Containing Russia: Back to the Future?
by Sergey Lavrov
[Subscribe online to Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture. Click here for details].
Editor’s Note: The following article by the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs was offered to the editors of Foreign Affairs for publication last May. Mr. Lavrov says he wanted to explain Russian foreign policy to an educated American audience and to respond to the discussion that started in the journal’s pages on the theme of “containing Russia” by the publication of an article signed by Yulia Tymoshenko, a prominent Ukrainian politician.
Editors at the magazine, citing their own requirements, subjected the article to extensive editing; the Russians complained of censorship because the article was cut by 40 percent. In the end, the Russian Foreign Ministry issued a statement that, as a result of the “excruciating and sluggish exchanges with the editors, the likes of which could only be found in diplomatic history,” the article was withdrawn. “This experience caused us to remember the worst features of the Soviet censorship past, which some in America seem to be trying to repeat,” the statement said.
The article came at a time of rampant Russophobia in the Western media and political circles. Rep. Tom Lantos notably compared Putin with the cartoon character Popeye, saying, “They’re eating the spinach of petroleum revenues, and the billions are flowing into the Kremlin, and with every billion . . . Putin’s muscles bulge more powerfully.” Last July Corriere della Sera published a notable interview with Richard Pipes, who claimed that we were heading for a new cold war. “For Europe, Russia could be even more dangerous than the threat of Islam, more hazardous than bin Laden”, he said. “When I come to Russia I’m always stricken with hostility of the country towards the West. Containment policy with regard to the country is necessary as well as it was with regard to the Soviet Union,” Pipes argued.
We bring Mr. Lavrov’s article to our readers without prejudice, as a supplement to Pat Buchanan’s excellent article published yesterday and in order to provide our readers with some relevant first-hand information unavailable from the Mainstream Media.
****
Influential political forces on both sides of the Atlantic appear intent on starting a debate about whether or not to “contain” Russia. The mere posing of the question suggests that, for some, almost nothing has changed since the Cold War. What is a return to containment meant to achieve at a time when Russia has abandoned ideology and imperial aspirations in favor of pragmatism and common sense? What is the purpose of containing a country that is successfully developing and thereby naturally strengthening its international position? What is the point of containing a country that aspires to things as basic as international trade?
It should be no surprise that Russia today is making use of its natural competitive advantages. It is also investing in its human resources, encouraging innovation, integrating into the global economy, and modernizing its legislation. Russia wants international stability to underpin its own development. Accordingly, it is working toward the establishment of a freer and more democratic international order.
The new advocacy of containment may stem from a substantial gap between Russian and U.S. aspirations. U.S. diplomacy seeks to transform what Washington considers “nondemocratic” governments around the world, reordering entire regions in the process. Russia, with its experience with revolution and extremism, cannot subscribe to any such ideologically driven project, especially one that comes from abroad. The Cold War represented a step away from the Westphalian standard of state sovereignty, which placed values beyond the scope of intergovernmental relations. A return to Cold War theories such as containment will only lead to confrontation.
In contrast to the Soviet Union, Russia is an open country that does not erect walls, either physical or political. On the contrary, Russia calls for the removal of visa barriers and other artificial hurdles in international relations. It espouses democracy and market economics as the right bases for social and political order and economic life.
Although Russia has a long way to go, it has chosen a path of development that entails unprecedented, and at times painful, changes. Russian society has reached a broad consensus that these changes should be evolutionary and free of upheavals. Ultimately, a mature democracy, with a vibrant civil society and a well-structured party system, will emerge from a higher level of social and economic development. This requires a substantial middle class, which cannot come into being overnight. It was only Russian tycoons who emerged overnight in the early 1990s—and those times are definitely over.
Frictional Energy—Countries dependent on external sources of energy criticize Russia for assuming its naturally large role in the global energy sector. However, those countries should recognize that energy dependence is reciprocal: hoarding is not a wise choice for an energy exporting country. That is why Russia has never failed to fulfill any of its hydrocarbon-supply contracts with importing countries. Russia does, however, consider energy to be a strategic sector that helps safeguard independence in its foreign relations. This is understandable given the negative external reactions to Russia’s strengthened economy and enlarged role in international affairs, in which Russia lawfully employs its newly gained freedom of action and speech. It should not be criticized by those who frown on a stronger Russia.
