Angola and
other repressive regimes will
continue to expand markedly in
1993. Of particular
concern will be Moscow’s supply
of sophisticated, controlled
weapons and technology and
defective nuclear reactors to
such nations — including,
incredible as it may seem given
Russia’s financial straits, with
the provision of Russian supplier
credits needed to consummate
these sales. - The constitutional
referendum currently scheduled
for April 1993 will either not
occur at all or will be
manipulated in such a way as to
make it meaningless, at best, or,
worse yet, an outright defeat for
democratic forces (read,
no change in the growing power of
the hardline Russian parliament). - Evidence will continue to
mount over the next six
months that Russian
technology theft and espionage
activities against the West are
virtually as relentless as ever.
The unreconstructed but renamed
KGB under the stewardship of
Saddam Hussein’s friend, Yevgeni
Primakov, will contribute
significantly to the hardliners’
agenda of preserving maximum
military and central power while
securing new Western financial
flows. - Serious challenges to the
“territorial integrity”
of the Russian Federation will
emerge over the next six
months, resulting
in increasingly heavy-handed
political pressure, economic
blackmail and coercive military
operations by Moscow against
outlying regions. Despite such
extortionary measures, the
break-up of the Russian empire
will become evident over the
course of 1993-94.
Although outside Russia, the
Baltic states will be subjected
to the same treatment in the name
of “protecting the rights of
Russian minorities.”
Once the question of punishing
Croatia is decided, Moscow will
endeavor to coordinate with the
Chinese and the British and/or
the French in the U.N. Security
Council to block a lifting of the
arms embargo on Bosnia,
enforcement of the no-fly zone,
armed support of humanitarian
relief efforts, forcible
liberation of death and rape
camps and Western air strikes on
Serbian targets — without
having to do so unilaterally.
Already Russia is engaged in
economic warfare against Ukraine
in the form of cutbacks in oil
deliveries from 40 million tons
of crude oil last year to 15
million tons. Yeltsin crowed to
President Bush on 3 January,
“This [cutback] is a coffin
nail for [Kravchuk].”
The Bottom Line
Notwithstanding the foregoing, the
heavy betting is that the Clinton
Administration will be disposed to
provide further economic, financial,
diplomatic and technological support to
Russia. An early bellwether will
be its handling of the pending — and
seriously flawed — $2 billion U.S.
Export-Import Bank “framework
agreement” to finance with taxpayer
guarantees American oil and gas equipment
sales to Russia — loans being made on an
essentially unsecured, non-collateralized
basis.(1)
Approval of this strategically
sensitive deal, which would have the
effect of helping to revitalize the
Russian energy sector, would perpetuate a
misguided Russo-centric policy.
It would be foolish, if not utterly
irresponsible, to do so at a time when it
is increasingly clear that such
assistance will neither: benefit genuine
reformers in Russia; endear the U.S. to
regional and Soviet successor state
entities (whose importance as alternative
power centers will only grow); nor buy
“protection” from more
malevolent Russian foreign policies. Only
when a demonstrable reversal of the
aforementioned negative trends is
certified to by President Clinton should
Russia be again deemed eligible for
large-scale Western assistance flows.
– 30 –
1. In
three separate papers, the Center for
Security Policy has recently raised
serious concerns about the timing,
structure, strategic and financial
implications of this framework agreement.
See “Revolving Doors:
Eximbank Official’s Scandalous
Self-Dealing is a Blow to U.S. Taxpayers,
‘Red Carpet’ for Returning Russian
Hardliners — and Their American Friends,”
(No. 92-D
148, 22 December 1992); “How
Not to Lend to a Bankrupt
Russia: Eximbank Energy Deal Should be
Iced, Reworked,”
href=”index.jsp?section=papers&code=93-D_3″>(No. 93-D 3, 11 January
1993); and Red Ink Rising:
Congress Needs to Take a Look Hard Look
at New Loans to Defaulting Moscow,
(No. 93-D 9, 19
January 1993).
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