Monday 15 April 2024

Core Common Interest

The great Professor Thomas Fazi writes:

It’s hard to imagine a better metaphor for the miserable state of UK politics than David Cameron flying across the Atlantic in the hope of convincing America to continue funding a bloody war on Europe’s doorstep — only to fail miserably. Over the past few days, the Foreign Secretary has met with a number of representatives of the Biden administration, as well as with key Republican leaders (including Trump himself), in an effort to unblock US funding for Ukraine. But in a continuation of his disastrous foreign-policy record, he has so far failed to raise a single dime.

Cameron used all the usual arguments: the rational, the emotional and the downright cynical. He said that if Russia isn’t defeated in Ukraine it will feel emboldened to invade other countries; and that Western support for Ukraine is “extremely good value for money”, as it has weakened Russia, created jobs at home and strengthened Nato “without the loss of a single American life”. He even gave an emotional performance in which he likened US support for Ukraine’s heroic struggle to his “grandfather landing on the Normandy beaches under the cover of an American warship”.

However, Republican hardliners who have been blocking Biden’s $60-billion Ukraine aid package were not impressed. For instance, while Cameron refused to give out any details about his meeting with Trump, we can assume that the latter wasn’t too inclined to help out the same person who, in the past, has described him variously as “stupid”, “wrong” and “misogynistic”. Elsewhere, Mike Johnson, the Republican House speaker who is holding back the vote on the Ukraine spending bill, couldn’t even be bothered to find time in his diary for Cameron.

In this respect, Cameron’s fundraising mission was nothing short of a disaster — yet it is one that is indicative of a broader problem within the British political establishment: their inflated sense of self, which in turn is rooted in national delusions about the US-UK “special relationship”. Almost 80 years since Churchill coined the term, the notion that the UK enjoys a privileged “subimperial” position among America’s Western allies continues to inform the country’s self-identity as one of the world’s great powers.

The reality, however, is that for a long time this “special relationship” has existed only in the minds of British elites. As for Americans, they were already likening Britain to a “butterfly content to flutter pathetically on the periphery of the world” in the pages of Time magazine in the Seventies. American officials have continued to pay lip service to the idea of the “special relationship”, but, as a senior Obama advisor later admitted, the US-UK bond “was never really something that was very important to the United States”. He added: “From my perspective it was very important for us to mention the special relationship in every press conference that we had when the UK people were here… but really we laughed about it behind the scenes”.

Similarly, Blinken’s reference to the “infamous special relationship” during a joint press conference with Cameron in December also had a sardonic air to it. And, during Cameron’s latest visit, we can imagine that there were similar scenes of mirth behind closed doors, after the Foreign Secretary spoke in grand Churchillian tones about the UK’s and US’s common responsibility to stand up for freedom and democracy in Ukraine.

Did Cameron really believe that he could wish Washington’s own propaganda into existence? Or was this simply another opportunity for him to steal a headline in what must surely be the final months of his zombified political career? Whatever the case may be, we must assume that Cameron is perfectly aware that the US has been working for some time to “Europeanise” the war — that is, to get Europeans to bear the burden of supporting Ukraine. They’ve also probably made peace, in national security circles, with the increasing likelihood that some kind of negotiated settlement is the only way to end the conflict — even if not before the next elections. In this sense, Trump’s peace plan “to end the Ukraine war in 24 hours”, by having Ukraine surrender the provinces of Donbas and Crimes in return for the war’s conclusion, probably enjoys much greater bipartisan support in the US than most are willing to admit.

After all, viewed in a realist sense, Washington can be said to have taken from this conflict what it wanted, in terms of driving a wedge between Europe (and Germany, in particular) and Russia, preventing the rise of a Eurasian geopolitical reality, and re-establishing America’s economic and military influence over Europe. This reality is going to remain unchanged even if the war should come to an end. Overall, then, Cameron was right to acknowledge that the US’s interests have been served quite well by the proxy war in Ukraine — for them, it really has been “good value for money”. The same, however, cannot be said of the UK — or Europe as a whole, which has suffered a huge economic blowback from the conflict, and is now facing the threat of an all-out war with Russia.

