Putin’s
speech shows that the Russians consider the restoration of geostrategic parity
and of the military balance of power as the key to preserving peace
March
3, 2018, 20:06
As
the repercussions of President Putin’s State
of the Nation address sink in, it is useful to highlight those words
in the address which set out Russian thinking on international relations, and
which explain Russian actions, including first and foremost the military build up President Putin discussed during the
address.
Western
orthodoxy about Russia – repeated in endless media articles and position papers
– is that Russia is a ‘revisionist’ power, with Putin set on re-creating the
USSR and reversing Russia’s ‘defeat’ in the Cold War, and prepared in order to
achieve this to overturn the ‘rules based international order’ the US
supposedly established following the end of the Second World War.
The
Russians do not conceive of themselves in that way at all. Nor do they
recognise the above paragraph as an accurate reflection of the current state of
international relations.
As
the Russians see it, far from Russia being a ‘revisionist’ power, it is Russia
which is the prime upholder of the international law and of a ‘rules based
international order’, and it is the US which as it seeks to pursue its
objective of spreading everywhere ‘liberal democracy’ – something which
the Russians see as code for ‘US hegemony’ – is the ‘revisionist’ power.
Far
from Russia wanting to recreate the USSR or having globalist or hegemonic
ambitions, the Russians see themselves as overwhelmingly focused on their own
internal development and in the process of Eurasian construction – ie. in the
peaceful and voluntary reintegration of the countries which once formed the
USSR – which they are pursuing in cooperation with China.
Claims
that the Russians are insulted by US descriptions of Russia as a ‘regional’ as
opposed to a ‘global’ power completely miss the point.
The
Russians are fully conscious of the limitations of their power, and have no
interest in expanding it globally.
Russia
does not have a vast ocean going fleet as the US does, and does not have or
aspire to have the huge global network of military bases that the US has.
Nor
does Russia play the central role in the world economy that the US does.
The
Russians have neither the resources nor the wish to challenge the US globally,
or to set themselves up as a global competitor to the US, as the USSR once was.
What
the Russians want is to be left in peace so that they can sort out their economic
and social problems, and so that they can peacefully re-establish the social
and economic connections within the territory of the former USSR which were
shattered when the USSR fell apart.
Not
only does Russia not have the resources or the wish to mimic the US’s global
role; it has a pronounced philosophical aversion to doing so.
It
is the US not Russia which claims for itself a global role as the ‘exceptional’
country, and it is the US not Russia which exempts itself through its doctrine
of ‘exceptionalism’ from observance of the global rules and of international
law which are supposed to underpin the entire ‘rules based international order’
which so far from wanting to undermine the Russians value as they see in it the
key to peace.
That
this is so is shown – the Russians argue – by US disregard for the UN Security
Council – whose authority when it suits it the US ignores – by US contempt for
state sovereignty – as shown by its regime change/humanitarian and ‘democracy
promotion’ policies – by the US’s regime change wars in Iraq and Libya, by the
US’s attack in 1999 on Yugoslavia, by the US’s support for the Jihadi
insurgency against the legitimate government of Syria, by the US’s constant
meddling in the domestic policies of other countries through its support for
‘democracy promotion’ and ‘colour revolution’ strategies in those countries –
with Ukraine being for the Russians the outstanding example, and with Russia
itself being a clear target – and by the (as the Russians see it) illegal
sanctions the US constantly imposes in order to coerce other countries to do
its bidding.
Russia
by contrast does none of these things, and opposes all of them.
Moreover
it is the US which the Russians see as constantly encroaching on themselves –
not vice versa – through the US’s expansion of NATO into
eastern Europe, its instigation of the coup in Ukraine, its continuing meddling
in the affairs of Eurasia, its meddling in Russian internal politics, its
sanctions policy against Russia, and its siting – contrary to previous treaties
and agreements – of ballistic missile interceptors close to Russia’s borders.
