Paul
Goble
Staunton, December 19 – Both Western
and Russian sources are reporting that Vladimir Putin is now prepared to
sacrifice Bashar Asad, and they are treating this was a victory for Washington
which has long insisted on that and a retreat or even defeat for the Kremlin
which has sought to defend its fellow dictator.
At one level that may be true, but
at three other levels, it is not. First,
sacrificing Asad is not the same thing as sacrificing the Asad regime. Putin has always been willing to sell out
even his allies but never interested in selling out his interests.
Consequently, he will continue to insist on an Asad-like regime in Syria; and
it appears likely some in the West will agree in the name of cooperation.
Second, Putin has achieved what he craves
most of all, recognition by the West that if it is going to address any problem
anywhere in the world, it must take Russia’s position into account. By his
military intervention in Syria, he has undermined the US-led coalition by
successfully demanding that his views be treated as equal to its.
And third, he has achieved something
far more significant: he once again has received Western deference for his
position that the great powers, one of which must be Russia, are quite entitled
to negotiate the fates of other countries without their participation. Thus,
once again, not only the fate of Syria but of Ukraine was discussed in their
absence.
A generation ago, many in the occupied
Baltic countries and East European states demanded that no decisions about them
should be taken unless they were participants. That position was summed up by
the slogan “nothing about us without us.” And it was one that the West
generally but not always agreed to.
Putin has never liked that. He wants
a Congress of Vienna-type world in which the great powers decide and the
smaller states obey. And in this case at
least, he appears to have gotten what he wanted in that regard as well.
Consequently, despite what some are saying, Putin didn’t lose and the West didn’t
win. In fact, in Moscow, it was just the reverse.
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