So, why is the UK leading the charge to further escalate the West’s involvement in Ukraine, doubling down on the military victory-at-all-costs narrative? Regardless of whether one takes the latter to mean the forceful return to pre-2022 or pre-2014 borders, there’s ample agreement, even in Western quarters, that either would be impossible to achieve without leading to a direct Nato-Russia war. What needs to give? And how should we explain the flippant way in which British leaders talk of how we have moved “from a post-war world to a pre-war world”?

“Why is the UK leading the charge to further escalate the West’s involvement in Ukraine?” One factor that arguably plays a role has already been mentioned: the British establishment’s distorted perception of the UK’s power. This goes a long way to explaining Britain’s increasingly aggressive posture against Russia, a country that, in military terms, dwarfs the UK in every possible respect: manpower, tanks, naval assets and aircraft. Moreover, the war in Ukraine has depleted British stocks to the point where Britain has run out of defence equipment to donate to Ukraine, while British-supplied artillery has run out of shells. As Lieutenant General Sir Rob Magowan admitted in a recent Defence Committee meeting, the UK would not be able to endure a conventional war with Russia for more than a couple of months.

One might argue that, in the eventuality of such a war, the UK would be part of a multinational Nato-led coalition. But other European countries face similar problems. As it is, the West is already unable to keep up with the artillery requirements of a geographically limited conflict such as the one unfolding in Ukraine. According to a recent estimate in the Financial Times, Russia’s annual artillery munition production has risen from 800,000 pre-war to an estimated 2.5 million, or 4 million including refurbished shells. EU and US production capacity, on the other hand, stands at about 700,000 and 400,000 respectively, although they aim to hit 1.4 and 1.2 million by the end of this year. More generally, meanwhile, it’s well understood that Nato’s armies are unprepared — in psychological as well as in military terms — for a long-running, symmetrical conventional war of the kind being fought in Ukraine, having been developed for completely different scenarios. So why are we even flirting with this possibility?

But perhaps the real question should be: how did we come to legitimise and even normalise the possibility of a large-scale war with Russia when deep down we all know that it would result in catastrophe, even if it remained limited to purely conventional measures? Our political and military leaders would likely reply that we don’t have a choice: that we are faced with an evil enemy bent on destroying us regardless of what we do. The implication is that there is nothing we can do to prevent this outcome; we can only prepare for it.

This deterministic narrative isn’t just untethered from reality; it’s also incredibly dangerous. As Nina L. Khrushcheva, a Russian-American professor of international affairs at The New School in New York, recently said: “Putin has not shown any desire to wage war on Nato. But, by stoking fear that he would, Nato risks creating a kind of self-fulfilling prophecy. Even I — a consistent critic of Putin — find this thoroughly provocative and foolish.”

The implicit message shouldn’t be underestimated: that whether Western leaders believe their own propaganda or not is irrelevant — what matters is how this is perceived in Russia. If the latter believes that Western countries are serious about the inevitability of war, it’s easy to see how it might conclude that Nato could decide to strike first at some point, and might therefore choose to pre-empt such as an attack by making the first move — as it did in Ukraine, but on a much larger scale.

This becomes all the more terrifying when we consider that we are dealing with a country armed with thousands of nuclear weapons. In the public debate, the risk of nuclear war is generally treated as an impossible scenario. Some even still maintain nuclear weapons act as a powerful deterrent against escalation.

Yet, none other than general Cristopher Cavoli, Nato supreme allied commander and head of US European Command, recently cautioned against the danger of thinking in these terms. Among other things, he noted that the US and Russia have virtually no active nuclear hotline, as they had during the Cold War, hugely increasing the risk of accidentally triggering a nuclear conflict, especially given the ongoing escalatory actions and rhetoric on both sides. “How,” he asked, “do we go ahead doing all of this and re-establishing our collective defence capability without being threatening and accidentally having the effect we don’t want?” The implication was that, by inflating the threat of war, we also risk conjuring it. And yet, only in January, it was reported that the US was planning to station nuclear weapons in the UK for the first time in 15 years.

