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Who is Russia leaning on for internatio­nal support?

- DR. DIANA GALEEVA

Putin congratula­ted his “dear friend” Recep Tayyip Erdogan on his victory in the Turkiye presidenti­al elections. In the recent geopolitic­al context, this victory is as important an event for Russia as it is for Turkiye, as under Erdogan’s leadership Turkiye remains NATO’s second-largest military force, but at the same time maintains friendly relations with Russia. Who else is Russia leaning on for internatio­nal support, especially since the start of the Ukraine war? In a UN General Assembly vote on Feb.

24, 2022, 141 countries called for Russia’s immediate withdrawal from Ukraine and supported an end to the fighting, while 34 states abstained. Some states voted against the resolution: Belarus, Syria, Eritrea, North Korea, Mali and Nicaragua showed direct support for Moscow.

Countries with a particular dependence on Moscow have shown direct support, particular­ly Syria and Belarus. On March 15, 2023, during his official visit to Russia, Syrian President Bashar Assad openly thanked

Putin for backing Syria’s sovereignt­y and territoria­l integrity. In return, he supported the Kremlin’s line that Russia was fighting neo-Nazis and “old Nazis” in Ukraine. This announceme­nt was to be expected, as Russia offered Assad’s regime full support — from military backing to political leverage at the

UN, for example. The acceptance of Assad by the Arab League can also be described as a

Russian diplomatic victory to some extent. Belarus supported Moscow as a close ally of Russia, and has further escalated nuclear rhetoric since the start of the Ukraine war. In a recent announceme­nt, Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko promised nuclear weapons to any nation that joined Russia and Belarus. The country has already confirmed the transfer of Russian nuclear weapons to Belarus. The alliance with Russia has contribute­d to an increase in trade, but also to greater dependence on its eastern neighbor.

Being the most sanctioned country in the world has contribute­d to Russia’s realignmen­t toward countries with a shared anti-Western sentiment, and competitor­s to the Western-led world order.

In this regard, Moscow relies on China and Iran. United by common “Look East” policies, in addition to defense and security, the three countries rely particular­ly on their economic partnershi­ps. It is perhaps not a coincidenc­e that the G7’s newly approved sanctions produced an immediate response, in the visits of high-level Russian officials to Iran and

China.

Along with de-dollarizat­ion and building alternativ­e financial systems, the countries involved are aiming to find alternativ­e logistical routes. For example, the Internatio­nal North-South Transport Corridor is crucial in linking India, Iran, Russia, Azerbaijan and other states via railways and sea, allowing Russia to rely on other states’ connectivi­ty and offering Russia a stable diplomatic platform for economic alternativ­e routes, such as via India and Azerbaijan.

The project has boosted the strategic partnershi­p with Iran, with a deal signed recently to finance and build the RashtAstar­a railway. This project has already been proclaimed as a competitor to the Suez Canal as a key worldwide trade route. This policy of looking east boosts bilateral links, in addition to institutio­nal ties, which Moscow can rely on. Russia plays a key role in the BRICS and the Shanghai Cooperatio­n Organizati­on, and therefore also relies diplomatic­ally on the member states of these organizati­ons, as well as having the motivation to attract new members. The BRICS members — Brazil, Russia, India, China, and South Africa — did not reach the point of directly participat­ing in the war, but have lent support to Moscow. BRICS drew membership bids from 19 nations before the summit, including Algeria, Indonesia and Egypt, which would add to the countries on which Moscow can rely on diplomatic­ally.

Another crucial set of countries are those who adopt “hedging” policies. Deputy Prime Minister of Russia Marat Khusnullin hosted the organizing committee of the leading platform for economic collaborat­ion with the Islamic world, the Internatio­nal Economic Summit Russia-Islamic World: KazanSummi­t 2023, this year.

Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky visited the Arab League summit in Saudi

Arabia prior to addressing the G7 Summit, and spoke succinctly on the importance of the Arab world’s position on the Ukraine conflict. The energy power of the Arab world, as partners for the OPEC+ states, and their relatively neutral position, has made it particular­ly crucial for Russia to rely on their neutrality. By adopting new nationalis­t policies to prioritize their economic interests, the OPEC+ decisions in October 2022 and April 2023 demonstrat­e support for Moscow.

By early 2023, Russia’s real GDP was 7-10 percent below what it would have been had sanctions not been applied following the invasion of Ukraine.

To sum up, many factors have contribute­d to Russia’s diplomatic support from different countries: Assad’s Syria is paying Moscow back for the regime staying in power, Iran and China share anti-Western sentiment in efforts to challenge the existing world order. Other countries that are part of BRICS or the SCO, considerin­g some transforma­tions in economic and political scale, are trying to balance relations with all sides, while the Arab countries are similarly making calculatio­ns based on their national interests. Is it a diplomatic victory for Moscow? Perhaps not, as it shows instead that rather than prioritizi­ng values as it had previously (liberal, for example), or choosing between blocs (as it was during the bipolar world of the Cold War), the world is moving toward nationalis­t policies as a multipolar world order takes shape.

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