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Russia and Bending: What Biden Didn’t Say

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Posted by Steve LeVine

Last Friday, O&G wrote of U.S. Vice President Joe Biden’s strong grasp of reality in the former Soviet Union, as expressed in his actions in Ukraine and Georgia. But yesterday, Secretary of State Hillary Clinton tried to sweep up in the wake of a later, widely remarked-upon Wall Street Journal interview with the vice president, headlined, “Biden Says Weakened Russia Will Bend to U.S.” Clinton’s remarks on a Sunday talk show came after a senior adviser to President Dmitri Medvedev asked, “Who is shaping the U.S. foreign policy, the president or respectable members of his team?”

The Russian official, Sergei Prikhodko, said he found the Journal story “perplexing.” I do too, but for different reasons: Unless Biden said something more than is in the story and the excerpts posted on the Journal website, he didn’t suggest that Russia will accede to U.S. wishes.

This is important because, bluntly speaking, the Journal headline and the follow-on reporting by The New York Times make Biden look wholly misinformed. This isn’t nuance — if Biden truly meant what the Journal reports he did, Mike McFaul, the National Security Council’s Russia hand, needs to get over to the Executive Office Building and have a little chat with him.

The Journal story, written by Peter Spiegel, synthesizes Biden’s remarks as such: The seriously weakened Russian economy will “force the country to make accommodations to the West on a wide range of national security issues, including loosening its grip on former Soviet republics and shrinking its vast nuclear arsenal.”

Within the story, we get this quote: “I think we vastly underestimate the hand that we hold.” The story goes on with this Biden quote: “Russia has to make some very difficult, calculated decisions. They have a shrinking population base, they have a withering economy, they have a banking sector and structure that is not likely to be able to withstand the next 15 years. They’re in a situation where the world is changing before them and they’re clinging to something in the past that is not sustainable.”

To summarize, Biden thinks that the Obama administration has underplayed its leverage as Russia suffers from a profoundly weak economy and disastrous demographics. On the merits of the assertion, I’d argue that the U.S. has not underestimated its leverage — to suggest that the U.S. can parlay Russian impoverishment into changed Kremlin policy on Iran, on missile defense, on European gas policy, and so on, is simply a misread of Russia. But this is beside the point. Biden does not predict Russian capitulation. It’s not in the quotes.

Now to the Journal’s second point — that Biden suggested that Russia will loosen its grip on former Soviet states such as Georgia and Ukraine.

Biden says the following: “I don’t expect the Russians to embrace — particularly this government, particularly Putin — to embrace the notion that [they should] reject a sphere of influence. But I do expect them to understand we don’t accept a sphere of influence.”

Fair enough — Moscow ought to recognize that Washington won’t shift a position on Central Asia, on the Caucasus, and on the other Slavic states that’s existed since George H.W. Bush’s administration. But where is the prediction of a Russian accommodation to the West’s position? It doesn’t appear in the quotes as far as I can see.

This isn’t Biden’s finest moment. But it’s a problem of a different order from what one would conclude from the Journal headline and lead.


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