This was the febrile context into which Cameron touched down in Washington this week, stoking further American intervention after which… who knows? In the best-case scenario, Cameron’s vanity trip will at least provide fodder for when he decides to write a second unreadable memoir. And in the worst? It’s all very good for Cameron to say that the war in Ukraine is “good value for money” — but as America’s politicians are starting to realise, the cost of nuclear war most certainly isn’t.


While researching my latest article, I came across a great paper written in 2016 by Nick Ritchie (@DrNickRitchie), a Senior Lecturer in International Security at the University of York, for the UK House of Commons Defence Committee.

The topic is escalating UK-Russia tensions following the post-2014 paradigm change in Ukraine. Ritchie argued that the UK’s overarching security interests lay in “avoiding escalation of the crisis to nuclear exchange at all costs” and “developing a mutually satisfactory relationship between NATO/Europe and Russia based on an acknowledgment that Russia is essential to a stable European security environment”. As he summed it up: “The primary threat here is not Vladimir Putin but the danger of conflict spiralling into nuclear violence”. Even though the paper is eight years old, it could have been written today. Indeed, the current climate — with open talk of the possibility, or even inevitability, of a direct NATO-Russia conflict — simply highlights how prescient Ritchie’s warning was. Here’s an abridged version:

A number of policy-makers have insisted that Russia’s actions in Ukraine and its more assertive nuclear practices both reinforce a need for a discrete UK nuclear weapons capability and revalidate the practice of nuclear deterrence. Policy-makers and advisors in the UK and other NATO countries have argued that NATO must revisit its nuclear weapons policy and nuclear weapons deployments. This is very dangerous. Both NATO and Russia risk cementing a deeply hostile and overtly nuclearised confrontation between NATO/Europe and Russia over Ukraine and the “post-Soviet space”. This, in turn, risks heightened misperception and miscalculation by overplaying the very limited capacity for nuclear threats to control a crisis. It also risks legitimising the possibility of and planning for a nuclear war in Europe as somehow commensurate with the interests at stake, which it is surely not. 

This submission challenges the framing of the current crisis with Russia by placing the conflict in context, and highlighting the polarisation and “re-nuclearisation” of the NATO-Russia relationship and the dangers involved in these developments. It argues that UK policy should be grounded in two foundational common interests between NATO and Russia: 1) reducing the salience of nuclear weapons and nuclear threats and avoiding escalation of the crisis to nuclear exchange at all costs; 2) developing a mutually satisfactory relationship between NATO/Europe and Russia based on an acknowledgment that Russia is essential to a stable European security environment.

I. Context

Moscow’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 was a clear violation of Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity and a breach of international law (in particular Article 2 of the UN Charter). It has led to violent conflict in Ukraine’s south and east with disastrous humanitarian and wider economic effects and exacerbated insecurity in countries bordering Russia, particularly former Soviet republics. The broader context is the deterioration of Russia-US/NATO relations from the mid-2000s. Russia-US/NATO relations reached new highs following the 9/11 attacks and the emergence of a common enemy in Al Qaida. By the mid-2000s the relationship was crumbling culminating in a post-Cold War low in the Russo-Georgia war in August 2008. The deterioration centred on the latest phase of NATO expansion in 2004, Russian interpretations of the “colour revolutions” in Georgia in 2003, Ukraine in 2004-05, and Kyrgyzstan in 2005 as part of a Western conceived conspiracy to drastically reduce Russia’s influence and, at worst, “a dress rehearsal for installing a pro-U.S. liberal puppet regime in the Kremlin”[1], and deep concern at the brand of neo-conservative unilateralism practiced by George W. Bush in his first term. This was captured in Vladimir Putin’s speech to the Munich Security Conference in 2007 when he said “Today we are witnessing an almost uncontained hyper use of force — military force — in international relations, force that is plunging the world into an abyss of permanent conflicts. As a result, we do not have sufficient strength to find a comprehensive solution to any one of these conflicts. Finding a political settlement also becomes impossible… One state and, of course, first and foremost the United States, has overstepped its national borders in every way. This is visible in the economic, political, cultural and educational policies it imposes on other nations. Well, who likes this? Who is happy about this?”[2]. The Obama-Medvedev “reset” after Georgia failed to take hold and Putin returned to the presidency determined to restore Russia’s role as an independent great power in a “polycentric world”.

