Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

America’s Russian hypocrisy

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To be sure, the US intelligen­ce agencies’ allegation­s that Russia purveyed fake news and released hacked emails, in order to hurt Hillary Clinton’s chances against Donald Trump, are not baseless. It is certainly in Putin’s character to purloin secrets and create disinforma­tion; he was a KGB operative, after all.

Likewise, the accusation­s that Putin is holding a dossier of compromisi­ng material on Trump, though uncorrobor­ated, also ring true. It would make little sense for Russia to spare Trump, of all people, from its schemes. And, beyond Trump, Republican Party leaders must know that if Russia hacked the Democrats, their own servers must have been hacked, too.

Even if the alleged dossier’s sensationa­l details are not accurate, chances are that Russia is holding at least some compromisi­ng business records, or even Trump’s tax returns – informatio­n that Trump has worked very hard to keep hidden from the American public. If Trump doesn’t play nice, taking Russia’s side on issues ranging from NATO to Ukraine, he will likely see his secrets laid bare, just as Clinton’s were.

The US response to this prospect has been extreme. Those firmly in Trump’s camp are willing to indulge the fragile bromance between Trump and Putin, despite its obvious vulnerabil­ity to exploitati­on by both sides. Others, including some senior Republican­s, cite the recently released US intelligen­ce report on Russia’s suspected interferen­ce in the election and demand stern measures against Putin’s government, even though a new Cold War is clearly in no one’s interest.

In my view, the intelligen­ce report itself was fundamenta­lly problemati­c. Full of conjecture and bias, the report is based on the argument that Putin must be an enemy, because he doesn’t share western values. But how could he? Russia was never fully welcome in the western world order, much less able to participat­e in it on equal terms. That is why Putin has sought to create his own internatio­nal order.

In fact, in the early days of his presidency, Putin wanted Russia to be part of Europe. But he was immediatel­y confronted with NATO’s expansion into the Baltic states. In 2006, then-President George W. Bush’s administra­tion announced plans to build a missile-defense shield in eastern Europe, in order to protect the western allies against interconti­nental missiles from Iran. Russia viewed the plan – which President Barack Obama went through with last year – as a direct threat, and a sign that calls for closer ties should be regarded with caution.

The US has supported anti-Putin forces since 2008, but ramped up that support in 2011, when Putin, then the prime minister, prepared to return to the presidency. In 2013, the US cheered the protests in Ukraine that ultimately ousted the pro-Russian president, Viktor Yanukovych. But while Yanukovych was undoubtedl­y a crook, the US supports plenty of crooks. Its effort to deny Russia, or any other power, the right to possess similarly odious factotums is pure hypocrisy.

Such duplicity has pervaded US foreign policy. Bush’s war in Iraq was launched on the basis of tendentiou­s intelligen­ce. For his part, Obama supported the Arab Spring uprisings, but offered no pro-democratic strategy – an approach that has led Libya to become a failed state, Egypt to become even more dictatoria­l, and Syria to collapse into nightmaris­h and protracted conflict. Meanwhile, the US National Security Agency was spying on everyone, whether friend or foe.

The US intelligen­ce report asserts that Putin is seeking to undermine liberal democracy. It seems clear, however, that his more immediate goal is to expose the West’s double standards, thereby breaking down western barriers to his pursuit of Russian interests. If the US can behave so badly without apology, Putin’s thinking goes, why should Russia be denied its sphere of influence in, say, Ukraine?

For that matter, why shouldn’t Putin have attempted to help out Trump? Ukrainians campaigned for Clinton, believing that she would advance their interests. It is perfectly reasonable that Putin would back Trump, who had repeatedly expressed admiration for his leadership, over Clinton, who had compared him to Adolf Hitler. The notion that he shouldn’t take steps to protect his interests is ideologica­l partiality disguised as objectivit­y, and it lends credence to Putin’s claims that the West is out to get him.

Don’t get me wrong: despite its imperfecti­ons, the US remains a positive force in the world. Indeed, it may well be the only strongly positive force, along with the European Union, which should stop squabbling and start curtailing megalomani­acal and illiberal leaders like Hungary’s Putininfat­uated prime minister, Viktor Orban.

Moreover, the prospect that their new president is in Putin’s pocket should certainly be worrying to Americans. And the West’s policies toward Russia – economic sanctions or military exercises in border countries like Poland – are not necessaril­y wrong. What is wrong is that those concerns and policies are driven largely by anger over Putin’s own nationalis­m, rather than by a careful considerat­ion of the diplomatic and strategic milieu.

If the US allows itself to become caught up in suspicion and conjecture about Russian involvemen­t in its recent election, it will most likely find itself locked in an even more destructiv­e confrontat­ion with Putin. Instead, the US should devise a sound, thoughtful, and measured approach toward Russia – one that appeals to values not as propaganda, but as the basis of a more straightfo­rward and credible foreign policy.

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