By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
The Five Futures Of Russia
Vladimir Putin
happened to turn 71 last October 7, the day Hamas assaulted Israel. The Russian
president took the rampage as a birthday present; it shifted the context around
his aggression in Ukraine. Perhaps to show his appreciation, he had his Foreign
Ministry invite high-ranking Hamas representatives to Moscow in late October,
highlighting an alignment of interests. Several weeks later, Putin announced
his intention to stand for a fifth term in a choiceless election in March 2024
and later held his annual press conference, offering a phalanx of pliant
journalists the privilege of hearing him smugly crow about Western fatigue over
the war in Ukraine. “Almost along the entire frontline, our armed forces, let’s
put it modestly, are improving their position,” Putin boasted in the live
broadcast.
On February 16,
Russia’s Federal Penitentiary Service announced the sudden death of the
opposition activist Alexei Navalny, aged 47, in a penal colony above the Arctic
Circle, from which he had continued to reach his millions of followers with
instructions on how to protest Putin’s plebiscite. A month later, the most one
could say was that the Kremlin had at least waited until after the voting was
staged to announce Putin’s victory.
Putin styles himself
as a new tsar. But a real tsar would not have to worry about a looming
succession crisis and what it might do to his grip on power in the present.
Putin does; that is partly why he must simulate elections. He is now set in his
office until 2030, when he will be in his 78th year. Male life expectancy in
Russia does not even reach 67 years; those who live to 60 can expect to survive
to around 80. Russia’s confirmed centenarians are few. Putin might one day join
their ranks. But even Stalin died.
Putin’s predecessor,
Boris Yeltsin, turned out to be that rare would-be tsar who named a successor
and smoothed his path to power. In 1999, Yeltsin, facing chronic health
challenges and fearing that he and his “family” of corrupt cronies might face
prison after he stepped down, chose Putin to preserve his liberty and legacy.
“Take care of Russia,” Yeltsin offered as a parting instruction. In 2007, aged
76, he died a free man. But the protector has refrained from emulating his
patron’s example. In 2008, Putin briefly stepped aside from the presidency, in
recognition of the same two-consecutive-term limit that Yeltsin faced. Putin
appointed a political nonentity in his place, shifted himself to the position
of prime minister, and came right back for a third presidential term in 2012
and then a fourth. Finally, he induced his counterfeit legislature to alter the
constitution to effectively remove any term limits. Stalin, too, had stubbornly
clung to power, even as his infirmities worsened. He refused to countenance the
emergence of a successor; eventually, he suffered a massive, final stroke and
fell into a puddle of his own urine.
Putin is not Stalin.
The Georgian despot built a superpower while dispatching tens of millions to
their deaths in famines, forced labor camps, execution cellars, and a
mismanaged defensive war. Putin, by contrast, has jerry-rigged a rogue power
while sending hundreds of thousands to their deaths in a war of choice. The
juxtaposition is nevertheless instructive. Stalin’s system proved unable to
survive without him, despite having an institutionalized ruling party. And yet,
amid the breakdown that began with the collapse of the Soviet Union but lasted
well beyond 1991, Putin consolidated a new autocracy. This fusion of fragility
and path dependence derives from many factors that are not easily rewired:
geography, a national-imperial identity, an ingrained strategic culture. (The
nineteenth-century Russian satirist Mikhail Saltykov-Shchedrin remarked of his
country that everything changes dramatically every five to ten years but
nothing changes in 200 years.) Still, whenever and however Putin might go, his
personalistic autocracy and, more broadly, Russia already face questions about
the future.
Putin’s regime styles
itself an icebreaker, smashing to bits the U.S.-led international order on
behalf of humanity. Washington and its allies and partners have allowed
themselves to be surprised by him time and again—in Libya, Syria, Ukraine, and
central Africa. This has provoked fears about the next nasty surprise. But what
about the long term? How, in the light of inescapable leadership mortality and
larger structural factors, might Russia evolve, or not, over the next decade
and possibly beyond?
After a ceremony
commemorating the 1,030th anniversary of Russia’s conversion to Christianity he
complimented Russia’s powerful fleet that “defends the Motherland.” He did so
standing in front of the statue of Peter the Great.
Readers seeking odds on
Russia’s trajectory should consult the betting markets. What Western officials
and other decision-makers need to do, instead, is to consider a set of
scenarios: to extrapolate from current trends in a way that can facilitate
contingency planning. Scenarios are about attempting to not be surprised.
Needless to note, the world constantly surprises, and something impossible to
foresee could occur: the proverbial black swan. Humility is in order. Still,
five possible futures for Russia are currently imaginable, and the United
States and its allies should bear them in mind.
