http://www.jamestown.org/publications_details.php?volume_id=400
<http://www.jamestown.org/publications_details.php?volume_id=400&issue_id=28
99&article_id=23469> &issue_id=2899&article_id=23469
 
TERRORISM MONITOR 
 
Volume 2 , Issue 1 (January 15, 2004) 
 

RUSSIA AND THE WAR ON TERROR: NOT A TRUSTED U.S. ALLY 
 

By Igor Torbakov
 

It is widely believed that cooperation in fighting international terrorism
and the development of global energy resources are the two main pillars of
U.S.-Russian relations post September 11. The firmness of this foundation,
however, has been eroded by the continuing disagreements between Moscow and
Washington over concrete anti-terror policies. The arrest at gun point of
the top executive of Russia's biggest oil company, on what appear to be
politically motivated charges, together with Russia's seeming drift toward
authoritarianism, evident in the outcome of the State Duma elections, have
also made the Bush administration wary of the Kremlin's credibility as a
partner. 
 
Divergent Views 
 
As the global war to contain terrorism moves forward, Russia is maintaining
the rhetoric of partnership and cooperation with the United States--at least
at the official level. Yet Russia's political class remains split over the
geopolitical implications of the anti-terrorism campaign and the prospects
for U.S.-Russian relations. 
 
Many Moscow-based political analysts argue that the struggle against
terrorism cannot serve as a solid basis for a U.S.-Russian "strategic
alliance;" they assert that the notion of terrorism is too vague to act as a
unifying force. Past experience has shown that Russia, the United States and
other countries--including China and the Central Asian nations--have all
sought to utilize the broader threat of terrorism to address specific, and
in some cases, long-standing strategic issues. As one Russian pundit put it,
every country has its own list of "favorite terrorists," and these lists
don't necessarily coincide. 
 
The most glaring example of definition discrepancy is, of course, Moscow's
outspoken criticism of the American effort to topple Saddam Hussein's regime
in Iraq. Russia was against the war from the very beginning and has
criticized its prosecution all along. During his December 18 national
phone-in discussion, President Vladimir Putin took aim at U.S. foreign
policy in general and at Washington's Iraq policies in particular. Putin
stated that "in all times in human history," countries that "sought to be
called empires" invariably suffered from a sense of "invulnerability,"
"greatness," and "flawlessness," Itar-Tass reported. Putin specifically
mentioned the Iraq war, saying that there were "no international terrorists
under [deposed Iraqi President] Saddam Hussein." He added that anything done
"without the UN Security Council's approval cannot be recognized as fair or
justified." 
 
"Iraq has demonstrated how differently [the Russian and American] sides
understand the tasks and objectives of the struggle against what is
currently called 'international terrorism,'" said political analyst Evgeny
Verlin in a commentary published in the Nezavisimaya Gazeta daily. 
 
Russia's political elite has been divided ever since President Putin
expressed Russia's allegiance to the anti-terrorism alliance. The ties
binding Russia to the U.S.-led coalition have eroded over the past two
years, but Moscow remains nominally committed to the anti-terrorism
campaign. One reason for this is the difficulty that the policy making
establishment is having developing an alternative strategic approach. 
 
Westernizers Versus Putinists 
 
Two main groups with distinct philosophical views are competing for
influence in the shaping of Russian strategic policy. The first group,
arguably the smaller and weaker one, is made up of staunch Westernizers who
advocate "strategic partnership with the United States." The
Westernizers--comprised mainly of Moscow-based analysts and political
thinkers--insist that the deployment of U.S. troops in Central Asia and the
Caucasus does not pose a threat to Russian interests. They cite one of
Russian Foreign Minister Igor Ivanov's dictums: "A threat to Russia is not a
danger of nuclear catastrophe or U.S. and NATO aggression. A threat to
Russia lurks in the Caucasus and [Russia's] Asian frontier." Westernizers
also argue that the Americans, while pursuing their own goals--namely, the
destruction of al Qaeda cells and the Taliban regime--have simultaneously
removed the gravest threat to Russia's security, eliminating the base of
Islamic radicalism lurking along Russia's southern border. 
 
"Lacking its own resources," says Andrei Piontkovsky, the director of the
Center for Strategic Studies in Moscow, "Russia, in order to resolve one of
its most acute security problems, has successfully used the military,
political and economic potential of the only superpower in the world." What
Russian diplomacy needs now is to strengthen this new and positive tendency,
maintains Piontkovsky. In addition, the Westernizers hope that multifaceted
cooperation with the United States will further democratic reforms at home
and make the cultural norms and political values of the two countries more
compatible. 
 
Westernizers tend to acknowledge quietly that Russia is playing junior
partner to the United States. They want Moscow to abandon attempts to
rebuild a "soft empire" in the post-Soviet space and to concentrate instead
on the economic and social development of Russia's Siberian and Far Eastern
regions. A major security threat, the Westernizers say, is the depopulation
of Russia's northeastern regions, along with massive Chinese immigration.
They argue that Washington is as interested as Moscow is in the containment
of China. They believe additionally that the key to the region's prosperity
is the development of its natural resources. 
 