This was fuelled by hydrocarbon exports, creeping authoritarianism through the silencing of political opposition, and an increasingly nationalistic policy discourse. Russia’s political and economic resurgence through the 2000s facilitated the Kremlin’s resistance to further political and economic integration on Western/US terms that was increasingly framed as Cold War geopolitical containment and capitalist encirclement. The Putin administration remained deeply concerned about the possibility of a Western-supported popular uprising that could depose his government. Putin was reportedly alarmed at the public assassination of Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi by NATO-backed rebels and the possibility of suffering a similar fate. This was compounded by popular protests in Moscow from 2011-2013 challenging the legitimacy of the State Duma elections in 2011 and his re-election to the presidency in March 2012, and then the ‘coup’ that deposed Viktor Yanukovych and triggered civil war, according to Putin.[3]

II. The relationship is becoming polarised and militarised

This provides the broader context in which mutual threat conceptions between NATO and Russia are becoming increasingly polarised, essentialised and militarised. The specific crisis in Ukraine centred on corruption, cronyism, electoral fraud and frustrated expectations of economic development. This set of issues has largely faded from view in the UK where policy discourse has coalesced around themes of Western resistance to Russian chauvinism, traditional inter-state military security, forging consensus within and political cohesion of the European “West”, economic punishment, and military deterrence. It frames the crisis as symptomatic of geopolitical rivalry between Russia and the West ignited by Moscow with Ukraine as a proxy.

This is a familiar narrative, fostered energetically by Moscow, that generates and reproduces enmity through a process of mutual “othering” in which both sides view the other as implacably hostile, duplicitous, and dangerous. This is reminiscent (and perhaps an extension) of the mutual othering that defined the Cold War confrontation in which the Soviet Union was framed in the West as possessing a relentless drive for global military domination, determined to seize Europe in its entirety, and developing a disarming nuclear first-strike capability to destroy the US nuclear arsenal and coerce the US during political crises[4]. This was later shown to be largely inaccurate since the Soviet Union was much more risk averse than assumed[5]. It was symptomatic of the political psychology of threat conceptions whereby exaggerated threats become normalised “because of emotional beliefs, incomplete information, institutional dynamics, and cultural practices. Threat becomes culturally routine, embedded in political institutions, and acquires an almost taken-for-granted quality”[6].

The process of othering also tends to personalise or essentialise a conflict around an individual, for example Hitler, Milosevic, Saddam Hussein, and now Vladimir Putin. Much commentary in the UK and US has reduced the current conflict to trying to figure out “what Putin wants” and lamenting the replacement of the supposedly reasonable Medvedev with a mercurial and ruthless successor. Essentialising a conflict in one individual, however, obscures the importance of historical and social context, not least Russia’s post-Cold War historical experience with NATO and the West[7].

A comparable process is now underway that reflects a reflexive cultural recourse to a Cold War explanatory model to account for each others’ actions, to categorise the Ukrainian crisis, and to frame appropriate responses[8]. We are witnessing an intensifying security dilemma in which steps taken to advance the security of NATO member states or prospective members are seen as threatening by Moscow, which takes political and military steps to counter NATO preparations, which reinforces worst case analyses in NATO, prompting additional steps that cement hostility[9]. Offensive steps become indistinguishable from defensive measures, threat perceptions harden, intentions become difficult to read, and risks of escalation grow. As the European Leadership Network observed in August 2015: “Russia and NATO both seem to see the new deployments and increased focus on exercises as necessary corrections of their previous military posture. Each side is convinced that its actions are justified by the negative changes in their security environment. Second, an action-reaction cycle is now in play that will be difficult to stop”[10].

