Strategic Trust-Building

Piin-Fen Kok Interviewed by Asia News Weekly on the Implications of Abe's Address to U.S. Congress

On April 29, Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe will address a joint session of the U.S. Congress in the run-up to the 70th anniversary of the end of the Second World War. Piin-Fen Kok, director of the China, East Asia and United States Program at the EastWest Institute, discussed the potential implications of the speech on the March 27th edition of the Asia News Weekly podcast. 

Watch Kok's interview at 1:06

To listen to the podcast, click here

 

Key excerpts from her comments are below:

On the ramifications of Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe being invited to address a joint session of the U.S. Congress: 

“As far as I understand, no sitting Japanese prime minister has ever addressed a joint session of both houses in Congress, so this is a big deal… It’s a very interesting time right now for U.S.-Japan relations. On the economic front, both are concluding negotiations on the Trans-Pacific Partnership, and the congressional role is very important in the U.S. because the president would need the Congress to grant fast-track trade promotion authority to facilitate the TPP.  On the security front, the two countries are revising their defense guidelines in recognition of the more proactive global role that Japan wants to take on. But this year is the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, so a great amount of attention both in the U.S. and globally, and especially in the Asia region, will be paid to Abe’s remarks about Japan’s role in the war.”

 

On the implications for the U.S. in Asia if Prime Minister Abe were invited to address the joint session and not take a more repentant view of history:

“I think that it would not be well received at all in Asia, especially by its two closest neighbors, China and Korea. And from the point of view of China, that would fuel even further the narrative by the Chinese that the U.S. is just enabling Japan for its own selfish strategic goals and ignoring history and the role that Japan has played in the war. And for Korea it’s just going to be a very tricky situation for the U.S. in trying to manage relations with its two main allies in the region… It’s been a rough time these days for America’s relations with its allies in other parts of the world, whether it’s tensions with Israel over Iran, or the UK, France and other European allies joining the Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank led by China. So I think the U.S. could scarcely afford any blow-up in relations between Japan and Korea.”

 

On whether Abe may adopt less apologetic language in his address for the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II:

“I think Abe had said himself back in January that he does plan to express remorse for Japan’s role in the war and to uphold the statements given by previous Japanese leaders. So I think in general he would probably abide by the spirit of what has been said before. Like they say, the devil is in the details—it’s all a matter of how nuanced an interpretation he himself wants to give, and things like referring to aggression, whether he would mention that kind of verbiage.”

 

On Japan’s reinterpretation of Article 9 of its constitution to allow for collective self-defense and its ramifications for U.S. interests in Asia:

“I think we need to make a distinction between reinterpreting Article 9, which is what is happening now, with the ruling coalition preparing a timetable and draft legislation to the Diet to be passed to lift the ban on collective self-defense... That is distinctly different from actually changing the constitution, which some have said is the ultimate goal of Prime Minister Abe. But changing the constitution will require a public referendum, and given the split in public opinion about this issue, that’s going to be exceedingly difficult and almost impossible to achieve... About the prospects of the legislation in the Diet that is most likely to be presented in the coming months or by next year, if it should for some reason or another fail, that would conceivably eliminate what Japan under Prime Minister Abe would desire to do in terms of a more proactive role in partnering with the U.S. and other countries in the region to defend their maritime interests, whether it’s in the East China Sea or in the South China Sea.

"But even so, even if the legislation is passed, the whole notion of collective self-defense, or CSD, faces severe, specific constraints under which such collective self-defense can be exercised. So in itself, the parameters are pretty narrow for Japan to have greater flexibility in the role of its SDF. So I think, again, a lot will depend on internal politics and a lot will depend on the coalition partner, the Komeito, which has its own reservations and adopts a more pacifist stance. Talking to Japanese experts and Japan watchers, the general sense is that to the extent that legislation is passed, it will most likely be pretty watered down, constrained and limited.”

Firestein Interviewed by NTDtv on 2016 U.S. Presidential Election

David Firestein, EastWest Institute’s Perot fellow and vice president for the Strategic Trust-Building Initiative and Track 2 diplomacy, was interviewed on the March 25, 2015 edition of Focus Talk, a news program broadcast by the Chinese-language television network New Tang Dynasty Television.

Speaking in Mandarin, Firestein commented on U.S. Senator Ted Cruz (R-TX) becoming the first major-party candidate to announce a bid for the U.S. presidency in 2016, as well as on the unfolding 2016 U.S. presidential election overall. 

