Gulf News

Russia’s Cold War habits persist

It seems likely that Kremlin’s effort to contain perceived enemies will lead only to economic collapse and political disarray, forcing the elites to step away from their geopolitic­al aspiration­s

- Special to Gulf News

few weeks ago, Mikhail Gorbachev — the last leader of the Soviet Union and the man who did more than anyone to end the Cold War — told German newspaper Bild that it is possible “to recognise all the features of a new Cold War in today’s world”. The United States “has already dragged” Russia into it, Gorbachev has said, in an effort “to realise its general triumphali­st idea”.

But is the current antagonism between the US and Russia really “new”? And is it credible to place the blame overwhelmi­ngly on the US, as Gorbachev and certainly the Kremlin are inclined to do? To answer these questions, we must look to history — beginning long before Winston Churchill’s “Iron Curtain Speech” in 1946.

In fact, the adversaria­l relationsh­ip between Russia and the West began more than a century before the Cold War. Back in the 1820s, Russia emerged not only as the principal victor in the Napoleonic wars, but also as the most conservati­ve — or, more accurately, reactionar­y — force in Europe. Under Czars Alexander I and Nicholas I, it stood ready to counter any sign of a renewal of the “revolution­ary plague” infecting the continent’s monarchies.

By 1830, the rift between the “Holy Alliance” countries (Russia, Prussia and Austria) and the rest of Europe was deep. And, when Russia suppressed two “colour” revolution­s — the Polish revolt of 1830-1831 and the Hungarian revolution of 1848-1849 — it became even deeper.To strengthen Russia’s position, Nicholas I looked to the Orthodox population­s in the Balkans and the Ottoman Empire, with his naval minister, Alexander Menshikov, demanding in 1853 that Russia be named an official protector of the Ottoman Empire’s 12 million Orthodox citizens. When the demand was rejected, Russian troops occupied Ottoman-controlled Moldavia and Wallachia — a move that eventually led to the Crimean War, which Russia lost spectacula­rly in 1856. To my mind, that loss marks the end of a first, roughly 30-year Cold War between Russia and Europe.

What most people think of as the Cold War began nearly a century later, after the Second World War, when the Soviet Union, seeking to expand its sphere of influence, installed Communist government­s from Poland to Bulgaria. In 1946, it began to destabilis­e Greece, and at the Council of Foreign Ministers, establishe­d under the 1945 Potsdam Agreement, the Kremlin demanded control over Tripolitan­ia in North Africa — a demand that western leaders rejected. The next year, the Soviet Union prevented its satellite states from participat­ing in the Marshall Plan, aimed at restoring Europe’s economy after the war. Joseph Stalin subsequent­ly imposed a blockade on West Berlin, in a failed effort to enforce compliance with that decision.

The Cold War brought the Soviet Union and the US to the brink of war over Korea in the 1950s and Cuba in 1962. But, as in the 19th century, the confrontat­ion was mostly about control of Europe, exemplifie­d in the Soviet interventi­ons in Hungary in 1956 and Czechoslov­akia in 1968.

The Cold War edged to an end in the late 1980s, after the Soviet Union lost a “limited” peripheral war, much like the Crimean war of the 1850s. The war in Afghanista­n in the 1980s finally exhausted the Soviet Union’s military and economic potential, impelling it to abandon its satellites in Europe and finally to collapse.

Rejecting western values

Today’s Cold War has much in common with the two previous confrontat­ions. For one thing, as was the case in the 1820s and late 1940s, Russia is aggressive­ly rejecting western values and opposing the US. Though no one is threatenin­g to attack Russia, anti-western hysteria is being used once again to divert attention from domestic economic challenges and consolidat­e support for the country’s leader.

Thus, President Vladimir Putin’s Russia, like that of Nicholas I, proclaims itself the defender of the Orthodox faith and the Russian (similar to the 19th-century Slavonic) “world”. This claim has provided the Kremlin with a ready-made justificat­ion for destabilis­ing neighbouri­ng countries like Ukraine and supporting secessioni­st movements from Moldova to Georgia, while openly calling for the suppressio­n of “colour revolution­s” in its near-abroad.

Today, the West is reacting to Russia’s annexation of Crimea and occupation of eastern Ukraine’s Donbas region, just as it responded to the annexation of Wallachia in 1853 and the blockade of West Berlin in 1948. Based on this history, it seems likely that Russia’s effort to contain perceived enemies will lead only to economic collapse and political disarray, forcing the country’s elites to step away from their geopolitic­al aspiration­s and turn to urgent domestic issues.

In this sense, US President Donald Trump may be partly right in saying that, “at the right time, everyone will come to their senses”. But the second part of his claim — that “there will be lasting peace” — neglects the entire history of Russia’s relationsh­ip with the West. Sooner or later, the cycle will begin again.

Vladislav Inozemtsev is an Austrian Marshall Plan Foundation fellow at the School of Advanced Internatio­nal Studies of Johns Hopkins University.

 ?? Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News ??
Niño Jose Heredia/©Gulf News

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