Friday, April 30, 2021

Issue 52

THE BRETON/GEROL NEWSLETTER


RUSSIA AND THE EURO-ATLANTIC POWERS: CAN IT GET WORSE?

Russia’s relations with the West, particularly with the United States plummeted to new lows in 2021. This level of mutual misunderstanding was not seen even during the original Cold War. After years of deteriorating relations, sanctions, tit-for-tat diplomatic expulsions, and an escalating rhetoric many in Russia are asking if some form of direct conversation may create even more tensions and conflict.

Events have cascaded over the past month. Russia’s treatment of imprisoned dissident Alexei Navalny, who has been sent to a prison hospital amid reports of failing health, underlines the sharp differences of perception between Russia and the West over human rights matters. The Russian military buildup near Ukraine has illustrated that the conflict in the Donbass region might explode at any time, possibly even dragging Russia and NATO into direct confrontation. As Russia brought 20% of its armed forces on the border with Ukraine in an unprecedented show of force by the second most powerful army in the world, it reaffirmed its support for the rebel regions and reminded Ukraine and NATO what they are up against.

©Biden/Facebook
After calling Putin "a killer", not the most diplomatic statement from the American president, Joe Biden surprised the Kremlin by proposing a “personal summit” to discuss the growing list of US-Russia disagreements. US expectations maybe limited, but that kind of meeting comes with the job. The question is whether a real dialogue can proceed despite the anti-Russia posturing by Biden himself and by the US political establishment in general.

The list of disagreements is very long. Taking into consideration the never-ending American tendency to see the world in the binary good guys vs bad guys framework, which is evident from the American approach to conflicts in Ukraine, Syria, Belarus, and Russia's "under siege" mentality and its decreasing clout in the world, there is little chance for optimism.

©President of Russia Website
The day after Biden talking to Putin on the phone Washington imposed a package of tough sanctions against Russia, for its alleged SolarWinds hacking and interference in the 2020 US presidential elections, infuriating Moscow and drawing threats of retaliation. The Kremlin had previously ordered Russia’s ambassador to the U.S. to return home for intensive consultations, an almost unprecedented peacetime move. Over the weekend, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov suggested that John Sullivan, the US ambassador to Moscow, should likewise go back to Washington to cool down. The Ambassador left shortly after.

There is a growing realization in Moscow, and it is not easy to refute, that the growing madness of internal American politics preoccupied with identity politics is spilling out into the US foreign policy. China with its genocidal concentration camps and its open aggression against Taiwan and neighbouring countries draws by far less ire of the US administration (or legacy media) than the fate of Navalny who, though unjustly imprisoned, keeps texting from jail on a regular basis. With all Russian human rights problems, the real communist dictatorship with all real brutality and murder (on rather mass scale) is China. Ingrained perceptions, business interests and even the desire to avoid the hint of perceived racism make it more politically expedient and convenient to target Russia. 

There is a growing sense in Moscow that the downward spiral of East-West ties has reached a point of no return, and that Russia should consider abandoning hopes of reconciliation with the West and seek permanent alternatives: perhaps in an intensified compact with China, and targeted relationships with countries of Europe and other regions that are willing to do business with Moscow.

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ARMENIA, THE GENOCIDE

U.S. President Joe Biden recognized the massacre of Armenians by the Ottoman Empire during World War I as genocide, following calls for the move by more than 100 US lawmakers.

The recognition, promised by Biden during the presidential campaign for the November election he won, is largely symbolic but is likely to anger Turkey and step up already high tensions between the two NATO allies. Avoiding angering Turkey was the main factor in previous US reluctance to recognize the genocide.

©Armenian Genocide Museum


Biden used the word "genocide" as part of a statement on April 24th when annual Armenian Genocide Remembrance Day commemorations are held around the world.

Armenian Prime Minister Nikol Pashinian has condemned what he called crimes against "civilization" and demanded an apology from Turkey as Armenia, amid coronavirus restrictions, marked the 105th anniversary of the World War I-era massacre of Armenians in the Ottoman Empire.