 

Parades to Fear, Not Celebrate

In The New York Times, EWI Senior Fellow Franz-Stefan Gady writes about military parades and their growing practice and significance outside of the western world. 

To read the piece at The New York Times, click here.

LEBRING-SANKT MARGARETHEN, Austria — In my life I have participated in several military parades, but one stands out. As an officer candidate in the Austrian Army, I marched in step to the tune of the “Radetzky March” past a crowd—my Uncle Winfried and Aunt Waltraud among them—down an alley leading to Eggenberg Palace, in Graz.

It was late fall, chilly and dark. Half the members of my company carried torches, which cast eerie shadows on the Baroque exterior of the castle.

As we marched by, crowds spontaneously clapped, some shouting, “Bravo, super Burschen!” (Well done, fine boys!) The shrill bark of red-faced sergeants and long days of monotonous drill were for a brief moment forgotten. Not forgotten were the echoes of past parades and the fate of those who had marched and cheered.

Grand national military parades are waning in most of the West, but in Asia, they are becoming a popular form of statesmanship. This year, lavish pageants of military hardware and marchers in formation will advance down boulevards in India, Pakistan, North Korea and China, as well as in Russia, straddling Europe and Asia.

Continue reading the main story

Yet however alluring and visually striking, these parades embody militarism, the deadly business at the heart of almost all sovereign states. The term “parade” comes from the Latin word “parare,” to prepare. Throughout history, parades have helped prepare citizens for war.

This volume of military parades suggests a dangerously combustible combination of militarism and national insecurity. They often create instability by starting a self-perpetuating cycle of lethal competition.

The 2015 Asian parade of parades began in January in India, which held a Republic Day gala in New Delhi. It featured cultural and religious tableaus woven into an awesome array of military displays. The “chief guest,” Barack Obama—the first American president to attend the event, with the first lady, Michelle Obama—applauded the troops with Prime Minister Narendra Modi and a host of dignitaries.

But these martial displays can prompt other nations—especially on borders—to continue a parade arms race in order to dispel notions of vulnerability and strengthen deterrence.

Following India’s parade, after a seven-year hiatus, Pakistan plans to hold its own Republic Day military parade. Noting President Obama’s visit to India and perhaps a Western tilt toward that country after NATO’s exit from Afghanistan, Pakistan’s prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, was hoping to secure President Xi Jinping of China as his “chief guest” of this year’s ceremony, as both leaders posture for a strategic alliance.

National military parades invite their own bigger and better sequels. Yet leaders of these countries might recall Europe’s experience in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, when countries underwent military innovation and stockpiled arms before the world wars.

Europe’s influence on parades can be found in Asia today in marching techniques, which often feature variations of the Prussian goose step (Stechschritt), especially popular in China, Russia and North Korea. Of the goose step, George Orwell noted that it is “one of the most horrible sights in the world.” He added, “It is simply an affirmation of naked power; contained in it, quite consciously and intentionally, is the vision of a boot crashing down on a face.”

Russia needs no reminder of the awful toll of the goose step. A parade will fill Red Square in May to commemorate the 70th anniversary of the end of World War II, the country’s most destructive war. President Vladimir V. Putin has expanded Victory Day celebrations, feeding his citizens’ reactionary sentiment for Soviet-era military prestige.

Military parades can also publicize military spending. In countries like China, where only a figure for the total defense budget is released, they help show what taxpayer money is buying.

After staging only three military spectacles since 1960, the Communist Party of China aims to “make Japan tremble,” according to The People’s Daily, a state-run newspaper, with a prodigious military parade later this year.

President Xi will reportedly, in an unusual gesture in China’s modern history, invite foreign heads of state to witness this tour de force in Beijing. Leaders of Taiwan, Vietnam and the Philippines may tremble as well.

In Japan, Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has sought to ease postwar constitutional restrictions on the country’s military. Under the aegis of “Abenomics,” the Diet has approved an increase in military spending for three consecutive years.

No one who has ever participated in a military parade can deny the rousing yet mind-numbing sensation that marching in perfect synchronization to the tune of martial music invokes, as well as the peculiar intoxicating bond that is forged between the soldier and the audience.

Marching, you are not allowed to move your head—save the dramatic “eyes right” for the presiding leader—and should restrict your vision to the neck seam of the soldier in front.

