These countries are willing to risk US ire over Russia-Ukraine
The Global South is not intimidated and has
increasingly refused to ally with the West on sanctions and condemnations.
MAY 2, 2022
Written by
Stephen
Kinzer
Americans are fervently cheering for Ukraine in a war
that many believe is a decisive struggle for human freedom. The intensity of
our infatuation makes it easy to assume that everyone in the world shares it.
They don’t.
The impassioned American reaction is matched only in
Europe, Canada, and the handful of U.S. allies in East Asia. For many people in
the rest of the world, the Russia-Ukraine conflict is just another pointless
Western war in which they have no stake.
The two biggest countries in Latin America, Mexico and
Brazil, have refused to impose sanctions on Russia or to curtail trade. South Africa,
the economic powerhouse of the African continent, has done the same. Asia,
though, is where the resistance to joining the pro-Ukraine bloc appears most
deliberate and widespread. This has alarmed Washington. To fight back, the
United States is cracking its whip over
several Asian nations.
China and India, where more than one-third of the
world’s people live, are the most potent dissenters. Both abstained from the
recent United Nations vote condemning Russia, and both reject U.S.-backed
sanctions. There isn’t much more we can do to punish China, but India might
seem more vulnerable. Soon after the UN vote, Secretary of State Antony
Blinken announced that
the United States had begun “monitoring some recent concerning developments in
India, including a rise in human rights abuses.” Then President Biden’s chief
economic advisor, Brian Deese, warned India that it would face “significant and
long-term consequences” if it does not reconsider its “strategic alignment.”
Pakistan, a nuclear power with 200 million people, did
more than simply abstain from the UN vote. When the United States asked Prime
Minister Imran Khan to join the anti-Russia coalition, he scoffed,
“Are we your slaves…that whatever you say, we will do?” This came not
long after he told the Pentagon: “Any bases, any sort of action from Pakistani
territory into Afghanistan, absolutely not.” On the day President
Vladimir Putin launched the invasion of Ukraine, Khan was with him in the
Kremlin.
Meanwhile, Assistant Secretary of State Donald Lu told
a Congressional hearing that his people spoke to Sri Lankan and Pakistani officials on the
phone to press them to vote for the resolution.
He said he was “disappointed” with the results. On April 9 Khan was removed
from office after some members of Parliament who had supported him changed
sides and joined the opposition.
Pakistan’s pro-American military had let members of
Parliament know that it favored a no-confidence vote. Khan had other problems,
including a poor economic record. He has announced that he will seek to return
to power in next year’s election, campaigning against an “arrogant and
threatening” United States.
Washington is also in near-panic over a new security
pact that the Solomon Islands (population 650,000) has signed with China. The White House said it
would “have significant concerns and respond accordingly” if the pact gives
China too much military influence in the Solomons. Prime Minster Manasseh
Sogavare replied that he found it “very insulting” for the United States to
brand his country “unfit to manage our sovereign affairs.” Media in the
region have speculated about a possible coup, or even an invasion launched from
Australia.
Other Asian countries are joining the drift away from
America’s sphere of influence. Vietnam abstained from the UN vote condemning
Russia and then announced a series of joint maneuvers with
the Russian military. Indonesia, the world’s fourth-largest country, which will
host this year’s G20 summit, insists that
Putin will be invited despite U.S. and European efforts to isolate him.
At the other end of the continent, Prince Mohammed bin
Salman of Saudi Arabia reportedly refused to
speak to President Biden about increasing oil production, but had a long call
with Putin (according to the Kremlin),
and has invited China’s President Xi Jinping to
visit Riyadh soon. The United Arab Emirates refused to condemn Russia
because, according to a presidential adviser,
it “believes that taking sides would only lead to more violence.”
Few world leaders have endorsed Russia’s invasion.
Some, however, might be forgiven for wondering how the United States, which
bombed Serbia, invaded Iraq, occupied Afghanistan and attacked Libya, can claim
that it opposes aggression. They are steeped in accounts of CIA kidnappings
and torture in
secret prisons,
so calls from Washington to support the “rules-based order” ring hollow.
President Biden’s demand that Putin stand trial for
war crimes might be justified by reported atrocities, but could be seen as
hypocritical from a country that has refused to join the International
Criminal Court in the Hague and even threatened to
invade Holland if the court investigates American war crimes. The United States
insists that Ukraine must be free to choose its own path, but sometimes objects
when other countries seek to do so.
Forces in Asia, not Europe, will shape the coming
century. Many Asian nations see their interests aligned with those of the
continent’s giants, Russia and China. They are not as easily intimidated as
they once were. The United States is betting that threats and warnings will
bring them back into line. That could have the opposite result and alienate
them further.
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