Over the course of
multiple presidential administrations, Washington has learned the hard way that
it lacks the levers to transform places such as Russia and, for that matter,
China: countries that originated as empires on the Eurasian landmass and celebrate
themselves as ancient civilizations that long predate the founding of the
United States, let alone the formation of the West. They are not characters out
of the playwright George Bernard Shaw’s Pygmalion, ripe for
conversion from street urchins to refined ladies: that is, from authoritarian,
imperialist regimes to responsible stakeholders in the U.S.-dominated
international system. Efforts to remake their “personalities” invariably result
in mutual recriminations and disillusionment. Leaders such as Putin and China’s
Xi Jinping did not capriciously reverse a hopeful process; in no small measure,
they resulted from it. So Washington and its partners must not exaggerate their
ability to shape Russia’s trajectory. Instead, they should prepare for whatever
unfolds.
Russia As France
France is a country
with deep-seated bureaucratic and monarchical traditions—and also a fraught
revolutionary tradition. Revolutionaries abolished the monarchy only to see it
return in the guise of both a king and an emperor and then disappear again, as republics
came and went. France built and lost a vast empire of colonial possessions. For
centuries, France’s rulers, none more than Napoleon, threatened the country’s
neighbors.
Today, these
traditions live on in many ways. As the French thinker Alexis de
Tocqueville shrewdly observed in his 1856 work The Old Regime and the
Revolution, the revolutionaries’ efforts to break definitively with the
past ended up unwittingly reinforcing statist structures. Despite the
consolidation of a republican system, France’s monarchical inheritance endures
symbolically in palaces in Versailles and elsewhere, in ubiquitous statues of
Bourbon dynasty rulers, and in an inordinately centralized form of rule with
immense power and wealth concentrated in Paris. Even shorn of its formal
empire, France remains a fiercely proud country, one that many of its citizens
and admirers view as a civilization with a lingering sense of a special mission
in the world and in Europe, as well as a language spoken far beyond its borders
(60 percent of daily French speakers are citizens of elsewhere). But crucially,
today’s France enjoys the rule of law and no longer threatens its neighbors.
Russia, too,
possesses a statist and monarchical tradition that will endure regardless of
the nature of any future political system and a fraught revolutionary tradition
that has also ceased to be an ongoing venture yet lives on in institutions and
memories as a source of inspiration and warning. To be sure, the autocratic
Romanovs were even less constrained than the absolutist Bourbons.
Russia’s revolution was considerably more brutal and destructive than even the
French one. Russia’s lost empire was contiguous, not overseas, and lasted far
longer—indeed, for most of the existence of the modern Russian state. In
Russia, Moscow’s domination of the rest of the country exceeds even that of
Paris in France. Russia’s geographical expanse dwarfs France’s, enmeshing the
country in Europe but also the Caucasus, Central Asia, and East Asia. Very few
countries have much in common with Russia. But France has more than perhaps any
other.
A man wearing a shirt depicting Russian President
Vladimir Putin, Saint Petersburg, May 2022
Contemporary France
is a great country, although not without its detractors. Some decry what they
deem its excessive statism, the high taxes necessary to underwrite uneven
services, as well as a broad socialistic ethos. Others find fault with what
they perceive as France’s great-power pretensions and cultural chauvinism.
Still others lament France’s difficulty in assimilating immigrants. But it is
possible to be disappointed in these or other aspects of the country and still
recognize that it provides the closest thing to a realistic model for a
prosperous, peaceful Russia. If Russia were to become like France—a democracy
with a rule-of-law system that luxuriated in its absolutist and revolutionary
past but no longer threatened its neighbors—that would constitute a high-order
achievement.
France tramped a
tortuous path to become what it is today. Recall Robespierre’s revolutionary
terror, Napoleon’s catastrophic expansionism, Napoleon III’s self-coup (from
elected president to emperor), the seizure of power by the Paris Commune, the
country’s rapid defeat in World War II, the Vichy collaborationist regime that
followed, the colonial Algerian war, and the extraconstitutional acts of
President Charles de Gaulle after he came out of retirement in 1958. One might
be seduced by the notion that Russia needs its own de Gaulle to help
consolidate a liberal order from above, even though no such deus ex machina
looms on Russia’s immediate horizon. But only hagiographers believe that one
man created today’s France. Notwithstanding the country’s moments of
instability, over generations, France developed the impartial, professional
institutions—a judiciary, a civil service, a free and open public sphere—of a
democratic, republican nation. The problem was not mainly that Yeltsin was no
de Gaulle. The problem was that Russia was much further from a stable,
Western-style constitutional order in 1991 than France had been three decades
earlier.
Russia Retrenched
Some Russians might
welcome a transformation into a country that resembles France, but others would
find that outcome anathema. What the world now sees as Putinism first surfaced in the Russian-language
periodicals and volunteer societies of the 1970s: an authoritarian, resentful,
mystical nationalism grounded in anti-Westernism, espousing nominally
traditional values, and borrowing incoherently from Slavophilism, Eurasianism, and Eastern
Orthodoxy. One could imagine an authoritarian nationalist leader who
embraces those views and who, like Putin, is unshakable in the belief that the
United States is hell-bent on Russia’s destruction but who is also profoundly
troubled by Russia’s cloudy long-term future—and willing to blame Putin for it.