This peripheral blindness, however, affects the soldiers, yet also the onlookers, creating what Harold Rosenberg called “a herd of independent minds.”

There is another, more solemn version of the military parade. In June 2012, I stood in a long line of a few hundred American soldiers and contractors flanking left and right the main road of Forward Operating Base Salerno in Khost Province, Afghanistan. A coffin draped with an American flag was slowly carried through the base.

There was no music and no marching in step. A chaplain and a few soldiers of the unit escorted the coffin to a C-130 transport plane waiting on the runway. A loudspeaker shouted out the commands, and even though I was wearing civilian clothes, I instantly assumed a military posture at the order of “Attention!” With no further thought, I also knelt down at the command, “Prepare for prayer!”

When I later wrote about my experience in a story for an Austrian newspaper, many complained that I—as a correspondent—should not have participated in this “hero ceremony.” I felt I almost had no choice.

For a soldier, parades mark the beginning and sometimes the end of military life. For nations, throughout history—and this is what Asia’s leaders should keep in mind—what begins as a parade often ends in carnage and death.

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To read the piece at The New York Times, click here.

5th Meeting of the Joint U.S.-Russia Working Group on Afghan Narcotrafficking

From March 3 to 6, 2015, the EastWest Institute (EWI) convened the 5th meeting of its Joint U.S.-Russia Working Group on Afghan Narcotrafficking. This group seeks to find ways for the United States, Russia, Afghanistan and other countries in the region to work together to combat the trafficking of narcotics from Afghanistan. In Washington, DC, the working group held internal discussions that will inform its consensus reports and met with U.S. government officials. In New York, EWI organized a roundtable discussion on Afghan narcotrafficking at EWI's New York Center, where the working group was joined by representatives of the Permanent Missions of Afghanistan, China, Iran, Kazakhstan and Russia to the United Nations; the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime; the staff of the U.S. Senate Caucus on International Narcotics Control; and other prominent experts on the substantive topics. 

Click here to read the working group’s latest report, Afghan Narcotrafficking: Post-2014 Scenarios.

Click here to read the working group’s first report, Afghan Narcotrafficking: A Joint Threat Assessment.
 

Event Photos


Asila Wardak of the Permanent Mission of Afghanistan to the UN and Ambassador Zahir Tanin,
permanent representative of Afghanistan to the UN with EWI Vice President David Firestein

 


Roundtable on Afghan Narcotrafficking at EWI’s New York Center
 


Representative of the Permanent Mission of Iran to the UN with EWI Vice President David Firestein
 


EWI Working Group member H. Douglas Wankel with Zhao Ningning of the Permanent Mission
of China to the UN

 


Deputy Chief of Mission M. Ashraf Haidari of the Afghan Embassy in New Delhi and Farhad Basharyar of the Afghan Ministry of Foreign Affairs with Vladimir Ivanov, director of EWI’s branch in the Russian Federation
 


5th Meeting of the Joint U.S.-Russia Working Group on Afghan Narcotrafficking at the
George Washington University’s Elliott School of International Affairs

 


EWI Working Group members Konstantin Sorokin, David Mansfield and George Gavrilis with
EWI Vice President David Firestein

Changing the Script: A Report from the 2014 Nuclear Discussion Forum

New Challenges and Solutions for the Nonproliferation and Disarmament Regime

In 2014, EWI and the Permanent Mission of the Republic of Kazakhstan hosted the third annual Nuclear Discussion Forum (NDF), a series of off-the-record meetings that brought representatives of United Nations Member States together to discuss key achievements, opportunities and challenges that lie ahead of the 2015 Treaty on the Non-proliferations of Nuclear Weapons (NPT) Review Conference.

We believe this report serves two basic purposes. First, it is a timely document that blends content from the Forum’s rich discussions with a substantive background on the most prominent issues that emerged during the sessions. Second, the report makes a number of actionable recommendations for consideration by the United Nations First Committee and other disarmament bodies.

 

Voice of America's Pro and Con Interviews David Firestein

David Firestein, Perot fellow and vice president for the Strategic Trust-Building Initiative at the EastWest Institute, was interviewed in Chinese by Voice of America (VOA) Mandarin Service as a panelist on Pro and Con, a weekly news and commentary program broadcast on the VOA Mandarin Service satellite television channel to Mandarin-speaking audiences worldwide. 