This is reflected in a series of actions and responses by Russia and NATO from the expansion of NATO in 2004 to the present. […]

III. “Re-nuclearisation” of European security

A worrying part of this process has been the overt re-nuclearisation of the NATO-Russia relationship and the wider crisis over Ukraine. Russia has deliberately intensified its nuclear weapon operations and threats in crude attempts at deterrence and intimidation[16]. […]

NATO has responded with plans to review its nuclear strategy[23]. […] This has been compounded by the desiccating nuclear arms control agenda with no prospect of a follow on to the 2010 New START agreement, mutual accusations of serious violations of the 1987 Intermediate Nuclear Forces (INF) Treaty, Russian withdrawal from the US-led Nuclear Security Summit process, and the dissolution of the Cooperative Threat Reduction programme in 2012 to secure nuclear material and deactivate nuclear delivery vehicles in the former Soviet Union.[29]

IV. Core common interest in reducing nuclear danger

There are significant risks with current policies and narratives on both sides that polarise, essentialise and further militarise the current conflict. Actions that enhance the role of nuclear weapons in NATO/Western-Russia relations are symptomatic of this but they also exacerbate and entrench ideological polarisation through the embedding of mutual enemy images and the possibility of nuclear conflict as an appropriate and acceptable outcome. This generates two core challenges that reflect two foundational common interests: 1) reducing the salience of nuclear weapons and nuclear threats and avoiding escalation of the crisis to nuclear exchange at all costs; 2) developing a mutually satisfactory relationship between NATO/Europe and Russia based on an acknowledgment that Russia is essential to a stable European security environment.

The first challenge is to recognise the mutual (NATO-Russia) and wider global (society of states, the human community, and natural environment) interest in avoiding escalation to nuclear exchange at all costs. A deepening process of othering will intensify deterrence-based arguments that the only way to prevent violent conflict between NATO and Russia is to more visibly and deliberately threaten nuclear devastation given the implacable and neo-imperial character of the other and the perceived importance of demonstrating resolve.

This approach carries severe risks. It is based on a belief (the “rational actor model” of nuclear deterrence theory) that the threat of nuclear violence will always induce sufficient a degree of caution into the minds of adversaries as to preclude the escalation of conflict to the level of nuclear use[36]. However, historical and psychological research suggests otherwise — and it is this that must induce caution when considering the role of nuclear weapons and threats of nuclear violence in the current conflict[37]. Research has shown that the practice of nuclear deterrence has the potential to foster violent conflict as well as the potential to deter it. […]

Numerous studies have highlighted the contingency of nuclear deterrence in practice[41]. These challenge the idea that nuclear weapons bring certainty, “insurance”, a guarantee of protection, and a common, rational logic of crisis escalation and control between nuclear-armed adversaries in crisis conditions. Analysis of the Cold War nuclear confrontation shows that it was not the stable, predictable relationship of assured destruction it is often portrayed as today. It was highly dangerous, plagued by uncertainty, fuelled by worst-case assumptions and planning with very serious risks of a deliberate or inadvertent cataclysmic nuclear exchange[42]. […] A central strategic lesson of the Cold War is that over confidence in the efficacy of a nuclear deterrent threat is deeply problematic and can be dangerously counter-productive[44].

The fallibility of nuclear deterrence as a relational practice between adversaries and the consequences of its failure by accident or design is a danger of the highest order, implicating crisis participants and non-participants alike. This is of paramount concern because even if the probability of something going wrong is considered small — either with nuclear weapons technology, organisational procedures, or the practice of nuclear deterrence in a crisis — the effects of the deliberate or accidental detonation of even a single modern nuclear weapon in a developed country promise to be catastrophic. Recent UN research shows that multiple nuclear detonations would be unmanageable[45]. Recent evidence suggests that even a relatively modest nuclear exchange would have devastating and global effects on the natural environment[46].

Other studies have revealed the high risk of nuclear war during the Cold War. […]

