By Matthew Continetti
Saturday, October 03, 2015
The North Atlantic Treaty Organization, established in
1949, has 28 members devoted to the idea of collective security. Prediction: By
the time President Obama leaves office in 2017, the NATO pledge of mutual
defense in response to aggression will have been exposed as worthless.
Objectively the alliance will have ceased to exist. The culprits? Vladimir
Putin — and Barack Obama.
Right now the world is focused on the Middle East:
Russian jets and bombers, operating from an expanding air base in Syria, strike
opponents of dictator and war criminal Bashar al-Assad. The Russians say they
are going after Islamic State — but there’s no evidence they are doing so. Nor
do they have reason to, considering the aim of Putin’s war is to preserve
Assad’s rule and to expand, for the first time in decades, Russia’s sphere of
influence into the Middle East.
Key to Putin’s strategy, write analysts Frederick W.
Kagan and Kimberly Kagan, is the doctrine of “reflexive control”: establishing
facts on the ground “in such a way that the enemy chooses Russia’s preferred
course of action voluntarily, because it is easiest and all the others appear
much more difficult and risky, if not impossible.”
Doesn’t have to be this way. Moscow’s propaganda
notwithstanding, Russia is a weak state with a deteriorating military
capability, whose claim to great power status is based on its nuclear arsenal.
But, by acting decisively and provocatively, Putin has found the means by which
to reassert Russian sovereignty and preeminence and ward off challenges to his
authoritarian regime.
Revisit Putin’s 2007 speech to the Munich security
conference, where he said “the unipolar model is not only unacceptable but also
impossible in today’s world.” The expansion of NATO, he went on, “represents a
serious provocation that reduces the level of mutual trust.” Then came the
threat: “Russia is a country with a history that spans more than 1,000 years
and has practically always used the privilege to carry out an independent
foreign policy. We are not going to change this tradition today.”
The next year the governments of Germany and France,
frightened by Putin’s rhetoric and reliant on Russian energy and arms deals,
scuttled the U.S. attempt to offer NATO membership to the former Soviet
republics of Georgia and Ukraine. Deprived of NATO’s security guarantee, both
of these small and poor and new democracies became open prey. Putin invaded
Georgia in 2008. He continues to exert influence there.
The techniques of reflexive control found their ultimate
patsy in Barack Obama. When it became clear in 2013 that the president had no
interest in enforcing his red line against chemical weapons use in Syria, Putin
and his foreign minister Sergei Lavrov pounced. Lavrov suggested in public that
Russia would assist the United States in “destroying” Assad’s WMD stockpile.
Obama, whose greatest fear is a major deployment of U.S. ground forces in the
Middle East, couldn’t help saying yes. Suddenly America was partnering with the
governments of Russia and Syria (and by extension Iran) to inspect and remove
the munitions. This decision not only averted U.S. intervention and guaranteed
Assad’s survival. It allowed Assad to gas his population in the future.
In 2014, when protests forced Ukrainian president Viktor
Yanukovych to flee to his backers in Moscow, Putin saw an opportunity to
reclaim Ukraine from the West. His military buildup on Ukraine’s eastern border
deterred NATO from harsh reprisals when the Russian parliament annexed Crimea.
The techniques of maskirovka — disinformation and deceit — provided cover for
Russia’s arming and training and staffing of anti-Kiev “rebels” in the east.
Sanctions and nasty words have not exacted enough of a
cost to stop Putin from instigating and perpetuating a civil war whose death
toll is in the thousands. President Obama has overruled his advisers and
refuses to provide lethal defensive arms for pro-Western Ukrainians, believing,
amazingly, that helping Kiev defend itself would “escalate” the situation. The
Ukraine conflict is now frozen — Putin can switch it on and off at will. His
goals remain: to efface Western pretentions to ideological and military
supremacy, and to replace President Petro Poroshenko with a Kremlin stooge.
