Source: Carnegie
Reprinted with permission from the Christian Science Monitor, October
26, 2000
WASHINGTON -- Because of its partisan nature, a recent report
of the Speaker's Advisory Group on Russia, composed of 12 House Republicans,
has failed to spark a serious debate about US policy toward Russia. We need
such a debate, for this is a country that will remain critical to our own security
and prosperity.
The report ignores solid achievements by the Clinton administration,
such as the withdrawal of Russian troops from Central Europe and the Baltics
and the return of Soviet nuclear weapons from Ukraine to Russia for dismantling.
Nevertheless, it is clear that the administration has badly mishandled policy
toward Russia. We need to understand what happened to leave us with a Russia
that is less friendly, weaker, poorer, and less democratic than it was nearly
eight years ago.
When President Clinton took office, nearly three-quarters
of all Russians had a favorable opinion of the United States. Today, fewer than
half do. At the time, Russia was seeking an alliance with the US. Today, Russian
national-security documents identify the US as a threat to Russia's strategic
interests.
The average Russian is worse off in socio-economic terms
than he was a decade ago. The economy has diminished by 40 percent. The World
Bank estimates that 45 percent of Russians live in poverty. The public health
system is a shambles, contagious diseases are returning, and public schools
are woefully underfunded.
Democracy has not fared well in Russia. Freedom of the press
is under threat. A Moscow newspaper recently published evidence that Mr. Putin's
first-round victory earlier this year was due to fraud. And the Department of
State documents no significant improvement in human rights since Clinton took
office.
So what went wrong? Surely, some of the problems are beyond
the administration's control. Some deterioration of US-Russian relations was
inevitable as the euphoria of our common victory over Soviet communism wore
off. Some of the economic hardship and undemocratic behavior is due to the harsh
Soviet legacy, which ruled out an easy transition to a market economy and an
open society. Much of the industrial decline has come from the sharp drop in
weapons productions.
But US policy did matter. The administration backed an economic
course - the so-called "Washington consensus" – that did not
take sufficient account of Russian political realities, including a widespread
elite and popular opposition to that course. Critics were generally dismissed
as communists, hard-liners, or economic illiterates. In the end, the administration
found itself backing a small, unpopular group of radical reformers. Not only
was the economic program not implemented, but the way it was pursued cast into
doubt American support for the democratization of Russia.
Meanwhile, the US image in Russia suffered. Inexplicably,
the administration condoned the Russian government's meeting its IMF inflation
targets in part by not paying wages and pensions. The administration turned
a blind eye to patently phony Russian budgets. The administration hyped its
role in Russia's successes before the financial collapse of 1998, but thereafter
it was unwilling to accept any blame for the hardships its policies had caused.
Such behavior led Russians to question our benevolence, intelligence, and morality.
Our image suffered further from the way the administration
dealt with foreign policy and security matters. Instead of building rapport
with the Russian elites - which is critical for good relations with Russia -it
manipulated Boris Yeltsin to advance our interests; we treated him like a major
world leader in return for his concessions on, say, Bosnia or Nato expansion.
Russian elites increasingly saw US policies as efforts to exploit Russia's weakness.
Our current problems with President Putin are only the fruits of our neglect
of the broader Russian political establishment.
The administration, of course, will agree with none of the
above. It has steadfastly refused to acknowledge any lapses in its policy toward
Russia, nor has it undertaken any systemic appraisal of its successes and failures
in Russia. It is time we did that for them.