RUSSIA IN THE NEW GEOPOLITICAL CONTEXT
Any meaningful analysis of the geopolitical,
legal-international and ideological aspects of the new political
age can be obtained solely outside the formulas offered by the
political-semantic technologies of global governance. At the
same time anybody bold enough to disregard the "sacred cows"
of the liberals of fin de sciecle will be running a
danger of being accused of violating political correctness. One
should admit, however, that the demagogic deliberations about
the rivalry between totalitarianism and democracy and about
globalization smack too much of the overused Marxist thesis
about "transfer from capitalism to communism being the main
content of our age." The world is being divided once more
before our eyes. One has to admit that the process does not
reflect at all the ideological struggle of the 20th century;
indeed, even during the Cold War it never completely dominated
international relations.
Current developments confirm that the
confrontation between the communist and liberal historical
projects has embraced the stereotypes born by the earlier
discussions inside Christian civilization. The "Eastern
question" of Nikolai Danilevskiy and the Russia and Europe
dilemma have become organic elements of the "great schism"
of the post-modernist era in which the ideas stemming from the
same root, the Enlightenment, were competing among themselves.
Both communism and liberalism, first cousins of the philosophy
of progress, are branded with universalism. They both identify
their aims with universal ideals. They shared the same aim even
if employed different means: creating a single uniform global
super-society and reducing the world to a single pattern devoid
of religious or national features. This was how "ideological
struggle" became an independent foreign policy phenomenon
that, in the latter half of the 20th century, pushed aside
considerations of continuity.
The latter became obvious as soon as Russia
lost, for a certain period, its great power nature and the role
of a geopolitical and spiritual counterbalance of the entire
West destined to guard the world's variety. Arnold Toynbee, the
patriarch of Anglo-Saxon historical thought, spoke with a good
deal of insight about the Western civilization's universalistic
ambitions. He wrote that it aimed at uniting entire mankind into
a single society and controlling everything on land, in the air
and in the water that could be of any use for contemporary
Western technologies. He added that what the West was doing to
Islam he was doing at same time to all existing civilizations:
Christian Orthodox, Hindu and Far Eastern world. [1]
Eurasia is being restructured in tune with the
painfully familiar geopolitical and spiritual ideas of the Old
World's imperial past. By joining NATO Hungary and the Czech
Republic do not distance themselves from communism. While moving
away from Russia, a totally alien country, they come back to the
"post-Habsburg" expanse. Catholic Poland sympathizes
with the Chechen bandits, which is hardly amazing. Adam
Mickiewicz, an idol of all Poles, "diedway" (to borrow
an expression from Alexander Herzen) somewhere in Constantinople
where he went "to knock together a Polish Cossack legion"
to join "civilized" Turkey against "barbarian"
Russia in the Crimean War.
In fact, the Baltic-Black Sea salient (a
project dating back to the 16th century) still lacks an
important link - Byelorussia. It was designed to keep Russia a
landlocked country. Today, like 100 years ago, Kosovo, the only
land military route to Thessalonica, connects Western Europe
with the Straits area. Pope John Paul II who called the
Ukrainians the only descendants of St. Vladimir and who is
persistently setting up Catholic dioceses in Russia is acting as
an heir to Pope Urban VII who responded to the Union of Brest of
1596 with: "Oh, my Rusins! I hope to reach out to the East
through you!" Finally, the triumphant Anglo-Saxons who
entered Kabul and Mesopotamia as peacemakers have realized the
boldest dreams of Disraeli and Palmerston. Lord Judd, a comic
imitator of the latter, is setting up so-called Chechen
committees at the Council of Europe to emulate his idol who set
up Circassian committees at the Paris Congress of 1856.
Control over natural resources and
geostrategic and naval routes leading to them is the main reason
why the world is carved up and the wars are waged. Russia is
being gradually pushed to the Eurasian north-east, away from the
major approaches (the Mediterranean-Black Sea-Caspian region) to
major natural treasures. This area is the north boundary of the
World Energy Ellipse that includes the Arabian Peninsula, Iraq
and Iran, the Persian Gulf, northern Iran, the Russian Northern
Caucasus, and Afghanistan. The world is divided in an effort to
push Russia away from one of the key communication centers of
the contemporary world in which resources are the key to
everything.