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TURKEY, WHO ARE YOU?

Turkey is emerging as an important actor in world politics, exerting growing influence both in its immediate region and beyond.  Undoubtedly, the man who deserves credit for this is its current president, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.

Turkey is a key member of NATO (on paper it has the second largest military within the alliance) and a member of several European organizations. It is growing more confident and is asserting more independent foreign policy positions. Turkey is involved in many conflicts near and far from its borders: Syria, Nagorno-Karabakh, Libya, and to a lesser non-military extent with Greece and Israel. Though a member of NATO it recently purchased an advanced S-400 Mobile Missile System from Russia, which triggered ire of the US. The US threatened to withhold the sale of F-35's to Turkey. Just recently Turkey offered a compromise: not to fully activate the S-400 system. In any case, Turkey is in the news frequently as it tries to reassert itself as major regional and even a world power.

In this light it would be interesting to see to what extent Turkey will unleash its anger at Joe Biden's recognition of Armenian genocide and how it will influence US-Turkey relations. In a way it will be a test and the world will see if Turkey really has matured into a major power or it will throw the usual tantrums of an insecure state.

©Erdogan/Facebook


Some suggest Turkey is pursuing a "neo-Ottomanist" agenda. This maybe a moot point but one should remember that Turkey as a national entity is still relatively young. Without harbouring credible territorial ambitions, it may entertain the desire to have a zone of influence that extends to nearby historic Ottoman territories. It also has to contend with a large Kurdish minority that never received the nation-state it was promised after World War I. The fact that it has moved away from Kemal Ataturk's vision of strictly secular Turkey towards a more Islamic one is clear. Erdogan's Turkey supports Hamas in Gaza, has very close ties with radical Islamists in Syria and even secretly cooperates with Iranian intelligence.

At times, this competes and creates tensions with the West. However lately it has managed to upset Russia with its open support and participation (on the level of advisors and weaponry) in the Azeri war against Armenia but also sales of weapons to Ukraine. Russia and Turkey have fought many wars against each other (12 to be exact since 1568) so Russia has no illusions about Turkey's objectives in the Caucasus and Crimea. Turkey is also keenly aware of the fact that Russia is still a military heavy weight and a nuclear super-power, so it plays very safe on this front. Turkey also has significant investments in Russia as well as major trade and tourism concerns.  

Occasionally Turkey threatens to withdraw from NATO to further its regional ambitions but as it stands today it seems it has reached limits of its capabilities. The Turkish economy is in decline and the population in large cities very much like to see Erdogan go.

However, with the less assertive Europe and America which is withdrawing from Syria and Afghanistan, Turkey will continue to be a local powerhouse and an irritant to both the West and Russia.

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 CZECH SPY THRILLER

On October 16th, 2014, a large ammunition depot, located on private land in the middle of nowhere in the Western part of the Czech Republic was blown up. Two guards lost their lives. The initial investigation found out that the weapons stored inside the warehouse belonged to a notorious Bulgarian arms dealer nicknamed Yemelian. Several years later in the interview with a reporter from the New York Times Yemelian admitted that the weapons stored there were purchased for the Ukrainian volunteer battalions fighting pro-Russian separatists in Donbass.

The authorities in Prague had its suspicions but there was little evidence. However, it is also possible that for political reasons the revelation was delayed for a more opportune time. On April 17th of this year, however, Czech officials made a stunning allegation, drawing a direct line between the explosions and the Russian military intelligence agency known as the GRU, specifically a division known as Unit 29155. That Unit is widely suspected in Salisbury's poisoning of Sergei and Julia Skripal with the nerve agent called Novichok. Both survived but have not been seen since then.

Czech counterintelligence service recently established, by discovering photocopies of passports belonging to two Tajik citizens, that they had visited the arms depot shortly before it was blown up and looked exactly like the two suspects in the Skripal poisoning affair. According to the British and Czech intelligence services they belong to Unit 29155.

