By Sunil Dasgupta One of the lasting questions in post-Cold War international relations has been the enduring preponderance of the...
By Sunil Dasgupta
One of the lasting questions in post-Cold War international relations
has been the enduring preponderance of the United States as the sole remaining
superpower. The Realist School of thought, which was predicated in significant
measure on the idea of the balance of power, failed to explain why other
nations did not rise or come together to balance the United States. To explain
the discrepancy, die-hard realists such as Robert Pape of the University of
Chicago proposed the idea of a transitional period of ‘soft’ or ‘hidden’
balancing by countries such as Russia, China, and even Europe before a period
of hard balancing returned.
Russia’s ability to defy the United States and other Western powers in
Ukraine (as well as Moscow’s support of the Syrian and Iranian regimes) since
late 2013 has suggested that the period of soft balancing is over. The return
of traditional balance of power politics implies that a multi-polar world, in
which the United States is one of many similarly positioned great powers, may
have arrived.
If the road to multipolarity runs through Ukraine, however, not everyone
is seeing the same view en route. On the one hand, it is clear that Russia has
been able to use economic interdependence, modern technology, and a proxy war
strategy to resist the United States and other Western powers. On the other,
the dangers of overreach are all too evident. Russia is on the precipice of
alienating Europe, revitalizing NATO, and bankrupting itself if energy prices
remain low. Furthermore, unless other rising powers such as China and India
choose to join Russia in defying the US-led Western order, the Russian ambition
of a rebalanced world is likely to remain a theoretical prospect rather than an
achievable goal.
Russian Successes
In Crimea and Eastern Ukraine, Moscow demonstrated willingness and new
capabilities to impose its will in its near abroad. Russia’s proxy war approach
reversed the model of traditional military operations in which information
warfare supports troop movements in pursuit of war aims. Russia reportedly used
cyber weapons to disable Ukraine’s telecommunications and internet capabilities
in a successful effort to keep loyal Ukrainian forces in Crimea from acting and
to isolate the region from external observation. At the height of the crisis,
pro-Kiev leaders lost connections to their mobile telephone networks. Moscow
was able to encourage autonomous groups to show support for the annexation of
Crimea. By the time that Russian troops (devoid of their identification
markers) crossed into Crimea, the war had been won. More recently, there have been
reports that Ukrainian soldiers in towns targeted by separatists have received
text messages ordering them to stand down. Despite agreeing to the
French-German brokered ceasefire agreement in February 2015, Russian proxies in
Eastern Ukraine have continued to make territorial gains.
Following the re-annexation of Crimea, President Vladimir Putin
encouraged the passage of a new law that allowed the government to send troops
to other countries to protect the “honour and dignity” of ethnic Russian groups.
Stephen Blank, the American scholar of Russia and the Caucasus, wrote in
response in May 2014 that Central Asia’s dictators were alarmed that the law
would be used as a pretext to justify further Russian invasions of their
countries.
Russia’s greatest achievement in Ukraine was to play on its economic
interdependence with Europe to create a divide between Europe and the United
States. In particular, energy dependence precluded European leaders from
seeking harsher action against Russia. The United States, which has
significantly less economic exchange with Russia, was understandably more eager
not only to sanction Russia but also to target President Vladimir Putin’s inner
circle. The harsher response from the United States reinforced the perception
that Washington was once again behaving as the world’s police force at a time
when other regional powers seemed more willing to accommodate Russian
interests.
Russian Failures
As the Ukrainian crisis has progressed, however, it is also clear that
Russia has overreached. The Ukrainians have not rolled over. In Petro
Poroshenko, Ukraine has found a leader who has both domestic and international
support. In February 2015, following the ceasefire agreement, the IMF promised
$17.5 billion in finding to Ukraine — a number that could rise to $40 billion
in the next four years. IMF Managing Director and former French finance
minister, Christine Lagarde, praised Poroshenko’s government for pushing
through unpopular reform measures to limit fiscal damage in the country.
The Kiev government has already received significant political and
economic support from the United States, and American aid will only increase if
Russia remains uncooperative. A Republican president in Washington would
certainly seek to turn the tables, but even the presumptive Democratic
candidate, Hillary Clinton, is a foreign policy hawk. The debate in Washington
now is whether the United States should supply lethal weaponry to Ukraine. Most
importantly, if Russian-backed proxies continue their war now that Moscow has
signed on to the ceasefire agreement, the prospect of a wider war in Europe
will bring the United States and Europe close together.