The southern salient begins in the
Mediterranean and the Straits. It is designed to link together
the Anglo-Saxon positions in Turkey through the Persian Gulf and
Pakistan and reach Afghanistan. For a while the latter remained
outside Anglo-Saxon control while Iraq was a stumbling block.
Both were destroyed. Time is running out for Iran.
We should say that the northern boundary of
the energy ellipse runs lose to Ukraine, Moldova, the Northern
and Southern Caucasus. This explains why the territories between
the Baltic and the Black Sea are actively drawn into the
Atlantic orbit, while Byelorussia, so far a missing part of the
same picture, is being cruelly persecuted. We are watching how
Russia is squeezed out of the Crimea, how the riot in Chechnya
is being presented as a national-liberation movement and how
Georgia is pulled into the American orbit.
Washington's Eurasian strategy aims at a total
control over the energy ellipse; the United States are working
toward depriving all potential and the already existing centers
of forces located much closer to the natural riches of any role
in regulating their use.
The Chechen conflict serves both aims - for
this reason a banal criminal riot was transformed into an
instrument of the world project. It is only part of it that
relates to the ideas of radical non-traditional Islam and its
terrorist centers. At all times the Islamic expansionist impulse
was guided by a non-Islamic mind that channeled it in the
desirable geopolitical directions.
This is not new. Back in 1835, a British ship
was caught off the Caucasian shores unloading weapons for the
Circassians. Similar things happened later, in the 1950s. One
can expect an attempt to revive the CENTO Pact under a
fashionable name, like a Stability Pact. CENTO developed from
the Baghdad Pact. This is needed to tie together all the
strategically important points along the Mediterranean-Asia
Minor-Persian Gulf-Pakistan line. This can be done if Iraq and
Kuwait-Mesopotamia are made part of the same line. They are the
cherished prize Britain was seeking in World War I (the Sykes-Picot
agreement), the territory on that it repeatedly set up its bases
and stationed its troops. To gain control over the huge Eurasian
ellipse, the "fourth Rome" should destroy Iraq, the
Carthage of the Persian Gulf.
The incantations about the end of the Cold War
cause skepticism, nothing else. Serious Western researchers have
already admitted that its history was greatly distorted and that
these distortions came and went, like a tide, both in the anti-Soviet
and anti-American contexts. Finally, we have become familiar
with the earlier concealed "British" version according
to which the Cold War was designated to "dissolve"
Germany. The British "carefully" transferred this
country to America, together with their anti-Germanic impulse.
It was they who taught ò Americans the classical vision
of the European world order.
I am resolved to abandon as an anachronism the
current vision of the Cold War as an unprecedented period more
horrible than anything mankind known so far.
International relations of the 20th century,
including the present era of democracy, differ from the imperial
past in two ways: unprecedented ideolîgization and far from
aristocratic rudeness. There is another new feature: false hopes
of the "demos" convinced of its importance while its
fate is determined by the oligarchs. Social psychology reflects
the general longing for an ideal model for faith in progress and
the kingdom of God. Mankind that has forgotten about peace with
God and about its own sins is looking forward to a horizontal
peace between peoples and states. Having failed to reach it, m
an effort to cleanse itself of responsibility for the sins of
the world mankind starts looking for a scapegoat.
It is for some time now that "happiness
of mankind," "eternal peace," and democracy have
replaced national interests as a foreign policy aim therefore
the opponent is presented as an enemy of mankind. The problems
and contradictions that plagued international relations during
the Cold War period copy the geopolitical constants and the
historical-cultural preferences of the past.