That is, someone who appeals to Putin’s base but makes the case that the war
against Ukraine is damaging Russia.
Demography is a
special sore point for Russia’s blood-and-soil
nationalists, not to mention the military brass and many ordinary people.
Since 1992, despite considerable immigration, Russia’s population has shrunk.
Its working-age population peaked in 2006 at around 90 million and stands at
less than 80 million today, a calamitous trend. Spending on the war in Ukraine
has boosted Russia’s defense industrial base, but the limits of the country’s
diminished labor force are becoming ever more evident even in that
high-priority sector, which has around five million fewer qualified workers
than it needs. The proportion of workers who are in the most productive age
group—20 to 39—will further decline over the next decade. Nothing, not even
kidnapping children from Ukraine, for which the International Criminal Court
indicted Putin, will reverse the loss of Russians, which the war’s exorbitant
casualties are compounding.
Productivity gains
that might offset these demographic trends are nowhere in sight. Russia ranks
nearly last in the world in the scale and speed of automation in production:
its robotization is just a microscopic fraction of the world average. Even
before the widened war in Ukraine began to eat into the state budget, Russia
placed surprisingly low in global rankings of education spending. In the past
two years, Putin has willingly forfeited much of the country’s economic future
when he induced or forced thousands of young tech workers to flee conscription
and repression. True, these are people that rabid nationalists claim not to
miss, but deep down many know that a great power needs them.
Given its sprawling
Eurasian geography and long-standing ties to many parts of the world, as well
as the alchemy of opportunism, Russia is still able to import many
indispensable components for its economy despite Western sanctions.
Notwithstanding this resourcefulness and despite the public’s habituation to
the war, Russian elites know the damning statistics. They are aware that as a
commodity-exporting country, Russia’s long-term development depends on
technology transfers from advanced countries; Putin’s invasion of Ukraine has
made it harder to use the West as a source, and his symbolic embrace of Hamas’s
nihilism gratuitously strained Russia’s relations with Israel, a major supplier
of high-tech goods and services. At a more basic level, Russia’s elites are
physically cut off from the developed world: hideaways in the United Arab
Emirates (UAE), however agreeable, cannot replace European villas and boarding
schools.
Although a Russian
authoritarian regime has once again proved resilient in war, Putin’s grave lack
of domestic investment and diversification, his furtherance of demographic
distress, and his role in the country’s descent into technological backwardness
could yet compel hardcore nationalists—among them many elites—to admit that
Russia is on a self-defeating trajectory. Many have privately concluded that
Putin conflates the survival of his aging personal regime with the storied
country’s survival as a great power. Historically, at least, such realizations
have precipitated a change of course, a turn from foreign overextension to
domestic revitalization. Last summer, when the mercenary leader Yevgeny
Prigozhin’s death squad marched on Moscow, it did not elicit bandwagoning by military officers, which is one reason Prigozhin called it off. But neither did it galvanize
the regime’s supporters to defend Putin in real-time. The episode furnished an
unwitting referendum on the regime, revealing a certain hollowness inside the
repressive strength.
Retrenchment could
result from hastening Putin’s exit, or it could follow his natural demise. It
could also be forced on him without his removal by meaningful political threats
to his rule. However it happened, it would involve mostly tactical moves spurred
by a recognition that Russia lacks the means to oppose the West without end,
pays an exorbitant price for trying, and risks permanently losing vital
European ties in exchange for a humiliating dependence on China.
Russia As Vassal
Defiantly pro-Putin
Russian elites boast that they have developed an option that is better than the
West. The Chinese-Russian bond has surprised many analysts aware of Beijing and
Moscow’s prickly relations in the past, including the infamous Sino-Soviet
split in the 1960s, which culminated in a short border war. Although that
conflict was formally settled with a border demarcation, Russia remains the
sole country that controls territory seized from the Qing empire in what the
Chinese vilify as unfair treaties. That has not stopped China and Russia from
bolstering ties, including by conducting large-scale joint military exercises,
which have grown in frequency and geographic scope in the past 20 years. The
two countries are fully aligned on Russia’s grievances regarding NATO expansion
and Western meddling in Ukraine, where Chinese support for Russia continues to
be crucial.
Chinese-Russian
rapprochement predates the rise of Putin and Xi. In the 1980s, it was Deng
Xiaoping who performed a turn away from Moscow more momentous than the one Mao
Zedong had carried out in the 1960s and 1970s. Deng gained access to the
American domestic market for Chinese producers, the same trick that enabled the
transformation of Japan and then South Korea and Taiwan. Deng’s divorce from
the communist Soviet Union for a de facto economic marriage with American and
European capitalists ushered in an era of astonishing prosperity that birthed a
Chinese middle class. But China and Russia remained intertwined. Deng’s
handpicked successor, Jiang Zemin, who had trained at a Soviet factory, brought
Russia back as a mistress without breaking the U.S.-Chinese marital bond. Jiang
placed orders that helped resuscitate Russia’s forlorn military-industrial
complex and modernize China’s own weapons production and military. In 1996,
Jiang and Yeltsin proclaimed a “strategic partnership.” Despite modest bilateral
trade, China’s domestic economic boom indirectly helped bring civilian
Soviet-era production back from the dead by lifting global demand and therefore
prices for the industrial inputs the Soviet Union had produced in low quality
but high quantity, from steel to fertilizer. Just as the United States had
helped forge a Chinese middle class, so, too, did China play a part in
conjuring into being Russia’s middle class and Putin’s economic boom.
