The New York Times documents the relentless foreign policy failure of the Putin regime:
This was supposed to be Russia’s round in the battle over its backyard. All year, despite its own economic spasms, Moscow has earmarked great chunks of cash for its impoverished post-Soviet neighbors, seeking to lock in their loyalty over the long term and curtail Western influence in the region.
But the neighbors seem to have other ideas. Belarus — which was promised $2 billion in Russian aid — is in open rebellion against the Kremlin, flaunting its preference for Europe while also collecting money from the International Monetary Fund. Uzbekistan joined Belarus in refusing to sign an agreement on the Collective Rapid Reaction Forces, an idea Moscow sees as an eventual counterweight to NATO.
There are other examples, like Turkmenistan’s May signing of a gas exploration deal with a German company, and Armenia’s awarding of a major national honor to Moscow’s nemesis, President Mikheil Saakashvili of Georgia. But the biggest came last week when Kyrgyzstan — set to receive $2.15 billion in Russian aid — reversed a decision that had been seen as a coup for Moscow, last winter’s order terminating the American military’s use of the Manas Air Base there.
“A game of chance has developed in the post-Soviet space: Who can swindle the Kremlin in the coolest way?” wrote the military analyst Aleksandr Golts, when news of the Manas decision broke. “Such a brilliant result of Russia’s four-year diplomatic efforts!”
There are few projects that matter more to Russia than restoring its influence in the former Soviet republics, whose loss to many in Moscow is still as painful as a phantom limb. Competition over Georgia and Ukraine has brought relations between Moscow and Washington to a post-cold-war low, and the matter is bound to be central to the talks that begin on Monday between Russia’s president, Dmitri A. Medvedev, and President Obama.
Russia’s ability to attract its neighbors to its side and keep them there is unimpressive. The Kremlin’s methods have been reactive and often bullying, combining incentives like cheap energy or cash disbursement with threats of trade sanctions and gas cutoffs.
The war in Georgia seems to have hurt Moscow in that regard. Rather than being cowed into obedience, as most Western observers feared, the former republics seem to have grown even more protective of their sovereignty. Moreover, the leaders themselves have thrived by playing Russia and the West and, in some cases, China off against one another, although that has not brought stability or prosperity to their countries.
In Moscow’s so-called zone of privileged interests, in other words, Russia is just another competitor.
“There is no loyalty,” said Oksana Antonenko, a senior fellow at the International Institute for Strategic Studies, based in London. “Rivalry is the persistent dynamic. They have to play in that game, to compete.”
Kyrgyzstan’s reversal on Manas is a case study in canny horse trading. Russian officials, including Mr. Medvedev, have said they blessed the decision, and that may be true, but President Kurmanbek S. Bakiyev is the one who walked away with what he wanted.
Moscow wanted the base, a key transit hub for the United States’ war in Afghanistan, shut down; Kyrgyzstan wanted more money. In February, Moscow seemed to have achieved a master stroke — at a news conference announcing the pledge of $2.15 billion in Russian aid, Mr. Bakiyev said the United States would have to leave Manas in six months.
The first Russian payments — a $150 million emergency grant and a $300 million low-interest loan — arrived in April, allowing Mr. Bakiyev to pay wages and pensions as he began his re-election campaign. Then Kyrgyzstan shocked the region by announcing a new agreement with the United States. Washington will pay more than triple the rent for the base — now called a “transit center” — increasing its annual payment to $60 million from $17.4 million, while kicking in upwards of $50 million in grants to the government. No one knows if the Kremlin will make good on the rest of its pledge.
Mr. Bakiyev “played the Russians, then he played us,” said Alexander A. Cooley, an associate professor of political science at Barnard College who addressed the Manas dispute in a recent book, “Base Politics.” “It’s all about getting as much as they can.”
This should be easier for Russia, which dwarfs its Eurasian neighbors in both size and wealth. Russia retains a military presence in more than half the former Soviet countries, and huge swaths of their populations rely on Russian media for their news. Russia can offer muscular assistance in elections, as in Moldova, which has just received a Russian pledge of $500 million four weeks before voters go to the polls to elect a new Parliament.
But Russia’s strategy for consolidating support in neighboring capitals can hardly be called a strategy. Belarus’s president, Aleksandr Lukashenko, who is avidly pursuing Western partners, has been barraged with carrots and sticks from Moscow — first promised $2 billion in Russian aid, then bitterly chastised for his economic policy, then punished with a crippling ban on the import of milk products, then rewarded by a reversal of the import ban. Russia regards Mr. Lukashenko’s truculence as a bluff.
“He is imitating a quarrel with Russia until the West demands serious changes from his regime, at which point, he will, of course, surrender,” said Parliament member Konstantin F. Zatulin, a standard-bearer for Russia’s ambitions in former Soviet space. “It’s just his greedy line of behavior.”
But the examples extend much farther. Every post-Soviet country that can manage it is pursuing a “multivector policy,” Mr. Zatulin acknowledged. Mr. Zatulin said he was not upset by these tacks away from Russia, but there was an edge to his answer.
“What is the point of being disappointed?” Mr. Zatulin said. “Pride comes before a fall. These are weak, dependent and poor countries which want to attract attention to themselves — not only attention, but aid. I cannot criticize them for that. But there are some red lines that shouldn’t be crossed.”
Herein lies the problem: Russia’s appeal to them just does not sound very seductive. Ideally, it would present an attractive model for its neighbors, politically and economically. Young generations would learn Russian because they wanted to, and the post-Soviet alliances would be clubs its neighbors are lining up to join.
In any case, Moscow will have to use tools other than wire transfers if it hopes to emerge from the financial crisis with a solid political bloc. As Alexei Mukhin, director of the nonprofit Center for Political Information, put it, “Love bought with money will not last long.
“That is purchased love,” he said. “It’s not very reliable.”








15 responses so far ↓
Robert // July 7, 2009 at 7:16 am |
What is (was) the idea behind the “Collective Rapid Reaction Forces”? Invading other countries together, or just “fraternal aid” to each other in their own internal matters?
trilirium // July 7, 2009 at 11:37 am |
Reading this article again and again, I’m completely failing to realize: it it was USA, who was almost kicked out from Kyrgyzstan; was meekly pleaded to stay; and (finally) was mercifully allowed to (for price of paying $60 mln instead of $17.4 mln annually, 3.5 times more)… why this article is called “Russia is being Rejected…”???
As its author, I’ll think of more appropriate title. ;)
Paul // July 7, 2009 at 12:25 pm |
Well, Russia is the loosing partner because its offer of 2,15 billion clearly could not compete with the USA’s meager 110 million. If you try to persuade someone with money to kick out your adversary and your adversary is able to counter that with offering not even 10% of what you are prepared to pay, then you have clearly failed to reach your diplomatic and political goals.
Karma // July 7, 2009 at 6:12 pm |
Too early to tell. Who knows what’s really going on? Who knows what the game is…
It is doubtful that the Kyrgyz would be so foolish as to leave 2 billion on the table for a mere 100 million. Obviously, there’s something else going on.
LES // July 7, 2009 at 2:05 pm |
Hi Paul,
He should read the article a few more times, and maybe, something will sink in. I read it once, and thought of a more appropriate title:
“The kremlin steals, rapes, tortures, brutalizes and lies to all of their neighbors’, people, property and territory [for centuries] , and pouts [and foams at the mouth] because their neighbors do not trust them.”
LES // July 7, 2009 at 2:45 pm |
Barack Obama tells Russia to respect borders of Georgia and Ukraine
US President Barack Obama has told Russia’s leaders they must respect the sovereignty of their neighbours Georgia and Ukraine in a major speech in Moscow.
By Our Foreign Staff and Agencies in Moscow
Published: 10:54AM BST 07 Jul 2009
[Rest of article, with live Obama speach, at:]
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/northamerica/usa/barackobama/5767109/Barack-Obama-tells-Russia-to-respect-borders-of-Georgia-and-Ukraine.html
**************************
MOSCOW (AP) – President Barack Obama’s speech to a graduating class of Moscow college students Tuesday was not widely available for the Russian people to see on television.
Obama’s speech at the New Economic School was being televised live on 24-hour news channel Vesti, but not on any of the main, more widely watched Russian TV channels like First Channel, Rossiya, or NTV.
A day earlier, the rebroadcast of a June 13 Russian league soccer match on the main state-run sports channel seemed to overtake coverage of Obama’s conference with Russian President Dmitry Medvedev.
It was not immediately clear whether Russia was trying to quash viewership of the news conference, where Obama and Medvedev announced preliminary agreement to reduce their massive stockpiles of nuclear weapons.
Russia owns or strongly influences the country’s main nationwide TV channels.
http://www.kyivpost.com/world/44844
rts // July 7, 2009 at 3:00 pm |
I think 99% of Russians do not care what Obama might have said. Hopefully the Russians will let him respect the borders of Mexico and Canada and that is more than enough.
Paul // July 8, 2009 at 12:07 pm |
The US respects the borders of Canada since 1783 (a few minord disputes were solved according to separate treaties) and respects the border of Mexico since 1848 – 1853. Since then, there have never been wars or armed dsiputes about the border, and the US neighbours can be quite sure that the US won’t invade them or otherwise try to snatch land away. I don’t think the same can be said of Russia’s neighbours. If the US are meddling in Russia’s neighbour states, it is because these state badly need Amercian help to be secure against Russia.
ditt0head // July 8, 2009 at 12:55 pm |
“Respects the border of Mexico since 1853″!!
Bravo! “We had decapitated him but did not further harm since then”.
Andrew // July 8, 2009 at 1:02 pm |
dittohead, you really are a hypocrite.
Russia is always land grabbing from its neighbours.
Just look at Abkhazia and South Ossetia which have been stolen from Georgia by force, or Koenigsburg (Kalliningrad), or their demands to re examine the borders with Poland and the Baltic states, or Finnish Karelia which is still occupied by Russia, all in the 20th C.
ditt0head // July 8, 2009 at 1:30 pm |
My dear Georgian friend! Are you able to understand some English? I’ve asked you several times not to write to me anymore. Gmadlobt.
Whatever. Finland has been given independence by Russia (for the first time in its history), and the border isn’t even disputed by any sane pesron in Finland. Poland also gained vast terrotories as the result of the WWII. Lost ‘Eastern last’ (kresy wschodnie)? Well, tell Mr. Agent Orange to give the Western Ukraine back to Poland while he’s still in office, what’s the problem? :-)
Finally, all this has nothing to do with USA vs Mexico.
Andrew // July 8, 2009 at 5:20 pm |
Now my dear greek speaking ignoant savage.
Finland had to fight for its independance, and was invaded by Russia in 1939/40 during the infamous “winter war” when it was a victim of Russian agression.
Funnily enough around 30% of Finns want a return of Karelia and support for the return of the stolen territory is particularly strong amongst the younger (post cold war) generation.
The border is quite disputed by sane persons in Finland, but as would be expected in a progressive western democracy there is a wide range of opinion.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Karelian_question_in_Finnish_politics
What my comment has to do with your post is that Russia is a far bigger threat to its neighbours both historically and currently, than the US is to its nieghbours.
Of course, you are too brainwashed to understand this fact.
Furthermore “My dear Georgian friend! Are you able to understand some English? I’ve asked you several times not to write to me anymore.”
1. Not Georgian.
2. If you want to post your inane (almost retarded) opinions here, anyone has the right to reply. Unfortunately for you, most of us come from a tradition of free speech, something you obviously fail to understand (like your hero Putin, and the backwards Russian society he opresses).
As for Poland “gaining” vast territories as a result of WW2, wrong again dildohead.
“World War II
Main article: History of Poland (1939–1945)
The Sanacja movement controlled Poland until the start of World War II in 1939, when Nazi Germany invaded on 1 September and the Soviet invasion of Poland followed on 17 September. Warsaw capitulated on 28 September 1939. As agreed in the Molotov–Ribbentrop Pact, Poland was split into two zones, one occupied by Germany while the eastern provinces fell under the control of the Soviet Union.