Two weeks ago, in a phone call with its prime minister,
Vice President Biden signaled America will support Montenegro’s application for
NATO membership. Good for him. But we should recognize nonetheless that this
move is a fig-leaf. It obscures the fact that Obama would otherwise be the
first president in a generation not to preside over an expansion of NATO. So
the White House supports a strategically insignificant nation surrounded by
member states. Woo-wee. It’s a metaphor for this administration’s lackadaisical
commitment to the alliance — and for Europe’s.
The Kremlin has noticed this ambivalence. Russian
intervention in Syria is about more than propping up Assad. Russian leadership
of a pro-Assad coalition that includes Iran and Iraq effectively displaces
America as the most influential external power in the region. Russian
provocations have forced Washington to plead for “de-confliction,” handing
Moscow freedom of action over Syrian, and possibly Iraqi, airspace. And the location
of the Russian base opens an additional front in Putin’s war against NATO.
Less than 50 miles from the border of Turkey — a NATO
member — the Bassel al-Assad airbase gives Putin’s air force the ability to
buzz and overfly not only Turkey but also U.S. allies Israel, Jordan, and Saudi
Arabia. “It also would allow,” write the Kagans, “his aircraft to shadow the
U.S. Sixth Fleet around the Eastern Mediterranean. He could force Turkey and
its NATO allies to establish standing combat air patrols along the southern
Turkish border.” The chances of a deadly incident increase every day.
Putin is boxing in NATO. His next target is the Baltic
States. Last Sunday on 60 Minutes, he
explained that the reason he has called the collapse of the Soviet Union “the
worst thing to happen in the last century” is that, “in an instant, 25 million
people found themselves beyond the borders of the Russian state.” His goal is
to reclaim them — to unify Russians living abroad in the Baltics, in Ukraine,
and beyond.
Raimonds Vejonis, president of Latvia, tells the Wall Street Journal that Russian sorties
over the Baltic nations are on the rise. In his full interview with Charlie
Rose, Putin singled out Lithuania: “More than half of the citizens have left
the country,” he lied. “Can you imagine a situation where more than half of the
Americans left the territory of the United States? It would be a catastrophe!”
Try this scenario: Sometime in the next 16 months, civil
unrest breaks out in one or more of the Baltic States. It’s the Russian
population, calling for “independence” from the central government and closer
ties to Moscow. Fighting erupts as Russian tanks mass along the border and jets
fly over Riga or Vilnius or Tallinn. They are all targets. Take Vilnius: While
there are few ethnic Russians in Lithuania, it is the land bridge between
Mother Russia and the Russian enclave of Kaliningrad. Supplying Kaliningrad
would be Putin’s casus belli.
The Baltic authorities call on NATO to respond — invoking
Article Four of the charter, which requires consultations, and possibly Article
Five, requiring force. But the West is distracted. Europe is overwhelmed by
crises in Greece and Ukraine, by the U.K. referendum to leave the E.U., by
ongoing Muslim migration to the north. The United States is occupied by its
presidential election, by Syria and Iraq and Afghanistan, by economic shocks.
The cries for assistance go unheard. The Obama
administration has refused even to try to secure permanent forward bases in the
Baltics — which would provide a credible deterrent — apparently due to the
belief that providing for a real defense is “provocative.” We are too busy, too
self-absorbed, too confused to worry about promises made years ago. Obama won’t
arm the Ukrainians. What makes us think he’d defend the Lithuanians or Latvians
or Estonians?
Before the White House recovers from its “surprise” at
events in the Baltics, Putin will have achieved his strategic goals and
established reflexive control over the situation. President Obama and
Chancellor Merkel and Secretary of State Kerry are sure to proclaim that the
arc of history will defeat Russia, even as they accommodate themselves to
Putin’s reality. NATO will be exposed as a covenant without the sword. And
millions of East Europeans will come under Vladimir Putin’s thumb. Victims of
the Kremlin’s avarice. Victims of Obama’s weakness.
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