©RFE/RL


"There is unequivocal evidence about the involvement of officers of the Russian intelligence service GRU in the explosion of the ammunition depot,” Prime Minister Andrej Babis told an unusual night news conference on April 17th. He also said 18 Russians working at the Russian Embassy were being expelled. “The Czech Republic is a sovereign state and must react accordingly to those unprecedented revelations,” he said.

Consequently, out of 23 Russian diplomats in Prague 18 were expelled and 95 Czech employees of the Russian embassy lost their jobs. Moscow retaliated asymmetrically by expelling 20 Czech diplomats.

The story took an unusual twist when suddenly Czech president Milosh Zeman came up with a statement alluding to the fact that maybe there could be other explanations for the 7-year-old explosion. He did not elaborate further but promised that all materials of the investigation will be eventually made public.

In the circumstances, even though the Czech Republic has been severely affected by COVID-19, it has now refused to consider the application for the registration of Russia’s Sputnik V vaccine.

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UKRAINE: SEARCHING FOR THE RIGHT SCENARIO

For many Western analysts and government officials, the recent escalation of tensions between Ukraine and Russia and especially the massive deployment of Russian troops all along the Ukraine-Russia border could only be explained by Russia’s desire to threaten and possible even invade Ukraine. The fact that the escalation of tension was inconsistent with both Ukrainian and Russian year-long efforts to maintain a working cease-fire along the line separating the rebel regions of Eastern Ukraine from the rest of the country was not addressed. Beyond general Russian aggressive intentions for the region, observers could offer no specific explanation for the timing and the scope of the Russian troop deployment.  The claim from some Russian quarters that the crisis was triggered by a Zelenskyy decree that makes retaking the Russian-annexed territory of Crimea official Ukrainian state policy does not stand up to close examination.

President Zelenskyy’s own professed commitment to the pursuit of a permanent cease-fire in Eastern Ukraine would make it highly unlikely for him to do anything to disrupt the current military standoff. On the other hand, as commander-in-chief, he has to direct Ukrainian Armed Forces and cannot be seen as retreating. As Dmitri Trenin from the Moscow Carnegie Centre suggested, it looks as though some time in February he authorised the re-deployment of Ukrainian troops and heavy equipment in greater proximity to the conflict zone. The lesser distance between conflicting entities was bound to create some new skirmishes even if Ukrainian troops were on order not to shoot first. It would also seem that there were some on the Ukrainian side that found inspiration in the quick victory of Azerbaijan in its recent conflict with Armenia over Nagorno-Karabakh. If the opposing side consisted only of local militias and Russian “irregulars”, some may have started thinking that a quick military advance might be possible. This is what Dmitry Kozak, Russian representative in the peace negotiations, referred to when he said that the Ukrainian authorities were like “children playing with matches”.

©President of Ukraine Website


The movement of Ukrainian troops would obviously have become known to Russia. The reaction could have been proportional, but it was not. Yet, as with Ukraine, the reaction was not to start shooting but to re-deploy troops. The re-deployment was massive. Its detection was un-avoidable. The point was to send a message to Ukraine and her supporters that Russia would massively intervene if the rebel regions came under attack. That was perfectly understood in Kyiv. Dmitri Trenin rightly observed the massive troop deployment was probably the best way of avoiding a real war down the road. Making clear the plausible Russian response seems to have been achieved. The Russian troops have returned to their home bases.

The disproportional Russian response carried a reputational risk by reinforcing in Western public opinion the image of Russia as a potential aggressor. There was obviously little concern among the Russian leadership about this: that battle is already lost in any event.

There may have been no military gain in this episode for President Zelenskyy’s. There was however a clear political advantage. At home, it served to buttress his nationalist credentials. On the international front, Zelenskky got all the expected reactions from Western governments in support of Ukraine thus amassing some intangible ammunition and moral support for his next encounter with President Putin some time in the next few weeks.   