During the era of global rivalry, when liberte
of the Third Estate competes with egalite of the
proletarians the American presidents and the Soviet general
secretaries brought up on mass culture rather than Mozart are
far removed from the ethics of Prince Metternich and Prince
Gorchakov with his "la Russie se recqueuille." The
Korean War, the American invasion of Cuba or Soviet invasion of
Hungary and Czechoslovakia offered nothing new to international
relations yet they were accompanied by an unprecedented effort
lo identify national interests with the moral and ethical canons
of the universe. This turned an opponent into the worst enemy of
mankind and a fiend. Both creations of the philosophy of
progress point to "happiness of mankind," "democracy"
or "proletarian internationalism" as the main foreign
policy aims rather than national interests. This is very much in
line with Wilsonianism and Lenin's foreign policy principles
that are very close to each other where their philosophies are
concerned. As a result, in the 20th century the continuing
geopolitical projects are contemplated within the Manichean
dichotomy of the good and evil.
The present "the only correct and
therefore omnipotent" liberal teaching is going on together
with the theologization of its historical project. The global
super-community, something that Marxism preached and liberalism
is still preaching smacks of an idea of a wandering metaphysical
Rome (translatio imperii) that travels from the West to
the East and back. Marxism and liberalism share many common
features and condemn the aliens in a similar way: "While
history is forging ahead to the triumph of market and democracy
certain countries remain on the side of the highwayr" [2] Here once more I am
forced to offer a politically incorrect remark: today we see
that all the constants of the centuries-long rivalry over the
seacoast and raw materials are still present together with those
traits of the Cold War that made it very close to the religious
wars.
This is manifested by a return to the pre-Westphalian
legal world outlook in which sovereignty and the classical
international laws had no force.
THE PEACE OF WESTPHALIA of 1648 ended
religious wars, that is, the wars waged for ideological reasons.
From that time on it was the state that was the subject of
international law rather than an axiological system or a type of
state.
The Enlightenment and West European liberal
democracy made the idea of the "sovereignty of people"
their basic postulate. International public law relies on the
principle of absolute sovereignty of a nation-state that cannot
be divided into classes depending on the state's degree of
civilization.
Chapter I of the UN Charter dealing with
the purposes of the United Nations betrays no preference
to any of the religious-philosophical or socio-political
system and does not mention democracy at all. It insists on
sovereign equality of all varied subjects of international
relations, that is, of republics monarchies, religious
communities (Christian, Islamic or Hindu alike), and liberal-democratic
societies of the Western type. From the point of view of
classical international law and the UN Charter they are
absolutely equal and none of them can be described as
progressive or backward.
Kant in his time said that the "war of
retribution" (bellum punitivum) among states was
unacceptable precisely because their relations were not of those
between a superior and subordinates. Back in the 1980s, the
thesis now completely refuted by the globalists dominated
international relations: while state sovereignty is regarded as
the basic principle an intervention designed to change not only
the object's behavior on the international arena but also
influence its domestic policies should be regarded as
contradicting the laws. This comment was uttered by prominent
political scientist S. Hoffman.[3]
It was for a long time that the present
challenge to the principles of sovereignty has been prepared.
The Council of Europe was set up as a structure parallel to the
UN, the "security organization." Its Charter and other
documents proceed from the standards of uniform civil society
and totally ignore such concepts as sovereignty and non-interference.
The Council of Europe is a purely ideological organization, a
"IV Liberal International" of sorts resolved to issue
"maturity certificates." It was the first to replace
international law as a legal system applied to nations by the
"world law" in which an individual rather than a state
is regarded as its subject. This individual is convinced that "ubi
bene, ibi patria" and relies on the world governance to
protect his rights. It is in this context that the human rights
issue is discussed while the philosophies of atheist
libertarianism and a religious society treat them in different
ways.
It is for a long time now that theoretical
quest in the field of "relative" or "functional"
sovereignty has been exploited to provide political
justification for the use of force. The new conceptions have
supplied the West with the right to protect human rights in the
countries that are allegedly violating them. They resort to
humanitarian interventions all the more willingly since the UN
Charter banned wars. Trailblazer lawyers regret that "international
law regulates relationships among states rather than individuals
and is designed to protect order rather than justice because it
relies on sovereignty". At the same time (say they) "world
law" as a new form of law is much better suited to serve
the world community of people rather than that of states.[4]
If preserved this trend may completely destroy
the international public law system and bring the era of nation-states
to the end. So far, smaller countries that have no nuclear
weapons are at the mercy of the strong powers; treaties and
agreements become protocols of intentions opened with "rebus
sic stantibus."
