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<https://original.antiwar.com/david_speedie/2024/06/19/the-missed-opportunities-syndrome-us-russia-relations-from-1992-present/>
  


The 'Missed Opportunities' Syndrome: US-Russia Relations from 1992-Present - 
Antiwar.com


David C. Speedie

7–9 minutes

  _____  

The tragic consequences of Russia’s February 2022 attack on Ukraine are amply 
documented in our mainstream media: one third of pre-war population lost, 
through death, displacement or flight; Ukraine’s infrastructural and 
environmental catastrophes; the grim echo of the trench warfare-like conditions 
of World War I, with incrementally small advances by either side at costs of 
thousands more lives.  The actual causes of the conflict are more the purview 
of independent media, this being an inconvenient topic for the Western 
narrative.  Bluntly put, the Ukraine tragedy was born of a series of missed 
opportunities, mostly willfully so, and mostly attributable to NATO and the 
West: if ever the words of Clausewitz rang true: War is politics by other 
means, they do so in the case of the Ukrainian tragedy.

It is clear that Western leaders went out of their way to prevent a negotiated 
diplomatic solution to the crisis.  As such, they share guilt in the onset of 
war, and also in its prolonged course, through massive arms supplies ot a 
Ukrainian cause that looks ever more lost.  The most immediate precipitating 
factor was the failure of Kyiv [at the urging of the West] to implement the 
Minsk agreements of 2015 and 2016 that would have removed the buildup of armed 
forces on both sides and kept the Donbas republics within Ukraine, with limited 
autonomy, and with such basic and essential rights as the use of the Russian 
language in official documents.  [One of the architects of Minsk, Chancellor 
Angela Merkel of Germany, subsequently confessed that the Minsk process was 
merely a playing for time to allow Ukraine to build up its military capacity. ] 
Subsequent West-dictated avoidance of a diplomatic solution torpedoed the 
Istanbul explorations in 2022 [remember Boris Johnson’s visit to Kyiv as NATO’s 
messenger boy?].

One year before Minsk I there was the overthrow of Ukraine’s legally elected 
President, and the West’s connivance in this, at the Maidan “revolution” in 
2014, in which the United States’ woman on the spot, Victoria Nuland, crudely 
dismissed our ambassador’s concern about the reaction of our European NATO 
allies to the coup.  Since one of the subplots here featured a growing NATO 
presence in Ukraine, the Russian reaction may only be surmised.

I would argue, however, that while these events are directly causal factors in 
the 2022 invasion, there is a chain of action – or inaction – that goes back 
more than thirty years, to the Cold War’s end and fanned the flames of Russian 
insecurity with regard to developments to its West.

First, beginning with Gorbachev in the last days of the Soviet Union, there 
were Soviet, then Russian proposals for a new European security architecture 
“from Lisbon to Vladivostok”.  The typical Western reaction was “Interesting 
idea, let’s think about it”.  This having evaporated into thin air, Gorbachev, 
Yeltsin and Putin all at various times broached the idea of Russia in NATO; the 
poor consolation prize was the NATO-Russia Council, where Russian concerns 
basically came to die.  Then, of course, we had NATO expansion, beginning in 
1999 and finally reaching Russia’s doorstep with the accession of the Baltic 
states and Poland and, most recently, Finland.  Thus perished the “not one inch 
to the east” verbal promise of James Baker to Gorbachev, which was reinforced 
by a veritable Hall of Fame of Western leadership: Helmut Kohl, Francois 
Mitterand, George H.W. Bush, NATO Secretary-General Manfred Woerner, even 
Margaret Thatcher [the Iron Lady praised Gorbachev as “a man I can do business 
with”].  The bottom line: this whole sorry train of events represents the 
missed opportunity to involve a willing Russia in a post-Cold War European 
security structure,

Russian exclusion from, or even serious engagement with, the West through NATO 
was exacerbated by U.S.-directed NATO actions that could only heighten Moscow’s 
angst, and justifiably so.  These are familiar: U.S. withdrawal from the 
Anti-Ballistic Missile Treaty in 2002; our refusal to respond to Russian 
concerns over the Conventional Forces in Europe agreement, resulting in 
Russia’s withdrawal; the bombing of Russia’s ally, Serbia, in1999; US placement 
of nuclear installations in Poland, Bulgaria and Germany [missile defenses, say 
we, but readily convertible to offensive purposes]; NATO exercises in Georgia 
and Ukraine [as one observer wryly noted: “Ukraine may not be in NATO, but NATO 
is most definitely in Ukraine”.]  In sum, the past thirty-odd year history of 
U.S./NATO- Russia relations is pockmarked with provocative actions by the West; 
Russia has been reactive, not revanchist, and the invasion of Ukraine is the 
apogee, a direct response to George W. Bush’s irrational proposal of NATO 
membership for Ukraine and Georgia at the 2008 Bucharest summit and the 
relentless increase in NATO’s presence since. Again, a bottom line: the 
overwhelmingly foolish missed opportunity of the post-Cold War age has been 
that of concluding a grand [or even good] bargain with Russia.  On the 
contrary, our billions of arms supplied to Ukraine. With increasing signs of 
approval to use them on targets within Russia, may well lead to Russia’s 
ultimate. apocalyptic reaction: nuclear war with NATO.

There is one final aspect of the “missed opportunities” syndrome, and one that 
hits home in a personal way – indeed, it may be seen rather as an elegiac 
reflection on “lost opportunities”.  For those of us who labored for some 
twenty-five years in private-sector efforts to see a positive U.S. Russia 
engagement take root, the loss of connections with Russian interlocutors who 
were engaged in a similarly constructive way is nothing short of tragic.  One 
thinks of scholars and experts such as Sergey Rogov of the Institute for the 
Study of the U.S. and Canada [now surely moribund, if not defunct]; Andrey 
Kortunov, Vyacheslav Nikonov and Dmitri Trenin [the first Russian director of 
the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace’s Moscow Center, an 
indispensable port of call in a Moscow visit, and now disbanded].  One thinks 
of governmental officials like the late Yevgeny Primakov [who turned his 
Washington-bound plane  around in mid-Atlantic upon hearing of the bombing of 
Belgrade], and of brilliant parliamentarians such as Vladimir Lukin and Alexey 
Arbatov, the latter perhaps the most penetrating mind on arms control issues on 
either the U.S. or Russian side.  What connects these individuals, and what 
makes the loss of their professional expertise and comradeship all the more 
lamentable, is that each was absolutely dedicated to the pursuit of a positive 
relationship.  Toward this end, they articulated Russia’s positions and 
strategic interests, while understanding the view from the other side – a 
diplomatic art that seems to have been irrevocably been lost in Washington.

David C. Speedie was Senior Fellow and Director of the Program on U.S. Global 
Engagement at the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs in New 
York from 2007 to 2017. He is a founding member of the Board of ACURA.

 

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