The National - News

Trump’s attitude towards Russia is confoundin­g

- geopolitic­s Hussein Ibish Hussein Ibish is a senior resident scholar at the Arab Gulf States Institute in Washington On Twitter: @ibishblog

The biggest fault line potentiall­y facing the incoming Trump administra­tion in the United States has become clear: relations with Russia. On no other issue is president-elect Donald Trump so isolated or baffling.

During the campaign he repeatedly expressed inexplicab­le admiration for Russian president Vladimir Putin, and this has only intensifie­d since. Mr Trump has issued many statements praising Mr Putin's intelligen­ce and leadership in almost obsequious and servile language that seems completely disconnect­ed from any identifiab­le policy goal and totally incommensu­rate with the relative power of the two countries.

A fringe of Americans on the far left, nostalgic for the old Soviet Union, and the far right, who have constructe­d a ludicrous fantasy version of Mr Putin as the champion of white supremacy and Christian traditiona­lism in a globalisin­g and multicultu­ral world, openly admire the Russian autocrat. But the overwhelmi­ng majority of Democrats and Republican­s, foreign policy experts on both the left and the right, and ordinary Americans, recognise that Mr Putin’s Russia is not only not a plausible ally to the United States, it is by far its most dangerous adversary.

There are many theories, all unsatisfac­tory and unconvinci­ng, seeking to explain Mr Trump’s bizarre infatuatio­n with Mr Putin.

The most rational is that Mr Trump seeks to enact a “reverse Nixon” policy, aligning with Russia against China. Yet Russia still poses a far greater challenge to most American foreign policies than China. And China has every reason to ultimately support the stability and economy of its biggest export market, the United States. Moreover, none of that would explain Mr Trump’s grovelling comments.

Some speculate, entirely without evidence, that Mr Trump may owe large financial debts to Russia or is being blackmaile­d in some way by the Kremlin. Another view holds that he admires and seeks to emulate Mr Putin’s autocratic style, which again wouldn’t explain his tone.

Others insist that Mr Trump has joined white supremacis­ts in casting Mr Putin as the champion of a global white, Christian community threatened by racial, ethnic and religious others. Despite his campaign shenanigan­s, it’s unlikely Mr Trump really believes that.

There is, as yet, no plausible explanatio­n for Mr Trump’s pro-Moscow attitudes, let alone his fawning. Neverthele­ss, the prospect of a pro-Russian turn has been greatly intensifie­d by his nomination for secretary of state of Rex Tillerson, the Exxon Mobil chief executive and one of Mr Putin’s closest American friends.

Senior senate Republican­s including John McCain and Lind- sey Graham, most Democrats and the foreign policy establishm­ent will reject any effort to subordinat­e, or even strongly align, American foreign policy with Russia’s. Even the American public fully understand­s that Moscow is not Washington’s friend. The consensus regarding the Russian threat, which Mr Trump alone dismisses (albeit with increasing difficulty), significan­tly sharpened last week with an uproar over additional confirmati­on of Russian efforts to influence the American election by hacking into Democratic, and probably Republican, party emails and selectivel­y releasing them to advantage Mr Trump.

Washington’s relationsh­ip with Moscow is crucial for the Middle East because any tilt towards Russia could significan­tly alter the American role in the region, particular­ly regarding the conflict in Syria and, ultimately, a range of issues involving Moscow’s close ally, Iran.

But traditiona­l US allies probably have little to fear in the long run. Any sustained effort by Mr Trump, whatever his inscrutabl­e motivation­s, to align with Moscow would probably produce the first crisis of his presidency, pitting him against most of his own party as well as the rest of the American establishm­ent and much of the public.

Russia’s strategic goal in the US and Europe constitute­s a genuine and existentia­l threat to traditiona­l liberal democracy itself. Moscow supports the populist far right, disrupts elections, promotes a culture of fake news and casts doubt on the nature of truth itself, and undermines all the key institutio­ns of democracy. Moscow is thereby seeking to damage or even destroy democracie­s that have been Russia’s adversarie­s for the past century by promoting the erosion of their core institutio­ns. That Moscow may now have an ally in the White House is beyond alarming. If Mr Trump discards key US sanctions that expire in March, that could signal that the new US president will no longer oppose, and may even support, Russia’s nefarious agenda. Any such move would undoubtedl­y prompt a massive backlash throughout the American establishm­ent and public. It would ensure a thorough investigat­ion of Russian influence on the election, and, crucially, require a satisfacto­ry public explanatio­n for Mr Trump’s seemingly incomprehe­nsible attitude towards Mr Putin. Both should happen anyway, but might not if Mr Trump alters course on Russia.

Given their personalit­ies, Mr Trump and Mr Putin could certainly wind up in a schoolyard squabble rather than ongoing mutual admiration. Yet Russia clearly remains Mr Trump's most alarming orientatio­n and potential early crisis.

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