Russia and the West

How a Cold War 'settlement' unravelled

An article in the West’s foremost strategic studies journal blames American short-sightedness for the breakdown of a chance to consolidate Russia-West relations
The Unravelling of the Cold War Settlement, by Daniel Deudney and G. John Ikenberry. Survival Vol. 51, Number 6, December 2009-January 2010

The article is one of the best yet to appear about what went wrong with Russia-West relations, when, at the end of the Cold W, they looked like entering a new era of constructive co-operation.

The writers insist that the Cold War did not simply ‘end’; rather, it was settled. They compare the settlement with earlier historic settlements – Westphalia, Utrecht, Vienna, Versailles, Potsdam . As with these earlier settlements, the architects hoped they were creating the framework for a new international order.

Moreover, say the authors, the settlement was not the product of a single event. It unfolded in the form of a sequence of steps and agreements - the collapse of communism in Eastern Europe, the negotiated withdrawal of Soviet forces from Germany, mutual disarmament measures, and the unexpected collapse of the Soviet Union.

All of this happened rapidly and peacefully, and was marked by a continuous process of negotiation’.

No punishment

At the time the United States leadership saw that its interest lay in a stable world order. There was no punitive element. And Moscow acted in the context of a wider Western system that made American power more restrained and less threatening.

‘The pivotal juncture was Moscow’s decision to withdraw from its extended ramparts in Central and Eastern Europe’. This was premised on the judgment of Soviet leaders that the West would not exploit Soviet vulnerability by encroaching on its historic defensive perimeter and sphere of influence.

And, for Moscow, the new security environment was not only less threatening; it also offered positive opportunities. It could become, as Gorbachev frequently articulated, a leader in co-operative global problem-solving and institution-building.

Soured

Much of the subsequent souring was the result of American policies, say Deudney and Ikenberry. American foreign policy, so successful at the moment of settlement, pursued goals contrary to the settlement’s principles. This occurred in the administrations of Bill Clinton and George W. Bush, when the United States pursued short-term goals at the expense of fundamental interests.

The US also undermined the settlement by exploiting its advantages without considering Russian interests. ‘An inflated sense of American unipolar prerogatives, combined with the ascent of an aggressive neo-conservative ideology [generated] an American foreign policy that has lost is sense of restraint and sensitivity to the interest of others.’

Deterioration

In the trajectory of deterioration, three specific issues loom particularly large, say the writers: NATO expansion and rivalries over former Soviet republics; termination of the ABM treaty and the deployment of anti-missile-defence systems; and controversies over oil-pipeline routes from the Caspian Basin.

‘Russians across the political spectrum vies NATO expansion as a major violation of their understanding of the settlement, and this has engendered fears of encirclement and encroachment.

‘Advocates of expansion point out that there was no explicit agreement not to expand NATO, but this is misleding because the idea of extensive NATO expansion was simply outside the realm of the thinkable at the time.’

How it happened

How did the NATO expansion come about? The writers recall that the most prominent critics of NATO expansion were ‘diplomatic historians, Russian specialists and moderate realists, such as George Kennan, who argued that it violated the principles of great-power restraint embodied in the settlement. It was therefore likely to trigger Russian antagonism.

In contrast, many East Europeans and hard-line realpolitik analysts viewed NATO expansion as a hedge against the inevitable reassertion of Russian power. ‘The appeal of charismatic Eastern leaders, most notably Lech Walesa and Vaclav Havel, combined with the mobilisation of ethnic Eastern European lobby groups in the United States, created powerful pressures for NATO expansion.

‘In contrast to the heady visions of the settlement period, the 1990s were marked by a steady atrophy of serious efforts to integrate Russia and to reconfigure Western institutions to accommodate it. And the fact that the Alliance was then fighting its first ‘hot’ war, against Serbia, reinforced the Russian perception that NATO was essentially anti-Russian in purpose.

Backsliding on nuclear arms control was another major cause of Russian grievance. The deterioration began in the 1990s with a loss of momentum downwards farther reductions, and culminated in the arms control roll-backs of the George W. Bush years. (Whereas President Reagan broke with his allies on the right by signing strategic agreements, George W. Bush was very much their captive.)

Obama

According to Deuden and Ikenberry, a major problem for American liberal thinking liberal grand strategy is the prevailing American an attitude towards historical legacies. ‘The Obama administration, wants to reset the relations with Moscow, but the metaphor of ‘resetting’ is itself revealing of the deep-seated American amnesia about history. …

‘This perspective under-appreciates the extent to which the legacies of the past – memories, grievances, identities – define the present. Successfully repairing the US-Russian relationship will require the US not just to ‘reset’ but to ‘rewind’ – [that is to say] to correct the legacies of the recent past that so heavily overshadow the [US-Russia] relationship

It will not be easy to achieve the restoration of the Cold War settlement and repair the relationship with Russia, they say. To do so, Americans will have to discipline themselves to abandon habits and mind-sets recently acquired, that are obsolete and counter-productive.

