War Erupts Inside the
Atlantic Council Over Article Questioning Washington’s Hostile Approach to
Moscow
Almost two dozen Atlantic Council fellows denounced a piece that said the US
policy towards Russia should not be focused on human rights
Dave DeCamp Posted on March 15, 2021
An article was written by two
Atlantic Council employees that argue Washington should consider a more
realistic approach to Russia caused quite the stir
within the think tank.
The article, written by Emma
Ashford and Mathew Burrows, says the US should “avoid a human-rights-first
approach to Russia.” The authors suggest that the Biden administration should
instead “seek to build a less aspirational policy toward Russia, minimize the
use of sanctions, and look for incentives that might induce Moscow to take
steps in line with US interests.”
Ashford and Burrows make an
argument grounded in reality. The US does not have the power to control what
happens inside Russia through sanctions and other unilateral means. The authors
are not at all sympathetic to Russian President Vladimir Putin and don’t even
suggest lifting sanctions that are currently in place. But at the
hyper-interventionist Atlantic Council, the idea of taking a less hostile
approach to Russia is out of the question to many of its employees.
Twenty-two Atlantic Council
fellows signed a statement
denouncing the article. “Their article is premised on a false assumption
that human rights and national interests are wholly separate,” the statement
reads. The statement ignores the fact that Washington cooperates with many
countries with questionable human rights records, including some of the
Atlantic Council’s top donors.
In the 2019 fiscal
year, the embassy of the United Arab Emirates contributed over $1 million to
the Atlantic Council. The UAE’s state oil company also chipped in over $250,000
for the think tank. Abu Dhabi is not the only Gulf monarchy that funds the
Atlantic Council, the embassy of Bahrain donated somewhere between $100,000 and
$249,000.
While the Atlantic
Council’s Gulf funding is rarely questioned, the article from Ashford and
Burrows caused some of its employees to complain about recent donations from
Charles Koch, who funds the libertarian Cato Institute that advocates for a
less interventionist foreign policy.
The Atlantic Council
received a $4.5 million donation over five years from Koch that set up the New American
Engagement Initiative (NAEI) and brought over some experts from the
Cato Institute, including Ashford. According to its website, the NAEI aims to
question the “prevailing assumptions governing US foreign policy, in particular
with respect to the efficacy of the military intervention and the lost potential of
diplomacy.”
Atlantic Council fellows that
signed the statement denouncing Ashford and Burrow’s article made it clear that
to them, questioning US aggression is akin to spreading Russian propaganda.
“The Koch industry operates as a Trojan horse operation trying to destroy good
institutions and they have pretty much the same views as the Russians,” one
person that signed the letter told Politico.
“The general view at the
Atlantic Council is to send them back to the Cato Institute where they came
from,” another person that signed the statement said. While they all had harsh
words for Ashford and Burrow’s article, the people that spoke with Politico who
signed the statement refused to go on the record and spoke anonymously.
One signatory to the
statement did go on record in his criticism and published an article responding
to Ashford and Burrow’s argument. Dylan Myles-Primakoff, who heads the Free
Russia Foundation at the Atlantic Council wrote a piece
titled “America’s Russia
policy must not ignore human rights.”
Myles-Primakoff argued that
“Russia’s domestic politics and its foreign policy are inextricably linked.”
His main example for this was what he described as the 2014 “invasion” of
Ukraine that resulted in Russia annexing Crimea. Myles-Primakoff said the
annexation of Crimea had a purpose in “Russia’s domestic politics.” He said the
Russian government “sought to convince Russians that the inevitable result
of a popular reform movement like Ukraine’s Euromaidan was not dignity and
democracy, but violence and chaos.”
Myles-Primakoff is right
that the Euromaidan protests that led to the ouster of former Ukrainian
President Viktor Yanukovych, who was democratically elected, caused Russia to
annex Crimea, but he ignores crucial context. First, referendum after
referendum shows the largely ethnic
Russian population of Crimea favored joining the Russian Federation. This is also demonstrated
by the fact that what Myles-Primakoff called an “invasion” was met with no
violent resistance.
Second, Myles-Primakoff
makes no mention of Washington’s role in the ouster of Yanukovych. The US threw
its full weight behind the opposition in Ukraine during demonstrations in 2013
and 2014, an opposition that even had a neo-nazi
element. A few weeks before Yanukovych was forced out, a recording of a phone call between then-US
Ambassador to Ukraine Geoffrey Pyatt and Victoria Nuland, who was working in
the State Department at the time, was leaked and released on YouTube. In the now-infamous
phone call, Nuland and Pyatt discussed who should replace the government of
Yanukovych.
Like the ethnic Russians in
Crimea, the ethnic Russians in Ukraine’s eastern Donbas region also rejected
the post-coup government in Kyiv, sparking the war that has killed tens of
thousands. The context of US involvement in the coup that sparked these events
is crucial, especially when discussing what US foreign policy should look like
in that part of the world. There’s an argument to be made that neither the
annexation of Crimea nor the war in the Donbas would have happened the way it
did if not for US intervention.
