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Russia Profile Weekly Experts Panel: 

Russia’s New European Security Pact


Last week, the Kremlin published its draft of the European Security Treaty,
first proposed in June 2008 as President Dmitry Medvedev’s first major
foreign policy initiative. Moscow has been criticized for offering few
specifics of this proposal, and thus failed to move its European partners
toward a meaningful discussion of its initiative. It has now taken this step
by putting forward a draft treaty, consisting of 14 articles. [...] Is it
possible to imagine that this treaty could serve as a viable replacement of
or a substitute for the existing security structures, particularly those
offering specific security guarantees, like NATO or the Collective Security
Treaty? Would it improve the efficiency of the existing conflict resolution
mechanisms in Europe? Would it restrict NATO’s ability to operate in Europe?
Would it increase Russia’s influence over security decisions in Europe? Will
it receive a broader discussion among European and Transatlantic powers, or
will it die the quiet death of many other grand plans for European security?


Srdja Trifkovic, Director, Center for International Affairs, the Rockford
Institute, Rockford, IL: 

Quite apart from its details and nuances, Moscow’s proposal can be taken
seriously because it comes after a notable shift in U.S. rhetoric and
behavior over the past year. This shift reflects U.S. President Barack
Obama’s evolving strategic priorities caused in part by the ongoing crisis
in Pakistan and the escalation of fighting in Afghanistan. The two key
elements are his U-turn on missile defense deployment in Poland and the
Czech Republic, and the quiet acceptance on both sides of the Atlantic that
there will be no NATO expansion along the Black Sea coast anytime soon. 

The problem is still what to do about NATO, and the Russian proposal offers
ambiguous guidance. The alliance has morphed into something it was never
intended to be: a vehicle for the attainment of American ideological and
geopolitical objectives outside the core area. It is necessary to halt and
reverse NATO’s recently invented mission as a self-appointed promoter of
democracy and humanitarian intervention and guardian against instability in
strange and faraway places. 

Bill Clinton’s air war against the Serbs marked a decisive shift in that
mutation. The trusty keeper of the gate of 1949 had morphed into a roaming
vigilante in 1999. This event had a profound effect on Russian thinking. A
decade later, the National Security Strategy approved by President Medvedev
last May identified the two gravest threats facing Russia as Ukrainian
accession to NATO and predatory Western designs on its energy and other
natural resources. The paper explicitly called the United States a major
threat to Russian national security. 

Such a conclusion was unsurprising. By virtue of its location, Russia
controls the crossroads of Eurasia and therefore access to its fabulous
natural resource wealth. Washington craves cheap and easy access to that
wealth, and under the presidency of George Bush, the United States had
developed an ideology to complement such geo-strategic ambitions. Former
U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice described it succinctly 18 months
ago: in U.S. foreign policy there is no distinction between ideals and
self-interest. U.S. foreign policy is its values, and America will stop at
nothing to ensure that its values prevail. The world is divided into two
camps: one is made up of states that share U.S. values; the other of states
(implicitly Russia and China) which were consigned to a lesser status
because their relations with the United States are rooted more in common
interests than in common values. Washington has changed its tone since, and
that change appears to be for the better. Obama now has an opportunity to
execute a paradigm shift and inaugurate a process in which the East-West
Security Pact would be just the first step on a long journey, not its
conclusion. 

In principle the Russian proposal is not ranged against NATO, but it could
help the United States sort out the incoherent mess NATO has become by
restoring the alliance’s proper legal mission as defender of the territory
of its member states. The proposal’s shortcoming, however, is that it
neglects the potential scope in Europe for a robust and independent EU
defense capability under the auspices of the European Security and Defense
Policy (ESDP). 

To devise a more inclusive European security architecture - one that
includes NATO, but more than just NATO - would require the establishment of
an organization that would replace the moribund OSCE. A new security
architecture embracing the main parts of North America, Russia and Europe,
would allow for the collective reallocation of forces so as to counter
threats emanating from outside: cross-border terrorism, drug trafficking,
sex slavery, proliferation of weapons of mass destruction, and - most
importantly - efforts to export jihad. 

These threats, unconventional yet real, are a factor for unity from
Vancouver to Vladivostok. That vast region is united above all by the moral,
spiritual and intellectual values derived from the Judeo-Christian and Greek
tradition, values that are far deeper than any issues which divide it. The
real threat to the security of pan-Europa thus defined comes from Jihad,
from the deluge of inassimilable immigrants, and from collapsing birthrates.
All three are caused by the moral decrepitude and cultural decline, not by
any shortage of soldiers and weaponry. 

Strategy is the art of winning wars, and grand strategy is the philosophy of
maintaining an acceptable peace. In considering Moscow’s proposals in good
faith, Western powers would display an aptitude for grand strategy, an
inspired grasp of the essential requirements of the moment which has been
sadly lacking in Washington for the past two decades. 

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