"When the United States, in its hour
of hubris, went to war to remake the Middle East in 2003, Vladimir Putin was a
critic of American ambition, a defender of international institutions and
multilateralism and national sovereignty.
This posture was vindicated by events, as our
failures in Iraq and then Afghanistan demonstrated the challenges of conquest,
the perils of occupation, the laws of unintended consequences in war. And
Putin’s Russia, which benefited immensely from our follies, proceeded with its
own resurgence on a path of cunning gradualism, small-scale land grabs amid
“frozen conflicts,” the expansion of influence in careful, manageable bites.
But now it’s Putin making the
world-historical gamble, embracing another version of the unconstrained
vision that once led George W. Bush astray. And it’s worth asking why a leader
who once seemed attuned to the perils of hubris would take this gamble now.
I assume that Putin is being sincere
when he rails against Russia’s encirclement by NATO and insists that Western
influence threatens the historic link between Ukraine and Russia. And he
clearly sees a window of opportunity in the pandemic’s chaos, America’s
imperial overstretch and an internally divided West.
Still, even the most successful
scenario for his invasion of Ukraine — easy victory, no real insurgency, a
pliant government installed — seems likely to undercut some of the interests
he’s supposedly fighting to defend. NATO will still nearly encircle western
Russia, more countries may join the alliance, European military spending will
rise, more troops and material will end up in Eastern Europe. There will be a
push for European energy independence, some attempt at long-term delinking from
Russian pipelines and production. A reforged Russian empire will be poorer than
it otherwise might be, more isolated from the global economy, facing a more
united West.
It’s possible Putin just assumes the
West is so decadent, so easily bought off, that the spasms of outrage will pass
and business as usual resume without any enduring consequences. But let’s
assume that he expects some of those consequences, expects a more isolated
future. What might be his reasoning for choosing it?
Here is one speculation: He may
believe that the age of American-led globalization is ending no matter what,
that after the pandemic certain walls will stay up everywhere, and that the
goal for the next 50 years is to consolidate what you can — resources, talent,
people, territory — inside your own civilizational walls.
In this vision the future is neither
liberal world-empire nor a renewed Cold War between competing universalisms.
Rather it’s a world divided into some version of what Bruno Maçães has called “civilization-states,”
culturally-cohesive great powers that aspire, not to world domination, but to
become universes unto themselves — each, perhaps, under its own nuclear
umbrella.
This idea, redolent of Samuel P.
Huntington’s arguments in “The Clash of Civilizations” a generation ago,
clearly influences many of the world’s rising powers — from the Hindutva
ideology of India’s Narendra Modi to the turn against cultural exchange and Western
influence in Xi Jinping’s China. Maçães himself hopes a version of
civilizationism will reanimate Europe, perhaps with Putin’s actions as a
catalyst for stronger continental cohesion. And even within the United States
you can see the resurgence of economic nationalism and the wars over national
identity as a turn toward these kind of civilizational concerns.
In this light, the invasion of
Ukraine looks like civilizationism, a bid to forge by force what the
Russian nationalist writer Anatoly Karlin dubs “Russian world” —
meaning “a largely self-contained technological civilization, complete with its
own IT ecosystem … space program, and technological visions … stretching from
Brest to Vladivostok.” The goal is not world revolution or world conquest, in
other words, but civilizational self-containment — a unification of “our own
history, culture and spiritual space,” as Putin put it in his war speech — with
certain erring, straying children dragged unwillingly back home.
But if your civilization-state can’t
attract its separated children with persuasion, can they really be kept inside
with force? Even if the invasion succeeds, won’t much of Ukraine’s human
capital — the young and talented and ambitious — find ways to flee or emigrate,
leaving Putin to inherit a poor, wrecked country filled with pensioners? And to
the extent that the nationalist vision of Russian self-sufficiency is
fundamentally fanciful, might not Putin’s supposedly-greater-Russia end up
instead as a Chinese client or vassal, pulled by Beijing’s stronger gravity
into a more subordinate relationship the more its ties to Europe break?"
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