Marin Independent Journal

The West fell short in bid to isolate Russia

- By Josh Holder, Lauren Leatherby, Anton Troianovsk­i and Weiyi Cai

After Russia invaded Ukraine, the West formed what looked like an overwhelmi­ng global coalition — 141 countries supported a United Nations measure demanding that Russia unconditio­nally withdraw.

By contrast, Russia seemed isolated. North Korea was one of only four countries that backed Russia and rejected the measure.

But the West never won over as much of the world as it initially seemed. Another 47 countries abstained or missed the vote, including India and China. Many of those “neutral” nations have since provided crucial economic or diplomatic support for Russia.

And even some of the nations that initially agreed to denounce Russia see the war as somebody else's problem — and have since started moving toward a more neutral position.

A year on, it's becoming clearer: While the West's core coalition remains remarkably solid, it never convinced the rest of the world to isolate Russia.

Instead of cleaving in two, the world has fragmented. A vast middle sees Russia's invasion as, primarily, a European and American problem. Rather than view it as an existentia­l threat, these countries are largely focused on protecting their own interests amid the economic and geopolitic­al upheaval caused by the invasion.

Today's landscape evokes the Cold War's many neutral states. But the world is now even more interconne­cted. The scale and complexity of global communicat­ions, economic ties and security links offer far more opportunit­ies for the West's rivals to gain leverage.

Last week, the U.N. General Assembly endorsed another resolution demanding that Russia withdraw from Ukraine's territory — but China, South Africa, India and many countries in the global south continued to abstain, underlinin­g their alienation from what they regard as the West's war.

Here is how Russia is taking advantage.

At first, the West's economic sanctions seemed like they might undermine Moscow's ability to sustain the war. An American-led campaign, which included 37 countries, rattled the foundation­s of Russia's financial system by freezing its foreign-currency reserves and targeting its

main banks.

The sanctions blocked key imports such as spare parts for aircraft and semiconduc­tors for electronic­s. And hundreds of companies voluntaril­y stopped doing business in Russia, leaving regular Russians without Apple retailers or Netflix subscripti­ons.

But the sanctions have not been as devastatin­g as the West had hoped. A handful of countries have filled the gap, increasing exports to Russia well above prewar levels, according to data collected by Silverado Policy Accelerato­r, a Washington nonprofit. Other countries' exports decreased when the war began but have since reversed course.

China and Turkey made up most of the export gap on their own.

Chinese passenger vehicles replaced Russia's past supply from Western manufactur­ers. China exported more machinery and semiconduc­tors, too. Other goods produced by multinatio­nal firms that can no longer be exported directly to Russia are now flowing through post-Soviet states.

Even as Turkey has sold weapons to Ukraine, President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has opened up an increased flow of goods to Russia, tearing a hole in the Western dam of sanctions.

“We have always maintained a policy of balance between Ukraine and Russia,” Erdogan said in September, six months after Turkey voted with the United States to denounce Russia's invasion.

Altogether, after initially falling post-invasion, trade levels have rebounded because enough countries remain willing to trade with Russia.

The sanctions could still be devastatin­g to Russia in the long term. They are already stunting foreign investment and starting to drain the government's coffers. Restrictio­ns on oil trading have forced Russia to cut production. And reorientin­g the country's natural gas pipeline infrastruc­ture toward Asia will take years.

But even though Russia's economy isn't thriving, it's strong enough to keep the war going. The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund projected last month that the Russian economy would grow by 0.3% this year, a sharp improvemen­t from its previous estimate that it would contract by 2.3%.

The United States and its partners have been dispatchin­g ever more lethal weapons and military equipment directly to Ukraine. And they have attempted to cut off Russia's own supply of military equipment by imposing export controls that prohibit many companies from selling critical technology to Russia.

The weapons have helped Ukraine surprise the world and hold off Russia's much larger military. At least 40 countries have provided military aid to Ukraine, either by sending offensive weapons or by providing other forms of military aid.

But the effort to deprive

Russia of military equipment has been less successful. Russia has found help here, too. North Korea has shipped “a significan­t number” of artillery shells to Russia, the United States has said. Iran has provided Russia with unmanned “kamikaze” drones that Moscow has deployed for attacks against civilian infrastruc­ture in Ukraine.

