The Cold War Is Back
Russia's military seizure of Crimea and preparations for a
possible annexation of the southern Ukrainian province have revived fears,
calculations and reflexes that had been rusting away since the fall of the
Berlin Wall in 1989.
Whether the crisis triggered by President Vladimir Putin's
attempt to prevent Ukraine, a strategic former Soviet republic, turning to the
West, becomes a turning point in international relations like the 2001 Al Qaeda
attacks on the United States or the 1962 Cuban missile crisis, is not yet
certain. There are still some steps to play out.
But policymakers and strategic analysts are thinking through
the consequences of a potentially prolonged East-West tug-of-war. And states in
the middle such as Germany and Poland are starting to weigh uncomfortable
adjustments to their policy.
The standoff is already posing tricky questions about the
balance between sanctions and diplomacy, setting loyalty tests for allies and
raising the risk of spillover to other conflicts and of possible proxy wars.
"Welcome to Cold War Two," Russian analyst Dmitri
Trenin of the Carnegie Foundation for International Peace declared in an
article for Foreign Policy magazine.
"The recent developments have effectively put an end to
the interregnum of partnership and cooperation between the West and Russia that
generally prevailed in the quarter-century after the Cold War," he said.
Trenin is not alone in seeing the struggle for Ukraine as
the biggest game-changer in European security since the collapse of the Soviet
Union in 1991.
While no one imagines the superpowers returning to a
hair-trigger nuclear confrontation or a bloc-against-bloc military buildup -
for starters, Russia no longer has a bloc - the knock-on implications for other
security problems, and for the world economy, are significant.
Frozen conflicts in Moldova, Georgia and Azerbaijan, all
"near abroad" post-Soviet states, could be reactivated.
In Berlin, policymakers worry that Russia could raise the
stakes by stopping cooperation with the West over Iran's nuclear program, the
civil war in Syria, security in Afghanistan and managing North Korea's
unpredictable leader.
Any one of those could make life more uncomfortable for the
United States and its European and Asian allies by destabilizing the Middle
East and southern Asia or raising tension on the Korean peninsula.
"THIS IS THE BIG ONE"
The realization that Germany, Europe's central power, has no
special influence with Russia when the geopolitical chips are down, and that
Chancellor Angela Merkel has been unable to sway Putin despite their common
languages, has concentrated minds.
In hindsight, Russia's 2008 military intervention in
breakaway regions of Georgia was a dry run. It had less global impact partly
because an erratic Georgian leader fired the first shots, but also because it
barely changed the status quo.
"Ukraine is different. It's on the fault line and it's
too big," says Constanze Stelzenmueller, senior transatlantic fellow with
the German Marshall Fund think-tank, who led a recent major study on Germany's
new foreign and security policy.
"Now we are entering a systemic competition. That's why
I think the Cold War analogy is accurate. If you're in Berlin, that's the way
it feels. This is the big one."
Despite its strong economic interests in Russia, where 6,200
German companies do business, and its dependency on Russian natural gas for 40
percent of supplies, Stelzenmueller expects Germany to "surprise on the
upside by being firm".
Moscow is only Berlin's 11th trade partner, below Poland.
Germany's main trade body said last week a trade conflict between the two would
hurt German business but it would be life-threatening for a stagnant Russian
economy.
As former Hong Kong governor Chris Patten observes, while
almost every European household owns goods made in China, few if any have
anything produced in Russia, except gas and vodka.
Central European economies could be severely disrupted if
Moscow played with the gas taps, but stocks are high, winter is over and Russia
needs the revenue.
GOING NEUTRAL?
In Cold War One, hawks in the United States and western
Europe fretted that then West Germany could turn neutral in its pursuit of
detente with the Soviet Union and its east European allies, including communist
East Germany.
That never happened. Bonn remained firmly anchored in the
Western political and military camp. But there were some epic transatlantic
battles along the way.
They included a 1982 clash with the United States over a
German-Soviet gas pipeline deal which the Reagan administration feared would
make West Germany dangerously dependent on Moscow.
The Germans stood their ground. The pipeline was built and
is one reason why Germany remains so hooked on Russian energy.
That dispute - just a year after a Moscow-inspired military
crackdown in Poland - may have lessons for any new Cold War.
A year later, Bonn withstood mass protests and threats from
Moscow to deploy U.S. medium-range nuclear missiles on its soil in response to
Soviet SS-20 rockets pointed at the West. That led eventually to a negotiated
end to the East-West arms race.
Then as now, a perceived Russian threat ultimately united
Europeans and the United States, despite public misgivings reflected today in
opinion polls showing neither Germans nor Americans are keen to get tough with
Russia.
Then as now, both Moscow and the West turned to China to try
to tip the balance. Then as now, U.S. strategists traded charges of appeasement
and warmongering as they argued over the right policy mix between containing
Russia and taking its interests into account.
If Putin moves to annex Crimea, Europeans may soon have to
contemplate awkward sacrifices to show their resolve.
For France, this could mean suspending a contract to sell
helicopter carriers to Russia. For Britain, closing its mansions and bank
vaults to magnates close to Putin. For Germany, initiating gradual steps to
reduce dependency on Russian gas.
It will take Cold War-style determination for any of that to
happen. Maintaining EU unity if the going gets tough, with states in southern
Europe such as Italy, Greece, Cyprus and Bulgaria closer to Moscow, could prove
a challenge.
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