Global dominance

Firstly, it will be necessary for Americans to give up visions of global unipolar dominance. They will have to stop thinking of any concession to Russia as ‘appeasement’.

And they will have to abandon their ‘victory through strength’ narrative of the end of the Cold War. (What ended the Cold War was not an American victory but t recognition by both sides of the threat posed by nuclear destruction.)

‘Doing this will, in turn require the United States to stop letting the ‘tail wag the dog’, through the intrusion of narrow but highly mobilised domestic ethnic, corporate and bureaucratic groups into the political process.

‘Americans will need to cultivate a mindset that puts their interdependence and vulnerability at the centre of their understanding of world affairs.’

Daniel Deudney is Associate Professor of Political Science at Johns Hopkins University. G. John Ikenberry is Albert G. Milbank Professor of politics and international affairs at Princeton University. ‘Survival’ is the bi-monthly journal of the London-based International Institute for Strategic Studies (iiss@iiss.org).

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Russia: security agent talks press freedom

An international conference on press freedom in Vienna, reports Andrei Soldatov, included a suprising guest: a Russian security service agent.
For the first time in almost a decade the Russian Federal Security Service (FSB) has decided to take part in a discussion on media coverage of the war on terror. In early October it sent one of its officials to the “War on Words” conference on this subject held by the International Press Institute in Vienna.

The presence of the Russian security services at an international discussion about press coverage of counterterrorism was surprising. After all, this is precisely the area of press freedom that is most systematically suppressed in Russia. And the originator and the main beneficiary of this strategy is the FSB.

The process has actually started in 1999 with the Second Chechen war: the Kremlin appeared to have learned the lessons of the conflict in 1994-1996, when Russian and foreign journalists managed to slip through Russian lines and were well provided with information from the other side in Chechnya. In Moscow the defeat was explained by Russia’s unpreparedness to fight and win the “information war,” which in turn prevented the mobilization of national will and soured international support. As a result, during the Second Chechen war the Kremlin did its best to prevent journalists from getting information provided by rebels.

Following this strategy, Moscow called the new conflict was a counterterrorism operation instead of a war. And under Russian law the press is not allowed to publish the comments of terrorists. Some Russian newspapers, notably Kommersant and Novaya Gazeta had been warned by the authorities for publishing interviews with rebels Moscow dubbed dubbed as terrorists. Some journalists were detained because of their reports of the storming of the Chechen capital Grozny from inside the city.

Large-scale terrorist attacks, notably Nord-Ost in October 2002 and Beslan in September 2004, became a pretext for the authorities to secure this approach. In 2002 a number of media outlets were punished for giving an air to hostage-takers in Nord-Ost as well as for the criticism towards the special operation to release hostages. The office of the Versyia weekly (where I then) was raided by FSB officers and I was interrogated four times at the FSB’s Lefortovo prison because of the reporting. But then the strategy was expanded: journalists were deprived of the right to go to areas of counterterrorism operation. If a new Beslan happens, journalists will most likely not be let in.

The authorities has intensified this approach. In 2006 a new anti-terrorist law was adopted, prohibiting journalists from getting to areas declared as zones of counterterrorist operations (a practice very similar to the Israeli “closed military area”). The authorities also established the “Bastion” training courses, a sort of brainwashing for journalists. If you have not attended the courses you might be not allowed to get to the area, as the number of press accreditations is limited and the preference would be for those participating in Bastion. That were the points I tried to explain at the conference in Vienna.

To my surprise, Nikolai Sintsov, the spokesman of the National Anti-Terrorism Committee (the coordination body within the FSB) did not try to deny it. In his statement at the panel moderated by Nick Gowing from BBC World News, Sintsov confirmed the limitations implied by the 2006 law. “Since by definition it is on the side of the majority, which is society, mass media should unconditionally support the anti-terrorist front,” he said.

Sintsov also admitted that the Bastion courses are a crucial part of FSB’s information strategy. He said that journalists at the courses “get knowledge concerning professional conduct and responsibility”. This stone-faced FSB official, so assured about the Russian secret services’ right to establish journalistic ethics, lost his temper only once in the conference: When asked whether he considered Anna Politkovskaya as a responsible journalist, he paused and asked in turn, what kind of responsibility was meant.

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Andrei Soldatov is editor of Agentura.Ru website. He worked for Novaya Gazeta from January 2006-November 2008. Soldatov and Irina Borogan are working on a book, The New Nobility, about the Russian secret services for PublicAffairs Books to be published in 2010

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Europe shivers under heavy snowfall

Plunging temperatures and heavy snows have caused the deaths of at least 80 people across Europe.

Thousands of other people have found their holiday travel plans left in tatters as air, road and rail links have been brought to standstill.