The majority group, the so-called Putinists--those who actually make the
decisions--are classic pragmatists and realists. They also tend to cooperate
with the United States on terrorism when they see the cooperation meeting
Russia's strategic interests--as in Afghanistan and, partially, in Central
Asia. However, this powerful group, which comprises the bulk of Russia's
bureaucratic class, diplomatic corps, and military and security community,
is far more wary of positioning Russia too close to the United States. "The
task of building a strategic alliance between Russia and America is
unrealistic and impractical," contends Aleksandr Bessmertnykh, who was
ambassador to the United States in 1990-1991. He was speaking at a recent
Moscow gathering of former Russian and U.S. ambassadors that was meant to
mark the seventieth anniversary of the reestablishment of diplomatic
relations between Washington and Moscow. "Friendly pragmatism" and
"relations without intimacy" is what should be the true basis of a
U.S.-Russian relationship, Bessmertnykh said. Other Russian participants
agreed, stressing that "we are different and will stay different." 
 
The pragmatists seem to recognize America's preeminence in world politics.
But in acknowledging America's overall leadership, they also maintain that
Russia has the right to assert its will within its own sphere of influence. 
 
Russia's military, in particular the General Staff, seems to be especially
suspicious of U.S. designs in the post-Soviet geopolitical space. Chief of
the General Staff Anatoly Kvashnin has taken repeated swipes at the United
States, accusing it of using the war on terror as a pretext for spreading
its influence abroad. The top Russian commander's comments would appear to
be directed at those U.S. troops stationed in the former Soviet republics of
Central Asia as part of Washington's Afghan campaign. Kvashnin stated to the
Interfax-AVN military news agency: "It is one thing when a country is
fighting terrorism on its own territory and some other countries assist
them. But it is quite another thing when, under the guise of fighting
international terror, some countries are in fact trying to get involved in
the internal affairs of the nation they are meant to be helping." Last
month, Russian Defense Minister Sergei Ivanov said that he did not want the
U.S. bases in Central Asia to remain after the U.S. troops completed their
job.
 
Some pragmatists seem to suspect that the United States is trying to expand
its influence in a broader fight for control of Central Asia's oil and
natural gas reserves, as well the region's pipeline network. In a remark
typical of such attitudes, Defense Minister Ivanov, reportedly one of
Putin's closest confidants, has recently said that America is "definitely
not a foe but, to be sure, it is not an ally either." 
 
Recent Developments 
 
The arrest of Mikhail Khodorkovsky, former head of Russia's giant Yukos oil
company--the leading business structure to champion U.S.-Russian cooperation
in the energy sphere--seems also to have prompted Washington to revisit the
issue of the "strategic alliance" that George W. Bush had supposedly formed
with Vladimir Putin. Until very recently, the Bush administration chose to
ignore the troubling signs coming from Russia: Suppression of independent
media outlets, "selective justice," assaults on representatives of big
business, and "neo-imperialism" in dealing with Russia's neighbors in
post-Soviet Eurasia. Washington appears now to realize, however, that
turning a blind eye to these phenomena might become counter-productive for
America itself. True allies and partners (including in the war on terror)
are supposed to share the same values, some American politicians point out. 
 
"We expect our relations to be based not only on the commonality of
interests but also on the commonality of values," said U.S. Ambassador to
Moscow Alexander Vershbow in a recent interview with the liberal
Ezhenedelnyi Zhurnal weekly. The American diplomat has noted that Washington
today is not sure if it shares the same values with Moscow. He cited the
Yukos case, the disappearance of independent television and the way the
presidential election was conducted in Chechnya as negative developments
that are eroding mutual trust and that "cause concern." "The [American]
perception of Russia is changing, the reliability of Russian partners is
being questioned," said Vershbow. "All this creates difficulties for the
development of the long-term partnership," he added. 
 
The December 7 parliamentary elections, which the U.S. State Department
called "free but not fair," gave President Putin total control over the
State Duma. The new parliament will be dominated by four parties espousing,
to various degrees, a combination of statist and nationalist ideas. The
representation of the two Western-type liberal parties was virtually wiped
out. Political analysts are split over how Putin will use his enhanced
authority. One school of thought maintains that parliament's new composition
will give the Putin administration a free hand to pursue pragmatic
cooperation with the West, rather than antagonize it. Other analysts
disagree. They note that prior to the emergence of the more nationalist new
Duma, a similar shift toward nationalist populism occurred within Putin's
own administration. This dual change is seen as potentially hazardous. 
 
Some parliamentary forces like the Rodina (Homeland) bloc have stated they
would prefer to see the Russian government adopt a tougher stance toward the
United States--to counter what the party believes to be Washington's
encroachment on Russia's sphere of influence. It would appear that by the
beginning of 2004, a common understanding had taken shape both in Washington
and Moscow: Putin's Russia will continue to cooperate with the United States
in the war on terror but it will never become a partner that Washington can
fully rely on. 
 
Igor Torbakov is a freelance journalist and researcher who specializes in
CIS political affairs. He holds an MA in History from Moscow State
University and a PhD from the Ukrainian Academy of Sciences. He was Research
Scholar at the Institute of Russian History, Russian Academy of Sciences,
Moscow, 1988-1997; a Visiting Scholar at the Kennan Institute, Woodrow
Wilson International Center for Scholars, Washington DC, 1995, and a
Fulbright Scholar at Columbia University, New York, 2000. He is now based in
Istanbul, Turkey.


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