The UN has to make a decision. In his address
to the Federal Assembly President Putin described its continued
functioning as the main decision-making mechanism as one of the
priorities.
If one regards the Security Council's approval
of lifting sanctions against Iraq as "returning the
conflict into its legal context and restoring the UN role"
one has to admit that it was the UN that created the crisis in
the first place. There are attempts at destroying its authority
and those behind them have their reasons. They are rooted in the
post-war international legal mechanism's failure to prevent a
deliberately created conflict and a military destruction of Iraq
(a regional structural element of the bipolar world of the
past), which the U.S. needed to reshape the world. This is not a
UN crisis - this is a crisis of the world system.
Apprehensive of veto the United States had to
remove from voting their draft resolution that would sanction an
aggression. This can hardly be described as a crisis. This
rather demonstrated that there were still rudiments of the
legitimacy era when all violations of international law were
qualified as such and the UN principles and role were valid. It
was the parity of forces that kept the sides within certain
limits.
The philosophy of international law was
crippled as soon as the concept first- and second rated states
had been gradually accepted. It is for the self-proclaimed
arbiters of the first order to classify the rest; the
"model" states are allowed to wield weapons to punish
the states of the second order. In the past the Christian as
well as the magnanimous liberal thought condemned social
Darwinism that manifested itself in the concept of survival
struggle among the states. The ethos of a warfare in which a
"superior" nation removes the non-historical nations
from the stage as well as the Deutschland über alles slogan
were formulated by the German historian von Treitschke in the
Bismarck era.
The very idea that the state that threatens
nobody and attacks nobody should be disarmed by force points to
the crisis of legal consciousness and sovereign equality. The UN
Charter bans the use of force while the refusal to use force as
well as sovereign equality of all subjects of international law
belong to the key principles of international law. They open the
UN Charter and all textbooks of international public law. In his
statement of 20 March, UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan carefully
avoided any condemnation of the aggression.
"Perhaps if we had persevered a little
longer... the world could have taken action to solve this
problem by a collective decision, endowing it with greater
legitimacy, and therefore command wider support, than is now
the case." From this it follows that had a greater number
of states supported the action the breach of law would have
become more legitimate. Is it the UN task to endow breaches of
law with legitimacy?
Time has come to decide whether the UN serves
a certain order imposed on the world by strong powers or to
formulate certain universally applied norms and principles of an
international legal nature binding on the weak and strong alike.
Otherwise the latter's actions would not be recognized as legal
even if it is impossible to oppose them. In both cases the UN
serves "a decision- making mechanism" but its impact
on the world's future will be different.
So far the United States has not become
completely disenchanted with the UN therefore one can expect
that it will try to alter the Charter. The principle of
unanimity of the great powers in the Security Council will be
the main target of attack. In fact, it was the stumbling block
back in 1944-1945 when the draft UN Charter was being discussed.
The same principle nearly failed the Dumbarton Oaks conference.
In 1944-1945, while discussing with the
Litvinov commission various drafts the United States sought to
replace the key sovereignty principles with a global governance
mechanism endowed with the right to identify "threats to
international peace" contained in the state's domestic
developments and to issue verdicts about "faulty domestic
policies" that should fit certain standards. Its decisions
should become binding even for the non-members. [5] Washington and London opposed the
principle of the permanent members' concurring votes and
insisted on a procedure that would exclude the parties in a
conflict from a discussion of their case even if it involved the
permanent members. (To clarify the point let us imagine a
situation when Russia conflicted with a neighboring state that
had given asylum to Chechen bandits while the Security Council
passed a decision, without Russia's participation, on its
enforced disarmament.)
The Soviet Union insisted on the member-states
retaining the right to vote in all circumstances. At a much
later stage the UN Charter acquired an ambiguous clause: if the
contradictions among the subjects are described as a "dispute"
to be discussed by the Security Council the SC permanent member
that is a partie to the dispute must abstain from voting. If the
contradictions are described as a "situation"
permanent members retain their right to vote and to veto. Since
all sides in the contradiction should formally agree on its
description as a "dispute" or a "situation"
the permanent member can always prefer a "situation"
to retain its right to vote and to veto.
