Russian aggression, subtle as it is is still a trigger point that
permits equally subtle counter movement that can totally negate and
ultimately the post imperial world for Russia. Establishing what can
effectively be an American Carrier Task force is an obvious gambit
and we are seeing steady movement now to do so.
This sets up a visible shield to provide air support for local land
forces including those of an evolving Ukrainian polity. Out of this
evolves a natural Danubian confederation under the European Union to
powerfully secure NATO's Southern Flank. Simply put, Russian push
leads naturally to pulling NATO forward into strengthening their
newest allies facing the black Sea.
All Russia can really hope for is to properly resolve Russian borders
with a minimum of dislocation. This happens to be very reasonable.
The Ukraine needs to acknowledge this and act quickly to get the best
possible deal. It will mean dumping the Eastern Ukraine back into
Russian ownership and allowing populations to share citizenship until
it is sorted out.
Again specific cities may be useful in designating citizenship,
rather than acreage which has always been misleading.
After the USSR collapsed, NATO was polite and never really readjusted
their geographical position to secure their total victory in the
traditional manner. Now Putin's efforts, really to correct obvious
geographical errors that can be accepted, has opened the door for
just that. Negotiating and securing borders will now be attractive
and will also allow us to engage Russia as a potential ally.
In that way Russia repairs some of what was lost and gains prestige
and support for their own need to defend their Asian borders. It
also secures all the newly risen free border states with settled
boundaries once and for all.
Borderlands:
First Moves in Romania
Geopolitical
Weekly
TUESDAY,
MAY 27, 2014 - 03:02 Print Text Size
By George
Friedman
http://www.stratfor.com/weekly/borderlands-first-moves-romania
I
arrived in Bucharest, Romania, the day after U.S. Vice President Joe
Biden. U.S. Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel will be here in a
few weeks. The talk in Bucharest, not only among the leadership but
also among the public, is about Ukraine. Concerns are palpable, and
they are not only about the Russians. They are also about NATO, the
European Union, the United States and whether they will all support
Romania if it resists Russia. The other side of the equation, of
course, is whether Romania will do the things it must do in order to
make outside support effective. Biden left Romania with a sense that
the United States is in the game. But this is not a region that
trusts easily. The first step was easy. The rest become harder.
If
this little Cold War becomes significant, there are two European
countries that matter the most: Poland and Romania. Poland, which I
visit next, stands between Germany and Russia on the long, flat North
European plain. Its population is about 38 million people. Romania,
to the south, standing behind the Prut River and bisected by the
Carpathian Mountains, has a population of about 20 million. Of the
roughly 82 million people along the eastern frontier (Poland,
Slovakia, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria), approximately 58 million live
in Poland and Romania. Biden's visit to Romania and U.S. President
Barack Obama's planned visit to Poland provide a sense of how
Washington looks at the region and, for the moment at least, the
world. How all of this plays out is, of course, dependent on the
Russians and the course of the Ukrainian crisis.
All
Soviet satellites emerged damaged after the collapse of the old order
in 1989. Few were as damaged as Romania. In many ways, the damage was
self-inflicted: The villain of the piece was a Romanian, Nicolae
Ceausescu. Ceausescu followed an anti-Soviet line, staying in the
Warsaw Pact but displaying singular hostility to the Soviet Union. I
recall Americans being excited about Ceausescu's Romania since, being
anti-Soviet, it was assumed that by definition he had to be
pro-American. To America's amazement, he wasn't. He wasn't even
pro-Romanian given that he concocted a scheme to pay off all of
Romania's foreign debts by destroying the lives of a generation of
Romanians by consigning the vast majority of the country's
agricultural and industrial production to hard currency exports.
Beyond that, he created a nightmarish security system that was both
corrupt and vicious. The world barely noticed. When the end came, it
also came for Ceausescu and his wife, the only Eastern European
leaders to be executed (amid intense fighting between factions).
For
all that, Romania has done remarkably well. Romania's unemployment
rate is only about 7 percent, which by European standards is
remarkably low. Its annual growth rate stands at more than 3 percent,
which is conversely high. In talking to Romanians, it is hard to see
into their hearts. They seem a gracious and friendly people, with a
measure of distrust and a taste for conspiracy no greater than
the norm for this region. What is remarkable about the
Romanians is that they are unremarkable. They have emerged from a
nightmare inflicted by one of their own and have regained their
balance.