Nevertheless,
societal and cultural relations between the two peoples remain shallow.
Russians are culturally European, and few speak Chinese (compared with
English). Although some elderly Chinese speak Russian, a legacy of Moscow’s
erstwhile centrality in the communist world, that number is not large, and the
days when Chinese students attended Russian universities in great numbers are a
distant memory. Russians are apprehensive of China’s power, and many Chinese
who hold weakness in contempt ridicule Russia online. Stalwarts of the Chinese
Communist Party remain unforgiving of Moscow’s destruction of communism across
Eurasia and eastern Europe.
And yet the
profundity of the personal relationship between Putin and Xi has compensated
for these otherwise brittle foundations. The two men have fallen into a
bromance, meeting an astonishing 42 times while in power, publicly lauding each
other as “my best friend” (Xi on Putin) and “dear friend” (Putin on Xi). The
two kindred souls’ authoritarian solidarity is undergirded by an abiding
anti-Westernism, especially anti-Americanism. As China, the former junior
partner, became the senior partner, the two autocratic neighbors upgraded
relations, announcing a “comprehensive strategic partnership” in 2013.
Officially, trade between Russia and China surpassed $230 billion in 2023;
adjusting for inflation, it had hovered around $16 billion three decades
earlier and stood at just $78 billion as recently as the mid-2010s. The 2023
figure, moreover, does not include tens of billions more in bilateral trade
that is disguised using third parties, such as Kyrgyzstan, Turkey, and the UAE.
China still buys
military aircraft engines from Russia. But otherwise, the dependence goes in
the other direction. Western sanctions accelerated the loss of Russia’s
domestic vehicle industry to China. Moscow is now holding a substantial pile of
renminbi reserves, which can be used only for Chinese goods. But despite
innumerable meetings over decades, there is still no final agreement on a major
new natural gas pipeline that would originate in Siberia and make its way to
China through Mongolia. The Chinese leadership has keenly avoided becoming
dependent on Russia for energy or anything else. On the contrary, China is
already the global leader in solar and wind power and is working to displace
Russia as the top global player in nuclear energy.
Russian elites, even
as they vehemently denounce an imaginary U.S. determination to subjugate or
dismember their country, have by and large not raised their voices against
Putin’s subordination of Russia to China. And lately, Russian commentators have
taken to retelling the tale of Alexander Nevsky, who
in the thirteenth century reigned as prince of Novgorod, one of the states
folded into Muscovy, the precursor to imperial Russia. When faced with
a two-front challenge, Nevsky chose to fight the
crusaders of the west, defeating the Teutons in the Battle of the Ice, and to
accommodate the invading Mongols of the east, traveling across central Asia to
the capital of the Mongol Golden Horde to be recognized as grand prince of Russia.
In this telling, the Western Christians were determined to undermine Russia’s
Eastern Christian identity, whereas the Mongols merely wanted Russia to pay
tribute. The implication is that today’s accommodation of China does not
require Russia to relinquish its identity, whereas a failure to confront the
West would.
This is bunkum. It
took Russians centuries to free themselves from what their school textbooks
uniformly called the Mongol yoke, but Russia has survived relations with the
West for centuries without itself ever becoming Western. Being non-Western,
however, does not necessarily mean being anti-Western—unless, of course, one is
struggling to protect an illiberal regime in a liberal world order. Russia
existed within its post-Soviet borders for two decades before Putin decided the
situation was intolerable. Now, having burned bridges with the West and blamed
it for the arson, he has little recourse other than to rely on China’s good
graces.
The great and growing
imbalance in the relationship has induced analysts to speak of Russia as
China’s vassal. But only China decides whether a country becomes its vassal,
whereby Beijing dictates Russian policy and even personnel, and assumes the
burden of responsibility. It has no binding treaty obligations with Russia.
Putin possesses only the 70-year-old Xi’s word—and Xi, too, is mortal.
Nonetheless, the two leaders continue to denounce the United States’ bid for
hegemony and cooperate closely. A shared commitment to render the world order
safe for their respective dictatorships and dominate their regions is driving a
de facto vassalage that neither fancies.