Poland, where temperatures have dropped to -20C, was worst affected with 42 people having died over the past three days.

Grazyna Puchalskam, Poland's national police spokeswoman, said on Monday: "Six people died on Friday, 15 on Saturday and 21 on Sunday".

The majority of the victims were homeless men aged between 35 and 50, who died while drunk, Puchalska said.

The deaths brought the country's death toll since the start of December to 69.

Police and municipal employees have stepped up patrols of areas where the homeless are known to gather, notably public parks and allotments, to try to persuade them to head to special hostels.

Ukraine reported 27 deaths, while six people were killed in accidents in Germany and three in Austria.

Power shortages

In France, the electricity grid was forced to cut off power to around two million people in the southeast in order to avoid a massive regional blackout, the operator said.

"RTE has put in place a programme of controlled load-shedding in order to avoid a complete black-out in the region," an RTE spokesman said, referring to the Provence Alpes Cote d'Azur region.

Some districts of Marseille, including the city centre, and the suburbs of Nice, were without power in the afternoon.

The country was forced to import power earlier than normal this winter and has warned that cold weather could force cuts because of near record consumption and delays to maintenance in its network of nuclear power stations.

At least two homeless people were reported to have died as the temperatures fell.

Flights cancelled

Flights were cancelled in France, Germany, the Netherlands, Portugal and Spain and main highways were blocked across Europe where some regions had more than 50cm of snow.

About 700 people spent the night on camp beds at Amsterdam-Schipol airport and more flights were cancelled after dozens were grounded on Sunday.

At Frankfurt and Duesseldorf airports in Germany more than 500 flights were cancelled or redirected.

And at Paris-Charles de Gaulle airport, 20 per cent of outbound flights were cancelled.

Eurostar services - which take rail passengers between London and Paris - were cancelled for a third consecutive day because of technical problems caused by the low temperatures.

The traffic disruptions have left thousands of passengers wondering how they will complete their journeys before the Christmas holidays.

Source: Agencies

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Mexico City passes gay marriage law

Lawmakers in Mexico City have passed legislation paving the way for the Mexican capital to become the first city in Latin America to legalise gay marriage.

In a vote on Monday the city's government passed a bill changing the definition of marriage from a union of a man and a woman to a union of two people.

The changes will give gay couples more rights, including allowing them to adopt children.

The city's leftist mayor, Marcelo Ebrard of the Democratic Revolution Party, was widely expected to sign the measure into law.

However, the conservative Nation Action Party of Mexico's president, Felipe Calderon, has vowed to challenge the gay marriage law in the courts.

Opposition

Many people in Mexico and elsewhere in Latin America remain opposed to gay
marriage, and the dominant Roman Catholic Church has announced its opposition.

"They have given Mexicans the most bitter Christmas," said Armando Martinez, the president of the College of Catholic Attorneys.
"They are permitting adoption (by gay couples) and in one stroke of the pen have erased the term 'mother' and 'father.'"

But Victor Romo, a city lawmaker and a member of the mayor's party, called the vote an historic day.

"For centuries unjust laws banned marriage between blacks and whites or Indians and Europeans," he said.

"Today all barriers have disappeared."

Changed code

Monday's vote, which passed the city assembly 39-20, was cheered by gay rights activists who had gathered outside of the assembly building.

Under the bill, the definition of marriage in the city's civil code will be changed to "the free uniting of two people."

The change would allow same-sex couples to adopt children, apply for bank loans as a couple, inherit wealth and be included in the insurance policies of their spouse, rights they were denied under civil unions already allowed in the city.

Mexico City's left-led assembly has made several decisions unpopular elsewhere in this deeply Roman Catholic country, including legalising abortion in the first 12 weeks of pregnancy.

That decision sparked a backlash, with the majority of Mexico's other 32 states enacting legislation declaring life begins at conception.

Only seven countries allow gay marriages, including Canada, Spain, South Africa,
Sweden, Norway, the Netherlands and Belgium.

US states that permit same-sex marriage are Iowa, Massachusetts, Vermont, Connecticut and New Hampshire.

Source: Agencies

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Foreign Fighters Lead Somali Fight

CAIRO — Hundreds of foreign fighters who reportedly flocked to Somalia last year to join al-Shabaab in fighting the interim government and UN peacekeepers are said to be assuming leadership roles in the militant group.

"There is increasing control exercised by the foreign leadership of al-Shabaab," Peter Pham, associate professor at James Madison University, told the Times on Monday, December 21.

"It is not just control of resources, foreign fighters and trainers, but of the actual decision-making."

According to intelligence sources, Al-Shabaab’s security and training operations arm is now headed by Pakistani national who goes by the name Abu Musa Mombasa.