The Russian government’s energy policy reflects a global trend toward state control over natural resources. Ninety percent of the world’s proven hydrocarbon reserves are under some form of state control. Such state control of energy resources is offset, however, by the concentration of cutting-edge technology in the hands of private transnational corporations. Thus, there are incentives for cooperation between the parties, with each sharing the same objective of meeting the energy requirements of the world economy.
Russia is pursuing a foreign policy in striking contrast to the ideologically motivated internationalism of the Soviet Union. Today, Russia believes that multilateral diplomacy based on international law should manage regional and global relations. As globalization has extended beyond the West, competition has become truly global—nothing less than a paradigm shift. Competing states must now take into account differing values and development patterns. The challenge is to establish fairness in this complex competitive environment.
The logical approach is for countries to focus on their competitive advantages without imposing their values on others. U.S. attempts to do the latter have weakened the West’s competitive position. As Eberhard Sandschneider, director of the Research Institute of the German Society for Foreign Policy, has put it, U.S. policies in recent years have “damaged tremendously the image of the West” in Asia and Africa. He concludes that nothing, or almost nothing, has been done to make Western values attractive to Asian and African populations. Russia can hardly be held responsible for that.
In his speech in Munich earlier this year, Russian President Vladimir Putin stated the obvious when he said that a “unipolar world” had failed to materialize. Recent experience shows as clearly as ever that no state or group of states possesses sufficient resources to impose its will on the world. Hierarchy might seem attractive to some in global affairs, but it is utterly unrealistic. It is one thing to respect American culture and civilization; it is another to embrace Amero-centrism.
The new international system has not one but several leading actors, and their collective leadership is needed to manage global relations. This multipolarity encourages network diplomacy as the best way for states to achieve shared objectives. In this system, the United Nations becomes pivotal, providing through its charter the means for collective discussion and action.
The Limits of Force—In 21st century, delay in solving accumulated problems carries devastating consequences for all nations. One sure lesson is that unilateral responses, consisting primarily of using force, result in stalemates and broken china everywhere. The current catalog of unresolved crises—Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Darfur, North Korea—is a testament to that. Genuine security will only be achieved through establishing normal relations and engaging in dialogue. German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier hit the right note when he counseled that today’s world should be based on cooperation rather than military deterrence.
Complex problems require comprehensive approaches. In the case of Iran, resolving differences should lie in the normalization by all countries of their relations with Tehran. Normalization would also help preserve the nuclear nonproliferation regime. Regarding Kosovo, independence from Serbia would create a precedent that goes beyond the existing norms of international law. Our partners’ inclination to give way to the blackmail of violence and anarchy in Kosovo contrasts with the indifference shown to similar violence and anarchy in the Palestinian territories, where it has been tolerated for decades while a Palestinian state has yet to be established.
Eliminating the Cold War legacy in Europe, where the containment policy was dominant for too long, is especially pressing. Creating division in Europe encourages nationalist sentiments that threaten the unity of the continent. The current problems faced by the European Union, in particular, and European politics, in general, cannot be solved without Europe’s maintaining constructive and future-oriented relations with Russia—relations based on mutual trust and confidence. This ought to be seen as serving U.S. interests as well.
Instead, various attempts are being made to contain Russia, including through the eastward expansion of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in violation of previous assurances given to Moscow. Today, supporters of NATO enlargement harp on the organization’s supposed role in the promotion of democracy. How is democracy furthered by a military-political alliance that is producing scenarios for the use of force?
Meanwhile, some are promoting the extension of NATO membership to the countries that comprise the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) as some sort of pass providing admittance to the club of democratic states whether these countries meet the democratic test or not. One cannot help wondering whether this initiative is being pursued for the sake of moral satisfaction or again to contain Russia.
As far as the CIS is concerned, Russia has the capacity to maintain social, economic, and other forms of stability in the region. Moscow’s rejection of politicized trade and economic relations and its adoption of market-based principles testifies to its determination to have normalcy in interstate relations. Russia and the West can cooperate in this region but only by forsaking zero-sum power games.
The drive to place missile defenses in eastern Europe is evidence of the U.S. effort to contain Russia. It is hardly coincidental that this installation would fit into the U.S. global missile defense system that is deployed along Russia’s perimeter. Many Europeans are rightfully concerned that stationing elements of the U.S. missile defense system in Europe would undermine disarmament processes. For its part, Russia considers the initiative a strategic challenge that requires a strategic response.