Yet the reality of the dangers of nuclear use are too often overlooked in UK nuclear weapons discourse. Nuclear weapons are framed as “the deterrent” implying an unproblematic and inherent capacity to deter in precisely the ways that policy planners expect. They are presented as an “ultimate insurance policy” implying some guarantee of protection. Or, more dangerous still, is the idea that possession of nuclear weapons will “ensure no aggressor can escalate a crisis beyond UK control” as Prime Minister Tony Blair argued in 2006 — an assumption that must be treated with scepticism given the likely asymmetries of interests at stake between adversaries[52]. Thinking like this obscures the basic reality of of nuclear deterrence as a dangerous game of nuclear brinkmanship based on “threats that leave something to chance” according to Schelling — the chance being nuclear war[53]. This, in turn, tends to obscure the basic reality that “in the real world of real political leaders… a decision that would bring even one hydrogen bomb on one city of one’s own country would be recognized in advance as a catastrophic blunder; ten bombs on ten cities would be a disaster beyond history; and a hundred bombs on a hundred cities are unthinkable”, as Presidents Kennedy and Johnson’s National Security Advisor McGeorge Bundy put in in 1969[54]. Reagan formalised basic reality in his 1984 State of the Union address when he declared “a nuclear war cannot be won and must never be fought”. The same logic applies today (and, interestingly, was reiterated by Vladimir Putin in 2015)[55].

This speaks to the foundational importance of concrete measures to reduce rather than enhance the salience of nuclear weapons in the current situation based on mutual recognition of this most basic of collective security interests. The primary threat here is not Vladimir Putin but the danger of conflict spiralling into nuclear violence. 

V. Core common interest in reassurance and engagement

The second and related challenge is to engage in “security dilemma sensibility” that reflects upon the risk of worst-case planning and recognises the importance of viewing responses through the other’s eyes. In their excellent book on the security dilemma in contemporary international politics, Booth and Wheeler define this sensibility as “the ability to understand the role that fear might play in their attitudes and behaviour, including, crucially, the role that one’s own actions may play in provoking that fear”[56].

Continuous worst-casing of Russian actions risks entrenching an overtly nuclearised conflict with the associated dangers outlined above. The current worst-case narrative frames Russian actions as symptomatic of a revanchist neo-imperial project to reconstruct a pro-Moscow buffer zone of compliant satellite states underpinned by a resurgent and expansionist bloc ideology of state capitalism and klepocratic authoritarianism. The annexation of Crimea is framed as a fundamental challenge to the entire post-cold War European order and even a challenge to the post-WWII international order[57]. Yet this narrative does not appear to capture the centre of gravity of Moscow’s foreign policy in the Georgian and Ukrainian confrontations or former President Dmitry Medvedev’s assertion of “privileged interests” in its “near abroad” after the short war with Georgia in 2008. Russian actions, whilst illegal, destabilising and perilous for the parties involved, seem to reflect an increasingly militant resistance to the encroachment of “the West”, its values and institutions. In that respect it is primarily defensive, from Moscow’s perspective (though more pre-emptively so in Ukraine than Georgia).

Deeply disturbing as the Georgia and Ukraine crises are (not least for those whose lives have been lost or destroyed), the Western narrative summarised here fails to capture Moscow’s apparent insecurity and fear. What is required instead is a different reading of UK and NATO security and the role of nuclear weapons in the current conflict over Ukraine and the broader adversarial context that has developed. This requires seeing the conflict and Moscow’s “nuclear euphoria”[58] for what it is: symptomatic of a Russian narrative of victimhood, resistance, and resurgence and an almost hyper-masculine foreign policy in which nuclear threats are deployed to try and sow political fear abroad and mobilise support at home for autocratic rule through displays of nuclear strength from a position of political, military and economic weakness. As Alexei Arbatov has argued, Moscow's “nuclear bravado” is a political message to the US and NATO to refrain from a military intervention: “It is targeted at the West to impress upon its leaders the exceptional importance of this region for Russia's national security interests”[59].

Again, context is key. We know that NATO-Russian relations have been something of a rollercoaster since the end of the Cold War with numerous highs and lows. […] But it is also clear that Russian and European interests have diverged considerably, underpinned by mutually-antagonistic (or anxiety-generating) political ideologies that pitch European liberalism against an authoritarian “Putinism”[60]. We know, for example, that Russia has remained deeply suspicious of US primacy and fearful of Western containment. It has interpreted NATO expansion, the development of missile defences, the emergence of an international human rights agenda, and US-led military interventions Bosnia, Kosovo, Afghanistan, Iraq, and Libya quite differently to many in the West. Moscow has regarded the latter as transgressions of basic norms of sovereignty symptomatic of the US’ “unilateral domination”[61] in the same way the West now regards Russian actions in Georgia and Ukraine. As Averre argues, Moscow stresses “concerns over heightened ‘global competition’, stemming from the West’s attempts to undermine traditional principles of international law and continue a neo-Cold war containment of Russia”[62]. This was reflected in Russia’s 2000, 2010 and 2014 military doctrines that frame NATO as its primary threat[63].