Zelenskyy has also appealed to the U.S. and Europe to expedite Ukraine’s membership in NATO, which Russia has long described as a “red line” that would lead to war. Top Kremlin official Dmitry Kozak even warned that if conflict erupts, it could be “the beginning of the end of Ukrainian state.

Ultimately though, there was a lot of noise but limited new damage done. As Zelenskyy, dressed in full military gear, was seen visiting Ukrainian troops in the conflict area one could not avoid the observation that the President was reverting to his previous profession and playing a part in a scenario from which he could improve his own position.

©President of Ukraine Website


In the days following the withdrawal of Russian troops Zelenskky repeated his call or changes to the Minsk process to be made more flexible. He also added the suggestion that to achieve progress he might be useful to add powerful players such as the US, the UK and Canada. He did not explain however why Russia would ever agree to amend the Minsk process or to include the strongest supporters of Ukraine in the negotiation process other than to provide cover for himself should he wish to make any compromise.  As for Canada specifically, it is hard to see what it could contribute at this late stage other than to continue its support for the modernisation of the Ukrainian military and improve it assistance to overall reform processes.

Unlike some of his foreign supporters Zelenskky no longer simply calls for the implementation of the Minsk Accords but rather for their updating. He knows that the Accords in their current state are unacceptable to Ukrainian public opinion. He has expressed the desire to bring back the population of the rebel regions into the Ukrainian polity, but he refuses to engage directly with the representatives of these regions because they continue to be labeled as terrorists. The only way out is through a negotiation with Russia, and with Vladimir Putin. He can have his European and North American friends put all the political pressure they can on Russia, he still must come up with something that will move Putin to an acceptable compromise. At this time, it might only be possible to come up with additional arrangements that would be seen as complementing the Minsk Accords and that might firm up ceasefire arrangements as well as facilitate a progressive return to normalcy in the conflict area.

It is worth noting that Dmitri Gordon, one of the leading Ukrainian political observers has expressed strong reservations about the usefulness of a Zelenskky-Putin meeting in the current environment. For Zelenskyy, negotiating with Putin and convincing his own people would seem equally daunting challenges. He will need the help of his foreign supporters on both accounts.  

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 PERSON OF THE MONTH: JOHN KERRY

© Kerry/Facebook


Former Senator and presidential candidate John Kerry is the US Special Presidential Envoy for Climate. It is a position in the Executive Office of the President of the United States with authority over energy policy and climate policy. He played a key role in bringing together 40 heads of state for two days of virtual climate talks earlier this month. The summit focused on what nations need to do to curb planet-warming emissions. Kerry also called the summit a historic economic opportunity.

John Kerry was born in 1943. In 1966 graduated from Yale and joined the U.S. Army. He fought   in Vietnam between 1968 and 1969 for 4 months in total. He participated in intense combat on several occasions as a commanding officer of a river bound swift boat. He was twice wounded and earned two Purple Hearts, Bronze and Silver Stars.

Kerry’s international climate efforts have been helped by his hard-earned stature in diplomatic circles. Aside from serving as Obama’s secretary of state, he had a long career as a U.S. senator and was the Democrats’ 2004 presidential nominee. He is a seasoned diplomat with years of political experience rivaled only by his direct boss, President Biden. John and Joe know each other well. Both come from Obama's team and obviously he has Biden's ear but must be subtle enough not to step on current Secretary of State Antony Blinken’s toes.

Considering how popular the whole climate change issue is in the Western world, especially among people under 35, Kerry's position in the government, coupled with his experience, carries a lot of weight and he is directly in charge of a plan to tackle climate change.

When John Kerry is in Washington, he has his office in the Eisenhower Executive Office Building next to the White House and at the State Department, his former stomping grounds, where he has a sizable staff. There is little doubt that he is advising the president on the ongoing talks with Iran since it was him who signed the deal with Iran on July 14th, 2015, the deal Donald Trump withdrew from and the deal Joe Biden is trying to resurrect.

At the end of his political career John Kerry came back in a big way. If he can do something about what many see as humanity's existential threat, history will be kind to him.