And other countries, including China, have continued to supply Russia with dual-use goods like microchips that make their way into military equipment.

To be sure, analysts say Russia does appear to be facing a shortage of precision weaponry, like cruise missiles, that require hightech equipment. And Russian soldiers report a lack of night-vision equipment and surveillan­ce drones on the front line.

A lot of world leaders don't particular­ly like the idea of one country invading another. But many of them aren't unhappy to see somebody stand up to the United States, either.

Throughout Africa, Latin America, Asia and the Middle East, many government­s with strong official ties to the United States and Europe don't see the war as a global threat. Instead, they've positioned themselves as neutral bystanders or arbiters, preserving as much flexibilit­y as they can.

Reaction to the invasion was mixed in Asia, where more than one-third of countries declined to condemn Russia in the initial U.N. vote. While most

American allies have fallen in line, Russia has been able to take advantage of trade relationsh­ips and friendly public opinion dating to the Cold War.

At the beginning of the invasion, the United States asked India to buy less oil from Russia. Since then, it has softened its stance as India has continuall­y defied alignment with either side. As tensions increase along India's border with China, experts have said India doesn't feel it can risk its relationsh­ip with Russia — a key source for weapons.

Gulf countries voted alongside the West to condemn Russia, but they have since largely sought to be seen as neutral arbiters.

President Mohammed bin Zayed of the United Arab Emirates traveled to Russia to meet with President Vladimir Putin and said he sought to find a diplomatic solution. He also offered up an Abu Dhabi airfield for the Brittney Griner prisoner exchange.

Dubai, in particular, has become a hub for Russians — a haven for oligarchs and pro-Kremlin elites where Western sanctions cannot reach. And Saudi Arabia has said it must pursue its own interests, even if that causes friction in its longstandi­ng relationsh­ip with the United States.

Nearly half of African countries abstained or were absent from the vote to condemn Russia, suggesting a growing reluctance in many nations to accept an American narrative of right and wrong. Russia has won friends through relentless propaganda and hard power, with a growing number of countries contractin­g with Russian mercenarie­s and buying Russian weapons.

Colombia recently refused a request from the United States to provide weapons to Ukraine. And when visited by Chancellor Olaf Scholz of Germany last month, President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva of Brazil declined to speak in support of Ukraine, saying, “I think the reason for the war between Russia and Ukraine needs to be clearer.”

Several dozen countries make up the core group backing Ukraine by providing military assistance or sanctionin­g Russia.

Western unity during the war has proved remarkable, with countries long seen as relatively friendly toward Russia — like Germany, France and Italy — remaining staunchly behind Ukraine.

But even among Western countries, the unity has not been perfect. Hungary has technicall­y sanctioned Russia as a member of the European Union, but under leader Viktor Orban it has been a persistent outlier in support for Ukraine within the EU. Hungary delayed several EU decisions that required unanimous support.

Others that provided Ukraine with military support have declined to impose economic sanctions on Russia.

And a much smaller group of countries have done everything: imposed sanctions, provided heavy weapons — such as tanks, armored vehicles and air defense missile systems — and committed at least 0.1% of gross domestic product as bilateral aid to Ukraine, according to data from the Kiel Institute for the World Economy.

As the war passes the one-year mark, Russia's strategy is clear: to wait out the West. Eventually, Putin is betting, European countries worried about the war's toll on their economies and their politics will drop their support for sanctions and weapons deliveries. Countries across Asia, the Middle East and Africa that are already neutral in the conflict will continue to increase trade with Russia.

And perhaps even the United States, with its presidenti­al election next year, will tire of war and will pressure Ukraine to give in to Putin.

How unified the West can remain — and how much of the world it is able to keep at least partly on its side — could well determine the outcome of the conflict.

 ?? MIKHAIL METZEL — SPUTNIK VIA AP ?? Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu attend a wreath-laying ceremony at the Unknown Soldier's Grave in the Alexander Garden during the national celebratio­ns of the “Defender of the Fatherland Day” in Moscow on Feb. 23.
MIKHAIL METZEL — SPUTNIK VIA AP Russian President Vladimir Putin and Russian Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu attend a wreath-laying ceremony at the Unknown Soldier's Grave in the Alexander Garden during the national celebratio­ns of the “Defender of the Fatherland Day” in Moscow on Feb. 23.

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