The directives to the Soviet delegation at the
Dumbarton Oaks conference declassified in the 1990s contained no
illusions: "The cases and situations in which the
organization could be used in our interests are few while
America has many chances to use it in certain cases to promote
its interests... We should do our best to prevent the use of the
organization against our interests. This is a measure of our
concessions at the coming negotiations." [6] Today the task of preserving the
UN role and the principle of the permanent members' concurring
vote is as urgent as ever.
THE DISPUTES ABOUT GLOBALIZATION being a
progressive phenomenon or serving to destroy the variety of the
world are going in the left Trotskyite and in the right
Christian context. Nothing has been said yet about the religious-philosophical
aspects of this phenomenon.
The world is too small, the flows of cultures,
people, money, and resources cannot be stopped. This is what has
caused natural globalization. It has nothing to do with the ideology
of globalism that is imposed on the world. It is a
legacy of ideological struggle that serves a banner of the
worldwide liberal supra-community under American "global
governance." The very fact that the West and the post-communist
world have embraced the ideology of globalism is a natural
result of the notorious ideological struggle in which two
kindred ideas of a uniform world competed against each other for
global governance. The ideology of globalism is being imposed on
the world with a nearly totalitarian fervor while it is invading
international law. This is an outcome of the triumph of liberal
over communist universality.
Kissinger has written about the conception
with which America entered World War I and the world scene in
general as a universal and basic harmony so far unrecognized by
mankind. Today, in the rays of the first "new thinking"
and the "democratic restructuring" of the world system
the imperial thought of the Old World is growing dimmer. At the
Paris Conference of 1919, President Wilson was holding forth
about America's unprecedented fate of realizing its
predestination by saving the world. According to the students of
American messianism and its religious and philosophical roots it
was Wilson who brought together the liberal ideas, the Calvinist
pathos of the Anglo-Saxon Puritans, the doctrines of the
Redeemer Nation and the Manifest Destiny. [7] They formulated America's moral
right to expansion and its right to rule "savages and evil
nations" (Senator Albert Beveridge). At all times there was
Calvinist confidence that the Almighty will reward those worthy
of His mercy here, on Earth. There was firm confidence that
success and wealth on Earth were the sure signs of being elected
and marked for Salvation. It is hard to correlate this with
"Blessed are the poor in spirit; Blessed are those who are
persecuted for righteousness."
It seems that we are witnessing how the motto
on the U.S. state seal that says Novus Ordo Seclorum is
developing from a mystic aim into a synthesis of Theodore
Roosevelt's imperialism and Wilson's messianism. "We rule
you in your own interests. Those who refuse to recognize this
are evil" since "the United States represents the
lofty principles of political order, much superior to all other
political orders. New American imperialism serves a lofty moral
aim." Export of behavioral clichés and stereotypes that
can be described as ideological programming is one of the key
requirements of global governance of nations split into free
individuals. In all countries common people are duped with the
pseudo-liberal idea of the cause of the Fatherland being alien
to them while an illusion of being part of the world oligarchy
is planted in the minds of national elites.
The non-Western world, however, interprets the
sermon about the right to deal preventive blows at states with
different, allegedly aggressive, types of government in the name
of universal democracy as a failure of Western values. It was
for a century that the West has been proud with them thus
gaining geopolitical and economic points. The communist-universalistic
alternative of the past is no longer attractive. The non-Western
world is free to choose - it has chosen "terrorism."
Here again I have to leave the limits of
political correctness to say that terrorism may become, and is
becoming, the world's structural component. It is one of the
results of globalization or, rather, of global governance. The
latter proved unable to protect its own citizens - never before
security had been so fragile as now despite impressive military
might invincible in traditional terms.
The Christian world cannot respond in kind not
only because liberalism has lost its moral aims outside earthly
existence and its ability to die for ideals. No Christian can
accept, for moral reasons, murder of innocent people as a form
of retribution for what a state or a terrorist group did.