Appearing with Firestein on the panel were Charles Laughlin, chair of Asian studies at the University of Virginia; Wei Bizhou, deputy editor and commentator for World Journal; and Chen Pokong, a political commentator. 

In the first segment, Firestein and other guests offered assessments of presumptive front-running U.S. presidential candidates Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush. In the second segment, guests compared the 2015 Chinese New Year TV Gala with the United States’ Academy Awards evening and looked at the different messages the two major cultural events sent about China’s and the United States’ media, culture and politics. 

All links provided below are in Mandarin only.

Will Hillary Clinton and Jeb Bush face off in the 2016 U.S. presidential election?

Firestein believes it is still too early to tell. He noted that few predicted during the early stages of the 2008 election cycle that Hillary Clinton would not win the Democratic nomination; at this moment, however, she is the frontrunner in the Democratic Party. Jeb Bush is also leading the Republican field, though this may change as he faces challenges rallying the support of a more fractured and less disciplined party. Despite mounting mistrust among Americans of the government and of the wealthy, Firestein argued that Americans have long been accustomed to presidential candidates who are financially and politically well-positioned; it is rare to see a true middle-class candidate mount a serious campaign for the presidency. The unique Clinton and Bush brands also change the way people evaluate these candidates.

According to Firestein, although some might worry about the impact of another Clinton or Bush in the White House on perceptions of the health of America’s democracy, both candidates are, in their own rights, highly qualified to run for president, and the next 18 months will in large part be about evaluating the candidates’ qualifications. Though Clinton and Bush may face challenges from the more radical wings of their respective parties during the primary elections, Firestein stated that most voters ultimately favor moderate candidates. 

Firestein also noted that many Americans have doubts about the effectiveness of the political system and are looking for a leader who will be able to “fix” Washington, D.C. Whether an “insider” such as Clinton, who has spent an enormous amount of time in Washington, D.C., or an “outsider” such as Bush, who served as the governor of a state and has spent relatively little time in Washington, would be better suited for the task will be a central question in this election for many voters.

Video: http://www.voachinese.com/content/pro-and-con-20150227-1-jeb-and-hillary...

 

Have the Chinese New Year Gala and U.S. Academy Awards (“Oscars”) Ceremony both been politicized?

Firestein commented that the fundamental difference between media in China and the United States is that Chinese media is controlled by the government and the party, whereas the American media is not. Thus, a program such as the Chinese New Year Gala broadcast by China Central Television (CCTV) cannot avoid taking on a political or propaganda dimension, whereas the Oscars are a purely private and artistic enterprise. Nevertheless, the Chinese New Year Gala has become an integral part of how ordinary Chinese celebrate Chinese New Year and has taken on significance in China that the Oscars cannot compare to in the United States.

However, Firestein also noted that the American media, including the film industry, has the right to explore and discuss political issues freely, and that the Oscars are no exception. Firestein cited Citizenfour, a documentary about National Security Agency whistleblower Edward Snowden that won the Oscar for Best Documentary Feature at the most recent ceremony, and musicians John Legend and Common’s acceptance speech for Best Original Song from their work on the film Selma as examples of the free political discourse that the American media is entitled to engage in. In contrast, the Chinese New Year Gala tends to stick to “safe” topics and avoids sensitive political issues to focus more on entertainment or official propaganda.

Video: http://www.voachinese.com/content/pro-and-con-20150227-2-oscar-and-cctvs...

 

David Firestein Discusses a Wide Range of Foreign Policy Topics on Diplomacy Now!

EWI Vice President of Strategic Trust-Building Initiative David Firestein was featured on "Diplomacy Now!", a student-run radio program at George Washington University.

To listen to the discussions, click here.

Firestein shared his views on the role foreign policy will likely play in the 2016 presidential election, his opinions on the front-running candidates’ foreign policy credentials and his assessment of larger trends in global conflict.

To listen to the discussions, click here.

A Task of Generations

EWI Board Member Amb. Wolfgang Ischinger analyzes recently heightened tensions between the West and Russia, and argues that resolving the current conflict could take a long-term diplomatic approach.

