As noted yesterday, after speaking with Russian dictator Vladimir Putin by telephone, German Chancellor Angela Merkel told Barack Obama that Putin did not seems to be in touch with reality. Such is the way of tyrants and one need only look at figures such as Hitler and Stalin who harmed millions while living in their own insane, paranoid alternate worlds. The irony in Putin's case is that - if Russia and the world are lucky - he may be hastening his own ultimate demise. A piece in
Time looks at four things that are occurring which despite Putin's initial military success may spell long therm disaster for this dangerous egomaniac. Here are article excerpts:
In the coming days and weeks, Putin will have to decide how far he
is prepared to take this intervention and how much he is prepared to
suffer for it. It is already clear, however, that he cannot emerge as
the winner of this conflict, at least not when the damage is weighed
against the gains. It will at best be a Pyrrhic victory, and at worst an
utter catastrophe. Here’s why:
1. At home, this intervention looks to be one of the most unpopular decisions Putin has ever made. The Kremlin’s own pollster released a survey
on Monday that showed 73% of Russians reject it. In phrasing its
question posed in early February to 1,600 respondents across the
country, the state-funded sociologists at WCIOM were clearly trying to
get as much support for the intervention as possible: “Should Russia
react to the overthrow of the legally elected authorities in Ukraine?”
they asked. Only 15% said yes — hardly a national consensus.
That seems astounding in light of all the brainwashing Russians have
faced on the issue of Ukraine. For weeks, the Kremlin’s effective
monopoly on television news has been sounding the alarm over Ukraine.
Its revolution, they claimed, is the result of an American alliance with
Nazis intended to weaken Russia. And still, nearly three-quarters of
the population oppose a Russian “reaction” of any kind, let alone a
Russian military occupation like they are now watching unfold in Crimea.
Monday’s survey suggests that the influence of Putin’s television
channels is breaking down. The blatant misinformation and demagoguery on
Russian television coverage of Ukraine seems to have pushed Russians to
go online for their information. And as for those who still have no
Internet connection, they could simply have picked up the phone and
called their panicked friends and relatives in Ukraine.
Even the adherents of the Communist Party, who tend to feel entitled to
all of Russia’s former Soviet domains, said with a broad majority — 62% —
that Russia should not jump into Ukraine’s internal crisis.
In Monday’s survey, 30% of respondents from Moscow and St. Petersburg
said Russia could see massive political protests of the kind that
overthrew the Ukrainian government last month. Putin’s only means of
forestalling that kind of unrest is to crack down hard and early. So on
Feb. 28, Russia’s most prominent opposition activist Alexei Navalny was put under house arrest
less than six months after he won 30% of the vote in the Moscow mayoral
race. Expect more of the same if the opposition to Putin’s intervention
starts to find its voice.
2. The economic impact on Russia is already staggering.
When markets opened on Monday morning, investors got their first chance
to react to the Russian intervention in Ukraine over the weekend, and as
a result, the key Russian stock indexes tanked by more than 10%. That
amounts to almost $60 billion in stock value wiped out in the course of a
day, more than Russia spent preparing for last month’s Winter Olympic
Games in Sochi. The state-controlled natural-gas monopoly Gazprom, which
accounts for roughly a quarter of Russian tax revenue, lost $15 billion in market value in one day.
The value of the Russian currency meanwhile dropped against the
dollar to its lowest point on record, and the Russian central bank spent
$10 billion on the foreign-exchange markets trying to prop it up. “This
has to fundamentally change the way investors and ratings agencies view
Russia,” said Timothy Ash, head of emerging-market research at Standard
Bank. At a time when Russia’s economic growth was already stagnating,
“this latest military adventure will increase capital flight, weaken
Russian asset prices, slow investment and economic activity and growth.
Western financial sanctions on Russia will hurt further,” Ash told the Wall Street Journal.
3. Even Russia’s closest allies want no part of this.
The oil-rich state of Kazakhstan, the most important member of every
regional alliance Russia has going in the former Soviet space, put out a
damning statement
on Monday, marking the first time its leaders have ever turned against
Russia on such a major strategic issue: “Kazakhstan expresses deep
concern over the developments in Ukraine,” the Foreign Ministry said.
“Kazakhstan calls on all sides to stop the use of force in the
resolution of this situation.”
Every single state in the former Soviet Union, from Central Asia to the
Baltics, has a large Russian-speaking population, and this statement
means that Russia reserves the right to invade when it feels that
population is threatened. The natural reaction of any Russian ally in
the region would be to seek security guarantees against becoming the
next Ukraine.
[I]n the course of one weekend, Putin has spooked all the countries he
wanted to include in his grand Eurasian Union, the bloc of nations he
hoped would make Russia a regional power again.
4. Russia’s isolation from the West will deepen dramatically.
In June, Putin was planning to welcome
the leaders of the G-8, a club
of Western powers (plus Japan), in the Russian resort city of Sochi. But
on Sunday,
all of them announced
they had halted their preparations for attending the summit in protest
at Russia’s intervention in Ukraine. So much for Putin’s hard-fought
seat at the table with the leaders of the Western world.
In recent years, one of Russia’s greatest points of contention with
the West has been over NATO’s plans to build a missile shield in Europe.
Russia has seen this as a major threat to its security, as the shield
could wipe out Russia’s ability to launch nuclear missiles at the West.
[A]fter Russia decided to unilaterally invade its neighbor to the west
this weekend, any remaining resistance to the missile-shield project
would be pushed aside by the renewed security concerns of various NATO
members, primarily those in Eastern Europe and the Baltics. Whatever
hopes Russia had of forestalling the construction of the missile shield
through diplomacy are now most likely lost.
No less worrying for Putin would be the economic sanctions the West is preparing
in answer to Russia’s intervention in Ukraine. Depending on their
intensity, those could cut off the ability of Russian companies and
businessmen in getting Western loans and trading with most of the
world’s largest economies. Putin’s allies could also find it a lot more
difficult to send their children to study in the West or to keep their
assets in Western banks, as they now almost universally do. All of that
raises the risk for Putin of a split in his inner circle and,
potentially, even of a palace coup. There is hardly anything more
important to Russia’s political elite than the security of their foreign
assets, certainly not their loyalty to a leader who seems willing to
put all of that at risk.
The Russian people deserve better than Vladimir Putin and I for one hope his days in power are numbered. It would be a sweet irony if Ukraine does become his Waterloo.
No comments:
Post a Comment