President Putin’s offer to allow joint usage of the Gabala radar base in Azerbaijan, instead of those eastern European installations—as well as his proposal, made when meeting with President George W.Bush in Kennebunkport, Maine, in July, to create a regional monitoring and early warning system—provides a brilliant opportunity to find a way out of the present situation with the dignity of all parties intact. As a starting point for a truly collective effort in this area, Russia is willing to take part, together with the United States and others, in a joint analysis of potential missile threats up to the year 2020.
The desire to contain Russia clearly manifests itself as well in the situation surrounding the 1990 Treaty on Conventional Armed Forces in Europe (or CFE Treaty). Russia complies with the treaty in good faith and insists only on the one thing that the treaty promises: equal security. However, the equal security principle was compromised with the dissolution of the Warsaw Pact; meanwhile, NATO was left intact and then enlarged. In the meantime, attempts to correct the situation have come up against the refusal of NATO member countries to ratify the modernization of the treaty under various unrelated pretexts that have no legal justification and are entirely political. The lesson to be drawn from the CFE Treaty stalemate is that any element of global or European security architecture that is not based on the principles of equality and mutual benefit will not prove to be sustainable. After all, if we cannot adapt this old instrument to the new realities, is it not time to review the situation and start developing a new system of arms control and confidence-building measures, if we find that Europe needs one? Here again, frank discussion at Kennebunkport gave hope that there is way to move toward putting into force the adapted treaty.
Beyond The Cold War—It is time to bury the Cold War legacy and establish structures that meet the imperatives of this era—particularly since Russia and the West are no longer adversaries and do not wish to create the impression that war is still a possibility. The path to trust lies through candid dialogue and reasoned debate, as well as interactions based on the joint analysis of threats. At the moment, however, without reasonable grounds, Russia is excluded from such joint analysis. Instead, it is urged to believe in the analytic abilities and good intentions of its partners.
Russians do not suffer from a sense of exceptionalism, but neither do they consider their analytic abilities and ideas inferior to those of others. Russia will respond to safeguard its national security, and in doing so will be guided by the principle of “reasonable sufficiency.” Meanwhile, it will always keep the door open for positive joint action to safeguard common interests on the basis of equality. This is the only serious approach to national security concerns.
In his speech in Munich, President Putin invited all of Russia’s partners to start a serious and substantive discussion of the current status of international affairs, which is far from satisfactory. Russia is convinced that a friend/enemy attitude toward it should be a thing of the past. If efforts are being undertaken to “counter Russia’s negative behavior,” how can Russia be expected to cooperate in areas of interest to its partners? One has to choose between containment and cooperation. This is relevant to Russia’s accession to the World Trade Organization and the Asian Development Bank and to the unwarranted continuance of the 1970s Jackson-Vanik amendment, which denies Russia permanent normal trading relations with the United States.
U.S.-Russian relations still enjoy the stabilizing benefits of a close and honest working relationship between President Putin and President Bush. Both countries and both peoples share the memory of their joint victory over fascism and their joint exit from the Cold War, which unites them in its own right. Should equal partnership prevail in U.S.-Russian relations, very little will be impossible for the two nations to achieve. The challenges are many—the struggle against international terrorism; organized crime & drug trafficking; the search for realistic climate protection; the development of nuclear energy while strengthening non-proliferation efforts; the pursuit of global energy security; and the exploration of outer space. Practical cooperation on these and other challenges should not be sacrificed on the altar of renewed containment.
At present, anti-Americanism is not as widespread in Russia as it is elsewhere. But a return to containment, and the bloc-based thinking that accompanies it, could trigger mutual alienation between Americans and Russians. The strains evident in the U.S.-Russian relationship call for a high-level working group charged with finding ways to further cooperation. The presidents of Russia and the United States support the idea of such a group, headed by the former statesmen Henry Kissinger and Yevgeny Primakov.
Both sides should demonstrate a broad-minded and unbiased vision, one that represents Russia and the United States as two branches of European civilization. Russia, the US and the EU should work together to preserve the integrity of the Euro-Atlantic space in global politics. For as Jacques Delors has said, whenever this troika “is divided by differences, whenever each party plays its own game, the risk of global instability greatly increases.”
