By all reputable accounts the most important event in the
world last week was a gas deal.
After Vladimir Putin traveled to Shanghai to meet with
Chinese leader Xi Jinping, the two finally agreed on a deal whereby Russia
would sell enormous amounts of natural gas to China. Thus, the two leaders
sealed a new political and economic alliance.
The Economist reported:
ON MAY
21st, after a nail-biting session of late-night brinkmanship, China and Russia
signed an enormous gas deal worth, at a guess, around $400 billion. Their
agreement calls for Russia’s government-controlled Gazprom to supply
state-owned China National Petroleum Corporation with up to 38 billion cubic
metres of gas a year between 2018 and 2048.
The
Economist is less than overwhelmed by the event, but it reports the
possible geopolitical consequences fairly:
The
deal will help the Kremlin reduce Russia’s reliance on gas exports to Europe.
It is proof that Mr Putin has allies when he seeks to blunt Western sanctions
over Ukraine. Both Russia and China want to assert themselves as regional
powers. Both have increasingly strained relations with America, which they
accuse of holding them back. Just over 40 years ago Richard Nixon and Henry
Kissinger persuaded China to turn against the Soviet Union and ally with
America. Does today’s collaboration between Russia and China amount to a
renewal of the alliance against America?
To signal the new cooperation between the nations, the
leaders oversaw joint military exercises. To seal the new alliance Russia was
now going to sell more military technology to Russia.
David Goldman offers some added perspective on the Sino-Russian alliance:
Energy
is important, but military and aerospace technology may be even more important.
As the Russian newspaper observes, Russia had restricted exports of its best
equipment to China because of intellectual property violations. Two weeks ago
Putin approved sale of Russia’s new S400 air defense system to China; this
reportedly will give China air cover over the whole of Taiwan, among other
things.
Russia
always has had first-rate designers, but its production capacities never
matched the ideas. Merge Russian designs with Chinese engineering, and the
likelihood that the Sino-Russian combination might challenge US technological
superiority is high. It’s not surprising that Russia responded to US sanctions
by cutting off exports of the rocket engines on which the US depends to launch
spy satellites. Bloomberg reports that it will take the US six years to
build replacement capacity.
Placing these events in the context of recent calls—often from
Republicans—for more sanctions against Russia to punish it for its activities
in Crimea, Goldman responds to his critics:
I may
have lost most of my remaining Republican friends for ridiculing the sanctions
and saber-rattling at Russia over Ukraine. We spoke loudly and carried a small
stick.
For his part Charles Krauthammer compared the recent events
to Richard Nixon’s opening to China in 1972. More so since Putin is trying to
undo the results of Nixon’s diplomacy.
The Obama administration called for a pivot to Asia. As reported here, Israel is currently doing so. Now, Russia is doing its own
pivot.
As Krauthammer also explained, the new deal undermines
Western threats to punish Russia:
By
indelibly linking producer and consumer — the pipeline alone is a$70 billion infrastructure
project — it deflates the post-Ukraine Western threat (mostly empty,
but still very loud) to cut European imports of Russian gas. Putin has just
defiantly demonstrated that he has other places to go.
The Russia-China
deal also makes a mockery of U.S.
boasts to have isolated Russia because of Ukraine. Not
even Germany wants to risk a serious rupture with Russia (hence the
absence of significant sanctions). And now Putin has just ostentatiously
unveiled a signal 30-year energy partnership with the world’s second-largest
economy. Some isolation.
Our own fearless leader has been less successful with his
own pivot to Asia.
In Krauthammer’s words:
The
contrast with President Obama’s own vaunted pivot to Asia is embarrassing (to
say nothing of the Keystone pipeline with Canada). He
went to Japan last month also seeking a major trade agreement that
would symbolize and cement a pivotal strategic alliance. He
came home empty-handed.
Finally, Krauthammer places the trip in historical
perspective:
Putin
to Shanghai reprises Nixon to China. To be sure, it’s not the surprise that
Henry Kissinger pulled off in secret. But it is the capstone of a gradual — now
accelerated — Russia-China rapprochement that essentially undoes the
Kissinger-Nixon achievement.
Their
1972 strategic coup fundamentally turned the geopolitical tables on Moscow.
Putin has now turned the same tables on us. China and Russia together represent
the core of a new coalition of anti-democratic autocracies challenging the
Western-imposed, post-Cold War status quo. Their enhanced partnership marks the
first emergence of a global coalition against American hegemony since the fall
of the Berlin Wall.
Indeed,
at this week’s Asian cooperation conference, Xi
proposed a brand-new continental security system to include Russia and
Iran (lest anyone mistake its anti-imperialist essence) and exclude America.
This is an open challenge to the post-Cold War, U.S.-dominated world that Obama
inherited and then weakened beyond imagining.
If
carried through, it would mark the end of a quarter-century of unipolarity. And
herald a return to a form of bipolarity — two global coalitions: one free, one
not — though, with communism dead, not as structurally rigid or ideologically
dangerous as Cold War bipolarity. Not a fight to the finish, but a struggle
nonetheless — for dominion and domination.
As might be expected the Obama administration is clueless:
To
which Obama, who once proclaimed that “no one nation can or should try to
dominate another nation,” is passive, perhaps even oblivious. His pivot to Asia
remains a dead letter. Yet his withdrawal from the Middle East — where from
Egypt to Saudi Arabia, from Libya to Syria, U.S. influence is at its lowest ebb
in 40 years — is a fait accompli .
The
retreat is compounded by Obama’s proposed massive cuts in defense spending
(down to below 3 percent of GDP by 2017) even as Russia is rearming and China
is creating a sophisticated military soon capable of denying America
access to the waters of the Pacific Rim.
Have a nice day!
"Both have increasingly strained relations with America, which they accuse of holding them back. Just over 40 years ago Richard Nixon and Henry Kissinger persuaded China to turn against the Soviet Union and ally with America."
ReplyDeleteRidiculous. No persuading was necessary. Relations between China and Russia had totally deteriorated already in the early 60s.
Just because the Soviet Union and China had bad relations... that does not mean that the Chinese would necessarily welcome the Americans-- and would do so without some very good diplomacy.
ReplyDelete