This essay was originally published in "Internationale Politik," and an English translation was published by the Munich Security Conference

Western leaders are more than willing to point out that there can be no military solution to the crisis in Ukraine. This is true – albeit only from their own perspective. Moscow has successfully used military force, one outcome of which is that the vision of a Euro-Atlantic security community has suffered significant injury. The current European security system could not prevent either the annexation of Crimea or the destabilization of Eastern Ukraine. And despite the ceasefire agreed in Minsk in September 2014, people are still dying through acts of war in the country that hosted the 2012 UEFA European Football Championship. In violation of the Euro-Atlantic acquis of Helsinki, which states that borders may only be changed by peaceful means, Russia has used military force both openly and covertly.

Today it is not only Ukraine that feels under threat but also other countries such as Moldova, Georgia, and the Baltic States. It is not impossible to imagine that a gray area might emerge between the EU/NATO and Russia. From Moscow’s standpoint, these countries form a cordon sanitaire, even though we always wanted to avoid differing levels of security across Europe. So far NATO and the EU have demonstrated a considerable degree of solidarity, and have responded with economic sanctions alongside a program of military reassurance within NATO. But the unity of the West is likely to be tested still further even if the ceasefire agreement were to work.

The question of Crimea must not be swept under the table. However, since it cannot be resolved under the current circumstances it is important to consider it separately as its own issue – a similar approach to the one adopted by Egon Bahr to bring the gridlocked negotiations between the two German states to a successful conclusion in 1972.

The current crisis does not represent a short-term worsening of conditions, rather we are watching a fundamental shift of East-West relations unfolding before our eyes. The situation is unlikely to change any time soon.

 

Russia’s zero-sum logic

As Russia sees it, the EU wanted to bring Ukraine closer to Europe and convince it to sever ties with Russia. But it is simply not correct that Kiev was forced to choose between the EU and Russia. What is true is that the EU was not prepared to accept Russia’s “droit de regard” in the negotiations with Kiev regarding an association agreement. Who are we to demand that Kiev accept that a third party will have a say in negotiations about the future direction of the Ukraine? The EU acted appropriately when it made sure not to give the impression that Moscow was being allowed to decide on the future of Ukraine.

Chancellor Angela Merkel underlined this point in the Bundestag at the end of November, quoting her own speech from the previous year: "The EU has repeatedly offered to speak with Russia to work out the mutual benefits of cooperation. It is my deep conviction that we must continue with these efforts to ensure that there is no either-or for countries in the eastern partnership between moving closer to the EU and Russian efforts to establish a closer partnership with these countries." Even if the association agreement had led to challenges for Russia’s trade relations with Ukraine, the Chancellor emphasized, it could not serve as either a legitimization of the annexing of Crimea or as justification for Russia’s involvement in the fighting around Donetsk and Luhansk.

Moreover, Russia's opposition to the EU is a relatively recent phenomenon. President Putin declared at a 2004 press conference: "If Ukraine wants to join the EU and if the EU accepts Ukraine as a member, Russia, I think, would welcome this because we have a special relationship with Ukraine." Ten years later, Russia is not even willing to accept an association agreement between the EU and Ukraine.

Which of Russia's complaints deserve serious consideration? The most significant is the suggestion that the West has built a common European home, but without giving Russia its own room, as American historian Mary-Elise Sarotte phrases it, utilizing a metaphor previously employed by Mikhail Gorbachev. During debates surrounding NATO expansion in the 1990s, the German government insisted on a two-pillar strategy: Yes to NATO expansion, accompanied by a more intensive partnership with Russia. Helmut Kohl insisted that the two aspects needed to be balanced and complement each other. Without NATO expansion, the countries in Central and Eastern Europe would have continued to feel unsafe. And yet without a strong NATO-Russia partnership, Russia would be locked out of the "common home." The outcome was the development and implementation of a dual strategy.

Regrettably this dual strategy was later abandoned, under the George W. Bush administration. His government chose to discontinue the Gore-Chernomyrdin Commission that had been such a key bilateral channel under Bill Clinton. More importantly, the Bush administration withdrew from the ABM treaty (an area where the Russians are particularly sensitive because it is the only issue where Russia is still on an equal footing with the United States) and began to plan for a missile defense shield.

The Bush pursue of NATO expansion and supported Kiev and Tiflis in their efforts to obtain membership, even though there was no consensus on the issue in either Ukraine or Georgia. At the 2008 NATO summit in Bucharest, France and Germany rejected the US proposal to extend the Membership Action Plan to Ukraine and Georgia. Tensions between Russia and Georgia escalated a short time later, with Russian troops occupying a number of Georgian territories. From Russia's perspective the West had continued to ignore Russia’s security interests; only a clear message would put a stop to that.