So why not stand together and act in the spirit of cooperation and fair competition on the basis of shared standards and a respect for international law? At Kennebunkport in July, President Putin and President Bush demonstrated what teamwork can achieve. They agreed to look for common approaches to missile defense and strategic arms reductions, and they launched new initiatives on nuclear energy and nonproliferation. Russia and the United States have nothing to divide them; along with other partners, they share responsibility for the future of the world. It is not Russia that needs to be contained; it is those who would deprive the world of the benefits that will come from a strong U.S.-Russian partnership.
[Subscribe online to Chronicles: A Magazine of American Culture. Click here for details].


1 Comment by nikopiko on 19 October 2007:
Why on earth would any USA media outlet edit this article ?
There is absolutely nothing wrong with Mr.Lavrov stating his ideas to people in the US. If there is something someone does not like in the article then please publish your own rebuttal as you may wish. If this is blatant propaganda then I would say don’t publish it at all.
As for me, I believe Mr. Lavrov has shown a good path for the relations of our two countries and the EU to follow.
Well written and thank you Mr.Lavrov.
2 Pingback by Lebanon » Blog Archives » Blazers topple Northern Lebanon in district opener (Lancaster Online) on 20 October 2007:
[...] Containing Russia: Back to the Future? . The current catalog of unresolved crises—Iraq, Iran, Lebanon, Darfur, North Korea—is a testament [...]
3 Comment by Allen Wilson on 20 October 2007:
The spirit and much of the letter of what Mr Lavrov says here is what I would say if I were an American leader, especially if I were president. Most important, in my view, is this sentence: ‘Russia, the US and the EU should work together to preserve the integrity of the Euro-Atlantic space in global politics’.
4 Comment by Clyde Wilson on 20 October 2007:
Nikopiko—the kind of censorship you question is SOP in American academia, publishing, and media.
5 Comment by robert m. peters on 20 October 2007:
I was privileged to attend a small liberal arts college, which at the time I attended it was a true liberal arts college – with that being questionable today. At that college were two professors, one serving and one emeritus, who were from Russia. The one, the older, had served in the Czar’s navy as an officer. The other, the younger, had served as an officer in the Red Army. The older is now long since deceased. The younger is now a man well up in years.
Both men understood and loved the Russia which the Communists had forced them to leave. They knew Russia’s flaws and short comings, and made no apologies for them, presenting them to us students in graphic and sometimes morbid detail. Yet, there was, at least as told through the hearts and intellect of these two men, something redeemable and worthy about Russia. We students sensed it although it was difficult to share that which we sensed in the context of the Cold War, the communists having acquired not only the worst that was Russia but also having usurped the best which was Russia.
Minister Lavrov’s article brings back those moments in the 1960’s as the small cadre of us country boys who dared “learn Russia” sat and listened, often at the mandatory Russian table, to the soul of Russia being storied out by the profs.
It is a pity that the editors of Foreign Affairs will not let Minister Lavrov “speak.” Thanks to Chronicles for allowing him his voice.
6 Pingback by Eunomia · Russian Foreign Minister On Chronicles’ Site on 20 October 2007:
[...] Saturday, October 20th, 2007 in politics, foreign policy, Russia by Daniel Larison The new advocacy of containment may stem from a substantial gap between Russian and U.S. aspirations. U.S. diplomacy seeks to transform what Washington considers “nondemocratic” governments around the world, reordering entire regions in the process. Russia, with its experience with revolution and extremism, cannot subscribe to any such ideologically driven project, especially one that comes from abroad. The Cold War represented a step away from the Westphalian standard of state sovereignty, which placed values beyond the scope of intergovernmental relations. A return to Cold War theories such as containment will only lead to confrontation. ~Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov [...]
7 Comment by Fred Breisch on 20 October 2007:
This article in conjunction with Pat’s article says it all about US foreign policy goals. It’s a very bad situation and I doubt a change in the US administration with the next election will change anything.
Perhaps we had better straighten out democracy here in America before we continue trying to export it around the world.
8 Comment by SPQR on 20 October 2007:
Very powerful and even moving. I thank Chronicles for publishing this and have emailed it to friends in academia who would not otherwise have access to it.
And Daniel Pipes’comment is absurd. It shows how little the established conservatives understand Islam and how little feeling they have for our traditional fellow travelers.
US foreign policy is suffering from a dangerous Jacobite universalism.