The current crisis and its broader context reflect the mutual mismanagement of post-imperial Russia’s insecurity after Yeltsin in terms of what sort of state it is and how it should act. It is an insecurity framed (rightly or wrongly) by a narrative of post-Cold War humiliation and containment. It has resulted in the reassertion of a Russian identity of great power autonomy framed in terms of righteous, nationalistic and often xenophobic resistance assimilation into a decadent Western hegemony (Moscow’s ‘othering’). This demonstrates the failure of NATO and Russia to develop a mutually acceptable European security apparatus that both reassures former Soviet republics and Warsaw Pact members wary of Russian power and reassures Russia about the West’s long-term intentions towards it. President Dmitri Medvedev set out Moscow’s principles for a new European security architecture in 2008 that made little headway in the West and were reiterated in 2016[64]. The creeping nuclearisation of the crisis is symptomatic of the depth of the current fracture.

This context highlights a second overarching common security interest: working consistently with Russia on the slow and painful process of conflict resolution, diplomacy and compromise to develop a mutually satisfactory working relationship on European security and other areas of common security interest without sacrificing basic value commitments. This requires acknowledging that the NATO/European-Russian relationship is “too big too fail” and that an exclusionary overt “containment” and militarised ideological confrontation is to be avoided given the foreseeable mutual long-term pain and high risk for all involved. Appreciating the wider social and historical context is not an exercise in appeasement, being an apologist for Moscow’s actions, or downplaying the significance of Russia’s recent threats and actions. It is not about ignoring or wishing away the increasing authoritarianism of the Kremlin under Putin, the worrying silencing of political opposition, and its shuttering of civil society space. But it is about accepting the long term requirement for careful management of European-Russia relations, that common interests will require cooperation, that Putinism is likely to characterise Russian politics for some time, that the West’s capacity to contain and deter has diluted as power as diffused in the international system, but that NATO and the West are nonetheless operating from a position of considerable strength compared to Moscow.

VI. Agency

The current crisis is symptomatic of a broader set of challenges of political and economic development and transition in post-Soviet states, including Russia. It is grappling with this set of challenges that will shape our security. This encompasses a set of difficult and long-term issues that can often get relegated because they are rooted in human security and development rather than military state security and Western conceptions of inter-state order. Preventing the collapse of the Ukrainian economy and aiding post-war reconstruction, reconciliation and demilitarisation are clear but difficult long-term security priorities that will invariably require Russian involvement and cooperation.

Moreover, this type of crisis is not new and it raises a broader set of questions about the relationship between Russian aspirations and interests and realizing a sustainable set of European security understandings and practices. Like it or not, it is clear that Russia is integral to a stable European security environment and that it is counter-productive to dismiss its security concerns as wholly illegitimate. The question, then, is one of how: how can we work collectively with what may well remain a semi-authoritarian Russia over the next decade or two to build a mutually acceptable European security environment, accepting that Russian political practices are at odds with European liberalism? What do we think that might look like over that time period building on Cold War and post-Cold War successes and failures? This is speaking to a set of problems that entangle regional inter-state order and human security needs and aspirations.

Here, it is vital to acknowledge our agency: we in the “West” have national and collective choice in how to interpret the current nuclear noise, what we think Moscow expects to achieve, how we understand “security” in the present context, and how we might respond. Instead of re-validating the efficacy of nuclear threats, Russia’s nuclear actions and Western responses point to the central importance of dialogue for crisis management and conflict resolution in the short term, and a common security agenda over the longer term. This speaks to a different set of priorities that include preventing the collapse of the Ukrainian economy, providing humanitarian and reconstruction support for Ukraine, and reaching common understandings on nuclear and wider military restraint, all of which will require some degree of Russian cooperation[65]. More broadly, it requires prioritising investment in “cooperative security efforts aimed at enhancing stability, mutual security and predictability through dialogue, reciprocity, transparency and arms limitations” that have eroded over the past decade[66]. There is certainly a role for maintaining a conventional capacity to respond to Russian paramilitary or proxy interventions in NATO allies, but whilst pushing hard on meaningful dialogue. There seems to be some appreciation of the counter-productive effects of reciprocating Russia’s nuclear messaging that lend Russian threats undue credence and political weight and reinforce Russian enemy images. Instead the response has been more measured — one of political reassurance to worried allies based on established commitments and enhanced responsiveness — though with creeping momentum towards escalation and a spiralling security dilemma.