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BRIEFLY NOTED


RUSSIA 1: PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS

Some observers continue to affirm that President Putin does not care so much about the internal affairs of Russia but would have greater interest in international relations. The April 2021 Address by President Putin once again confirms that this is not entirely correct. In his latest address, Putin devotes a lot much time to internal matters than to international ones.

The address also reveals a certain frustration on the part of the President at the slow implementation of some government programs. This fuels the debate about the real extent of Putin’s power. The matter is not whether Putin is an authoritarian leader but whether any Russian president or leader can bring the large federal bureaucracy and the many regional managers into effective action. There are intrinsic limits as to what can be achieved by instructions. No matter how powerful he might be, he is clearly feeling these limits and talking about it year after year. Scholars studying Russian history may recognize a long-standing “conservative” pattern of inertia and resistance to change.


RUSSIA 2: THE RED LINES

In his address Putin cautioned other international players not to cross Russia’s red lines, or else. Neither Putin nor his Press Secretary were willing to provide specific details as to what the red lines maybe. Ukraine membership of NATO comes to mind, but was not mentioned, purposefully creating uncertainty about the exact location where the red line might pass.


RUSSIA 3: MILITARY DISCIPLINE

 A Russian military appeals court in Siberia has upheld the sentence of Private Ramil Shamsutdinov, who was sentenced to 24 years in prison in January for killing eight fellow servicemen in a rampage he says was the result of hazing he faced in the army.

The lawyers said that it was not immediately clear if there would be a further appeal by the        victims' relatives, some of whom had appealed the sentence as too lenient.

Shamsutdinov's defense team has said their client went on a shooting spree in October 2019, killing eight -- including two high-ranking officers -- in the town of Gorny in the Zabaikalye region after being tortured and beaten by other soldiers and officers during his induction into service.

In late December 2020, a jury found Shamsutdinov guilty of murder and attempted murder, but also said he deserved leniency, which according to Russian law meant his sentence should not exceed 13 years in prison. Nevertheless, he was sentenced to 24 years in January, while some of the victims' relatives sought life in prison for him.

In recent years, photos and video footage have been posted online by members of the Russian military that show the severe bullying of young recruits as they are inducted into the army.


RUSSIA 4: FREEDOM OF RELIGION

An independent bipartisan advisory body has reiterated its call for the U.S. State Department to add Russia to its register of the world's "worst violators" of religious freedom, a blacklist that already includes Iran, Pakistan, Tajikistan, Turkmenistan, and six other countries.

The U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom (USCIRF), created by Congress to make recommendations about global religious freedom, proposes in its annual report released on April 21st that Russia, India, Syria, and Vietnam be put on the "countries of particular concern" list, a category reserved for those that carry out "systematic, ongoing, and egregious" violations of religious freedoms. The blacklisting paves the way for sanctions if the countries included do not improve their records.

A total of 188 criminal cases alone were brought against the banned Jehovah’s Witnesses, while there were 477 searches of members' homes, with raids and interrogations including "instances of torture that continue to go uninvestigated and unpunished." Although Russian authorities may overextend the reach of anti-extremism and anti-terrorism laws to deal with some Muslim groups, there are also cases in predominantly Muslim areas, such as Chechnya, where regional powers enforce a stringent version of Islam.

Russia officially recognizes four traditional religions: Christianity, Islam, Buddhism and Judaism. Other than the Jehovah’s Witnesses, the groups that encounter the greatest difficulties are the evangelicals who try to engage in active missionary work. 


RUSSIA/BELARUS

In his April address, Putin also mentioned the recent alleged US-sponsored assassination attempt against President Lukashenko of Belarus. He rightly observed that the affair was barely noticed outside of Belarus and Russia. Lack of interest elsewhere might be explained by the impression that nothing of the kind could happen in a heavily policed state such as Belarus and that it was, in the words of an opposition leader, a provocation.


