From
STRATFOR
GLOBAL INTELLIGENCE
"Russia and the United States Negotiate the Future of Ukraine"
By
George Friedman, April, 1st. 2014
During
the Cold War, U.S. secretaries
of state and Soviet foreign
ministers routinely negotiated
the outcome of crises and the
fate of countries. It has been a
long time since such talks have
occurred, but last week a
feeling of deja vu overcame me.
Americans and Russians
negotiated over everyone's head
to find a way to defuse the
crisis in Ukraine and, in the
course of that, shape its fate.
During
the talks, U.S. President Barack
Obama made it clear that
Washington has no intention of
expanding NATO into either
Ukraine or Georgia. The Russians
have stated that they have no
intention of any further
military operations in Ukraine.
Conversations between Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
and U.S. Secretary of State John
Kerry have been extensive and
ongoing. For different reasons,
neither side wants the crisis to
continue, and each has a
different read on the situation.
The Russian Perspective
The
Russians are convinced that the
uprising in Kiev was fomented by
Western intelligence services
supporting nongovernmental
organizations and that without
this, the demonstrations would
have died out and the government
would have survived. This is not
a new narrative on the Russians'
part. They also claimed that the
Orange Revolution had the same
roots. The West denies this.
What is important is that the
Russians believe this. That
means that they believe that
Western intelligence has the
ability to destabilize Ukraine
and potentially other countries
in the Russian
sphere of influence,
or even Russia itself. This
makes the Russians wary of U.S.
power.
The
Russians also are not
convinced that
they have to do anything. Apart
from their theory on Western
intelligence, they know that the
Ukrainians are fractious and
that mounting an uprising is
very different than governing.
The Russians have raised the
price of natural gas by 80
percent for Ukraine, and the
International Monetary Fund's
bailout of Ukrainian sovereign
debt carries with it substantial
social and economic pain. As
this pain sets in this summer,
and the romantic recollection of
the uprising fades, the Russians
expect a backlash against the
West and also will use their own
influence, overt and covert, to
shape the Ukrainian government.
Seizing eastern Ukraine would
cut against this strategy. The
Russians want the pro-Russian
regions voting in Ukrainian
elections, sending a strong
opposition to Kiev. Slicing off
all or part of eastern Ukraine
would be irrational.
Other
options for the Russians are not
inviting. There has been talk of
action in Moldova from
Transdniestria. But while it is
possible for Russian forces
there to act in Moldova,
supplies for the region run
through Ukraine. In the event of
a conflict, the Russians must
assume that the Ukrainians would
deny access. The Russians could
possibly force their way in, but
then a measured action in
Moldova would result in an
invasion of Ukraine -- and put
the Russians back where they
started.
Action
in the Baltics is possible; the
Kremlin could encourage Russian
minorities to go into the
streets. But the Baltics are in
NATO, and the response would be
unpredictable. The Russians want
to hold their sphere of
influence in Ukraine without
breaking commercial and
political ties with Europe,
particularly with Germany.
Russian troops moving into the
Baltics would challenge Russia's
relationship with Europe.
Negotiations
to relieve the crisis make sense
for the Russians because of the
risks involved in potential
actions and because they think
they can recover their influence
in Ukraine after the economic
crunch hits and they begin
doling out cash to ease the
pain.
The U.S. Perspective
The
United States sees the Russians
as having two levers.
Militarily, the Russians are
stronger than the Americans in
their region. The United States
had no practical military
options in Crimea, just as they
had none in
Georgia in 2008.
The United States would take
months to build up forces in the
event of a major conflict in
Eurasia. Preparation for Desert
Storm took six months, and the
invasion of Iraq in 2003 took
similar preparation. With such a
time frame the Russians would
have achieved their aims and the
only option the Americans would
have would be an impossible one:
mounting an invasion of
Russian-held territory. The
Americans do not want the
Russians to exercise military
options, because it would reveal
the U.S. inability to mount a
timely response. It would also
reveal weaknesses
in NATO.
The
Americans also do not want to
test the Germans since they
don't know which way Berlin will
move. In a sense, the Germans
began the crisis by confronting
the Ukrainians' refusal to
proceed with an EU process and
by supporting one of the leaders
of the uprising both before and
after the protests. But since
then, the Germans have fallen
increasingly quiet and the
person they supported, Vitali
Klitschko, has dropped
out of the race for the
Ukrainian presidency. The
Germans have pulled back.
The
Germans do not want a
little Cold War to
break out. Constant conflict to
their east would exacerbate the
European Union's instability and
could force Germany into more
assertive actions that it really
does not want to undertake.
Berlin is very busy trying to
stabilize the European Union and
hold together Southern and
Central Europe in the face of
massive economic dislocation and
the emergence of an increasingly
visible radical right. It does
not need a duel with Russia. The
Germans also receive a third of
their energy from Russia. This
is of mutual benefit, but the
Germans are not certain that
Russia will see the mutual
benefits during a crisis. It is
a risk the Germans cannot afford
to take.
If
Germany is cautious, however the
passions in the region flow, the
Central Europeans must be
cautious as well. Poland cannot
simply disregard Germany, for
example. The United States might
create bilateral relations in
the region, as I suggested would
happen in due course, but for
the moment, the Americans are
not ready to act at all, let
alone in a region where two
powers -- Russia and Germany --
might oppose American action.