From this standpoint it is not clear what constructive role, if any, UK and NATO nuclear deterrent threats have to play, in particular given the very real challenges and risks involved. Priority should be placed on firmly downplaying and delegitimising any role for nuclear weapons in managing the current confrontation irrespective of Russia’s nuclear activities. It is not necessary or in the UK’s, NATO’s or the wider ‘West’s’ interests to embed relations with Russia in a permanently re-nuclearised confrontation. As Egon Bahr and Gotz Neuneck argued in 2015: “It is neither intelligent, nor in European interests, to raise again dramatically the threat of nuclear war… These weapons’ effects are so overwhelming and catastrophic that any concept of using them in a ‘limited’ way is completely disconnected from reality”[67].

14 February 2016

Ritchie’s warning appears all the more prescient in light of the astonishing — and terrifying — speech recently made by Gen. Christopher Cavoli, NATO supreme allied commander and head of US European Command. Here are the main takeaways: 

  • The US and Russia have virtually no active nuclear hotline — which was one of the staples of Cold War nuclear policy. And this in the middle of a proxy hot war. Cavoli urged the United States to revive the lines of communication with Moscow that helped both countries avoid nuclear conflict during the Cold War. “[Back then] we could read each other’s signals. We knew how to send signals to each other… almost all of that is gone now”, Cavoli said. 
  • Improvements in NATO’s combat readiness haven’t been matched at the strategic level when it comes to ensuring that the nuclear powers don’t misread each other’s intentions. Hence the risk that they misread each other’s intentions is high.
  • Such lines of communication are hard to reinstate because, well, Russia is at war — not just with Ukraine but with the US and NATO (although Cavoli omits this). “Efforts are underway at NATO to update some of the old practices. But there are complications, because we’re trying to reestablish [them] during a hot war”.
  • The main tools of nuclear deterrence have been lost. During the Cold War, Cavoli said there was a “very fine and mutually understood vocabulary” between the West and the Soviet Union. “We knew how to communicate verbally and nonverbally about our intentions in a way that gave predictability to the other side, comprehension to the other side. And this was one of the principal things that we used to manage escalation and to achieve deterrence without significant risk”.
  • One of the main reasons for the current unprecedented nuclear risk is the abandonment of various nuclear treaties (initiated unilaterally by the US, though Cavoli omits this). “Other factors from the past that were effective included various nuclear treaties, agreements and onsite inspections that helped keep communication lines open. We fell out of the habit of using these mechanisms to signal and… we collectively have walked away from many of the arrangements and the treaties that previously gave us the ability to do this”, Cavoli said.
  • NATO’s aggressive anti-Russia posturing is the main obstacle to the reopening of nuclear communication lines. Any push to improve how the United States and NATO communicate with Moscow could be challenged by the alliance’s ongoing efforts to bolster its eastern flank with Russia. The Kremlin in recent years has ramped up its criticisms of NATO and the increasing number of alliance forces positioned in places such as the Baltic states and Poland, which it has characterised as a threat.
  • Regardless of what NATO’s actual intentions may be, there is a real risk of accidentally triggering a nuclear conflict. “How do we go ahead doing all of this and reestablishing our collective defense capability without being threatening and accidentally having the effect we don’t want?” Cavoli asked.

Terrifying stuff. If you’re not worried, you’re either not paying attention or you’re burying your head in the sand.

2 comments:

  1. Fazi is practically a Workers Party member, it's amazing he gets published in things like UnHerd.

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    Replies
    1. It is the coming intellectual trend, and they know it.

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