This sentiment is widely felt throughout Russia. In the summer of the Russia-Georgia war in 2008, Mikhail Gorbachev wrote in the New York Times: "Indeed, Russia has long been told to simply accept the facts. Here’s the independence of Kosovo for you. Here’s the abrogation of the Antiballistic Missile Treaty, and the American decision to place missile defenses in neighboring countries. Here’s the unending expansion of NATO. All of these moves have been set against the backdrop of sweet talk about partnership. Why would anyone put up with such a charade?" Given the widespread belief that the West has steadily exploited Russia’s weakness after the fall of the Soviet Union, Putin's policy of restoring Russia’s status as a world power is exceedingly popular. If the West has made one error it is that of abandoning the original NATO dual strategy.

 

Domestic policy game-changer

How do you deal with a country that views itself as a victim? None of the above should be taken as an excuse for Russia's use of force or the revisionism that shapes Putin's current foreign policy. But if we want to deal productively with Moscow then we need to understand the perceptions and emotions that form the backdrop to Russia's actions. This sense of being unfairly treated by the West makes it extremely difficult to rebuild a constructive relationship with Moscow.

Today the problem is that Russia is a superpower only in the military sense (above all due to its arsenal of nuclear weapons) and in terms of its energy resources. In the 21st century, superpower status does not just depend on military capabilities but also on the ability to persuade and acquire partners, to get involved and get others involved to shape alliances. According to this definition the Russia of today is definitely no superpower.

When Barack Obama was elected, his administration decided to rebuild the country's relationship with Russia from the ground up. Obama reworked the missile defense plans, turned them into a NATO project, and invited Russia to collaborate. This strategy produced positive results, including a new START agreement and greater cooperation in relation to Afghanistan and Iraq. Nevertheless, both sides remained dubious about the other’s intentions. Instead of becoming a game-changer and serving as the roof of the "common home," the missile defense system emerged as a form of "game-breaker."

What also changed, however, was Russia itself, as observed by Michael McFaul, former US ambassador to Moscow: "Russian foreign policy did not grow more aggressive in response to U.S. policies; it changed as a result of Russian internal political dynamics. The shift began when Putin and his regime came under attack for the first time ever." Many observers assume that the demonstrations occurring before Putin was reelected president gave him the impression that someone was trying to bring about regime change. That is why he is so determined to prevent any further color revolutions. Strobe Talbott wrote an essay in 2014 describing it like this: "Putin's aggression only makes sense against the backdrop of what has been the defining theme of his presidency: turning back the clock. For years that has meant repudiating the transformational policies of his immediate predecessors and reinstating key attributes of the Soviet system within the borders of the Russian Federation."

 

A new dual strategy

How should the West respond to Putin’s revisionism? What might a strategy look like that would neither discard the fundamental norms shared by large parts of the Euro-Atlantic area nor add fuel to the fire? I propose a new dual strategy:

We need strategic patience, and we must attempt to negotiate from a position of strength, not one of weakness and indecisiveness. In his first speech on assuming office, the new Secretary General of NATO Jens Stoltenberg stressed that better ties with Russia are more likely to be achieved if the alliance is strong. It is vitally important to constantly reiterate our obligation to provide mutual assistance, as outlined in Article V, as well as the indivisibility of security among NATO members. However, we should also avoid getting caught up in new discussions about Ukraine's NATO membership. There is a simple three-step test to measure whether a country should be invited to become a member or not: Is there consensus within the respective country regarding the application for NATO membership? Do all NATO alliance partners agree to invite the country? Would this NATO membership enhance European security or not? Only if the answer to all three questions is affirmative should the country in question actually be invited to become a member. Today and tomorrow, Ukraine would not pass this test.

We also need to expand on the second pillar in the dual strategy. There is a real risk that an overreaction on the part of the West could lead to Russia retreating behind a barricade of patriotism. There has been heightened rhetoric recently even among liberal Russian politicians and commentators. Our goal cannot be to play the role of the enemy against whom all Russians must unite. Sadly, Russians today rarely hear the voice of dissent. Russian media has, for example, created the Fata Morgana of Ukrainian fascism despite the fact that the main right-wing parties only received around two per cent of votes. By contrast, the Russian government invited envoys from European neo-Nazi parties to serve as election observers. When the conflicting parties so obviously live in different worlds it becomes difficult to find a solution. But we should try to make clear that it is not the West that is attempting to avoid a collaborative relationship.

