Russia ate NATO’s carrot
With Russian troops now within 25 miles of Tbilisi, the U.S. has stepped up its tough talk on Russia. But regardless of how the military situation plays out, the democracy agenda has been dealt a serious blow.
Press Conference
Today, Secretary of State Condoleeza Rice gave a joint press conference with Georgian President Mikhail Saakashvili. Saakashvili decried looting and what he referred to as “ethnic cleansing” by Russian forces and irregulars. He also made grim reference to a report released yesterday by Human Rights Watch blaming 11 civilian deaths and several injuries on the Russian use of cluster bombs, which Saakashvili called “an inhuman weapon.” [In the interest of full disclosure, the United States does not renounce the use of cluster bombs.]
Saakashvili called the Russian invasion an effort “to kill Georgian democracy, and to end the independence of Georgia.” He defiantly added, “Russia has lots of tanks, but no tank is enough to crush the will of a free people.”
The Response of International Institutions
For her part, Secretary Rice demanded that Russia respect the ceasefire agreement signed today, and withdraw its forces from Georgia. (At the time, they were a mere 25 miles away.) She also called on the international community to hurry to provide observers and a peacekeeping force, which would deny Russia an excuse to stay. The Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe (OSCE) began to take steps that would up its current number of observers in Georgia from 200 to 300, but this would require all 56 member-states to sign off.
Meanwhile in Washington, President Bush delivered a strong condemnation of Moscow at the White House. In it, he said the U.S. would work with members of the G-7 to resolve the crisis, thus seemingly kicking Russia out of the G-8 club with one word. This would follow on the heels on Monday’s conference call among foreign ministers of the G-8 sans Russia. This kind of diplomatic response is a sure step in the right direction, but a sign that the West is nowhere near prepared to bare its teeth. No surprise there – if it were, this would never have happened.
HEY! Who ate our carrot?
Which leaves one questioning the relevance of NATO. Before the Russian invasion, Georgia was actively trying to join NATO. The U.S. was pressing other members on its behalf, without success. In a world where Russia is expected to keep quietly to itself, the U.S. could offer the prospect of NATO membership as an inducement to states to implement democratic reforms. Reforms would gradually take place, and the entire eastern European neighborhood would benefit from having more democratically inclined neighbors in it.
But now the calculus is quite different. With the real Russia unmasked for all the world to see, joining NATO becomes much more serious business for all parties concerned, for several reasons. First, with the United States tied down in Iraq and Afghanistan, an American promise to come to the aid of aggrieved European allies looks – for the foreseeable future – a lot like an empty threat. This means that even as countries like Georgia and Ukraine want NATO membership with increasing urgency, it stands to do them less and less good. They could bend over backwards to implement reforms – right up until the Russians marched in.
Second, even if we had a free hand, our security policy would likely trump our democracy policy, as it has many times before. In a rush to extend NATO membership, the United States would be willing to overlook democratic gains – or lack thereof.
Third, even if we had a free hand and prospective members suddenly became advanced consolidated democracies, a Russian menace decreases the likelihood that any of our other NATO partners want to risk war with Russia by entering into an alliance.
All of this spells trouble for the democracy agenda.
The Democratic Piece » Facing the Democracy/Security Distinction on 02 Sep 2008 at 9:52 pm #
[...] conflict in Georgia returns us to the familiar topic of democracy losing out to security considerations. It is argued that Western powers—most especially the United [...]