What
Putin’s address shows is that the Russians have finally given up hope of
persuading the US to change its behaviour.
Moreover
the address also shows what the Russians believe to be the cause of this (as
they see it) US misbehaviour.
This
is the disappearance of the geostrategic military balance which existed between
the US and the USSR during the Cold War.
With
the USSR gone the US – with its huge military superiority over all other
countries – felt that it could do as it liked, and sought to leverage its
position of military superiority over all other countries to change the world
to conform to its ideology and interests.
It
follows from this analysis that the Russians believe that the only way that
this pattern of US misbehaviour can be ended is through the restoration of the
geostrategic military balance which existed between the US and the USSR during
the Cold War.
According
to this analysis, the Cold War was not properly speaking a ‘war’ at all, but
was rather a ‘long peace’, with the USSR because of its military power able to
act as the sheet anchor of the international system through its ability to
restrain the US, thereby ensuring that the Great Powers respected each other’s
interests, and thus preserving peace.
By
restoring the geostrategic military balance which existed during the Cold War
the Russians believe that the US will be put under restraint again, so that the
proper functioning of the international system can be restored, and so that
countries like Russia and China will be left alone so that they can press ahead
with their social and economic plans in peace.
I should
note that we have conducted the work to reinforce Russia’s defence
capability within the current arms control agreements; we are not violating
anything. I should specifically say that Russia’s growing military
strength is not a threat to anyone; we have never had any plans
to use this potential for offensive, let alone aggressive goals.
We
are not threatening anyone, not going to attack anyone or take away
anything from anyone with the threat of weapons. We do not need
anything. Just the opposite. I deem it necessary to emphasise
(and it is very important) that Russia’s growing military power
is a solid guarantee of global peace as this power preserves
and will preserve strategic parity and the balance
of forces in the world, which, as is known, have been
and remain a key factor of international security after WWII
and up to the present day.
And to those
who in the past 15 years have tried to accelerate an arms
race and seek unilateral advantage against Russia, have introduced
restrictions and sanctions that are illegal from the standpoint of international
law aiming to restrain our nation’s development, including
in the military area, I will say this: everything you have tried
to prevent through such a policy has already happened. No one has
managed to restrain Russia.
Now
we have to be aware of this reality and be sure that everything
I have said today is not a bluff ‒ and it is not a bluff, believe me ‒ and to give it
a thought and dismiss those who live in the past and are unable to look into the future, to stop rocking the boat we are all in and which is called the Earth……
…….There
is no need to create more threats to the world. Instead, let us
sit down at the negotiating table and devise together a new
and relevant system of international security and sustainable
development for human civilisation. We have been saying this all along.
All these proposals are still valid. Russia is ready for this.
Our
policies will never be based on claims to exceptionalism. We protect
our interests and respect the interests of other countries. We
observe international law and believe in the inviolable central
role of the UN. These are
the principles and approaches that allow us to build strong,
friendly and equal relations with the absolute majority
of countries.
(bold
italics added)
Much
Western commentary has sought to contrast the first part of President Putin’s
State of the Nation address, which focused on the Russian government’s plans
for Russia’s social and economic development, with the second part of
President Putin’s State of the Nation address, in which President Putin unveiled Russia’s new weapons systems.
In
my opinion this is to misunderstand the address.
In
Putin’s mind and in those of other Russian officials the second part of the
address is not intended to be a contrast to the first part of the address.
Rather
the two parts of the address compliment each other, with the military build up
described in the second part of the address making possible the peace and
independence Russia needs so that it can carry out the social and economic
plans discussed in the first part of the address.
It
further follows from this that Putin also does not see his address as a threat
to the US.
Putin
has no interest in threatening the US, and of course he entertains no ambitions
– as the Soviet leaders perhaps once did – of changing the political, economic
and social system of the US, and nor of course does anyone else in the Russian
government entertain such ambitions either.