Throughout the 19th and 20th centuries all terrorists in the
Christian world were militant atheists, revolutionaries or
Trotskyites. The terrorists of extremist dissident Islamic
movements regard themselves as the "weapon of God."
They look at their victims as inanimate objects rather than
living creatures, to which they should address their demands.
Christian culture, on the other hand, insists on people's
equality in the eyes of God; it is therefore impossible to
transform man into a means.
Talking of international terrorism as a
formula of world politics one should say that the term is
deliberately applied to highly varied phenomena while the "struggle
against international terrorism" developed into a political
doctrine. It was discovered to be a handy diplomatic and
political instrument to be used within the international legal
context. One should say that the same "terrorist centers"
train people to fight the United States and Russia. One should
bear in mind, however, that the terrorists pursue different aims
in relation to both countries. "Terrorism" wants the
United States to stop interfering with the domestic affairs of
other worlds. The incentives of the United States and the "terrorists"
constitute a novel phenomenon with frightening aims and no less
frightening methods.
The aims the Chechen criminal bands, or "terrorists"
are pursuing against Russia were not brought to life by any of
the new phenomena in world politics. They are pursuing
geopolitical goals of the past: detaching the Caucasus from the
Stavropol and Krasnodar Territory (with the latter marked in
their maps as "the Islamic republic of Adyghea"). "Terrorism"
is a method employed to seize by force the territories that
Russia defended from the Ottoman Empire and Persia acting at
Britain's instigation.
The United States is fighting for its imperial
interests and "global governance" while Russia is
fighting for its continued existence. Russia's ally fails to
demonstrate due solidarity with Russia when it comes to its
territorial integrity and its spheres of influence stretching
from the Balkans to the Black Sea. In fact, "anti-terrorist
solidarity" is of an ad hoc nature.
Protest develops into terrorism when the
factor of force comes to the fore while military technology
achieves fantastic heights. Conventional armaments have reached
the unprecedented high qualitative level while the means of
their use (electronic homing devices and delivery methods) have
radically changed both strategy and tactics. Conventional
weapons are following the path earlier traversed by nuclear
weapons that have already reached the stage when their
destructive potential made them inapplicable. It was missile
defense that served the containment purposes. In the same way,
it is few countries with latest anti-air complexes that can
oppose America's latest conventional armament systems tested in
Yugoslavia, Afghanistan, and Iraq.
This has already changed the very idea of war.
The attacking armies are only nominally involved while the most
selfless fighting back of an even large army has become
technically impossible. Solders are no longer expected to fight
at close range: computers are doing the fighting against an army
unable to beat off strikes of high-tech conventional weapons.
What the army can do is to find a shelter against them -
something that cannot be done in a nuclear attack. In this way,
contrary to what pseudo-humanitarian rhetoric insists on, the
new methods of a "conventional" warfare are aimed
mainly at the civilians.
Indeed, in Yugoslavia life-support systems of
large cities were consistently destroyed. The Serbian army lost
about 100 people while the losses among the non-combatants were
much larger: several thousands of adults and over 400 children.
What did inspire those who took hostages in a Moscow theater?
Urban industrial civilization surrenders when
water supply and sewage in megalopolises fail and not when the
army is defeated. The authorities are much more susceptible to
yield to blackmailing with humanitarian interventions and
terrorist acts when the liberal conscience of the "citizens
of the world" alien to the fates of the Fatherland fails to
identify them with the nation, its past, and its army. This
conscience is a product of globalism and the idea of an open
civil society.
The new world has put on the agenda
a host of issues, two of which are the ever-topical historical
and philosophic dilemmas: "Russia and Europe" and
"Russia together with America or against it." There
are several new problems such as "America and the rest of
the world" and "America and Europe." It is for
Russia itself to find its place in the complex intertwining that
has already produced a system of international relations, no
matter how incomplete. An independent decision alone can restore
to Russia its system-forming function.
The first decade of the "unipolar"
world produced an unprecedented high wave of anti-Americanism in
Europe and a crisis in NATO. So far, Europe has failed to
demonstrate that it possesses the necessary willpower and an
ability to formulate a new cultural-historical and political
alternative to what has already created global governance to
which it fell victim together with the others.
