On July 27, 1999, Russia's new Prime Minister,
Sergei Stepashin, will visit Washington, D.C. Stepashin, who
succeeds Evgeny Primakov, is a former Minister of the Interior and
of Justice. Many in the Clinton Administration saw Stepashin's
appointment by President Boris Yeltsin and Primakov's removal as an
attempt to salvage Russia's relations with the West because
Primakov had opposed, frequently and openly, the United States on
many issues, including Iran, Iraq, and the war in Yugoslavia.
U.S.-Russia relations throughout the
conflict in Kosovo were at their lowest since the end of the Cold
War. First, Russia and the United States bitterly disagreed over
the intervention itself. Then Moscow equated a military move
against Yugoslavian President Slobodan Milosevic with aggression
against Russia. But the combination of Russia's financial crisis,
talk of a ground offensive mounted by the members of the North
Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), and possibly Milosevic's
brutality prompted Russia to help to bring peace to Yugoslavia.
Now, Russia has joined the NATO effort to police the peace process.
Both the Kremlin and the White House feel pressure to show that
they are serious about improving relations between Russia and the
United States. Stepashin's visit offers them an opportunity to do
so.
Because Stepashin, a pragmatist, is a
political unknown in the United States, the upcoming visit will be
his diplomatic debut. In addition to establishing smoother
relations with the United States, Stepashin hopes to facilitate the
release of a $4.5 billion loan announced by International Monetary
Fund (IMF) Managing Director Michel Camdessus in March 1999.
For
its part, the Clinton Administration has an ambitious agenda for
the meeting with Stepashin. Issues include such strategic security
concerns as negotiating the status of the 1972 Anti-Ballistic
Missile (ABM) Treaty; Russia's spread of the technology to
manufacture and deploy weapons of mass destruction (WMD),
especially to Iran and China; and space and technological
cooperation in the future.
To
ensure closer relations with Russia under Prime Minister Stepashin,
the Clinton Administration should:
- Formulate a new framework for
constructive relations with Russia.
With Primakov as Foreign Minister (January 1996 to August
1998) and Prime Minister (August 1998 to May 1999), Russia
retreated from the close partnership Presidents Yeltsin and Bill
Clinton had worked to establish. Primakov's anti-American stance
was evidence of the Cold War nostalgia afflicting many of the old
Soviet foreign policy elite who remained in positions of power in
Russia. Primakov also maintained a relationship with such
ideological opponents of the United States as Saddam Hussein of
Iraq, which made U.S.-Russia cooperation difficult on many
fronts.
Primakov was fired because, among other
things, President Yeltsin understands that Russia needs Western
investment and technology more than the West needs Russia. Moscow
will need the cooperation of the United States to move Russia's
economy out of its current slide. At the meeting with Stepashin,
the United States should build on Russia's cooperation in Bosnia
and Kosovo to pursue initiatives in three broad areas: (1) economic
development and the establishment of the rule of law in Russia to
create conditions for increased private investment from the West;
(2) an improvement in military cooperation by encouraging
coordination on peacekeeping in Kosovo, better civilian-military
relations, and the renewal of the NATO-based Partnership for Peace;
and (3) cooperation on strategic concerns, including
nonproliferation, moving beyond the ABM Treaty, and establishing a
new framework for negotiations on missile defense.
-
Urge Russia to reduce and eventually
eliminate its dependence on IMF credits.
Russia's dependence on assistance from the IMF and Western
countries places Russians more in debt and does not provide an
incentive to reform its failing economy. Russia's inability to meet
the requirements of previous IMF loans has led to frustration in
the West and resentment within Russia, which undermines good
relations. Instead of seeking additional assistance that would not
improve Russia's desperate economic situation, the Stepashin
government must pursue comprehensive reforms that encourage private
foreign investment, which would provide a far better foundation for
economic growth.
-
Demand an investigation of bilateral
and multilateral financial aid programs from the West.
According to some deputies in the State Duma and some
officials of the Central Bank, bank officials have mishandled, and
possibly even embezzled portions of, IMF and other loans to
Russia. Even former Russian
Prime Minister Viktor Chernomyrdin admits that some World Bank
credits, such as the coal industry credit, have disappeared. Such
allegations of multimillion-dollar corruption at the highest levels
of government in Russia involving funds from the IMF and the World
Bank undermine the hard-won trust of Western lenders and investors.
Russia needs to expose the activities of the officials involved in
such scandals as the FIMACO (Finance Investment Management Company)
affair, in which the Central Bank siphoned hundreds of millions of
dollars through an unknown offshore company to play Russia's highly
lucrative short-term bond market. To begin the process of renewing
confidence in Russia's market, Clinton Administration officials
should ask Prime Minister Stepashin to release the results of the
Central Bank audit recently conducted by
PricewaterhouseCoopers.