However
Putin has come to believe that without the restoration of the geostrategic
military balance which existed during the Cold War there is no possibility of
the US changing its behaviour and taking into account Russia’s opinions and
interests, and leaving Russia alone so that Russia can finally go about the
task of developing its society and economy in peace.
As
such, Russia’s military build up is intended over time – by creating
constraints on US behaviour, and by forcing the US to respect and listen to
Russia – to create eventually the conditions for what Putin hopes will be a
sustained improvement in US-Russian relations based this time on equality and
mutual respect.
Will
it work? Will the build up of Russia’s strategic weapons really restrain
the US and secure world peace? Can Russia achieve the restoration of the
geostrategic military balance of the Cold War? Will Russia’s military
build up really create the conditions for a sustained improvement in US-Russian
relations?
During
the detente era of the Cold War a similar Soviet build up did for a time lead
to a brief thaw in US-Soviet relations. However it proved short lived
because the US ultimately found it conceptually impossible to accept the USSR
as an equal partner.
No
sooner was the detente framework between the US and the USSR established
through a series of agreements painstakingly negotiated between 1963 and 1975,
then powerful forces in the US set to work to undermine it. By 1980 when
Ronald Reagan was elected US President they had largely succeeded in doing so.
What
proved impossible to sustain in the binary system of the 1970s, when the USSR
was far more powerful than Russia is today, is much less likely to happen
today, all the more so as ‘exceptionalist’ thinking is far more dominant in the
US today than it was in the 1970s.
Moreover
though Russia can certainly afford the cost of sustaining a nuclear arms race –
nuclear weapons and specifically the weapons Putin outlined in his State of the
Nation address are as Putin says “modestly priced” – experience shows that
achieving a proper military balance also requires achieving a balance in
conventional forces, where by comparison with the US’s global forces Russia is
badly outmatched.
The
ace in Russia’s pack is however Russia’s alliance with China to which – along
with Russia’s friendly relations with India – Putin pointedly referred in his
address
Our comprehensive
strategic partnership with the People’s Republic
of China is one example. Russia and India also enjoy a special
privileged strategic relationship.
(bold
italics added)
Note
the careful distinction in the nature of Russia’s relations with China and
India – whose relations with each other are currently going through a (probably
temporary) bad patch – in these words.
With
China Russia has a “comprehensive strategic partnership” ie. a de facto
alliance. With India Russia has a “special privileged strategic
relationship” ie. a close and enduring friendship.
In
his State of the Nation address Putin did not speak for China – he has no right
to – but it is the Russian-Chinese
alliance which as much as – or arguably much more so than – Russia’s
strategic weapons build up is changing the world’s geostrategic balance, and
which is placing increasing constraints on US behaviour.
Indeed
with no sign of any Chinese strategic weapons build up comparable to the one
Putin has just announced despite the steady deterioration in US-Chinese
relations, it cannot be excluded that there has been some sort of agreement
being Beijing and Moscow whereby Moscow counters the US at a strategic nuclear
level whilst China concentrates on the far more costly task of challenging US
naval supremacy in the Pacific and in the South China Sea.
That
would be an obvious way for the two countries to use their “comprehensive
strategic partnership” to complement each other by playing to their respective
strengths.
Whether
a Chinese naval build up in the Pacific, complimenting a Russian strategic
weapons build up and a Russian ground forces build up in Europe, will persuade
the US to modify its behaviour is another matter. I have to say that I
have my doubts.
Having
said this, Putin’s State of the Nation address does provide further
confirmation of what the US’s Nuclear Posture Review has already admitted: the US’s ‘unipolar moment’ is over.
Great
Power competition has returned and with it the concept of the ‘balance of
power’.
Before
long I expect we will also be hearing about ‘spheres of influence’ again.
Depending
on what happens next in the Pacific region, this may also be the moment when
the Russian-Chinese alliance finally starts to come out of the shadows.
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