Lastly, Moscow’s own position is looking increasingly precarious as the
sustained fall in oil and gas prices damages the ruble one more time. A
December 2014 finding from the London merchant bank, Barclays Capital (
reported in Forbes magazine ), argued that Russia would draw on its foreign
exchange reserves to prevent the ruble from inflating. Russia’s December 2014
reserves were $32 billion less than in November and $123 billion less than
December 2013. In December 2014, the value of the ruble fell 20 percent,
hitting a bottom of 70 rubles to the US dollar in the middle of the month. Food
inflation doubled in 2014 and stands at 15 percent. Non-food inflation also
doubled and stands at 8 percent.
Will China and India join?
Not surprisingly, Asia’s rising powers, especially China and India, have
taken less judgmental positions on the Ukraine crisis than the Western world.
Both governments have remained officially neutral, preaching restraint and
negotiation over force and violence, even though political leaders in both
countries have expressed a desire to bring a multi-polar world about.
Chinese newspapers have argued that Russia should have its own
legitimate sphere of influence that includes Ukraine, and have decried the
American role in denying this to Moscow. The official Xinhua news agency
published a commentary that said: “It is time for Western powers to abandon
their Cold War thinking, stop trying to exclude Russia from the political
crisis they have failed to mediate, and respect Russia’s unique role in mapping
out the future of Ukraine.” Indian newspapers have called on Russia to withdraw
its troops, but also called on all parties to abandon “Cold War thinking,”
which is code for the West treating Russia not as a hostile power but one with
legitimate interests in its neighborhood.
It is hard to imagine that Chinese leaders are not thinking about
Taiwan, which is roughly in the same position as Ukraine, a small nation with
difficult ties to the behemoth next door and whose independence is defended by
the United States. If the United States rescinded its support for Taiwan,
Beijing would be able to proceed with its objective of reunifying Taiwan with
the mainland. But the fact that it will require military action with
unpredictable costs cannot be lost on the Chinese government.
Further, for China to pick another fight in its own region will lead
other states into a closer embrace with the United States. In the South China
Sea, American support for China’s smaller rivals has strengthened their ability
to resist Beijing, but also made them vulnerable to Chinese proxy warfare.
In India, too, there is ambiguity about the lessons from Ukraine. New
Delhi does not currently claim any territory outside its control — not
seriously, at any rate — but India has historically complained about American
influence in its own neighborhood of South Asia. Today, India may be one of
the most pro-American countries in world, but there is considerable suspicion
among the political elite about American-style balance of power politics, which
led to decades of support for its rival Pakistan. On the other hand, Indian
newspapers have emphasized the need to defend international law against the use
of force. Indeed, proxy wars in South Asia have generally run against India,
and Indians think of themselves as victims of Pakistani tactics similar to
those Ukraine now faces from Russia. Nevertheless, this could soon change: as
Afghanistan is contested once more, New Delhi could very well have its own
proxy war to fight.
Rather than one clear lesson, therefore, the Ukraine crisis has shown
other states both how to fight a proxy war as well as the danger of national
overreach. Unless China and India begin to draw less ambiguous conclusions, the
road through Ukraine is more likely to lead to a diminished Russia than a
multi-polar or post-Western world. Consequently, change in the world order, when
it comes, will not depend on the power of one state — Russia, China, or another
— but on the construction of a common view of the road to multi-polarity.
About The Author:
About The Author:
Sunil Dasgupta
is the director of University of Maryland Baltimore County’s Political Science
Program at the Universities at Shady Grove. His research and teaching focuses
on security and foreign policy. He is currently working on research examining
changing military organization and Indian and Chinese pursuit of great power
status.
Does
the Road to a Multipolar World Run through Ukraine? by Sunil Dasgupta is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International
License.
The article was originally published at United Nation University One World Blog on February 28, 2015
AIDN: 001-10-2015-0323
The article was originally published at United Nation University One World Blog on February 28, 2015
AIDN: 001-10-2015-0323