Obama Changes Tack on Russia,  Calls up Putin 

 

By  
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=938327&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fatimes.com%2Fauthor%2Fm-k-bhadrakumar%2F>
 M.K. Bhadrakumar on  
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 January 14, 2016

 
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 http://atimes.com/2016/01/obama-changes-tack-on-russia-calls-up-putin/

 

The US President Barack Obama sprang a New Year surprise on his Russian 
counterpart Vladimir Putin by telephoning him Wednesday night. It was a double 
surprise since the Russian New Year Holiday Week is ending on Thursday, January 
14, and Obama rarely makes such gestures; and, secondly, the call signified a 
virtual U-turn just a day after the US president had made some unfriendly 
remarks about the Kremlin’s policies and caricatured Russia as undermining the 
international system.

 

The Kremlin described the Putin-Obama conversation as frank and constructive.  
The White House readout make it clear that the two presidents held a detailed 
discussion on the situation in Ukraine and the Middle East tensions (Syrian 
conflict and Saudi-Iran rift) and North Korea’s dangerous nuclear brinkmanship. 
It was indeed a substantial phone conversation, signifying a Russian-American 
constructive engagement.

 

The Kremlin readout is an unusually detailed one, conveying a high degree of 
satisfaction, while the White House readout underscored that Obama’s intention 
was to discuss with Putin the “full implementation” of the Minsk agreement on 
Ukraine “by all parties”, to coordinate on the upcoming UN-sponsored roadmap on 
Syrian transition, and to get Russia on board a unified big-power stance to 
pressure North Korea.

 

According to the Kremlin’s version, Putin stressed the “need for Kiev’s full 
and rigorous observance of the Minsk Agreements”, in particular regarding the 
constitutional amendments that enable local elections to be held in the 
breakaway regions of Donbass. The White House maintained that on his part, 
Obama stressed that “the key next step” is about the two sides in Ukraine 
reaching agreement on the modalities of holding elections in the breakaway 
regions.

 

The difference over the implementation of the Minsk agreement appears to have 
narrowed down to a matter of the relative stress the two big powers put on what 
are indeed two inter-related aspects of the current situation, namely, the 
constitutional reform and the holding of local elections under the new 
legislation.

On Syria, Putin brought up “the need to create a broad coalition to fight the 
Islamic State and other extremist organizations” and on the criticality of 
avoiding “double standards” in naming the irreconcilable rebel groups that will 
be kept out of the purview of the peace talks. Interestingly, there was a 
discussion on military-to-military contacts between the US and Russia “aimed at 
consolidating efforts” to fight extremist groups in the Middle East.

The two presidents have called for de-escalation of the Saudi-Iran rift. They 
obviously share the concern that tensions may result in flashpoint at some 
point. If the Saudi hope was that Washington will be obliged to take sides in 
the rift, things are moving altogether in a different way. (The ease with which 
Washington and Tehran defused a potentially ugly stand-off over the detention 
of 10 American sailors by the Iranian Revolutionary Guards this week suggests a 
deepening US-Iranian engagement, which cannot be lost on Riyadh.)

 

On North Korea, notwithstanding the cordial ties between Russia and that 
country, Moscow is backing Washington’s tough approach as regards meting out a 
“harsh international response” (Kremlin’s words) to the reported testing of a 
hydrogen bomb by Pyongyang. Russia, of course, disfavours any precipitate 
military actions by the US but has reason to feel gratified that the Obama 
administration has taken the issue to the UN Security Council and is not acting 
as a lone ranger.

 

What does Obama hope to convey through this rare gesture of phoning up Putin 
amidst the Russian New Year festivities? Indeed, he felt it prudent on second 
thoughts not to cause annoyance to Moscow at a juncture when the US badly needs 
Russia’s cooperation to tackle a host of regional issues. In sum, he has 
hastened to correct the impression he put forth in his 2016 State of the Union 
Address on Tuesday regarding Russia as a pernicious entity in the international 
system. Obama signaled the following:

*       The US is no longer playing a behind-the-scenes role of inciting its 
proxy government in Kiev to drag its feet on the full implementation of the 
Minsk agreement (which is a precondition for the West to lift sanctions against 
Russia). 
*       The US stance does “see Syria fundamentally very similarly” with Russia 
– to use Secretary of State John Kerry’s words – and the two countries need to 
work together in resolving the conflict. Kerry was, perhaps, more explicit 
after his talks in the Kremlin on December 20: “We (US) are not trying to do a 
regime change. We are not engaged in a colour revolution”. 
*       The US will not take sides in the Saudi-Iran rift; nor is it seeking to 
take advantage of a flare-up in sectarian strife in the Muslim Middle East. 
*       The US recognizes that Russia’s cooperation is necessary and useful to 
pursue a “strong and united international response” to the North Korean regime. 

The Kremlin described the Putin-Obama conversation as “frank and constructive”. 
Indeed, differences exist between the US and Russia, including some serious 
differences such as on NATO’s expansion or the US’ missile defense system. The 
Russian experience so far has been that the US played a spoiler’s role in 
Ukraine and has not really come to terms with the stunning reality of Russian 
military presence in Syria. Besides, there is no let-up whatsoever discernible 
in the US official media propaganda against Russia, which is very often highly 
personalized attacks on Putin.

 

However, if Obama has really embarked upon a “constructive” engagement with 
Putin, the latter can be expected to respond positively. Putin never tires of 
pointing out that the New Cold War is a choice that Obama needs to make and 
that Russia by itself is averse to.

 

The coming weeks will be keenly watched as to how the US-Russia engagement 
actually works on the ground. Both Ukraine and Syria are immediate testing 
grounds. The local elections in Donbass cannot wait much longer and the 
ceasefire and the transition in Syria is also on the cards.

 

But looking ahead, the real touchstone will be any incipient signs of the 
easing of western sanctions against Russia. Any such signs would go a long way 
to confirm that Obama has had misgivings about his administration’s messianic 
mission to ‘punish’ Russia, which Russia will never accept, and which can only 
create more turbulence in a world that is already in turmoil

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