Ceausescu
aside, the nightmare was initiated by the Soviets, who were drawn in
by the Germans. This has resulted in a lasting national trait: When
the Russians act, it strikes fear deep into the Romanian heart. When
the Russians act and the Germans have a hand in the action, the
Romanians' worst nightmare is realized. Their reaction doesn't
manifest itself as with the Poles, who are always committed to the
decisive confrontation. Instead, the nightmare scenario elicits a
more cautious and sinewy response involving the search for a way both
to resist and if necessary to accommodate. Above all, it elicits a
search for allies, preferably far enough away not to occupy them and
strong enough to offer meaningful support. Obviously, the Americans
are tailor-made for this role, so long as they don't overstep their
bounds and generate fears of domination.
The
Ukrainian Factor
Events
in Ukraine have, of course, set this process in motion. Remarkably,
the United States, which remained a bystander other times, has gotten
quickly and significantly involved this time around. There is no
question in Romania as to the importance of Ukraine to Russia, nor
any belief that the Russians will let go of it. My view is
that Russia will not let go, but will let things quiet down a bit.
The Russian gamble is that no matter what the outcome of Ukraine's
elections, the Ukrainians will be unable to form a coherent
government. If that is true, then the Russians can pick the
Ukrainians apart over time, returning to the status quo
ante. Therefore, the Russians will wait. Time, if this view is
correct, is on the Russians' side.
The
Russians do not want to be excessively aggressive for another reason:
namely, Germany. The Germans do not want to go beyond
occasional rhetoric in confronting Russia. In fact, they don't want
to confront Russia at all. They want to do business with Russia. I
heard several times that the Germans have already opted to align
themselves with Russia for commercial reasons. In my view, German
policy is moving in that direction, but the deal is not yet sealed.
In the same way that Russian President Vladimir Putin rushed to China
to gain at least the appearance of strategic options, so,
too, Putin wants as deep a relationship with Germany as he can get.
He will not be excessively and overtly aggressive until and unless he
must be. The Germans cannot be seen as simply abandoning their
European allies, and Putin cannot put them in that position.
The
Russians want to quiet Ukraine down for another reason. Crises
galvanize Americans to act rapidly, and frequently, effectively.
Crises that are dying down cause the Americans to pause and consider
the direction of events. As Biden's visit to Romania indicated,
Washington moves fast in crisis mode. The Russians can control the
tempo of American actions by cooling things down in Ukraine – or so
they think. And this is precisely what worries the Romanians. They
see themselves as having a long-term Russian problem. At
the moment, they are making a large bet that the Americans will
follow through on their commitments and interest even as the Russians
dial down the immediate crisis.
Fairly
or not, the Romanians see the Obama administration as insufficiently
engaged and heedless of the dangers the Russians pose. They also see
the administration as intensely critical of Romania's culture of
corruption -- which the Romanians admit is a problem -- but intensely
interested in military and political coordination. They understand
the United States, which is what worries them. On the one hand, they
will be courted intensely by the vice president only to be condemned
by the State Department, and expected to expose themselves to Russian
retaliation. I tried to explain the complexities of being American.
The Romanians' sympathy was restrained. They think they heard a real
commitment from the American side, but they simply don't know how
genuine it is.
In
the course of various conversations I tried to explain my view of the
situation. The United States has a pattern of engagement in Europe.
It postpones intervention to the last moment, builds alliance
structures, supports allies with economic and military aid, and then
waits until late in the game to intervene, always hoping it won't
have to. Biden's and Hagel's visits are part of the
process of creating a regional bloc to contain the Russians and to
establish a framework for military aid. Intervention comes much
later, if ever.
The
Romanians are more comfortable with this than the Poles are, who have
asked for 10,000 NATO troops on their territory. The Romanians have
no such expectations. They are also prepared to increase their
defense budget to 2 percent of gross domestic product, which is
significant for Europe these days. But they expect the United States
to help finance the cost of the weapons they need to purchase.
Expecting credit when facing the Russians, however, is no more
reasonable than subjecting a country to State Department criticism
while the Defense Department is urging risk taking. The Romanians
ultimately feel that the U.S. intent isn't clear.
U.S.
Goals
The
American intent at this point is to maintain an independent,
pro-Western Ukraine. That might simply not be possible. But the
problem is that in having this goal, and pursuing it to some effect,
the United States has convinced the Russians that it intends to break
the Russian Federation by denying it an essential sphere of
influence. The Russians have now concluded that whatever happens in
this round in Ukraine, this process will not end.