Russia As North Korea
In deepening Russia’s
dependence on China, Putin or his successor could draw paradoxical inspiration
from the experience of North Korea, which in turn could give Xi or his
successor pause. During Beijing’s intervention to rescue Pyongyang in the
Korean War, Mao, employing a proverb, stated that if the lips (North Korea) are
gone, the teeth (China) will be cold. This metaphor implies both an act of
buffering and a condition of interdependence. Over the years, some Chinese
commentators have doubted the value of propping up North Korea, particularly
after the latter’s defiant nuclear test in 2006. Faced with UN sanctions, which
China joined, North Korea’s leadership pressed forward aggressively with its
programs for nuclear weapons and missiles, which can reach not just Seoul and
Tokyo but also Beijing and Shanghai. Still, China’s leadership eventually
reaffirmed its backing of Pyongyang, in 2018. Given North Korea’s extreme
dependence on China for food, fuel, and much else, Beijing would seem to have
its leader, Kim Jong Un, in a vice grip.
Yet Pyongyang
loyalists sometimes warn that the teeth can bite the lips. As ruling circles in
Beijing have discovered time and again, Kim does not always defer to his
patrons. In 2017, he had his half brother, Kim Jong
Nam, who was under China’s protection abroad, murdered. Kim can get away with
defiance because he knows that no matter how much he might incense Beijing,
China does not want the regime in Pyongyang to fall. If the North Korean state
imploded, the peninsula would be reunited under the aegis of South Korea, a
U.S. treaty ally. That would amount to China, at long last, losing the Korean
War, which for more than 70 years has remained suspended by an armistice. A
loss of the Korean buffer could complicate Beijing’s options and internal
timelines regarding its hoped-for absorption of Taiwan, since China would face
a more hostile external environment close by. Historically, instability on the
Korean Peninsula has tended to spill over into China, and an influx of refugees
could destabilize China’s northeast and potentially much more. So Beijing
appears to be stuck in a form of reverse dependence with Pyongyang. Xi would
not want to find himself in a similar position with Moscow.
Russian service members march in a military parade,
Moscow, May 2023
Russia and North Korea
could scarcely be more different. The former is more than 142 times as large as
the latter in territory. North Korea possesses the kind of dynasty that Russia
does not, even though each Kim family successor gets rubber-stamped as leader
by a party congress. North Korea is also a formal treaty ally of China,
Beijing’s only such ally in the world, the two having signed a mutual defense
pact in 1961. (Some Chinese commentary has suggested China is no longer obliged
to come to North Korea’s defense in the event of an attack because of
Pyongyang’s development of nuclear weapons, but the pact has not been
repealed.) North Korea faces a rival Korean state in the form of South Korea,
making it more akin to East Germany (which of course is long gone) than to Russia.
Despite these and
other differences, Russia could become something of a gigantic North Korea:
domestically repressive, internationally isolated and transgressive, armed with
nuclear weapons, and abjectly dependent on China but still able to buck
Beijing. It remains unclear how much Putin divulged in Beijing, in February
2022, about his plans for Ukraine when he elicited a joint declaration of a
Chinese-Russian “partnership of no limits” that soon made it appear as if Xi
endorsed the Russian aggression. Not long after China released a peace plan for
Ukraine, Xi traveled to Moscow for a summit, at one point appearing with Putin
on an ornate Kremlin staircase that, in 1939, Joachim von Ribbentrop, the
German foreign minister under the Nazis, had descended with Stalin and his
foreign minister, Vyacheslav Molotov, while cementing the Hitler-Stalin pact.
And yet a Kremlin spokesperson spurned the possibility of peace, even though
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky’s government accepted China’s vague
document as worthy of discussion. (China’s low-level peace mission to Kyiv fell
flat.) Later, after Chinese diplomats bragged to all the world and especially
to Europe that Xi had extracted a Russian pledge to not use nuclear weapons in
Ukraine, Putin’s regime announced it was deploying tactical nuclear weapons in
Belarus. (China went on to criticize the deployments.) It is not likely that
any of these episodes were intended as explicit slights. But they made
observers wonder about Russia’s evolution toward a North Korean scenario, for
even if unintended, they revealed the potential for Moscow to embarrass Beijing
without suffering consequences.
Since the Prigozhin
mutiny, Xi has stressed what he calls “the fundamental interest of the two
countries and their peoples,” implying that the special relationship would
outlast the Kremlin’s current leadership. In truth, an authoritarian China
could hardly afford to lose Russia if that meant ending up with a pro-American
Russia on its northern border, a scenario parallel to, yet drastically more
threatening than, a pro-American, reunited Korean Peninsula. At a minimum,
access to Russian oil and gas, China’s partial hedge against a sea blockade,
would be at risk. But even if China were gaining little materially from Russia,
preventing Russia from turning to the West would remain a topmost national
security priority. An American-leaning Russia would enable enhanced Western
surveillance of China (the same way, in reverse, that U.S. President Richard
Nixon’s rapprochement with Mao enabled Western surveillance on the Soviet Union
from Xinjiang). Worse, China would suddenly need to redeploy substantial assets
from elsewhere to defend its expansive northern border. And so China must be
prepared to absorb Pyongyang-like behavior from Moscow, too.
