US-Russia talks on Syria: A balance of ideals, interests
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If each American could be a fly on the wall during the Russian-US negotiations over Syria, they might witness a traditional clash between Russian 鈥渞ealism鈥 over the country鈥檚 own national interests and American 鈥渋dealism鈥 over a moral issue like chemical weapons.
This type of confrontation has already played out over Syria 鈥 in public. On Tuesday, for example, President Obama said the United States was an 鈥渆xceptional鈥 nation that must stand for global values, such as the international chemical weapons ban. On Thursday, Russian President Vladimir Putin denounced such an American presumption of superiority as 鈥渆xtremely dangerous.鈥
Mr. Obama said the US has been 鈥渢he anchor of global security鈥 based on its unique 鈥渂urden of leadership.鈥 Mr. Putin says the US must act abroad only with the approval of the United Nations Security Council 鈥 meaning, only without Moscow鈥檚 veto 鈥 as this was in America鈥檚 鈥渓ong-term interest.鈥 (He didn鈥檛 describe it as an ideal.)
This fundamental conflict, in which Russia operates almost solely on geopolitical interests and power relationships while the US usually starts out asserting its ideals, is what must be resolved in the talks over Syria. Then perhaps the two countries can come up with a diplomatic resolution on Syria鈥檚 chemical weapons. (Basic facts also need resolving: Putin disputes Obama鈥檚 statement that the Assad regime carried out the Aug. 21 gas attack.)
Russia鈥檚 many insecurities 鈥 about potential enemies, its declining population, its unstable politics 鈥 keep its leaders focused on interests more than ideals. Putin鈥檚 domestic interests drive him to create the illusion of Russia as a great power. But he is often reminded otherwise. His authoritarian government, for example, is highly dependent on oil and gas exports, yet this week he learned the US will overtake Russia this year in the production of liquid fuels such as crude oil.
The US itself is often divided between two similar foreign-policy camps 鈥 the 鈥渞ealists鈥 (such as Henry Kissinger) and the 鈥渋dealists鈥 (such as Woodrow Wilson). In his address to the nation, Obama jumped between the two camps, trying to appeal to both, which may account for the poor reception of the speech among the foreign-policy elite.
Resolving this apparent clash in the US has not always been easy. But it is possible when there is a confluence of narrow national interests and broader principles and moral imperatives.
Take the Monroe Doctrine, set down in 1823, that insists no foreign power can dominate Latin America 鈥 for the interest of US security 鈥 while also asserting the ideal of self-rule in the region. Or consider that US presidents during the cold war who sought to protect US interests in western Europe while also promoting liberty in communist-dominated countries.
When realists and idealists are more sensitive to each other鈥檚 basic reasoning, common ground is possible. The principle and the practical overlap.
This is not new for the US. Thomas Jefferson said that America鈥檚 鈥渋nterests soundly calculated, will ever be found inseparable from our moral duties.鈥
If there is a fly on the wall in the US-Russia talks, perhaps it can say those words.