How America Should Respond to Resurgent Russia

August 20th, 2008 By: Michael van der Galien | Tags:

The United States should announce its intention to transfer the entire Europe-based American military establishment to new locations in Central Europe, because many of the EU’s largest states are more interested in avoiding a rupture with Moscow than in protecting the vital interests of the Union’s eastern members, writes Wess Mitchell of the think tank the Atlantic Community in a guest post for PoliGazette.

Crises, so the saying goes, have a nasty way of exposing pretensions. The Russian invasion and occupation of the republic of Georgia exposed the pretension that the United States is capable of effectively underwriting the security of small, isolated powers in Russia’s backyard. In singling out Georgia - America’s longtime regional protégé - Moscow employed a tactic that is as old as geopolitics itself: humbling a small-power proxy to demonstrate the impotence of its Great-Power patron. Distracted by two simultaneous land wars, a rapidly-arming Iran and a deepening economic crisis, there is little the United States can do to alter Russian behavior.

For the first time in living memory, a US ally has been forced to endure sustained humiliation in full view of the international community without an effective counter-move by Washington. In Georgia, American weakness - and with it, the fiction of unipolarity - has been laid bare for the world to see. Now Washington faces an unfamiliar predicament: we cannot afford to divert scarce US power assets to a part of the world that is now demonstrably beyond our strategic reach, but we also cannot afford to do nothing.

Should the United States allow the crisis to pass with only a symbolic rebuke, two far-reaching consequences will follow:

  1. Other former Soviet captive nations, including those in Central Europe, will begin to doubt America’s ability to act as a credible security guarantor and
  2. Russia will be emboldened to repeat its tactic elsewhere.

A dangerous cycle could ensue in which US allies feel a sharpened security dilemma and Russia continually tests the limits of its local power position. The net result could be that the vital strategic middle ground between Russia and Europe could gradually come back “into play” for the first time in two decades.

This would not be in the US national interest. While the centrality of Georgia to key American interests may be, as some US commentators allege, debatable, the importance of Central Europe is not. Of the three occasions in the past century when America has been pulled into global conflicts, all originated in the 800-mile strip of land between the Baltic and Black Seas. Only when this region, and with it, the eastern flank of NATO, are unambiguously in the Western ambit can America confidently turn its attention away from Europe and deal from a position of strength with issues further afield.

In an ideal world, the United States would be able to count on the European Union to quell disturbances in what is, after all, Europe’s own strategic hinterland. However, as recent events have shown, many of the EU’s largest states are more interested in avoiding a rupture with Moscow than in protecting the vital interests of the Union’s eastern members.

When Russia launched a cyber attack on Estonia last summer, the EU failed to issue a meaningful response. When Russia threatened to aim nuclear weapons at Poland and the Czech Republic for cooperation on US missile defense, the EU said nothing. And when Russia invaded Georgia, eastern leaders were shocked to find their Western neighbors reluctant, not only to back proposals for a tough EU response, but to assign blame in the conflict at all.

If a convincing message is to be sent to Moscow, it will have to come from the United States. Perhaps it’s too late even for that. Perhaps the majority of analysts are right that America - distracted, out-maneuvered and over-stretched - is no longer capable of a tough response.

But perhaps not. There is one option that has not been discussed that could help to shift the diplomatic playing-field to the West’s favor. The United States should announce its intention to transfer, on a permanent basis, the entire Europe-based American military establishment to new locations in Central Europe. This should include the EUCOM headquarters and the bulk of the US Seventh Army and Third Air Force - upwards of 60,000 troops. Ideally, these forces and facilities would be distributed between the three largest and most Atlanticist eastern states - Poland, the Czech Republic and Romania - thus covering the northern, southern and central approaches to the region.

As draconian as such a measure might sound, it would offer at least two significant advantages over the other options that are being discussed.

  1. It would alter the actual power reality on the ground in the region. Most of the other options tried or talked about - referring Russia to the UN Security Council, canceling joint Russia-NATO military exercises, expelling Russia from the G-8 - are “prestige penalties,” none of which would outweigh the enhanced power status that Moscow achieved by initiating its offensive to begin with. Russia’s move was power-political; so too must be the response. By advancing US military assets one square closer to the geostrategic fault-line (as we did by placing American bases in Germany during the Cold War), Washington would demonstrate Western seriousness and force Moscow to think long and hard before attempting another show of force.
  2. Signaling our intention to shift US bases eastward would provide a much-needed injection of confidence for US allies in the region, both in and out of NATO. The “demonstration effect” that Russia has so far managed to produce must not be allowed to stick. A demonstration of equal or greater magnitude must be made, and soon. Already, Washington’s meager response has led to renewed calls in Warsaw for a bilateral US security pledge over and above Article V. Allowing these jitters to spread could open a geopolitical can of worms that would be very difficult to shut. By launching basing talks with key eastern allies, the United States would send an unmistakable message that we are, and intend to remain, a force to be reckoned with in the region - a perception that, despite Central European membership in NATO, is beginning to slip.

An eastward shift in Europe’s strategic center-of-gravity is long overdue. For years, Pentagon planners have talked about the benefits that would accrue from the placement of military installations in Central Europe, not only in the immediate vicinity but in the nearby Middle East as well. Accordingly, we have sought “lily pad” bases in Romania and Bulgaria and missile defense sites in the Czech Republic and Poland (the latter of which, as of yesterday, has been jolted out of its months-long torpor into signing an agreement). The crisis in Georgia should be seen as confirmation of this instinct and provide an impetuous to continuing and accelerating the process.

Obviously, attempting to transfer US forces eastward would be a lengthy, expensive and negotiation-laden undertaking. It might not work. And even it does, it is a long-term fix that would not save Georgia from its immediate travails. However, the very act of announcing that we are contemplating such a move, by demonstrating US seriousness, creativity and commitment to the region, would help to strengthen the Western negotiating position at a moment when it is risibly weak.

In retrospect, the Georgian crisis is likely to be seen as the first in a series of friction-points in the transition to global multipolarity. It therefore matters how we acquit ourselves in the crisis. While we cannot continue the process of geopolitical expansion that brought us into Georgia, we also cannot precipitously retract. We must make intelligent use of the power assets at our disposal to consolidate our position and strengthen the disincentives against de-stabilizing Russian moves in the future. Doing so could help to ensure that, when the next crisis arises, we are able - unlike today - to deal with Moscow from a position of strength.

Wess Mitchell is a member of the board of Atlantic Initiative U.S. He is director of research at The Center for European Policy Analysis (CEPA), a research institute dedicated to the study of Central Europe.

This post first appeared here

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • del.icio.us
  • Technorati
  • SphereIt
  • NewsVine
  • TailRank
  • Reddit
  • StumbleUpon
  1. John
    August 20th, 2008 at 17:13
    Reply | Quote | #1

    Or…
    The US finally should develop a real policy on Russia, instead of the amateurish attitude of the Bush administration that has been a collosal mistake so far. The first mistake was Bush tearing up of the Missile Deense Treaty, then encouraging Georgia to poke
    at the Russians and then hide behind an undefined American protection.
    Further antagonising Russia is not going to solve any problems,  we just need a wiser US administration and we can all thank God that it will come soon, if in the mean time more demage is not done by the residents of the White House.

  2. Not John
    August 20th, 2008 at 20:57
    Reply | Quote | #2

    I suppose John, above, doesn’t realize that the election in the US has yet to be held and very well might be occupied by a Republican president.  

     

  3. John
    August 20th, 2008 at 21:54
    Reply | Quote | #3

    I suppose one can only assume that a Republican might very well not occupy the post of presidency.

    regardless, a meaningless commentary by NJ

  4. Matt
    August 20th, 2008 at 22:11
    Reply | Quote | #4

    John, is there any meaningful proof that the Bush Aministration encouraged Georgia’s attack on S. Ossetia?  My understanding is that the US told the Georgians specifically to NOT antagonize the Russians. 

  5. Rachel
    August 20th, 2008 at 23:35
    Reply | Quote | #5

    Russia overstepped its boundaries. But Georgia is far from innocent. An article from the Asian Times stated that Europe was very weary of Shakashvilli and his oppressive ways toward S. Ossetia and Abkhasia and even his own Georgia. They refused to put Georgia in Nato most likely because they knew Mr. S was a powder keg. And I believe that we told S. don’t fall for Russia’s teasing. One of many op-eds in the Asian times is this one
    http://www.atimes.com/atimes/Central_Asia/JH12Ag01.html

    and here’s an article from slate
    http://www.slate.com/id/2191588/entry/2191589/

    If there was a mistake here, it was the US and Europe not insisting that Georgia recognized the independence of its breakaway sections. I know this is rather Copperhead-ish, but it would have taken away Russia’s excuse of protecting their people (wink wink)

    Also, regardless of whethter we were involved in Iraq or Afghanistan or neither, there would still have been no support for an armed conflict against the-second-highest-amount-of-nukes- in-the-world Russia

  6. John
    August 21st, 2008 at 04:52
    Reply | Quote | #6

    Matt, it is not important that I or anyone else, other than Mr. Saakashvili, thought that US encouragement was there for him to take such a bold step as to attack Russia’s ally in Georgia’s troubled territory.

    It has been written that Ms. Rice had cautioned the Georgian president not to be tempted by Ossetian provocations, if this information is indeed true than it proves the saying that "the tail is wagging the dog". One should come to certain conclusions about Georgia’s actions in that case.

    I agree with Rachel who says the West could have in fact pulled the rug under Russia’s feet by recognizing those breakaway regions. A highly controversial and an unlikely step by the West, but very logical and just. But sadly justice is hardly the motivation here either by the US or Russia.

    There is a huge double standards in play here; throughout the Cold War the Soviet Union was condemned by the West for its "evil deeds" and its repression, oppression, tyranny etc… you name it and all the negative attributes were there to fit this malignant system,  especially Stalin and the havoc he brought upon the people under his control.

    But somehow the tyrannical  legacy of the same Stalin regime, especially the arbitrary inclusion of peoples in enemy territories, now all of a sudden is regarded by the West as sacrosanct, pushing forward a bogus mantra called "territorial integrity" that they themselves disregard. This is a bunch of hooey used by the West, the US in particular, to arbitrarily use and abuse whenever and wherever deemed necessary . One cannot but compare the case of Kosovo (yes) V.S. other parts in similar situations like Ossetia, Abkhazia, Nagorno-Karabakh (No).

    Rachel point hits the mark.

  7. kbn
    August 22nd, 2008 at 05:55
    Reply | Quote | #7

    Lets not forget to pray for our political leaders to make the right decisions. What is wrong with these Russian’s……

  8. Zaza
    August 26th, 2008 at 23:14
    Reply | Quote | #8

    Russian invasion is no surprise to us in Georgia. Nor is the recognition of S. Ossetia and Abkhazia. Russians never made a secret they would do it. Russian analysts wrote it would happen in August. The amassed thousands of tanks and  entire 58th army across the border, the buildup that took years and culminated with war games to stage invasion. I understand the posters here are preoccupied with realpolitik, but to think Saakashvili or Georgians are such suicidal  idiots  to provoke Russia is just ridiculous. Same as if looks of rape victim aroused a rapist, so she it one to blame. Russia did not have a trouble to find an excuse to invade Georgia. I don’t think Saakashvili made  serious mistake or miscalculation. He was able to hold back invading force with one brigade, for nearly three days, until  Bush realized what’s really going on and Russia found herself isolated.  The blitzkrieg failed. Putin did not achieve his real objective - topple of government, annexation of Georgia and total control of Caspian and central Asian energy routes. They recognised those two separatist regions, but de facto nothing changed for us, they were ruled by Russia since 1992. All they gained is that put delayed action mine under their own state, which will detonate sooner or later. Today, west has more cards in hand than Russia. Please, just don’t have illusion that bear will understand human language.

PoliGazette Comments Policy

PoliGazette encourages comments from all viewpoints, especially those that disagree. Comments submitted must, however, adhere to the following standards. Comments that violate these standards may be edited or deleted without notice at the sole discretion of the editors. Commenters who repeatedly or egregiously violate these standards or who attempt to argue publicly with editors regarding the comments policy may be banned from commenting further.

(1) Comments should address the substantive content of the post. Comments that repeatedly or blatantly misrepresent the content of the post or of others' comments are not welcome. Comments that respond to something other than which the contributor or commenter may have said are irrelevant and should not be posted.

(2) Comments should avoid vulgarity as well as racial, ethnic, religious, or sexual bigotry.

(3) Comments should not personally attack the character, personal integrity, or professional reputation of any PoliGazette contributor or of other commenters.

(4) Comments should reflect the contributions of the commenters themselves and should not include extensive cut-and-paste reproductions of others' words except insofar as necessary to supplement the commenter's own arguments. Link spam, trackback spam, and propaganda spam will be instantly deleted.

(5) Public figures are considered open to all substantive criticism of their policies and statements. Comments that present objectively false factual information about public figures (i.e. "Obama is a Muslim") or that attack public figures by attacking their families are not welcome. Comments that merely repeat slogans for or against a candidate without engaging in substantive comment are not welcome.

Questions or challenges to these policies or their application should be directed to the editors by email only.


Warning: is_writable() [function.is-writable]: open_basedir restriction in effect. File(error_log) is not within the allowed path(s): (/home/p6525pol:/usr/lib/php:/usr/local/lib/php:/tmp) in /home/p6525pol/public_html/wp-includes/wp-db.php on line 500