Putin's Power Play In Syria Is Win-Win
By: Rachel Marsden
PARIS -- Boy, was that ever painful, watching Russian President Vladimir
Putin attempting to pry U.S. President Barack Obama's fingers off the Tomahawk
missile trigger and convince him not to go ahead with an attack that Obama most
likely didn't want to launch in the first place.
America won, and so did Russia. I realize that sounds bizarre, but this isn't a
football game with a winner and a loser. It's not like Obama is going to have to
give his Nobel Peace Prize to Putin as if it were the Lombardi Trophy and only
one team at a time can have it (although some have suggested as much).
A lot of people are saying that the United Nations Security Council's resolution
forcing Syria to turn over its chemical weapons to international control -- and
the explicit absence of any military force in the event of noncompliance -- is a
major diplomatic victory for Russia. A friend working in the American
intelligence community told me that he thought Putin had managed to outsmart
Obama using his chess-master, spymaster and other Russian-cliché-master talents
to get exactly what he wanted in Syria.
Putin is a black belt in judo, and it seems that he adopted that sport's
strategy of capitalizing on the momentum of an opponent's punch to throw him to
the ground. In this case, the punch was being thrown by a U.S. president
bringing his nation to the brink of war in the absence of public support or the
evidence to win it.
Still, it would be a mistake to see this as a zero-sum game. What is America's
loss here? If anything, it's a net gain, because if Islamic extremists are
flooding into Syria, as has been reported, then responsibility for the war on
terrorism in the region is placed directly onto Russia's shoulders. If Obama can
let Putin handle it without crying about Russians infringing on the humanitarian
rights of those extremists, simply because it's Russia leading the cleanup and
because Cold War rivalries die hard, then everybody wins. Odds are slim to none
that Russia is going to drop the ball on an opportunity to eradicate Islamic
extremism -- or risk such an opportunity by letting Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad behave like a nut job.
Indeed, it's worth the effort for the Russians if they can keep both Assad and
the powder keg under his feet under control to prevent him from being replaced
by a less secular leader. Perhaps even more important to Russia than the
preservation of port access and direct trade, a stabilized Syria with Assad
behaving himself would mean that Russian energy transit routes to Europe won't
face competition from any pipelines sought by Gulf nations like Saudi Arabia and
Qatar -- which, not coincidentally, are providing significant material support
to the anti-Assad rebels. Assad in power means that a pro-Saudi/Qatari
alternative will be shut out of Syria in favor of the current status quo between
Syria and Russia.
As for whether this near-monopoly would be detrimental to Europe's energy
market, probably not, since Russia is already Europe's top oil and gas supplier,
and there's no evidence that having the Saudis or Qataris share that market with
Russia would prove advantageous to European countries. Given the ongoing global
war against Islamic extremism, perhaps the more important question is whether
Europe would want to diversify its energy imports in favor of these two Islamic
regimes. With a near-doubling in Qatari natural gas exports to Europe from 2009
to 2010, and with Saudi Arabia and Iran already being the fourth- and
fifth-largest crude oil exporters to Europe, according to Eurostat, perhaps
Europe's preference is to cultivate some control over these regimes through
trade partnerships -- a strategy that Russia has applied successfully to former
Soviet satellite states, and that China has exercised in places such as Africa
and South America.
The flip side is that Syrian stability also increases the likelihood of eventual
pipelines from Iran and Iraq into Syria. Iran, a close Russian ally whose fuel
would supply Syria itself via a pipeline through Iraq, wouldn't compete with
Gazprom on the European gas market. But America may not like seeing Iraq, a
nation on which it just spilled blood and tears for a war and 10 years' worth of
rebuilding, buddy up to Syria, Iran and other players in the region, who are at
best the competition and at worst a potential security threat.
But with North America set to achieve energy independence within this decade,
the returns on such forays into oil-rich foreign lands aren't what they used to
be, and trying to break up trading blocks on the other side of the planet is
like trying to have a long-distance relationship with a woman who's already
going out with a guy in the same town. A bit more creativity is in order, since
threatening to get the guy fired, or depriving him of his resources, or just
straight-up kicking his butt probably won't work in the long run, if at all.
Putin just took at least one major drama queen and her entourage off America's
hands. Accept the breakup, wish them well and move on. She's his problem now,
and he's only too happy to take full responsibility.
COPYRIGHT 2013 RACHEL MARSDEN