spectator | Just for once, let us try this argument with an open mind, employing
arithmetic and geography and going easy on the adjectives. Two great
land powers face each other. One of these powers, Russia, has given up
control over 700,000 square miles of valuable territory. The other, the
European Union, has gained control over 400,000 of those square miles.
Which of these powers is expanding?
There remain 300,000 neutral square miles between the two, mostly in
Ukraine. From Moscow’s point of view, this is already a grievous,
irretrievable loss. As Zbigniew Brzezinski, one of the canniest of the
old Cold Warriors, wrote back in 1997, ‘Ukraine… is a geopolitical pivot
because its very existence as an independent country helps to transform
Russia. Without Ukraine, Russia ceases to be a Eurasian empire.’
This diminished Russia feels the spread of the EU and its armed wing,
Nato, like a blow on an unhealed bruise. In February 2007, for
instance, Vladimir Putin asked sulkily, ‘Against whom is this expansion
intended?’
I have never heard a clear answer to that question. The USSR, which
Nato was founded to fight, expired in August 1991. So what is Nato’s
purpose now? Why does it even still exist?
There is no obvious need for an adversarial system in post-Soviet
Europe. Even if Russia wanted to reconquer its lost empire, as some
believe (a belief for which there is no serious evidence), it is too
weak and too poor to do this. So why not invite Russia to join the great
western alliances? Alas, it is obvious to everyone, but never stated,
that Russia cannot ever join either Nato or the EU, for if it did so it
would unbalance them both by its sheer size. There are many possible
ways of dealing with this. One would be an adult recognition of the
limits of human power, combined with an understanding of Russia’s
repeated experience of invasions and its lack of defensible borders.
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