Russia In Chaos
Putin’s regime wields
the threat of chaos and the unknown to ward off
internal challenges and change. But while keenly sowing chaos abroad, from
eastern Europe to central Africa and the Middle East, Russia itself could fall
victim to it. The Putin regime has looked more or less stable even under the
extreme pressures of large-scale war, and predictions of collapse under
far-reaching Western sanctions have not been borne out. But Russian states
overseen from St. Petersburg and Moscow, respectively, both disintegrated in
the past 100-odd years, both times unexpectedly yet completely. There are many
plausible hypothetical causes for a breakdown in the near future: a domestic
mutiny that spirals out of control, one or more natural catastrophes beyond the
authorities’ capacity to manage, an accident or intentional sabotage of nuclear
facilities, or the accidental or nonaccidental death of a leader. Countries
such as Russia with corroded institutions and legitimacy deficits can be
susceptible to cascades in a sudden stress test. Chaos could well be the price
for a failure to retrench.
Even amid anarchy,
however, Russia would not dissolve like the Soviet Union. As the KGB’s final
chief analyst lamented, the Soviet federation resembled a chocolate bar: its
collective pieces (the 15 union republics) were demarcated as if with creases
and thus were ready to be broken off. By contrast, the Russian Federation
mostly comprises territorial units not based on ethnicity and without
quasi-state status. Its constituents that are national in designation mostly do
not have titular majorities and are often deeply interior, such as Tatarstan,
Bashkortostan, Mari El, and Yakutia. Still, the federation could partly
disintegrate in volatile border regions such as the North Caucasus.
Kaliningrad—a small Russian province geographically disconnected from the rest
of the federation and sandwiched between Lithuania and Poland, more than 400
miles from Russia proper—could be vulnerable.
Were chaos to engulf
Moscow, China could move to retake the expansive lands of the Amur basin that
the Romanovs expropriated from the Qing. Japan might forcibly enact its claims
to the Northern Territories, which the Russians call the southern Kurils, and
Sakhalin Island, both of which Japan once ruled, and possibly part of the
Russian Far Eastern mainland, which Japan occupied during the Russian civil
war. The Finns might seek to reclaim the chunk of Karelia they once ruled. Such
actions could spark a general unraveling or backfire by provoking a Russian
mass mobilization.
Amid chaos, even
without major territorial loss, criminal syndicates and cybercriminals could
operate with yet more impunity. Nuclear and biological weapons, as well as the
scientists who develop them, could scatter—the nightmare that might have
accompanied the Soviet collapse but was essentially avoided, partly because
many Soviet scientists believed a better Russia might emerge. If there were to
be a next time, it’s impossible to predict how Russians might weigh their hopes
against their anger. Chaos need not mean a doomsday scenario. But it could.
Armageddon might have only been postponed, instead of averted.
Continental Cul-De-Sac
A Russian future
missing here is the one prevalent among the Putin regime’s mouthpieces as well
as its extreme-right critics: Moscow as a pole in its version of a multipolar
world, bossing around Eurasia and operating as a key arbiter of world affairs.
“We need to find ourselves and understand who we are,” the Kremlin loyalist
Sergei Karaganov mused last year. “We are a great Eurasian power, Northern
Eurasia, a liberator of peoples, a guarantor of peace, and the
military-political core of the World Majority. This is our manifest destiny.” The
so-called global South—or as Karaganov rendered it, “the World Majority”—does
not exist as a coherent entity, let alone one with Russia as its core. The
project of Russia as a self-reliant supercontinent, bestride Europe and Asia,
has already failed. The Soviet Union forcibly held not just an inner empire on
the Baltic and Black Seas but also an outer empire of satellites, ultimately to
no avail.
Russia’s world is
effectively shrinking despite its occupation of nearly 20 percent of Ukraine.
Territorially, it is now farther from the heart of Europe (Kaliningrad
excepted) than at any time since the conquests of Peter the Great and Catherine
the Great. More than three centuries after appearing on the Pacific, moreover,
Russia has never succeeded at becoming an Asian power. That was true even when
World War II presented it with opportunities to avenge itself against Japan for
the defeat Russia suffered at its hands in 1905, to reestablish the tsar’s
position in Chinese Manchuria, and to extend its grasp to part of the Korean
Peninsula. Russia will never be culturally at home in Asia, and its already
minuscule population east of Lake Baikal has contracted since the Soviet
collapse.
Russia’s influence in
its immediate neighborhood has been diminishing, too. The bulk of non-Russians
in the former Soviet borderlands want less and less to do with their former
overlord and certainly do not want to be reabsorbed by it. Armenians are embittered,
Kazakhs are wary, and Belarusians are trapped and unhappy about it. Eurasianism and Slavophilism are mostly dead
letters: the overwhelming majority of the world’s non-Russian Slavs joined or
are clamoring to join the European Union and NATO. Without Russia menacing its
European neighbors, NATO’s reason for being becomes uncertain. But that means
Russia could break NATO only by developing into a durable rule-of-law state,
precisely what Putin resists with all his being.