Of all the countries involved in the war, Poland lost the highest percentage of its citizens: over six million perished, half of them Polish Jews. Poland made the fourth-largest troop contribution to the Allied war effort, after the Soviets, the British and the Americans. The Polish expeditionary corps played an important role in the Italian Campaign, particularly at the Battle of Monte Cassino. At the war’s conclusion, Poland’s borders were shifted westwards, pushing the eastern border to the Curzon Line. Meanwhile, the western border was moved to the Oder-Neisse line. The new Poland emerged 20% smaller by 77,500 square kilometres (29,900 sq mi). The shift forced the migration of millions of people, most of whom were Poles, Germans, Ukrainians, and Jews.”
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Poland#World_War_II
Robert // July 8, 2009 at 1:31 pm |
@“Respects the border of Mexico since 1853″!!
Bravo! “We had decapitated him but did not further harm since then”.
And imagine this: the USA didn’t even attempt to pernamently grab (annex) any territory even during the total chaos of the bloody Mexican Revolution / Civil War (which included the US involvement).
And you have no even semi-serious politicians or military generals talking nowadays about the need to invade not only Mexico or Canada, but even the hostile Cuba.
And you know, shock-and-awing Cuba would be really just a training exercise (and not a “heroic feat” with heavy losses like the Russian Georgia bombing campaign – just few days and several aircraft of the “invincible” Red Star airforce lost in combat to the tiny Georgian armed forces).
rts // July 8, 2009 at 2:04 pm |
Paul:
“Since then, there have never been wars or armed dsiputes about the border, and the US neighbours can be quite sure that the US won’t invade them or otherwise try to snatch land away.” ………
Murder Inc. USA – Global Nazi Parasit and its humanitarian Interventions :-)
(or History Of USA’s STATE TERRORISM)
Let me list below the nearly 100 US military interventions in and occupations of Latin American countries since 1798. The list does not include US-sponsored military coups such as in Guatemala in 1954; destabilization efforts such as those the US implemented in Chile in 1970-73; or US-financed wars by local allies such as that fought in Nicaragua for the past eight years.
Mexico: 1806, 1814-25, 1836, 1842, 1844, 1846-48, 1859, 1866, 1870, 1873, 1876, 1913, 1914-17, 1918-19.
Cuba: 1814-25, 1822, 1823, 1824, 1825, 1898-99, 1906-09, 1912, 1917-33, 1933, 1956-58, 1961, 1962.
Dominican Republic: 1798-1800, 1814-1825, 1903, 1904, 1914, 1916-24, 1961, 1964, 1965.
Haiti: 1888, 1891, 1914, 1915-34, 1957.
Puerto Rico: 1814-25, 1898-99.
Jamaica, Antigua, Trinidad, Bermuda, St. Lucia, Bahamas: 1940
Grenada: 1983.
Guatemala: 1920, 1962
Honduras: 1903, 1907, 1911, 1912, 1919, 1924, 1925.
Nicaragua: 1853, 1854, 1857, 1894, 1896, 1898, 1899, 1910, 1912-25, 1926-33.
Costa Rica: 1921
Panama: 1856, 1865, 1885, 1903-14, 1918-20, 1921, 1925, 1959, 1964, 1989
Colombia: 1860, 1868, 1873, 1895, 1901, 1902.
Brazil: 1894
Peru: 1835-36.
Paraguay: 1859
Chile: 1891
Uruguay: 1855, 1858, 1868
Argentina: 1831-32, 1833, 1852-53, 1890.
The US population has a strong self-image of charity toward those “less fortunate,” both at home and abroad. Many, as a result, cannot comprehend the common use in the Third World of the term imperialist to describe the United States, or the frequency with which the slogan “Yankee Go Home” is written on walls all over Latin America. Equally incomprehensible, it would appear, is the response of many Latin American nations to the current US military invasion of Panama. Their demands for non-intervention, for the recognition of sovereignty and self-determination, fall on the deaf ears of those in the United States proud of their government’s role as “policeman” of the region—a self-appointed role consecrated in the Monroe Doctrine of 1822 and carried out unilaterally ever since. If these numbers do not impress you too much, it’s the best indication you are a conventional American idiot.
rts // July 8, 2009 at 2:57 pm |
“Equally incomprehensible, it would appear, is the response of many Latin American nations to the current US military invasion of Panama.”
Sorry, I meant not Panama but Colombia and massive current US build up in that country targeting oil rich Venezuela and Ecuador.