-
Establish a comprehensive program of
reforms.
Russia needs to conduct an unprecedented crackdown on crime
and corruption. As a former top law enforcement official, Stepashin
knows how corrupt Russia's economy is and that little will change
unless the government pursues reform. Western knowledge and experts
could facilitate the process--a lesson demonstrated in the Czech
Republic, Poland, Hungary, Bulgaria, and the Baltic States--but
Russians must perform the bulk of the work. These reforms include
strengthening the judicial system; introducing a currency board
(provided ample hard currency reserves are available); reducing
subsidies of industry and agriculture; passing a land code to
encourage the development of construction; promoting private
farming and agribusiness; reducing the pervasive barter system in
unmarketable, noncompetitive goods; and downsizing the military.
Although the Russians must perform the
brunt of the work, the United States should offer technical advice
and support from government and private-sector experts in business,
nongovernmental organizations, professional associations, and
academic institutions. The experience of pro-reform efforts in
Novgorod the Great, Nizhny Novgorod, Samara, and Saratov indicates
that such technical assistance should be focused on regions and
driven by local beneficiaries' demands. U.S. institutions should be
encouraged to sponsor Russian graduate students, young managers,
and administrators to give them exposure to the workings of a free
market. But Russians know best what they need. And it is the next
generation of Russians, who grew up under Soviet President Mikhail
Gorbachev's perestroika and Yeltsin's reforms, that offers the best
hope for Russia's future.
-
Restore cooperation between NATO and
Russia.
After the war in Kosovo commenced, Russia suspended all its
military-to-military contacts with NATO and its members. This is a
negative development that needs to be reversed. The
sensation-seeking dash by Russian paratroopers to the airport at
Pristina in Kosovo after the peace agreement was announced is an
example of the destabilizing actions that strained NATO-Russia
relations. The only NATO-Russia cooperation under way today occurs
within the framework of the Kosovo peacekeeping force (KFOR), which
is proceeding quite well. Both NATO and Russian commanders in
Kosovo have expressed satisfaction with the cooperation between
their troops on the ground. The United States should offer not only
to restore military-to-military contacts between NATO and Russia to
the pre-Kosovo levels and return Russia's military representatives
to NATO's headquarters in Brussels, Belgium, but also to build ties
between NATO members and Russia's forces through military
educational exchanges, joint rescue missions, and other
confidence-building measures.
Expand joint U.S.-Russia cooperation on
strategic arms and nonproliferation.
Russia proved itself a difficult partner on a number of
strategic issues, including missile defense. Russia's State Duma
has resisted ratification of the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty II
(START II) since 1993. To improve relations, the United States, and
Russia should concentrate their efforts on resolving outstanding
differences, including:
- Missile
defense agreements.
The ABM Treaty is a relic of the Cold War, signed and ratified
by the Soviet Union and the United States. The treaty bars the
United States from deploying a missile defense system for the
protection of its national territory. Today, the possibility of
missile attack no longer threatens just the two nuclear superpowers
of the 1970s. Several countries, including Iran, Iraq, Pakistan,
India, and North Korea--some of which are hostile to the United
States--are working to develop nuclear weapons and ballistic
missile programs.
At the recent summit of the Group of Eight
(G-8) industrial countries in Cologne Germany, Presidents Clinton
and Yeltsin committed to holding negotiations on both the ABM
Treaty and START III this fall. The joint statement is faulty; it
assumes that Russia can seek modifications to the ABM Treaty as
though it is a party to the treaty. The ABM Treaty, however, was
concluded between the United States and the Soviet Union, which no
longer exists. The diplomatic record demonstrates that Russia is
not, and never has been, a party to the treaty. In fact, the ABM
Treaty no longer is valid because no state, including Russia, is
capable of fulfilling the obligations the treaty imposed on the
Soviet Union. House Majority Leader Richard Armey (R-TX) and House
Majority Whip Tom DeLay (R-TX) describe this problem with the joint
Cologne statement in a June 28 letter to President Clinton.
At the upcoming meeting with Stepashin,
U.S. officials should announce two modifications to the Cologne
joint statement: (1) that the topic of the negotiations should be
cooperation during the transition period to the full deployment of
missile defense systems, not modifying the ABM Treaty; and (2) that
the forum for the negotiations should be the Defense and Space
Talks. The Clinton Administration walked out of these talks in
1993. They should be revived as an appropriate forum for discussing
deployment of ballistic missile defenses. Such talks could be
opened to other states interested in missile defense.
