http://www.guardian.co.uk/print/0,,329722245-103677,00.html

Comment

*The west may yet come to regret its bullying of Russia
*
*Putin has no interest in a new cold war and is struggling to modernise his
economy. Yet he is rebuffed and insulted*

Simon Jenkins in Moscow
Wednesday February 21, 2007

*Guardian*

Countries too have feelings. So I am told by a Russian explaining the recent
collapse in relations between Vladimir Putin and his one-time western
admirers. "We have done well in the past 15 years, yet we get nothing but
rebuffs and insults. Russia's rulers have their pride, you know."
The truth is that Putin, like George Bush and Tony Blair, has an urgent date
with history. He can plead two terms as president in which he has
stabilised, if not deepened, Russian democracy, forced the pace of economic
modernisation, suppressed Chechen separatism and yet been remarkably
popular. But leaders who dismiss domestic critics crave international
opinion, and are unaccustomed to brickbats. Hence Putin's outburst at the
Munich security conference this month, when he announced he would "avoid
extra politesse" and speak his mind.

Putin's apologists ask that he be viewed as victim of an epic miscalculation
by the west. Here is a hard man avidly courted at first by Bush, Blair and
other western leaders. After 9/11 he tolerated US intervention along his
southern border with bases north of Afghanistan. Yet when he had similar
trouble in Chechnya, he was roundly abused. When he induced Milosevic to
leave Kosovo (which he and not "the bombing" did), he got no thanks.

When Putin sought to join Nato in the 1990s he was rebuffed. Then Nato broke
its post-cold-war promise and advanced its frontier through the Baltics and
Poland to the Black Sea. It is now planning missile defences in Poland and
the Czech Republic and is flirting with Ukraine and Georgia. Against whom is
this directed, asks Putin.

The west grovels before Opec, but when Putin proposes a gas Opec it cries
foul. America seizes Iraq's oil, but when Putin nationalises Russia's oil
that, too, is a foul. Meanwhile, every crook, every murdered Russian, every
army scandal is blazoned across the western press. True, Russia is still a
klepto-oligarchy that steps back as often as forward, but what of America's
pet Asian democracies, Afghanistan and Iraq?

In his Munich speech Putin asked why America constantly goes on about its
"unipolar world". Does Washington really seek a second cold war? Russia is
withdrawing from Georgia and Moldova. Why is Nato advancing bases in
Bulgaria and Romania? The west is handling Syria, Iraq, Afghanistan and Iran
with the arrogance and ineptitude of 19th-century imperialists. Is it
surprising Russia is seeking allies where it can, in China, India, Iran and
the Gulf?

At an Anglo-Russian conference in Moscow last weekend I was bemused by the
talk of a return to "east-west" confrontation. Diplomats have a habit of
listing complaints like marriage counsellors inviting couples to catalogue
what most irritates them about each other. The list seems endless, but it
surely points to a proper talk rather than a divorce. Don't they really need
each other after all?

Having visited Russia three times since the demise of the Soviet Union, I
remain impressed by its progress. Debate and comment are open. Russia is not
squandering its energy wealth but setting $100bn aside in an infrastructure
fund. The links between Russia and western business are worth $30bn in
inward investment. Cultural and educational contacts are strengthening.
Moscow and St Petersburg are booming world cities, their skylines thick with
cranes.

The west views pluralist democracy as so superior that any state coming to
it fresh must surely welcome it with open arms. When there is backsliding,
as in former Yugoslavia, Ukraine, Russia and parts of Africa, let alone the
Arab world, the west behaves like a peevish car salesman whose client has
not obeyed the repair manual. If the west can do fair elections, market
capitalism, press freedom and regional secession - after a mere two
centuries of trial and error - why can newly free states not do them
overnight?

The tough response to Putin is easy. It is the one he has from Washington
and Nato. We won the cold war. You lost. Shut up. If, as Russia's top
general said last week, you want to withdraw from the intermediate-range
nuclear forces treaty, then withdraw. If you think gas and oil enables you
to play the superpower again, see what happens. Bush and Blair may be
screwing up "Islamistan", but their successors will be more canny. Our
defence budget is bigger than yours and we have you surrounded.

All this makes for good realpolitik. But what Putin actually said in Munich
reflected not belligerence but puzzlement at the aggressive course of
western diplomacy. In the old days, he said, "there was an equilibrium and a
fear of mutual destruction. In those days one party was afraid to make an
extra step without consulting the others. This was certainly a fragile peace
and a frightening one, but seen from today it was reliable enough. Today it
seems that peace is not so reliable."

Putin is hardly seeking a return to the certainties of the cold war. He has
no more interest than the west in stirring the hornet's nest of Islamic
nationalism, stretching as it does deep into Russian territory. His desire
for "ever closer union" with Europe and Nato after 1997 was sincere and was
surely welcome.

While Putin appears to have been conducting his diplomacy over the past
decade from weakness and the west from strength, the reverse has been nearer
the truth. Britain and America have been led by essentially reactive
politicians with no grasp of history. A terrorist outrage or a bombastic
speech and they change policy on the hop. When Bush and Blair go, they will
leave a world less secure and more divided in its leadership than when they
arrived. Their dismissive treatment of Russia's recovery from cold war
defeat has been the rhetoric of natural bullies.

Russia and the west have everything to gain from good relations. Putin has
struggled to modernise his economy while holding together a traumatised and
shrunken Russian federation. The west may feel he errs towards
authoritarianism, but second-guessing Russian leaders is seldom a profitable
exercise. This is a huge country, rich in natural and human resources. It is
hard to think of somewhere the west would be better advised to "hug close".
Instead, Putin will hand his successor an isolated and bruised nation. Under
a less confident president, it could retreat into protectionism and
alliances the west will hate. To have encouraged that retreat is truly
stupid.

[EMAIL PROTECTED]


Guardian Unlimited (c) Guardian News and Media Limited 2007


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Одговори путем е-поште