Putin鈥檚 backward gaze
By moving on Ukraine, Vladimir Putin looks to the past when he should be envisioning a fresh future for Russia.
By moving on Ukraine, Vladimir Putin looks to the past when he should be envisioning a fresh future for Russia.
Is Vladimir Putin a genius, a Russian chess master thinking several moves ahead of the West in the diplomatic and military confrontation playing out in Ukraine?
He sends a column of trucks toward that country purportedly carrying humanitarian aid while at the same time sending in convoys of arms for the Russian-backed rebels fighting just inside the eastern border. And now he鈥檚 suddenly speaking in conciliatory tones, ready to talk with Ukraine鈥檚 president, Petro Poroshenko, in an Aug. 26 face-to-face meeting.
Is he a mastermind brilliantly pushing for advantage in every facet of the Ukraine problem?
A more useful view might be that of a desperate Russian leader trying to make his country relevant in a world that is passing it by.
When a country loses its sense of direction and purpose, a foreign adventure can serve as a handy unifying force.
Instead of looking ahead, President Putin is looking backward longingly at imperial and Soviet Russia. He鈥檚 attempting to energize his country around the idea of reuniting Russian-speakers in now independent former Soviet states with Mother Russia.
Putin鈥檚 Russia is rich in natural resources, including oil and gas. But that isn鈥檛 the foundation of a diversified, 21st-century economy. Russia鈥檚 population is stagnant. Yes, its oligarchs have become super-rich, but not through innovation: According to one source, Russia ranks behind the US state of Alabama in the number of patents it has been awarded in the past decade.
Here鈥檚 the rub: The decline of Russia isn鈥檛 in the interests of the world. Western economic sanctions may be useful in the short run, but the goal is a stable Russia that is engaged economically and otherwise with Europe, the United States, and the world, not a sickly and isolated Russian bear.
The government of German Chancellor Angela Merkel has stepped in and engaged Putin in talks that should aim at finding a way to keep Ukraine intact as an independent, neutral buffer state between the European Union and Russia. That 鈥渟oft power鈥 role is an appropriate one for Germany as a thriving democracy and Europe鈥檚 leading economic power.
That effort should free the US to stand back and play the long game of carrots and sticks aimed at inducing Russia to turn away from an expansionist policy. Taking steps to make Russia鈥檚 incursion into Ukraine more costly (already begun with sanctions) and boosting Ukraine鈥檚 economy are two actions.
Russia has strong emotional ties to Ukraine, an important region of the old Soviet Union. Its loss, as one Russia-watcher has put it, is like 鈥渢he pain an amputee feels in a phantom limb.鈥
Putin and Russia may long for what now seem like grander days of empire under czars and communists. But those are roads to a past that can鈥檛 be repeated. Putin鈥檚 energy would be better spent on building a different, new Russia, one whose prosperity is based on cooperation, not confrontation, with its neighbors.