These modifications would allow Russia,
which is not a party to the legally defunct ABM Treaty, to
participate in the negotiations this fall.
- START III Talks.
The logic of the original Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty, START
I, is anchored in the Cold War reality of a bipolar world in which
imposing equal ceilings for the number of nuclear warheads in an
arsenal made sense. The proposed START III, however, would occur in
a very different strategic environment. Russia's gross national
product is $280 billion and falling; its military budget in 1998 is
estimated around $4 billion. The country's nuclear deterrent is
deteriorating. According to Russia's military and political
leaders, the country will have difficulty sustaining even 1,000
nuclear weapons in 2010. It is in Russia's interest to have a
manageable weapons reduction process in place. At the same time,
new WMD programs in highly unstable countries, such as Iran, Iraq,
and North Korea, put the lives of Americans at increased risk.
These new threats could justify an asymmetric reduction of
warheads, whereby the United States would require maintaining more
than the 2,500 warheads envisaged in START III.
The United States should make it clear to
Stepashin that the United States does not see Russia as a foe, and
that the U.S. arsenal is not aimed primarily at deterring Russia.
More likely determinants of the number of the U.S. strategic
nuclear weapons are programs to develop ballistic missile
technology in China, North Korea, and Iran, which are likely to
pose a more immediate threat to U.S. territory and U.S. allies. The
United States should adjust its strategic nuclear targeting policy
to meet these multiple threats simultaneously, which would mean a
relatively large U.S. arsenal is necessary.
-
Russia's military doctrine.
The United States should impress on Stepashin that it is aware
Russia modified its military doctrine to reflect a greater reliance
on both tactical and strategic nuclear weapons. U.S. officials
should state clearly and unequivocally that the United States views
this policy shift as unnecessarily destabilizing. They should
encourage Stepashin to convince his countrymen that they have more
to gain by seeking cooperation with other countries and less to
gain by boosting Russia's nuclear posture.
-
The sale of WMD technology to
Iran.
Despite numerous protests from the Clinton Administration,
Russia's state agencies--such as the nuclear energy ministry
Minatom, the International Space Agency, and the Energiya space
technology company--continue to supply Iran with technologies to
help it to build WMD, including modern rocket engines. Unless this
technology transfer is brought to an immediate end, Iran will be
capable of deploying its first nuclear-tipped missiles aimed at
targets throughout the Middle East and Europe by 2001. The United
States should be firm in obtaining full disclosure from Russia
regarding all arms deals and technology transfer agreements with
Iran. The Kremlin should cooperate in ensuring that all of Iran's
nuclear, missile, chemical, and biological weapons programs
cease.
-
Cooperative threat reduction
programs.
To facilitate confidence-building measures, decision-makers in
the United States and Russia should focus on such important issues
as the dismantling of ballistic missiles and strategic bombers; the
destruction of chemical weapon stockpiles; and the retooling of
biological weapons production facilities for civilian use,
including pharmaceutical and agricultural product development.
Congress funds these Department of Defense and Energy programs
through the Nunn-Lugar initiative. There are allegations that some
of these funds have been used to support Russia's strategic weapons
modernization and proliferation activities. The United States
should work with Stepashin to include in these programs the
destruction of nuclear warheads and accountability and transparency
measures to ensure that U.S. taxpayer funds are not wasted.
CONCLUSION
Prime Minister Stepashin's Washington
debut offers the United States an opportunity to improve relations
with Russia by addressing substantive issues. Even in the aftermath
of Kosovo, with surging anti-American sentiments in Russia, a lot
could be achieved by developing a working relationship with a Prime
Minister who is eager to restore Russia's good standing with the
United States. The Clinton Administration needs to address
important U.S. security concerns, such as national missile defense
and nonproliferation, and develop strong relations with the
Stepashin government. Moreover, the United States should seek
effective measures to assist Russia's democratic movement in its
difficult quest to build the rule of law, a full-fledged market
economy, and a participatory democracy. Such tasks will require
decades of economic and political stability.
The
Russian delegation must leave Washington with the clear sense that
the military operation in Yugoslavia was not directed against
Russia, and that the United States continues to value good
relations with Russia. But to achieve such relations, Russia must
work with the United States to eliminate points of friction, such
as its proliferation of WMD and its resistance to a missile defense
system to protect Americans. Waiting until after upcoming
presidential elections in both countries have changed the key
players could prove costly to the economic, military, security and
diplomatic dimensions of U.S.-Russia relations in the next
century.
Dr. Ariel
Cohen is Senior Policy Analyst in Russian and Eurasian
Studies at The Kathryn and Shelby Cullom Davis International
Studies Center at The Heritage Foundation.
Endnotes