In my opinion, we should launch a diplomatic process under the umbrella of the OSCE. This would bring Russia back to the table and allow us to consider new ways of approaching the idea of a common European home or comprehensive Euro-Atlantic security community. This is of course a long-term goal but it is important to keep the idea active.

One shorter-term goal could be to improve military transparency. The past few months have seen a series of close calls between Russian combat aircraft and planes from the West. Neither Russia nor NATO have any interest in an accidental escalation with potentially far-reaching consequences. Even at the peak of the Cold War, both sides endeavored to mitigate the risk of misunderstandings and to avoid this route to a possible nuclear war.

The Nuclear Threat Initiative recently published its report "Building Mutual Security," containing several important proposals. Key questions include: Why are intercontinental ballistic missiles still kept on high alert? Why can longer advance warning periods not be agreed upon? And in a similar vein, would it not be possible to create more transparency on military exercises? The size of Russian exercises held in the last few years has frequently been kept barely under the threshold that would require NATO observers to be present. Finally, negotiations on conventional arms control could be ramped up again to improve security and reinforce mutual trust.

Recent developments, unfortunately, are not heading in this direction. For example, Russia has ended its cooperative work with the US to secure nuclear material on Russian soil. This program will now end in 2015. On the other hand, Russia’s involvement in the Iranian nuclear issue points to the possibility of increasing Western-Russian cooperation in areas where common interests prevail. We could also offer Russia an economic partnership. Chancellor Merkel recently talked about the possibility of establishing a common economic area including Russia. As a first step the EU could work with the Eurasian Economic Union (EEU). This new dual strategy centers on the idea of "congagement" – a blend of containment and engagement which was recently also proposed by the Peace Research Institute Frankfurt.

 

A Russian Federation that abides by the rules

How should we proceed with sanctions? Sanctions are not an end in themselves. Their purpose is to give Russia incentives to cooperate in efforts to stabilize Ukraine. It is not about punishing Moscow or making the Russian people suffer. Destabilizing Russia is not an option. All of us want and need a stable and prosperous Russian Federation. But we also want a Russian Federation that abides by the rules and works with us to strengthen the architecture, institutions, and rules of European security.

In the early 1970s, hardly anyone believed that it was a good idea to start the negotiations that eventually led to the Helsinki Accords. In the 1980s hardly anyone could imagine that most of the central and eastern European states would soon become democracies. Today, hardly anyone might believe that it makes sense to restart negotiations with Russia.

To be clear: this task may take an entire generation. In the past few decades, sadly, our societies, in Germany in particular, have taken peace and security in Europe very much for granted. If the events of 2014 – in Ukraine and elsewhere – bear any message for us it is this: how can we establish an effective and legitimate global and regional system of governance in times when demand for it is high and supply low. And how we can hang on to the fading dream of European security rather than let it descend into a long nightmare.

Post-2014 Scenarios on Afghan Narcotrafficking

EWI Releases Latest Report

The EastWest Institute has just released Afghan Narcotrafficking: Post-2014 Scenarios, the second report out by its working group of Russian and U.S. experts. As Afghanistan now faces an uncertain political and security environment following the drawdown of ISAF troops at the end of 2014, the potential for a worsening narcotrafficking threat is great.

The report states that the potential for deterioration “underscores the imperative need for Russian and U.S. policymakers to find the political will to resume and perhaps even increase cooperation despite ongoing differences on other issues. Together with regional partners and international organizations, renewed Russian-U.S. cooperation presents the best hope for a brighter future.”

Senator Dianne Feinstein issued the same call for cooperation in a December 2014 report by the United States Senate Caucus on International Narcotics Control, in which she wrote: “The simple fact is that Afghan narcotics pose serious security and health threats to both the United States and Russia. We should find opportunities to jointly address this shared problem.”

The working group’s first report, Afghan Narcotrafficking: A Joint Threat Assessment, came out in 2013. Post-2014 Scenarios will be followed by three more reports in 2015 and 2016 offering specific policy suggestions on border security, alternative livelihood in Afghanistan and narco-financing, with a final report presenting a compendium of all recommendations.

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