Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 20 – In 1979,
many in the West felt that Moscow was winning and Western countries were
divided and in retreat. The Soviets invaded Afghanistan, a revolution in Iran
led to the seizure of American diplomats, Europe was divided and divided from
the US, and the US president spoke of “a crisis of confidence” among the American
people.
Nine years later, the Soviets pulled
out of Afghanistan, ten years the Soviet bloc in Eastern Europe collapsed, and
12 years later the USSR disintegrated, the result of the failure of communism
and the appearance of leaders in the West who recognized that the USSR was “an
evil empire” and called on those under communist rule “not to be afraid” to
challenge it.
That history should not be forgotten
now when once again there are people in the West who view one aspect of Russia,
its militarist expansionism under Vladimir Putin, and ignore all the other
realities that mean his country is far weaker and less likely to pose a long-term
challenge to the West than did the USSR.
This week has seen a German paper
proclaim that Putin is going from victory to victory and will soon extend it by
replacing the government in Berlin (faz.net/aktuell/politik/syrien-trump-brexit-der-sieger-heisst-putin-14579240.html),
a poll showing that many US Republicans view Putin in a positive light (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5858DAEAC1F89),
and an American expert argue that the world needs to come to terms with the
return of an empire like the Soviet one (liveinternet.ru/users/lebedev56/post404577460/).
That Putin has achieved certain
victories or at least has seen history going his way over the past year is
true. The West has been swept by the kind of populist isolationist nationalism
that dictators like the one in the Kremlin can easily exploit, especially given
that with rare exceptions, the current leaders of the West has not displayed
the courage one might hope for.
But “behind the headlines,” as the
Russians like to say, the image is very different. Russia’s economy is
declining and is in much greater difficulty than it was only a year or two ago.
Moscow faces a variety of domestic problems ranging from demographic collapse
to ethnic divides that it will find increasingly difficult to cope.
And its successes in foreign affairs
may not be as long-lasting or unambiguous as the pessimists in the West are now
saying. Unlike in Russia, Western
countries have institutions to change their leaders on a regular basis; and
unlike in Russia, these leaders preside over countries which are far richer and
more attractive to others than Russia is likely to ever be.
More to the point, many of Putin’s
supposed victories are Pyrrhic. That is, they contain within themselves
problems that are only going to mount in the coming months. His campaign in Syria is threatening to
become a quagmire for Russian forces however much his propaganda says
otherwise.
His much-ballyhooed alliance with
China is turning out to be much less favorable to Russia than he and many
alarmists in the West imagine: China has cut imports from Russia over the last
three years only a few percentage points less than have Western countries that
have imposed sanctions.
And Putin’s “greatest triumph” in
the minds of some, the election of Donald Trump who has been openly pro-Russian
in his campaign and in his selection of cabinet nominees, isn’t likely to work
out as he wants and as some fear.
On the one hand, Putin’s open
involvement in American electoral politics is already producing a backlash
among some like Senator John McCain who are certain to conduct the kind of
investigations that will undermine the swoon of many in Washington for the
Kremlin leader and his policies.
And on the other, Trump’s new
nationalism will not work to Putin’s advantage across the board. It may
tragically lead to less American concern with human rights and democracy and
less support for those like Ukraine and the Baltic countries that are directly
threatened by Putin’s aggressiveness.
But Trump’s call for dramatically
boosting US energy production will have the effect of driving down oil prices,
thus undercutting the primary source of income on which Putin’s war machine
rests; and his disruption of international trade arrangements, something Putin
welcomes, will also work against Putin and Russia.
As trade is disrupted, ever more
countries will first focus on their own problems rather than on others, making
it more difficult for Russia to attract investment, and then they will almost
certainly try to make new arrangements for cooperation in which Putin’s Russia
is unlikely to find a place.
As we approach the darkest day of
the year, it is perhaps natural that people have bleak assessments. But if one
looks back to 1979 and its aftermath, one can take courage. Just two months
into 1980, the US hockey team defeated the Soviet one at the Lake Placid
Olympics, an event that changed how Americans thought about the US-Soviet
competition.
Many became convinced as the coach
of that team put it that the day of the Soviets was “done” and that if a group
of American college kids could defeat what was in fact a professional Soviet
team, that could only mean that Americans and the American system could defeat
the Soviets and theirs.
Within a decade, that occurred, an
outcome that the defeatists of today should not only remember but take
seriously.
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