The re-division of the world that is taking
place before our eyes has a geopolitical script of its own and
is reshuffling international political forces into new patterns.
As soon as Russia finally loses all acquisitions of
Peter the Great that have been troubling Europe since the 18th
century "the decline of Europe" will become a fact. It
will lose its role of a center of historical events of world
importance. For a short while Old Europe was aware that as a
result its own role and its value as Washington's ally would
decline. Europe has still to come to an inevitable conclusion
that Russia's great power role does not infringe on its own role
in world politics. In fact, its role will diminish together with
that of Russia's.
Meanwhile Old Europe is losing its meaning as
a historical project. This looks strange against the impressive
perspectives of the EU territorial expansion and the role of the
Euro as the second world reserve currency. The EU, however, is
nothing more than a huge "organizational project" not
bold enough to include in the European convention aims and
values outside its limited earthly existence. Being purely
materialistic and rational it is one of the most boring samples
of what liberal planning can do. It confirms what conservative-minded
philosopher of law Carl Schmitt said, not without a great deal
of sarcasm, in the 1920s about similarity between the
philosophical paradigms of Marxist and liberal economic
doctrines: "The pictures of the world cherished by a
contemporary industrialist and industrial proletariat can be
taken for twins... The industrialist has no other ideal except
that cherished by Lenin, viz. 'electrification of the globe.'
Their disagreements are limited to the methods." [8]
The world and Europe as reflected in the minds
of left Social-Democrats united into a new world-wide fraternité
is nothing more than a huge economic venture in need of
optimization to be able to satisfy the growing requirements of
primitive individuals. In the past, Solana, D'Alema and Fischer
being pink social-democrats, red communists or ultra-lefts
belonged to the cosmopolitan left Liberal set that eagerly
embraced the idea of global super-community.
The new configurations will be of no use for
Europe if it losses its spiritual destination that moved it at
the times when it produced great powers and great cultures.
Today, they are serving global governance and Washington's
Eurasian project.
One cannot take seriously the talks about a
new Entente yet the new challenges and temptations of the
material paradise force us to give a fresh look to the "Russia
and Europe" dilemma that Europe has not yet resolved for
itself. In the same way we should cast another glance at the sad
and instructive experience of building a material paradise that
killed the Orthodox empire. Russia's decline has demonstrated
that neither the territory nor formidable economy nor even
nuclear arms can stop the country from slipping to the margins
of history: matter deprived of spirit is dead. The philosophy of
hedonistic and Narcissist libertarianism challenges all great
national and spiritual traditions and demands that these
traditions be removed so that history be deprived of any moral
purpose.
Liberalism that has reached the stage of
degradation and has lost its moral aims and purposes is as alien
to Europe as it is alien to Orthodox Russia. If both of them
follow this road they will find themselves loosing any
historical initiative and pushed to the world's backyard. This
will mean not only the end of liberal history according to
Fukuyama but also the decline of Europe -- Untergang des
Abendlandes according to Spengler. Both of them, though, may
acquire the badly needed historical impulse through their
cultural and historical cooperation.
Emmanuel Todd, prominent French academic and
public figure, began his widely acclaimed book with: "The
United States of America are developing into a problem for the
rest of the world" and concluded: "The 'global'
American power has entered the stage of decline of its military,
economic, and ideological might."[9]
In the short-term perspective, however, one
should accept America and its attempts at global governance with
new ideological and legal parameters as new geopolitical reality
in which Russia, Europe, and America for that matter have still
to find their places. One can see that the structure that
Washington is building up is still shaky. To invest it with
stability and to uproot the regional configurations of the
bipolar past, America resorts to annual hysterics over conflicts
of secondary importance. This is needed to occupy another region
and to make use of the scare of "terrorism" to make
permanent worldwide warfare an institution of sorts.
Wobbly "global governance" calls for
additional efforts to reach stability. Any genuine system of
international relations even if based on a single key element
demonstrates an ability to regulate and reproduce itself. The
war on Iraq launched in disregard of the German-French protests,
has clearly shown that Washington would rather control world
resources and the military marine routes leading to them than
remain loyal to its obsolete allied obligations. The trans-Atlantic
Yalta platform of interests survived the Soviet Union's
disintegration; it was not strengthened by the movement to
Belgrade and it split in Baghdad. This will probably become the
starting point of anew stage of clash of civilizations that will
offer new roles to old players.