BELARUS

The new U.S. ambassador to Belarus, Julie Fisher, has met with exiled opposition leader Svyatlana Tsikhanouskaya, just ahead of talks between authoritarian ruler Alexander Lukashenko and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

The meeting took place on April 21st in Vilnius, the capital of neighboring Lithuania, where former presidential candidate Tsikhanouskaya moved under pressure from the Belarusian authorities shortly after Lukashenka claimed victory in a widely disputed presidential election in August 2020.

Fisher met with Tsikhanouskaya on the eve of the meeting between Putin and Lukashenko in Moscow, during which the two were expected to discuss further deepening the ties between the countries. Although for different reasons and with different objectives, Lukashenko remains under pressure from both sides, but seems intent on biding his time.

 

CANADA-TURKEY

Canada has halted some military exports to NATO ally Turkey after a probe confirmed Canadian drone technology was used by Azerbaijan in last year’s fighting with Armenia over the breakaway Nagorno-Karabakh region.

Canada suspended military export permits to Turkey last October pending an investigation into allegations Canadian technology was misused when the Turkish military provided armed drones to support Azerbaijan.

“Following this review, which found credible evidence that Canadian technology exported to Turkey was used in Nagorno-Karabakh, today I am announcing the cancellation of permits that were suspended in the fall of 2020,” Canadian Foreign Minister Marc Garneau said in an April 12th statement. “This use was not consistent with Canadian foreign policy, nor end-use assurances given by Turkey,” he added.

 

ISRAEL

According to the Israeli army, Syria fired a missile at an Israeli Air Force jet, missed its target and landed near Dimona on April 22nd.

The Israeli interceptor failed to shoot the missile down. Syria reported that an Israeli strike near Damascus injured four soldiers in response.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the missile strike or comment from Iran. But on Saturday, Iran’s hard-line Kayhan newspaper published an opinion piece by Iranian analyst Sadollah Zarei suggesting Israel’s Dimona facility be targeted after the attack on the nuclear facility in Natanz. Zarei cited the idea of “an eye for an eye” in his remarks.

The Dimona reactor is the heart of the super secret Israeli nuclear program. According to the CIA estimate Israel possesses between 200 and 400 nuclear warheads. Israel is the only country in the world that practices "nuclear ambiguity" i.e. it neither confirms nor denies having nuclear weapons.


KYRGYZSTAN

Four patients are being treated in hospitals in the Kyrgyz capital, Bishkek, after consuming a toxic root that had been promoted by President Sadyr Japarov as an "effective" cure to treat COVID-19.

Doctors said on April 21 that Duishon Abdyldaev, 63, was being treated for poisoning with aconite root at the National Cardiology and Therapy Center, while three other patients whose identities were not disclosed were being treated for poisoning with the highly toxic root at the toxicology department of the Bishkek Trauma and Orthopedic Center.

On April 15, Japarov said in a post on Facebook that the root had proven to be an "effective" method to treat COVID-19.

The entry contained a video showing men without protective equipment bottling a solution with extracts from the aconite root, warning that drinking the solution while it is cold might result in death.

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THE AUTHORS


Ilya Gerol, former foreign editor of the Citizen in Ottawa, syndicated columnist in Canadian, US and European media specializing in international affairs. His area of expertise includes Russia, Eurasian Economic Union, Eastern and Central Europe.  Ilya Gerol has written several books, one of them, The Manipulators, has become a textbook on relations of media and society.

During his career in the Canadian Foreign Service, Gilles Breton had three assignments at the Canadian Embassy in Moscow. His first posting there began during the Soviet period, in 1983. His last was from 2008 to 2012 as Minister-Counsellor and Deputy Head of Mission. He also served as Deputy Director responsible for Canada’s relations with Russia from 2000 to 2008. As an international civil servant, he was Deputy Director of the OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights in Warsaw from 1994 to 1997.

Gilles Breton also currently serves as Chairman of the National Board of the Canada-Eurasia-Russia Business Association. The views expressed in this newsletter exclusively reflect the opinion of the authors.

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