When No Means Yes: How Moscow Learned to Love NATO Expansion to its Borders

 






by Gordon  Hahn

 

Ever since the idea of expanding NATO without Russia was first broached in the 
early 1990s, many policymakers and analysts have argued that Russia does not 
view NATO expansion as a threat but rather uses it as a pretext to interfere in 
the domestic politics or attempt to restore its lost empire. This is a false 
and dangerous myth that is intended to remove the share of responsibility the 
West bears for the growing conflict with Russia. This myth risks yet more 
conflict to the detriment of the West, Russia, and its neighbors.

 

Those who purvey the myth that Moscow really is not opposed to, or concerned 
about a NATO expansion that excludes Russia do so in the face of the facts. 
Indeed, every late Soviet and post-Soviet Russian president and foreign 
minister has rejected NATO expansion precisely because it is detrimental to 
Russian national security. Russia’s military doctrine puts at the top of the 
list of “external military dangers…the growing violent potential of NATO and 
the delegation to it of global functions which are facilitative of violations 
of international law and the nearing of the military infrastructure of the 
member-countries of NATO to the borders of the Russian Federation, in 
particular by way of the bloc’s further expansion.” Trial balloons and direct 
proposals floated by every post-Soviet Russian president about Russia joining 
NATO were received coldly or completely ignored. Putin publicly supported the 
possibility during his first months in office and received no response.

  
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The most recent reincarnation of the assertion that Moscow views NATO expansion 
as benign came last month from former US ambassador to Russia, Michael McFaul. 
He claimed that during the Barack Obama presidency the Russian leadership never 
raised the issue of NATO expansion, which it now argues was one reason for what 
I regard to be Moscow’s overreaction to the 21 February 2014 
ultra-nationalist-led coup in Kiev by occupying and annexing Crimea.

 

Of course, we can not know what issues Russian leaders raised in private 
meetings with U.S. officials, but numerous Russian officials, including 
President Vladimir Putin, have stated ad infinitum that Russia opposes NATO 
expansion along its borders. To be sure, the issue of NATO expansion has not 
been at the center of Russian-American relations during President Obama’s 
tenure, but this is because Washington and Brussels have made no move to expand 
NATO further during either Obama term. So Ambassador ’s claim is akin to saying 
that Mongolia has not raised the issue of Argentinian encroachments on its 
border. The issue would not have been raised because it is not an issue to 
begin with.

 

However, in the case of Russia and NATO expansion Moscow’s silence during 
Obama’s  was but a temporary lull in the dispute; a lull shattered by the 
events in Kiev last year. Indeed, when the 2008 NATO summit approved eventual 
expansion to Ukraine and Georgia, Putin made a point of denouncing the plan and 
warning Moscow would be forced to respond in terms of its defense and security 
posture. When his successor, Dmitrii Medvedev, proposed Russian-Western talks 
on creating a new European security architecture, Washington ignored him and 
Brussels issued a lukewarm response before dropping it from the agenda.

 

At the same time, Georgian President Mikheil Saakashvili responded differently 
to the promise of NATO membership; he promptly invaded South, bombed its  with 
inaccurate GRAD rockets, and killed 19 Russian peacekeepers  of civilians. 
Russia responded with its own invasion to defend its traditional Ossetian 
allies and occupied Georgia’s other remaining breakaway republic. Moscow could 
not let chaos reign along its border in a region where  (and ) compatriots 
residing  Russia would have helped produce and feed an insurgency against 
Georgian occupation forces.

 

However, with its army a mere 30 miles from Georgia’s  and the NATO-trained 
Georgian army in complete collapse, Moscow made no move ‘to restore the Soviet 
Union’ or its Tsarist empire by occupying Tbilisi. Instead, by recognizing the 
long-standing de facto (though not de jure) independence of the breakaway 
republics it created a buffer zone between Russia and the future NATO member.

 

Putin’s actions in Ukraine, rather than being part of some master plan for 
eternal conquest, have been reactive, defensive, and in good part driven by the 
perceived and real NATO threat as well as losses on the ground in Ukraine. The 
February pro-democratic revolution-turned nationalist-led coup prompted Putin’s 
Crimean gambit. Kiev’s initiation of a civil war against ethnic Russians and 
Russian-language speakers in the Donbas, where virtually no violence had 
preceded its ‘anti-terrorist operation’ similarly prompted Putin’s rather 
limited support for the Donbass separatists, which was purely a homegrown 
reaction to the nationalist surge in Kiev. Moreover,  Moscow waited three years 
and frequently negotiated before undertaking its anti-terrorist operation in a 
very similar situation against Chechen rebels in the early 1990s, Kiev waited a 
mere month before moving against its separatists.

 

In this light, Russia’s annexation of Crimea serves a purpose similar to 
Russia’s support for South  and , preserving a strong Russian military presence 
to counter a . Similarly, the Donbas separatists offer the potential of another 
buffer state to replace that lost in Kiev.

 

Thus, it is no coincidence that one of Russia’s chief demands in cooperating to 
resolve the Ukrainian crisis is that Kiev’s constitution be amended to 
stipulate Ukraine’s neutral, non-bloc status. If this happens, Moscow will be 
even less interested in supporting the Donbass rebels, given the instability 
the rebels are fomenting both across and within its borders.

 

A NATO expanding along Russia’s western and southwestern borders is a direct 
potential threat to Russia. Imagine if the situation were reversed. Russia 
leads world history’s most powerful military alliance which had spreads to all 
of Latin America. Now Moscow ignores a broken agreement in Canada and supports 
instead the unconstitutional seizure of power by pro-Russian parties, some of 
which are neo-fascist in nature. How would Washington respond?

 

So American policymakers can continue to proselytize and even operate according 
to the myth or false assumption that NATO expansion does not really matter to 
Moscow, but they will do so at the peril of international security.

 

Gordon M. Hahn, Ph.D. 

Analyst, Rus Strategic Ltd., Prague, Czech Rep.  

Analyst and Advisory Board Member, Geostrategic Forecasting Corporation, 
Chicago, Ill., www.geostrategicforecasting.com 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=908539&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.geostrategicforecasting.com%2F>
 . 

Analyst and Consultant, www.russiaotherpointsofview.com 
<http://click.icptrack.com/icp/relay.php?r=107351866&msgid=908539&act=HT36&c=541249&destination=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.russiaotherpointsofview.com%2F>
 

 

Dr. Hahn is author of the well-received books Russia’s Islamic Threat (Yale 
University Press, 2007) and Russia’s Revolution From Above, 1985-2000 
(Transaction Publishers, 2002), the just published book The Caucasus Emirate : 
Global Jihadism in Russia's North Caucasus and Beyond (McFarland Publishers, 
2014), various think tank  and numerous articles in academic journals and other 
English and Russian language media. He has taught at Boston, American, 
Stanford, San Jose State, and San Francisco State Universities and as a 
Fulbright Scholar at  State University, Russia and has been a senior associate 
and visiting fellow at the Center for Strategic and International Studies, the 
Kennan Institute in Washington DC, and the Hoover Institution.

 

 

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