Occasionally,
there is the odd voice in western media that does not sing from the
same songsheet. Significantly, this comes, not from the liberal left,
but from the conservative Right.
It’s
Nato that’s empire-building, not Putin
Two
sides are required for a New Cold War — and there is no obvious
need for an adversarial system in post-Soviet Europe
Peter
Hitchens
7
March, 2015
Just
for once, let us try this argument with an open mind, employing
arithmetic and geography and going easy on the adjectives. Two great
land powers face each other. One of these powers, Russia, has given
up control over 700,000 square miles of valuable territory. The
other, the European Union, has gained control over 400,000 of those
square miles. Which of these powers is expanding?
There
remain 300,000 neutral square miles between the two, mostly in
Ukraine. From Moscow’s point of view, this is already a grievous,
irretrievable loss. As Zbigniew Brzezinski, one of the canniest of
the old Cold Warriors, wrote back in 1997, ‘Ukraine… is a
geopolitical pivot because its very existence as an independent
country helps to transform Russia. Without Ukraine, Russia ceases to
be a Eurasian empire.’
This
diminished Russia feels the spread of the EU and its armed wing,
Nato, like a blow on an unhealed bruise. In February 2007, for
instance, Vladimir Putin asked sulkily, ‘Against whom is this
expansion intended?’
I
have never heard a clear answer to that question. The USSR, which
Nato was founded to fight, expired in August 1991. So what is Nato’s
purpose now? Why does it even still exist?
There
is no obvious need for an adversarial system in post-Soviet Europe.
Even if Russia wanted to reconquer its lost empire, as some believe
(a belief for which there is no serious evidence), it is too weak and
too poor to do this. So why not invite Russia to join the great
western alliances? Alas, it is obvious to everyone, but never stated,
that Russia cannot ever join either Nato or the EU, for if it did so
it would unbalance them both by its sheer size. There are many
possible ways of dealing with this. One would be an adult recognition
of the limits of human power, combined with an understanding of
Russia’s repeated experience of invasions and its lack of
defensible borders.
But
we do not do this. Instead we have a noisy pseudo-moral crusade,
which would not withstand five minutes of serious consideration. Mr
Putin’s state is, beyond doubt, a sinister tyranny. But so is Recep
Tayyip Erdogan’s Turkey, which locks up far more journalists than
does Russia. Turkey is an officially respectable Nato member, 40
years after seizing northern Cyprus, which it still occupies, in an
almost exact precedent for Russia’s seizure of Crimea. If Putin
disgusts us so much, then why are we and the USA happy to do business
with Erdogan, and also to fawn upon Saudi Arabia and China?
Contrary
to myth, the expansion of the EU into the former communist world has
not magically brought universal peace, love and prosperity. Croatia’s
economy has actually gone backwards since it joined. Corruption still
exists in large parts of the EU’s new south-eastern territories,
and I am not sure that the rule of law could be said to have been
properly established there. So the idea that the recruitment of
Ukraine to the ‘West’ will magically turn that troubled nation
into a sunny paradise of freedom, probity and wealth is perhaps a
little idealistic, not to say mistaken.
It
is all so much clearer if we realise that this quarrel is about power
and land, not virtue. In truth, much of the eastward expansion of
Nato was caused by the EU’s initial unwillingness to take in
backward, bankrupt and corrupt refugee states from the old Warsaw
Pact. The policy could be summed up as ‘We won’t buy your
tomatoes, but if it makes you happy you can shelter under our nuclear
umbrella’. The promise was an empty assurance against a nonexistent
threat. But an accidental arrangement hardened into a real
confrontation. The less supine Russia was, the more its actions were
interpreted as aggression in the West. Boris Yeltsin permitted
western interests to rape his country, and did little to assert
Russian power. So though he bombarded his own parliament, conducted a
grisly war in Chechnya, raised corruption to Olympic levels and
shamelessly rigged his own re-election, he yet remained a popular
guest in western capitals and summits. Vladimir Putin’s similar
sins, by contrast, provide a pretext for ostracism and historically
illiterate comparisons between him and Hitler.
This
is because of his increasing avowal of Russian sovereignty, and of an
independent foreign policy. There have been many East-West squabbles
and scrimmages, not all of them Russia’s fault. But the New Cold
War really began in 2011, after Mr Putin dared to frustrate western —
and Saudi — policy in Syria. George Friedman, the noted US
intelligence and security expert, thinks Russia badly underestimated
the level of American fury this would provoke. As Mr Friedman
recently told the Moscow newspaper Kommersant, ‘It was in this
situation that the United States took a look at Russia and thought
about what it [Russia] wants to see happen least of all: instability
in Ukraine.’
Mr
Friedman (no Putin stooge) also rather engagingly agrees with Moscow
that overthrow last February of Viktor Yanukovych was ‘the most
blatant coup in history’. He is of course correct, as anyone
unclouded by passion can see. The test of any action by your own side
is to ask what you would think of it if the other side did it.
If
Russia didn’t grasp how angry Washington would get over Syria, did
the West realise how furiously Russia would respond to the EU
Association Agreement and to the fall of Yanukovych? Perhaps not.
Fearing above all the irrecoverable loss to Nato of its treasured
naval station in Sevastopol, Russia reacted. After 23 years of
sullenly appeasing the West, Moscow finally said ‘enough’. Since
we’re all supposed to be against appeasement, shouldn’t we find
this action understandable in a sovereign nation, even if we cannot
actually praise it? And can anyone explain to me precisely why
Britain, of all countries, should be siding with the expansion of the
European Union and Nato into this dangerous and unstable part of the
world?
Peter
Hitchens is a columnist for the Mail on Sunday
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