Washington,
like Moscow, has limited
options. Even assuming the
Russian claim about U.S.
influence via nongovernmental
organizations is true, they have
played that card and it will be
difficult to play again as
austerity takes hold. Therefore,
the latest events are logical.
The Russians have turned to the
Americans to discuss easing the
crisis, asking for the creation
of a federation in Ukraine, and
there have been suggestions of
monitors being deployed as well.
The Significance of the Negotiations
What
is most interesting in this is
that with the next act being
played out, the Russians and
Americans have reached out to
each other. The Russians have
talked to the Europeans, of
course, but as discussions reach
the stage of defining the future
and options, Lavrov calls Kerry
and Kerry answers the phone.
This
tells us something important on
how the world works. I have laid
out the weakness of both
countries, but even in the face
of this weakness, the Russians
know that they cannot extract
themselves from the crisis
without American cooperation,
and the United States
understands that it will need to
deal with the Russians and
cannot simply impose an outcome
as it sometimes did in the
region in the 1990s.
Part
of this might be habits learned
in the Cold War. But it is more
than that. If the Russians want
to reach a solution to the
Ukrainian problem that protects
their national interests without
forcing them beyond a level of
risk they consider acceptable,
the only country they can talk
to is the United States. There
is no single figure in Europe
who speaks for the European
states on a matter of this
importance. The British speak
for the British, the French for
the French, the Germans for the
Germans and the Poles for the
Poles. In negotiating with the
Europeans, you must first allow
the Europeans to negotiate among
themselves. After negotiations,
individual countries -- or
perhaps the European Union --
might, for example, send
monitors. But Europe is an
abstraction when it comes to
power politics.
The
Russians called the Americans
because they understood that
whatever the weakness of the
United States at this moment and
in this place, the potential
power of the United States is
substantially greater than
theirs. On a matter of such
significance to the Russians,
failing to deal with the United
States would be dangerous, and
dealing with them first would be
the best path to solving the
problem.
A
U.S.-Russian agreement on
defusing the crisis likely would
bring the Germans and the rest
into the deal. Germany wants a
solution that does not disrupt
relations with Russia and does
not strain relations with
Central Europe. The Germans need
good relations with the Central
Europeans in the context of the
European Union. The Americans
want good relations, but have
little dependence on Central
Europe at the moment. Thus, the
Americans potentially can give
more than the Europeans, even if
the Europeans could have
organized themselves to
negotiate.
Finally,
the United States has global
interests that the Russians can
affect. Iran is the most obvious
one. Thus, the Russians can link
issues in Ukraine to issues in
Iran to extract a better deal
with the United States. A
negotiation with the United
States has a minimal economic
component and maximum political
and military components. There
are places where the United
States wants Russian help on
these sorts of issues. They can
deal.
Divergent U.S. Concerns
Most
important, the United States is
not clear on what it wants from
the Russians. In part it wants
to create a constitutional
democracy in Ukraine. The
Russians actually do not object
to that so long as Ukraine does
not join NATO or the European
Union, but the Russians are also
aware that building a
constitutional democracy in
Ukraine is a vast and possibly
futile undertaking. They know
that the government is built on
dangerously shifting economic
and social sands. There are
parts of the U.S. government
that are concerned with Russia
emerging as a regional hegemon,
and there are parts of the U.S.
government still obsessed with
the Middle East that see the
Russians as challengers in the
region, while others see them as
potential partners.
As
sometimes happens in the United
States, there is complex
ideological and institutional
diversity. The State Department
and Defense Department rarely
see anything the same way, and
different offices of each have
competing views, and then there
is Congress. That makes the
United States in some ways as
difficult to deal with as the
Europeans. But it also opens
opportunities for manipulation
in the course of the
negotiation.
Still,
in cases of the highest national
significance, whatever the
diversity in views, in the end
the president or some other
dominant figure can speak
authoritatively. In this case it
appears to be Kerry who,
buffeted by the divergent views
on human rights and power
politics, can still speak for
the only power that can enter
into an agreement and create the
coalition in Europe and in Kiev
to accept the agreement.
Russia
suffered a massive reversal
after former Ukrainian President
Viktor Yanukovich fell. It acted
not so much to reverse the
defeat as to shape perceptions
of its power. Moscow's power is
real but insufficient to
directly reverse events by
occupying Kiev. It will need to
use Ukraine's economic weakness,
political fragmentation and time
to try to reassert its position.
In order to do this, it needs a
negotiated solution that it
hopes will be superseded by
events. To have that solution,
Moscow needs a significant
negotiating partner. The United
States is the only one
available. And for all its
complexity and oddities, if it
can be persuaded to act, it
alone can provide the stable
platform that Russia now needs.
The
United States is not ready to
concede that it has entered a
period during which competition
with Russia will be a defining
element in its foreign policy.
Its internal logic is not
focused on Russia, nor are
internal bureaucratic interests
aligned. There is an argument to
be made that it is not in the
U.S. interest to end the
Ukrainian crisis, that allowing
Russia to go deeper into the
Ukrainian morass will sap its
strength and abort the emerging
competition before it really
starts. But the United States
operates by its own process, and
it is not yet ready to think in
terms of weakening Russia, and
given the United States'
relative isolation, postponement
is not a bad idea.
Therefore,
the negotiations show promise.
But more important, the Russians
have shown us the way the world
still works. When something must
get done, the number to call is
still in the United States.