Paul
Goble
Staunton, March 27 – The Western
powers have long talked about “red lines” in Syria and elsewhere, actions or
events that they say have suggested underscore their concern and indicate where
they will act. Now, Russian President Vladimir Putin has done the same, and his
“red lines” underscore that his moves in Ukraine are part of a much larger
Kremlin program.
In an article in “Vzglyad,”
symbolically titled, “Not Just Ukraine,” Moscow journalist Yevgeny Krutikov points
out that Putin has now said that “the West has crossed a line,” yet another
indication that he has drawn such lines and that the West must take those into
consideration (vz.ru/politics/2014/3/25/678423.html).
Krutikov devotes his article to
where these lines are. According to him, they include any further expansion of
NATO eastward, especially involving Georgia and Ukraine, designed to encircle
Russia. Instead, Putin’s first “red line” is that Ukraine, Georgia, Sweden and
Finland must retain their “neutral status as ‘buffer countries.’”
A second Putin “red line” concerns
Georgia in particular. Moscow isn’t
interested in restoring normal ties with Georgia, Krutikov says, because it
will insist “on the preservation of the independent status of Abkhazia and
South Osetia as part of the general structures of international politics,” something
that will block NATO and Western expansion there.
A third Putin “red line” is in the
Baltic countries. Krutikov insists that Russia
has no plans to “destabilize” the situation “in the Baltic direction.” The economies of Latvia and Estonia, he says,
are “a virtual joke” and imposition of sanctions on Russia will hit them
hard.
“For the Russian Federation,” the “Vzglad”
journalist says, “’a red line’ could arise only if there were an effort to
strengthen the NATO grouping in the region with offensive forces of high
precision and greater radius of action,”
something Moscow believes “would be a violation of international agreements.”
In addition, he writes, Moscow would
consider “absolutely unacceptable” any “unfriendly actions” by Lithuania and
Poland toward Kaliningrad or toward Russian shipping and other commerce in the
Baltic region.
A fourth Putin “red line” would be
any manipulation of oil and gas prices designed to punish Russia as a major
exporter. That line is unlikely to be crossed, Krutikov says, because any moves
in that direction would hurt those who initiated such an action as well.
A fifth such line, he continues,
would be an American or Western threat to or action against any of Russia’s
allies around the world such as Syria. “Attacking the weak is a tactic as ancient as the world,” but if the
West does this in the current crisis, Putin will view it as yet another “red
line” violated.
A sixth “red line” for Putin is any
terrorist action on the territory of the Russian Federation that Moscow could
find “a trace” of American influence and thus hold the US responsible.
A seventh is the further
militarization of the Arctic intended to reduce Russia’s pre-eminence there.
An eighth is the American push for
further nuclear drawn downs at both the strategic and tactical level, an effort
that Krutikov says the Kremlin views as part of a general effort to weaken
Russian power.
And a ninth is American support for “a
‘fifth column’” of opposition figures in the Russian Federation and especially
any encouragement for demonstrations against the Putin regime.
Obviously, this
is a Putin wish list, and equally obviously the “red lines” declared by some
leaders are imposed only to be violated or ignored by others. But this list is
sufficient to demonstrate to anyone who is still not convinced that the Kremlin
leader has a far larger agenda than “only Ukraine,” one that completely
undermines the 1991 settlement and even that of 1945.
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