9 Comment by robert reavis on 21 October 2007:
Mr. Peters wrote :
“Both men understood and loved the Russia which the Communists had forced them to leave. They knew Russia’s flaws and short comings, and made no apologies for them, presenting them to us students in graphic and sometimes morbid detail. Yet, there was, at least as told through the hearts and intellect of these two men, something redeemable and worthy about Russia.”
If one were to substitute the word Russia for America, you might be describing Tom Fleming, Clyde Wilson, Pat Buchanan, Sirja Trifkovich or any number of other citizens now labeled as, “Unpatriotic Americans” under the current “conservative” regime. The money and power is all on the other side today, but the truth is what it is and should be told and remembered even when it can’t be practiced. The appeals for money, activity and counter attack are misplaced in today’s environment. The old timers certainly need our support–financial, moral and otherwise — but as Homer noticed in the Odyssey, “few men are as good as their Fathers. Most are worse and few better. ” The priority today should be to know, remember and pass on the tradtion. This takes more courage, thoughtfulness and time, than it does money, organization or mindless activity. These latter three categories are today occupied territory and anyone visiting their precincts will become corrupted by the environment. rr
10 Comment by Roach on 21 October 2007:
Why we didn’t go to Russia and symbolically ask for their assistance based on their Chechen experience after 9/11 is a mystery. We have the same interest in that part of the world: oil, peace, and keeping the nut-cases down to a low roar. Instead we stupidly interfere with their internal affairs all of the time.
11 Comment by m. zurich on 21 October 2007:
The corporate press in the U.S. is pathetically one-sided beyond measure. It is responsible for first encouraging and second allowing, (never mind without normal questioning but with actual cheap cheerleading), all of the foreign policy mistakes of the past 10 years.
It is always pleasant of course to see sanity ‘reimposing’ itself…
Here is the maxim under one pseudonym or another I have always reminded us of: ‘Absolute or perfect balance in the world is rigged to be not possible (the world is alive and dynamic, not hypothetical); and for this very reason on the other hand approximate balance is Requisite.’
Children or more specifically ‘adolescents’ “think” or more accurately in this regard ‘believe’ in terms of absolutes … they take a non-dynamic [or absolute] wish or fantasy and ‘believe’ in it ‘as if’ they are actually ‘thinking’. There’s is nothing wrong with ‘belief’ indeed it is in human or conceptual creatures a BIOLOGICAL necessity. We do it and will always do it all the time. The mistake is to confuse it with thought. A belief [wish or idea] is open-ended, and good in that regard. Apparently even mother Nature has proven to be paradoxically in some NARROW regards open ended in allowing for creatures (ourselves) who are not only aware and thinking unconsciously…but aware of being aware and also thinking consciously as well. A thought in comparison with beliefs or a wish or an idea is not open ended. Rather it is something complete in itself and something we can Do. Here’s a thought – ‘don’t confuse motion with action.’
‘In 2003 and 2004 came the U.S.-supported and financed “color-coded revolutions” in Georgia and Ukraine, the geopolitical equivalent of Putin engineering anti-American regime changes in Mexico and Canada.’ -Trifkovic
The ‘belief’ in American right to hegemony or the cultural underpinning of a jewish notion in their being ‘chosen’ … is adolescence. Putin argued in the past let’s give them the benefit of the doubt. Now he is acting, based on our adolescent belief that an untenable IMBALANCE toward ourselves in the world is a good thing, by his instead having to become the sane responsible parent…in noticing Approximate Balance is Requisite.
I have also written in the past of noticing his courage and sanity, and am glad to see it continues to be the case. Of course perfect or absolute balance is NOT possible…only the temptation to act in one’s own interests in tipping the balance/s…too much toward oneself. We can Hope once it is Russia’s or china’s turn to make that mistake they do Not choose to. Or if they do then perhaps in the future America may have its own Putin. That would be ‘nice.’
___________________________________
12 Comment by robert m. peters on 21 October 2007:
If one lent an ear to the Fox-sponsored Republican “debates” on this October eve, one heard that the star of Putin and Russia is rising in the pantheon of enemies of the Neo-con and Rockefeller Republicans. Osama, were he listening to the debates, might feel that he is about to become a second tier enemy. He might even feel slighted. A co-star with Russia on the newly emerging enemies list is China. The refrain is to build a larger and more advanced military to “defend” against these “threats.” With the exception of one man on the podium, these Republicans represent a ship of fools – our ship! The problem is, that unlike Jonah, who volunteered to be thrown over board to save the ship and the crew, these men will throw or have already thrown us over board.
