nationalinterest.org
<https://nationalinterest.org/feature/can-reykjavik-meeting-really-improve-u
s-russia-ties-185640>  


Can the Reykjavik Meeting Really Improve U.S.-Russia Ties?


by Nikolas K. Gvosdev

6-8 minutes

  _____  

Here we go again. The pattern is now well-established. U.S.-Russia relations
worsen in the course of a presidential administration, and by the end of an
occupant's tenure in the White House, the pundits declare that the
relationship hasn't been this bad since the days of the Cold War. Both sides
develop their well-worn list of talking points about the transgressions and
misdeeds of the other. A new U.S. president promises that he won't take the
same steps as his predecessor in dealing with the Kremlin, and even takes
some actions designed to show the Russian government how things have
changed, and how Russia is not as important a priority or player in the
international scene for the United States and better not have an
over-inflated sense of its importance in the grand scheme of things. And
then, lo and behold, at the first major encounter between senior Russian and
American figures, they engage in a tough but frank exchange of views and
solemnly declare that despite all the transgressions of the past, both the
United States and the Russian Federation can engage in substantive dialogue
and find ways to cooperate on areas of shared concern.

It almost feels that I could take pieces written in 2001, or 2009, or 2017,
cross out some names (striking Colin Powell, Hillary Clinton, or Rex
Tillerson for Tony Blinken), change a few points, and produce an analysis of
the first encounter in Reykjavik. And, for his part, Russian Foreign
Minister Sergey Lavrov has had such experience in dialoguing with his
American counterpart that the script is second nature-the standard
references to the "constructive" nature of the talks, the need for "mutual
respect" and the enunciation of an agenda that always seems to have the same
items on it (noting the appearance of both North Korea and Iran yet again).
And then, the hopes for some sort of breakthrough fade away as the
structural realities of the U.S.-Russia relationship-particularly the
zero-sum nature of many of its components-reasserts itself. Any positive
momentum founders on fundamental disagreements such as the enlargement of
the North Atlantic alliance to encompass states like Ukraine or Moscow's
insistence on its sovereign rights to govern itself as it sees fit, and so
on. And the pattern repeats itself.

It is critically important for the United States and Russia to talk, and the
focus of the Blinken-Lavrov meeting on the question of strategic
stability-arguably the most critically important factor given that both
countries hold impressive nuclear arsenals-is the correct one. Moreover, the
lemming-like slide in the relationship, where each side increases punitive
actions while finding more ways to cut ties-is extremely dangerous. If the
Reykjavik meeting can arrest this process, and commit both sides to a
position I argued for nine long years ago-the importance of ring-fencing
certain aspects of the U.S.-Russia relationship from political
disruption-then this will have been an important first meeting. Having it
take place on the sidelines of the Arctic Council was also important because
the Arctic is one of the few remaining issue areas where Washington and
Moscow do tend to collaborate and have a shared interest in beating back any
efforts by states like China to insist that a category of "near-Arctic"
states should also have a say in the regional infrastructure of governance. 

What's positive is that both sides agree that it is important to talk and to
draw up a substantive agenda on maintaining strategic stability. The
imposition of new U.S. sanctions against the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, with
the concurrent waiver granted to the parent holding company of that
pipeline, also creates a temporary pause in the cycle of Russian action-U.S.
sanction-Russian action-U.S. sanction that has characterized relations over
the past several years-at least through to a planned presidential summit
between Joe Biden and Vladimir Putin next month. (Of course, the waiver
given to Nord Stream AG may be less motivated by a desire to offer an olive
branch to the Kremlin and more to avoid an open rupture with German
chancellor Angela Merkel before the G-7 and NATO summits.)

But a temporary breathing space does not portend a major shift in the
relationship. The real question is whether Biden and Putin are prepared to
bargain. The crux of any such engagement is to what extent would the Biden
administration be prepared to throttle back its pressure on Russia-over
Ukraine, the fate of Alexei Navalny, etc.- if the Putin government was
prepared to guarantee concrete support for American initiatives-not only on
Iran and North Korea but Syria but even on the parameters by which other
Eurasian states could affiliate to Euro-Atlantic institutions. To what
extent could Russia shape settlements-say with regard to Syria-where it
might be able to extract concessions from the United States on behalf of its
clients? Left unspoken but also hanging in the air is what the U.S. might be
willing to offer to encourage Russia to reconsider aspects of its strategic
partnership with Beijing.

And yet, the record on compromises has not been promising. For several years
the German government has tried to sell a compromise formula on the Nord
Stream pipeline, that in return for the U.S. ceasing its efforts to prevent
its construction Russia would be required to guarantee the continuation of
some energy transit via Ukraine-that has not found many takers in
Washington. Indeed, earlier this month Blinken himself reiterated to the
Ukrainian government that it is standing U.S. policy to prevent completion
of the line-a policy that the temporary waiver of sanctions does not appear
to have altered. 

It is possible to have a frank conversation and still not to find common
ground. But perhaps that ought not to be the metric. Perhaps just finding a
way to deconflict the U.S.-Russia relationship is ambitious enough. Three
years ago, I wrote in the journal Horizons
<https://www.cirsd.org/en/horizons/horizons-summer-2018-issue-no-12/permanen
t-divergence-the-evolution-of-us-russia-relations-in-the-trump-era>  "that
friction in the American relationship with Russia is inevitable, but
dysfunction is not. It should be possible to find a way to contain and
mitigate the contradictions between the two countries' approach to
international affairs." We'll see if the Blinken-Lavrov meeting is the first
step in this direction.

Nikolas K. Gvosdev is a contributing editor at the National Interest. 

Image: Reuters 

 

-- 
http:www.antic.org
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion on the web visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/035101d74ee7%2461984520%2424c8cf60%24%40gmail.com.

Reply via email to