There is no basis for
Russia to serve as a global focal point, drawing countries toward it. Its
economic model offers little inspiration. It can ill afford to serve as a major
donor of aid. It is less able to sell weapons—it needs them itself and is even
trying to buy back systems it has sold—and has been reduced in some cases to
bartering with other pariah states. It has lost its strong position as a
provider of satellites. It belongs to a pariah club with Iran and North Korea,
exuberantly exchanging weapons, flouting international law, and promising much
further trouble. It’s not difficult to imagine each betraying the other at the
next better opportunity, however, provided they do not unravel first; the West
is more resilient than the “partnerships” of the anti-West. Even
many former Soviet partners that refused to condemn Russia over Ukraine,
including India and South Africa, do not view Moscow as a developmental partner
but as scaffolding for boosting their own sovereignty. Russia’s foreign policy
delivers at best tactical gains, not strategic ones: no enhanced human capital,
no assured access to leading-edge technology, no inward investment and new
infrastructure, no improved governance, and no willing mutually obliged treaty
allies, which are the keys to building and sustaining modern power. Besides raw
materials and political thuggery, the only things Russia exports are talented
people.
Russia has never
sustained itself as a great power unless it had close ties to Europe. And for
Putin or a successor, it would be a long way back. He undid more than two
centuries of Swedish neutrality and three-quarters of a century of
Finlandization (whereby Helsinki deferred to Moscow on major foreign policy
considerations), prompting both countries to join NATO. Much depends on the
evolving disposition of Germany: imagine the fate of Europe, and indeed the
world order, if post–World War II Germany had evolved to resemble today’s
Russia rather than undergone its remarkable transformation. Germany played the
role of bridge to Russia, securing peaceful unification on its terms and
lucrative business partnerships. But as things stand, Moscow can no longer cut
deals with Berlin to revive its European ties without fundamentally altering
its own political behavior, and maybe its political system. Even if Russia did
change systemically, moreover, Poland and the Baltic states now stand
resolutely in the way of Russian reconciliation with Europe as permanent
members of the Western alliance and the EU.
Russia’s future
forks: one path is a risky drift into a deeper Chinese embrace, the other an
against-the-odds return to Europe. Having its cake and eating it, too—enduring
as a great power with recaptured economic dynamism, avoiding sweeping
concessions to the West or lasting subservience to China, dominating Eurasia,
and instituting a world order safe for authoritarianism and predation—would
require reversals beyond Russia’s ability to engineer.
Is There A Better Way?
Russia’s basic grand
strategy appears simple: vastly overinvest in the military, roguish
capabilities, and the secret police, and try to subvert the West. No matter how
dire its strategic position gets, and it is often dire, Russia can muddle
through, as long as the West weakens, too. Beyond Western disintegration, some
Russians quietly fantasize about a war between the United States and China.
West and East would maul each other, and Russia would greatly improve its
relative standing without breaking a sweat. The upshot would seem to be
self-evident: Washington and its allies must stay strong together, and Beijing
must be deterred without provoking a war. The conventional options, however,
have severe limits. One is accommodation, which Russian rulers occasionally
need but rarely pursue—and, when they do, they make it difficult for the West
to sustain. The other is confrontation, which Russian regimes require but
cannot afford, and the opportunity costs of which are too high for the West.
The path to a better option begins with a candid acknowledgment of failures,
but not in accordance with received wisdom.
Calls to recognize
Russia’s “legitimate” interests are frequently heard in critiques of U.S.
policy, but the great-power stability purchased by indulging coercive spheres
of influence always proves ephemeral, even as the agonies of sacrificed smaller
countries and the ignominy of compromising U.S. values always linger. Consider
that in the aftermath of Nixon and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger’s
maneuvering, China and Russia are closer than ever. Arms control is effectively
dead. Détente died before many people even knew what the word connoted, but the
damage in Indochina, Latin America, South Asia, and elsewhere remains palpable
even now. Kissinger might have argued that these disappointing results were the
fault of others for failing to adhere to his practice of shrewd balancing in
international affairs. But any equilibrium that depends on the dexterity of a
single person is not, in fact, an equilibrium.
Many advocates for
and past practitioners of engagement assert that the multidecade U.S. policy of
engaging China was smarter than it looked, that American policymakers were
always skeptical that economic growth would lead China toward an open political
system but believed it was worth trying anyway. Some also claim they hedged
against the risk of failure. Such retrospective image burnishing is belied by
the glaring insecurity of global supply chains (as revealed by the COVID-19
pandemic) and the pitiful state of the U.S. defense industrial base (as
revealed by the war against Ukraine). In the case of Russia, Washington did
hedge, expanding NATO to include almost all of eastern Europe and the Baltic
states. But that had less to do with an unsentimental assessment of Russia’s
possible trajectory than with the shame of Yalta, when Washington proved
powerless to deliver on its promises of free and fair elections after World War
II, and the post-1989 pleas of the potential new entrants for admission.