13 Comment by TRIFKOVIC on 21 October 2007:
THE ESSENTIAL THING IS that we need to DISCRIMINATE between fools, knaves and idiots on one side and real men on the other. Frank and meaningful DISCRIMINATION is the key to every society’s survival. As for the issue on hand, I’d gladly have Mr. Lavrov (or his boss, Pres. V.V. Putin, for that matter) as a welcome and honored guest at my dinner table, but not — God, assuredly not — Mrs. Clinton, Mr. Clinton, Mr. G.W. Bush, Mr. Biden, Mr. Lantos, Dr. Albright, Dr. Rice, Mr. Holbrooke, Gen. Clark, et al. Who cares — they’ll scoff — we are welcome at all smart parties inside the Beltway; but my table is good, my cellar is well stocked, and witty, warm, friendly, amusing and decent people are often to be found there. It is a life form they just cannot morph into, alas. “Chronicles” editors and contributors and a few like-minded Europeans are always welcome, it’s an idiot-free-zone here in the Secure Undisclosed Location on Chicago’s North Shore….
14 Comment by robert m. peters on 21 October 2007:
DR. TRIFKOVIC
Lavrov and Putin this country boy from the hills of north Louisiana ain’t, but I’ll put your hospitality to the test the next time I venture to the North Shore of Chicago. However, finding your undisclosed location may be a challenge.
Now, my table is also good and witty, warm, friendly, amusing and decent people are often to be found there; however, there is no cellar here because the water is only about two feet under the ground. Were it here, it would not be well stocked, save for iced-tea and butter milk!
15 Comment by TRIFKOVIC on 22 October 2007:
“European” above is generic and cultural, of course…
16 Comment by Bob on 22 October 2007:
As a case on point for Trifkovic # 13 :
“THE ESSENTIAL THING IS that we need to DISCRIMINATE between fools” see http://www.takimag.com/
“Like the proverbial canary in the coal mine, the now-infamous confrontation between Hitchens and Father Rutler at Manhattan’s Union League Club on May 1 portends worse things ahead. It reveals a deadly weakness in the conservative movement. It shows how carelessly and reflexively we have fallen into the habit of treating our enemies as friends, and our friends as enemies. Many of us, it appears, have lost the ability to tell the difference. This is no trival flaw. Unless corrected, it spells doom for our movement, and perhaps ultimately for our Republic.”
http://www.takimag.com/
17 Comment by Mickey Droney on 22 October 2007:
“In contrast to the Soviet Union, Russia is an open country that does not erect walls, either physical or political. On the contrary, Russia calls for the removal of visa barriers and other artificial hurdles in international relations. It espouses democracy and market economics as the right bases for social and political order and economic life.”
That paragraph is frightening. Maybe Russia should just join the EU and we can get this whole on-world government-thing moving more quickly.
18 Pingback by Relations with Russia « Vox Nova on 23 October 2007:
[...] with Russia Chronicles Magazine published an article from the Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs that had been originally written for [...]
19 Comment by Robert Pinkerton on 5 November 2007:
Born in 1944, I had been a Cold Warrior since advent of political consciousness. From age 17 (in 1962) until the fall of the USSR, the last paragraph of any letter I wrote was “… ceterum censeo delendam esse Muscoviam.” Solely and squarely on foreign-policy issues, I was a Goldwater activist in 1964. Once again solely and squarely on foreign policy issues, although I am the opposite of rich, I gave $1,000.00 to Mr. Reagan’s 1980 campaign. Because, between Reagan and Pope John Paul II, the Soviet Union was made to fall without an horrific world war, I forgave Mr. Reagan’s otherwise grossly negligent abdication of any State’s suzerain role over its economy, though I execrate the results of that negligence.
Long-time friends ask me why I became so indulgent to Boris Yeltsin and now to Gospodin Putin — even to the point of forgiving the latter’s past as a full Colonel in the KGB. My answer? Mother Russia was possessed of a devil from 1917 to 1991. Now it is necessary for her to recover from the ordeal of possession. Though I might be proved wrong before I die, I believe at this writing that “Tsar Vladimir” is not the rabid dog that the Soviet leaders were.