There is a shared opinion in the expert
community that Europe will look for new forms of opposing
America's Eurasian strategy as the latter will step up its
expansionism. It depends mainly on Russia whether the first
decade of the 21st century will produce a more or less
equilateral triangle of the centers of force (America-Europe-Russia)
as an indispensable element of the new geopolitical arrangement.
A strong European role requires strong Asian politics.
It seems that Russia is gradually restoring
its traditional multisided strategy - something that befits a
great Eurasian power. In fact, this policy is part of Russia's
natural historical mission of balancing the West and the East.
As soon as Russia abandoned it the world set in motion;
civilizations started competing among themselves in an effort to
grasp its heritage and to gain toeholds in the key regions. It
was Pyetr Stolypin who said the following: "We inherited
our double-headed eagle from Byzantium. One-headed eagles are
equally powerful yet if we cut off the East-looking head of our
eagle it will bleed to death."
Russia's balancing role that the world needs
very much can be restored: Russia has not lost its strategically
central position in Eurasia. It is even much more important than
the naive Sakharov-Gorbachev school believed it to be and much
more resilient than Brzezinski imagined it to be. His
"grand chess match" was meant to do away with this
role. One should bear in mind, however, that Russia will remain
the political axis of the Eurasian geopolitical expanse as long
as it opposes the efforts to deprive it of an access to the
Baltic and the Black seas.
Russia should not be late - it should find its
place in each of the system-forming or large structures. It
should not afford any of its partners to use it in an opposition
between America and Islam, between China and America, between
India and Pakistan, and between Europe and America. The unipolar
world is a temporary phenomenon of the short period of
transition from the bipolar to a multipolar system. Its outlines
can be seen today. China has made spectacular progress in space
research while the Islamic world will obviously continue
developing and consolidating.
Russia should not choose between "together
with America against Europe" and "together with Europe
against America." There is no choice between confrontation
and eternal friendship in international relations, either.
Official anti-Americanism today would be nothing but bluff,
something like the commotion around the Winter Olympics in Salt
Lake City. While pursuing strategic aims of its own that do not
coincide with those of the United States Russia needs good
working relations with Washington. In his time George Kennan
described the relations between the two countries in the
following way: they should be "reasonably good but
reasonably distant". Translated into present realities this
means: shared interests and no ideology.
In its time Prince Gorchakov's "la
Russie se recqueille" (Russia is con-centrating)
produced a much greater impression that Nikita Khrushchev's
antics. In this connection we should bear in mind that "strategic
partnership" implies "strategic rivalry."
[1]
A.G. Toynbee, Viztintiiskoe nasledie Rossii. Tsivilizatsia
pered sudom istorii, Moscow, 1996, p. 116.
[2]
John Lewis Gaddis, We Now Know: Rethinking Cold War History, Oxford,
1997; The Long Peace, Inquiries into the History of Cold War,
N.Y.-Oxford, 1982; Ann Dcighton, The Impossible Peace:
Britain, the Division of Germany and the Origins of the Cold War,
Oxford, 1990.
[3]
Condoleezza Rice, "Vo imia natsional'nykh interesov," Pro
et Contra, Moscow, Spring 2000, p. 118.
[4] Intervention
in World Politics. Ed. By Hedley Bull, Oxford, 1984, pp.
10-11, 95.
[5] International
Affairs, Vol. 75, No. 3, July 1999, p. 547.
[6] RF
Foreign Policy Archives, Record Group 0512, Inventor,' 4,
Document 301, File 31, pp. 11-13, 16,21,23,26-29.
[7] RF
Foreign Policy Archives, Record Group 0512, Inventory 4,
Document 299, File 37, pp. 39-43.
[8] K.
Schmitt, Politicheskaia teologia, Moscow, 2000, p. 116.
[9]
Emmanuel Todd, Après l'empire. Essai sur la decomposition.
Natalia Narochnitskaya
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