Critics of NATO expansion, for their part, blame it for Russia’s revanchism, as
if a repressive authoritarian regime that invades its neighbors in the name of
its security is something unexpected in Russian history and wouldn’t have
happened anyway had the alliance not expanded—leaving even more countries
vulnerable.
Peace comes through
strength, combined with skillful diplomacy. The United States must maintain
concerted pressure on Russia while also offering incentives for Moscow to
retrench. That means creating leverage through next-generation military tools
but also pursuing negotiations in close cooperation with U.S. allies and
partners and aided by so-called Track II exchanges among influential but
nongovernmental figures. Meanwhile, Washington should prepare for and
assiduously promote the possibility of a Russian nationalist recalibration. In
the event that Russia does not become France any time soon, the rise of a
Russian nationalist who acknowledges the long-term price of extreme
anti-Westernism remains the likeliest path to a Russia that finds a stable
place in the international order. In the near term, a step in that direction
could be ending the fighting in Ukraine on terms favorable to Kyiv: namely, an
armistice without legal recognition of annexations and without treaty
infringement on Ukraine’s right to join NATO, the EU, or any other
international body that would have it as a member. Putin might well achieve his
war aims before a Russian nationalist officer or official gets the chance to
accept such terms, but the high costs to Russia would persist, as the conflict
could shift from attritional warfare into a Ukrainian insurgency.
As strange as it
might sound, to create the right incentives for retrenchment, Washington and
its partners need a pro-Russian policy: that is, instead of pushing Russians
further into Putin’s arms, confirming his assertions about an implacably
anti-Russian collective West, Western policymakers and civil society
organizations should welcome and reward—with visas, job opportunities,
investment opportunities, cultural exchanges—those Russians who want to deconflate Putin and Russia but not necessarily embrace Jeffersonian
ideals. It would be a mistake to wait for and reward only a pro-Western Russian
government.
The West should also
prepare for a Russia that inflicts even greater spoliation on a global
scale—but not drive it to do so. Some analysts have been urging U.S. President
Joe Biden (or a future president) to pull off a reverse Nixon-Kissinger: to
launch a diplomatic outreach to Moscow against Beijing. Of course, China and
the Soviet Union had already split well before that previous American gambit.
Separating Russia from China today would be a tall order. Even if successful,
it would necessitate looking the other way as Moscow coercively reimposed a
sphere of influence on former Soviet possessions, including Ukraine. The
tightness of the Chinese-Russian relationship, meanwhile, has been mutually
discrediting, and it has bound Washington’s allies in Asia and Europe much more
closely to the United States. Rather than a reverse, Washington could find
itself in an updated Nixon-Kissinger moment: asking China to help restrain
Russia.
Opportunity Abroad, Opportunity At Home
The supreme irony of
American grand strategy for the past 70 years is that it worked, fostering an
integrated world of impressive and shared prosperity, and yet is now being
abandoned. The United States was open for business to its adversaries, without
reciprocation. Today, however, so-called industrial policy and protectionism
are partially closing the country not just to rivals but also to U.S. allies,
partners, friends, and potential friends. American policy has come to resemble
China’s—right when the latter has hit a wall.
To be sure,
technology export controls have a place in the policy toolkit, whether for
China or Russia. But it’s not clear what the United States is offering in a
positive sense. A strategic trade policy—reflected by initiatives such as the
Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement, which Washington crafted but then
abandoned—might be a nonstarter in the current domestic political climate. A
nimble administration, however, could repackage such an approach as an
ambitious quest to secure global supply chains.
The turret of a destroyed Russian tank near Robotyne, Ukraine, February 2024
World order requires
legitimacy, an example worth emulating, a system open to strivers. The United
States was once synonymous with economic opportunity for its allies and
partners but also for others who aspired to attain the prosperity and peace
that the open U.S.-led economic order promised—and, for the most part,
delivered by reducing inequality on a world historic scale, raising billions of
people out of poverty globally, and fostering robust middle classes. But over
time, the United States ceded that role, allowing China to become synonymous
with economic opportunity (as the leading trade partner of most countries) and
manufacturing prowess (as a hub of technical know-how, logistics mastery, and
skilled workers). To recapture lost ground and to restart the engine of social
mobility at home, the United States, which has a mere 1.5 million mathematics
teachers and must import knowledge of that subject from East Asia and South
Asia, needs to launch a program to produce one million new teachers of math within
a decade. It makes little sense to admit students to college if, lacking the
universal language of science, engineering, computers, and economics, they are
limited to majoring in themselves and their grievances.
Investing in people
and housing and rediscovering a civic spirit on the scale that characterized
the astonishing mobilizations of the Cold War around science and national
projects would not alone guarantee equal opportunity at home. But such policies
would be a vital start, a return to the tried-and-true formula that built U.S.
national power in conjunction with American international leadership. The
United States could once again be synonymous with opportunity abroad and at
home, acquire more friends, and grow ever more capable of meeting whatever
future Russia emerges. The American example and economic practice bent the
trajectory of Russia before, and it could do so again, with fewer illusions
this time.
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