Whatever
the American thoughts initially, they are realizing that the Russian
threat to Ukraine is permanent, and that whatever happens in Ukraine,
it will extend to countries like Romania. And Romania particularly
matters to the Russians for two reasons. First, Romania is on the
Black Sea, and the Black Sea is Russia's southern maritime access to
the world. That's why they had to hold Sevastopol, and that's why
Odessa mattered so much. The Russians are aware that they need access
to the Bosporus, controlled by the Turks. Still, American
aircraft in Romania and Romanian ships in the Black Sea could
complicate the Russians' lives substantially, including their power
in the Caucasus, since Georgia is on the Black Sea as well.
It should be noted that boosting naval power is on the
Romanian-American agenda, and both countries understand the challenge
this creates for Russia.
The
second challenge is that Romania is potentially capable of producing
significant hydrocarbons, including oil. The Russians' only real card
in this game is their energy sales to Europe. If they withhold it,
the pressure is enormous and that economic pressure can be converted
to political power. Germany's attitude is influenced by several
things, but energy dependence is certainly one of the main ones.
There
is no simple energy alternative to Russia, but one can be cobbled
together from several sources, if not to replace Russian energy then
to mitigate its power. Romania has energy and other resources to
contribute to this, and the public statement issued by the United
States and Romania included a commitment by Romania to focus on
energy production as a critical element of the partnership. This is
not as easy as it sounds. Romania has a reputation abroad for
enormous complexity and unreliability in its permitting process.
This
is another point where Romania's new strategy intersects with Russian
interests. The Romanian view is that the Russians are extending their
influence throughout the region, but particularly in Romania. They do
it by the traditional means of using their intelligence services to
try to manipulate the political process in Romania. As important,
they can use commercial relations to weave networks of influence that
are designed to make it costly for Romania to resist the Russians.
The Russians are particularly adept at using Gazprom, its
subsidiaries and other Russian energy companies to purchase and
invest in Romanian and regional companies. The deals are never
unattractive to either side in business terms, but they also serve to
put the Russians in a position to shape both energy policy and
political dynamics. This what I call commercial imperialism: the use
of deals, particularly in energy, to create blocking points within
the political system when Russian interests are threatened. This is
not confined to Romania; the Russians use this tool to shape the
behavior of other countries. Though certainly far less unpleasant
than Soviet occupation, it nevertheless poses a challenge to U.S.
Influence.
Moldova,
Energy and Russian Subtlety
There
is another dimension to all of this, namely, Moldova. Moldova is
ethnically Romanian but has been dominated by the Soviet Union and
before that the Russian Empire. It is a place that survives by its
wits and by accommodating Russian influence. It is an important place
in the sense that if it were to be occupied by the Russians, Moscow
would have access to the Prut River, with only a plain between it and
Bucharest. If Moldova were to join Romania, then NATO would be on the
Dniester River, less than a hundred miles from Odessa.
But
such calculations matter only in wartime, and the Russians are
inherently weak. Their single advantage is energy exports, and that
advantage depends on the world price of oil, where they make their
real profits. They do not control that price and in the future it is
possible that the United States, suddenly a massive producer of oil,
will be pushing the price downward. If that happens, there is little
left for them.
But
that won't happen for a couple of years, if it happens at all. And
the full strength of the United States will not be at Romania's call
for a few years, if it does become available. And Romania's
obligation to produce energy won't manifest itself for a couple of
years. So here in southeastern Europe, the Russians have a window of
opportunity to create a framework that can withstand the winter that
is coming.
They
cannot live without Ukraine. They cannot take Romania. With or
without the Americans, the Russians aren't strong enough for that.
What they can do is manipulate, subvert, confuse and deflect. They
need to undermine the Romanian entente with the United States, and
they are skilled at the political maneuvering needed to do that. To
many in Romania, Russia is near and strong, America far and
indecisive. This was pointed out to me at one meeting. I replied: "In
the 20th Century, the United States has won three wars in Europe. How
many have the Romanians won?"
The
most remarkable thing about Romania and even Europe as a whole is
that in spite of the historical reality that the United States wins
European wars, there is a view of the United States that it is naive,
unfocused and bumbling. This goes beyond this administration to every
administration I can recall. And yet, it is the United States that
decides the fate of Europe consistently.
The
Romanians know this, but they still feel that the Russians are more
clever and capable than the United States. I think the reason is that
the Russians move with enormous subtlety and complexity. They do this
to compensate for their weakness. The United States operates more
simply. It can afford to; it is playing from strength. For now, the
Romanians accept this, but their acceptance is fragile. It depends on
political consistency on the part of the United States, but with
great distance come options and the ability to change one's mind.
Romania is here and can't go elsewhere. It can only change alliances
and hope for the best, something both sides need to consider.
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