*

Foreign Fighters Joining Al-Shebaab

Abu Mansur Al-Amriki, an American citizen; Mohamoud Mujajir, a Sudanese; and Ahmed Abdi Godane, an Afghan, are also taking leading field commanding roles.

Saudi citizen Mohamed Abu Faid is reportedly leading Al-Shabaab's financial arm.

Facing growing military pressure in Pakistan, Afghanistan and Iraq, hundreds of foreign fighters reportedly flocked to Somalia last year to join Shabaab, which the US designates as a terrorist group.

Some estimates put the number of foreign fighters in Somalia at 1200-1500.

Al-Shabaab launched a deadly offensive in May against the internationally-backed government of President Sheikh Sharif Sheikh Ahmed.

The fighting has killed hundreds of civilians and displaced hundreds of thousands.

At least seven people, mainly civilians, were killed and five others injured in the capital Mogadishu on Sunday as militants and pro-government forces exchanged mortar fire.

Rift

Security experts, however, believe the increasing foreign fighters' influence has caused rifts inside al-Shabaab.

"There is a serious struggle within al-Shabaab between nationalists and the foreign jihadis who want to take the fight to another level," Abdi Rashid, a Somalia analyst at the International Crisis Group, told the Times.

Rashid said this has led in recent months to internal conflicts and even some defections.

Al-Shabaab's reliance on foreign fighters has also pitted the group against its former ally Hizb ul-Islam.

"Hizb ul-Islam’s orientation is domestic but al-Shabaab’s focus is on a broader ideological Islam," says Pham, the James Madison University professor.

Shabaab and Hizb ul-Islam militant went to war earlier this year over control of the southern port of Kismayo.

Clashes between militants from both groups have since become fiercer and frequent.

Somalia, a Horn of Africa country, has lacked an effective government since the ouster of former president Mohamed Siad Barre in 1991.

More than 14 attempts to restore a functional government have since failed.

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US Reaches Out to Iraq Foes

CAIRO – In a major turnaround, the US is reaching out loyalists of young, influential Shiite leader Muqtada al-Sadr, a long-time foe, to reach a political deal before time for its troop drawdown from the oil-rich country.

"Yes, the Americans tried to talk to me and other Sadrists several times," Qusay al-Suhail, a top Sadrist political leader in Baghdad, told The Washington Time on Monday, December 21.

He said senior American military and civilian officials sought meetings with Sadrists at least five times in the past five months.

"They try to talk to us as individuals…But we made it clear that there is no use to talking to us when you are an occupying power."

Loyalists of young, influential Shiite leader have 32 lawmakers in the incumbent 275-member parliament.

Sadr has been a vocal critic of the 2003 US invasion of Iraq.

His Mahdi Army militia, estimated at some 60,000 fighters, has often clashed with US forces since the March 2003 invasion.

In 2004, Sadr led two rebellions against American troops from Najaf which saw hundreds of his militiamen killed.

Though Sadr, whose whereabouts are not known, has disbanded his Mahdi militia in 2007, he still has another militia known as the Al-Yawom al-Mawood (The Promised Day) Brigade.

He had urged other followers to lay down their arms to work on building social, cultural and religious services in Iraq's dominant Shiite community.

"Sayeed Muqtada al-Sadr has transformed the Mahdi Army to a cultural institution," Suhail told the Times.

"Their duty is to deepen their cultural beliefs and widen their religious understandings."

He said the military resistance has been exclusively put in the hands of the Al-Yawom al-Mawood Brigades.

"It's open, there is no limit or number for it; anyone who has the discipline to apply the rules can get in. But he has to abide by the orders of Sayeed Muqtada."

Deal

US officials confirmed the outreach effort led by Gary Grappo, an ambassadorial-level official who works out of the US Embassy in Baghdad, and Maj. Gen. Joseph Reynes Jr., who heads the Force Strategic Engagement Cell.

Two US officials similar with the effort said the outreach aims to reach a political understanding with the Shiite leader.

In return, American would release thousands of Sadrist followers in its custody, said the officials.

There are nearly 2,000 Sadrist followers in the US custody in addition to another 2,000 in Iraqi custody.

"We have a committee formed in the movement seeking their release, specifically with the Iraqi government only," said Suhail.

"We speak only to the Iraqi government."

The US embassy in Baghdad declines to confirm the reported outreach effort.

"The embassy is always interested in meeting individual members of any group that has renounced violence and expressed a willingness to participate in the political system," said spokesman Philip Frayne.

Analysts believe the American outreach aims to prevent any troubles following the US drawdown, set for August 2010.

"They have been a driver of instability in the past, though they have certainly moderated their approach and have emphasized the importance of the political and social aspects of the movement," said Marisa Cochrane Sullivan, research director at the Institute for the Study of War.

"They still do retain a militia wing known as the Promised Day Brigade, which is a security concern and something I am sure US civilian and military leaders in Baghdad are concerned about as they consider withdrawal."

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