Myles-Primakoff took issue
with Ashford and Burrows pointing out that US-Russia relations began rapidly
declining around the 2011 and 2012 protests in Russia. Ashford and Burrows
write: “US-Russia relations declined markedly in 2011-12 after then-Secretary
of State, Hillary Clinton voiced support for protests in Moscow.”
Myles-Primakoff says this line ignores the context of what was happening in
Russia at the time and blames Putin’s decision to run for a third term and
alleged fraud in the 2011 parliamentary elections for the damage that was done
to the US-Russia relationship at the time.
But Myles-Primakoff again
misses the mark with his argument. In 2011, Clinton voiced support for
protesters in Russia and voiced concern over claims of fraud in the
parliamentary elections. Putin responded by accusing
Clinton of inciting protests. “They heard the
signal and with the support of the US State Department began active work,”
Putin said.
Myles-Primakoff described
Putin’s comments as a “wild conspiratorial response.” While Putin may have been
overstating it, he had real reasons to fear that the US was funding protesters
and opposition groups in Russia. Clinton based her claims of election fraud on
a report from an election monitoring organization known as Golos, which was accusing the Russian
government of violating election laws before votes were
cast in the 2011 parliamentary election.
At the time, Golos was
funded by the US government through the US Agency
for International Development (USAID). Golos was also receiving
money from the National Endowment for Democracy, an organization that presents
itself as a private company but is funded almost entirely by the US government.
The US government was also
funding political parties inside Russia at the time. “We had been offering
political training to every political party in Russia, to Putin’s own party, to
the Communists, but also to Putin’s opponents,” Victoria Nuland
told PBS in 2017 when discussing the
2011 elections. Although Nuland said the US was training Putin’s United Russia
party through the NED and similar organizations, the party had rejected earlier claims from
Nuland that they got funding from USAID.
With the US so deeply
entrenched in Russia’s politics in 2011, Washington certainly had ways to
influence Putin’s opposition and these facts make the Russian president seem
less paranoid than Myles-Primakoff would like readers to believe. Russia’s
Central Electoral Commission eventually issued a report on the 2011 elections
and found out of the 1686 reports on irregularities they investigated, 11.5 percent were
confirmed to be true. Only 60 of the complaints were claims that voting
results were falsified. In 2012, Putin kicked USAID out of Russia.
Myles-Primakoff also
addresses jailed Russian opposition figure Alexei Navalny, who Ashford and
Burrows described as “an open nationalist who is widely known to agree with Putin
on many foreign policy questions; he backed the Russian seizure of Crimea and
has made racist and Islamophobic remarks.”
Myles-Primakoff rebuked the
claim that Navalny “backed” the annexation of Crimea by using a quote from
Navalny in 2014. The opposition figure said, “Crimea was seized with egregious
violations of all international regulations.” While this is a real quote from
Navalny, Myles-Primakoff presented it out of context. Navalny made the comment
while explaining that if he were president of Russia, he would not return
Crimea to Ukraine.
Here’s what Navalny
said in October 2014: “Crimea, of course, now de facto belongs
to Russia. I think that despite the fact that Crimea was seized with
egregious violations of all international regulations, the reality is
that Crimea is now part of Russia. Let’s not deceive ourselves. And I
would also strongly advise Ukrainians not to deceive themselves.”
Myles-Primakoff did not
challenge the assertion that Navalny is a nationalist who has made racist and
Islamophobic remarks. Due to past comments Navalny made, Amnesty International
revoked his status as a prisoner of conscience, which is being spun by
Western media as the result of a Russian government-backed smear
campaign, but Amnesty denies
that claim. “Reports that Amnesty’s decision was influenced
by the Russian state’s smear campaign against Navalny are untrue,” the rights
group said in a statement.
Ashford and Burrows also
touch on what is perhaps the most important aspect of the US-Russia
relationship: arms control. They argue that focusing on human rights inside
Russia interferes with progress on arms control. Myles-Primakoff says this
argument is irrelevant because Russia decided to extend New START, the vital
nuclear treaty that would have expired in February, amid threats of sanctions
from the new Biden administration. But extending New START is the bare minimum
Washington and Russia could do.
As the two largest nuclear
powers, the US and Russia have an obligation to the world to negotiate new
treaties to dismantle their enormous arsenals. With the Biden administration
slapping new sanctions on Russia over Navalny, it makes it much harder for Moscow
and Washington to negotiate a new treaty. New START had a built-in five-year
extension, so renewing the treaty took little more than a phone call. A brand
new treaty would require good faith.
But most funders of the
Atlantic Council have no interest in nuclear treaties or easing tensions with
Moscow. The think tank
receives contributions from the top US weapons makers, including Raytheon,
General Atomics, Boeing, Lockheed Martin, and Northrop Grumman. The Atlantic
Council is also funded by NATO, an alliance that has an interest in keeping
tensions high and presenting Russia’s annexation of Crimea as an unprovoked
“invasion.”
With these facts in mind,
it’s no surprise that Ashford and Burrows’ article caused such a stir within
the Atlantic Council. By making such a fuss over a mild criticism of
Washington’s hostile approach to Russia, the Atlantic Council fellows showed
their hand.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario