Opinion 




 



http://www.themoscowtimes.com/stories/2006/03/28/006.html 

Tuesday, March 28, 2006. Page 10. 

 

Will the Authoritarians of the World Unite?

By Andrew C. Kuchins 

The chumminess of Russian and Chinese authoritarian leaders was on display
again last week with Vladimir Putin's state visit to Beijing. The nascent
Chinese-Russian entente is not news since the relationship has been steadily
broadening and deepening for more than a decade. But there is increasing
evidence suggesting this relationship is part of a growing global
ideological conflict between consolidating democracies and dictatorships.

Also in the news last week was the landslide re-election of Belarussian
President Alexander Lukashenko, who last year was designated "Europe's last
dictator" by U.S. Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice. In what has now
become a familiar pattern, Western election monitors, including the OSCE,
and the U.S. government strongly condemned electoral violations while the
Russian government praised the quality of the elections. Authoritarian
solidarity received a big shot in the arm last summer when Uzbekistan
evicted U.S. military forces and signed a security alliance with Russia.
This was followed in August by the fanfare surrounding the first
Chinese-Russian joint military exercises.

On the democracy front, U.S. President George W. Bush traveled this month to
India and signed a path-breaking civilian nuclear agreement that marked a
significant, if controversial, step forward in relations between the world's
two largest democracies. Obviously there is a geopolitical subtext as the
Bush administration sees a strong and democratic India as part of a China
containment strategy. Rice also recently traveled to democratic allies Japan
and Australia, even making a stop in democratic hopeful Indonesia.

This month, the United States published a new and ideologically highly
charged National Security Strategy document that placed democracy promotion
at the forefront of U.S. security interests. The document, which included
specific criticism of Russian backsliding on democracy, predictably elicited
a blistering retort from the Foreign Ministry. This repeated a pattern seen
earlier in the month with the publication of a report on Russia by a Council
on Foreign Relations task force and the State Department's annual report on
human rights. 

On his first trip to Washington as foreign minister as these reports were
being released, Sergei Lavrov philosophically ascribed the Russia bashing in
the United States to those uncomfortable with a "strong Russia" and lamented
that "Russia does not want to be provoked into an ideological conflict with
the U.S. like the Cold War." 

But we are slipping into the Cold War tone and rhetoric. The new energy
behind U.S. democracy promotion efforts and rhetoric combined with the
series of "color revolutions" in Georgia, Ukraine and Kyrgyzstan are
generating an authoritarian backlash championed by Beijing and Moscow. From
the Chinese and Russian perspectives, U.S. support for democratic
institutions, free elections and civil society has more to do with expansion
of Washington's geopolitical interests than expanding liberty. 

It is, however, far too premature to conclude that the barricades are drawn
between the "authoritarian internationale" and any global democratic
alliance. Moscow and Beijing have far too many strong interests with
developed market democracies to make a 21st-century Sino-Russian alliance an
attractive option. Chinese-Russian trade may well double or more to as much
as $80 billion by 2010 as Chinese President Hu Jintao and Putin announced
last week. But even with this impressive growth, China's trade with the
United States would be at least four times greater. China will probably
become Russia's largest trade partner, but Russia's economic and strategic
interests will remain diversified east, west and south to avoid
over-dependence on the burgeoning Chinese market.

In addition to Russian arms sales, the Chines-Russian economic relationship
will be based on Russian export of raw materials, mostly energy, and import
of Chinese manufactured goods. Fears about Russia becoming a "natural
resource appendage" to China are overblown. Chinese-Russian energy ties
vividly display both the potential and limitations of the relationship as
well as Russia's development strategy as an "energy superpower." 

The potential is suggested by Russia's status as the world's largest
supplier of hydrocarbons and China's as the fastest growing consumer. The
problem is how much oil and gas Russia can supply to China when and at what
cost. Production levels of Russian gas have already stagnated and will
likely fall somewhat beginning in 2008. Where will the promised new 80
billion cubic meters per year of gas come from for China that Hu and Putin
agreed to last week? How will this be balanced with growth in European
demand, new exports of LNG to the United States and Russian domestic demand?
Russian oil production faces a similar predicament, although production may
continue to grow slowly for a few more years. And while Chinese companies
are chomping at the bit to buy Russian energy assets, they do not have the
technology and project experience needed for greenfield development that
Western energy majors can bring to the table.

That is why the imminent decision about the partnership arrangements for
development of the mammoth Shtokman gas field in the Barents Sea is of great
substantive and symbolic value. This is technically the most demanding and
expensive gas field project in history, and there is no question that
Gazprom cannot do it alone. Expect that an announcement about partners and
equity arrangements will be made this spring before the Group of Eight
meeting in St. Petersburg in July. Don't expect that the involvement of
Western energy and financial institutions will make Russia a democracy,
although we should expect modest improvements in corporate governance and
efficiency. The exigencies of developing Russia's energy resources, so key
to its economic and international clout, will also mitigate against the
Chinese and the Russians colluding too closely beyond Moscow's pragmatic
commercial interests.

Andrew C. Kuchins is a senior associate of the Carnegie Endowment for
International Peace in Washington.









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2006 The Moscow Times. All rights reserved. 

 



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