The Moscow summit between U.S. President Barack Obama, Russian President Dmitri Medvedev and Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin has ended.
As is almost always the case, the atmospherics were good, with the proper things said on all sides and statements and gestures of deep sincerity made. And as with all summits, those atmospherics are like the air: insubstantial and ultimately invisible. While there were indications of substantial movement, you would have needed a microscope to see them.
An agreement was reached on what an agreement on nuclear arms reduction might look like, but we do not regard this as a strategic matter. The number of strategic warheads and delivery vehicles is a Cold War issue that concerned the security of each side`s nuclear deterrent.
We do not mean to argue that removing a thousand or so nuclear weapons is unimportant, but instead that no one is deterring anyone these days, and the risk of accidental launch is as large or as small whether there are 500 or 5,000 launchers or warheads.
Either way, nuclear arms` strategic significance remains unchanged. The summit perhaps has created a process that could lead to some degree of confidence. It is not lack of confidence dividing the two countries, however, but rather divisions on fundamental geopolitical issues that don`t intersect with the missile question.
The Fundamental Issues
There are dozens of contentious issues between the United States and Russia, but in our mind three issues are fundamental.
First, there is the question of whether Poland will become a base from which the
It represents the U.S. use of Polish territory for strategic purposes, and it is something the Russians oppose not so much for the system`s direct or specific threat — which is minimal — but for what it symbolizes about the Americans` status in Poland.
The Russians hoped to get Obama to follow the policy at the summit that he alluded to during his campaign for the
Second, there is the question of Iran. This is a strategic matter for the
And third, there is the question of
Of some importance, but not as fundamental as the previous issues, was the question of whether
Even before the summit, the Russians made a concession on this point, giving the United States the right to transit military equipment via Russian airspace. This was a significant policy change designed to demonstrate
The move cost the Russians little under the circumstances, and is easily revoked. And while the
Moreover, the
Conversely, the Russian concession on the issue signals that U.S.-Russian relations have improved. The concession was all the more significant in that it came after Obama praised Medvedev for his openness and criticized Putin as having one foot in the Cold War, clearly an attempt to play the two Russian leaders off each other.
What the
Much more significantly, the
A joint review of all of the world`s missile capabilities was established at the summit, and this joint review will consider Iranian — and North Korean — missiles. The Polish BMD system will be addressed in that context.
In other words,
The Russians in turn made no visible concessions on
NATO expansion is where some
That is why this principle must apply to all nations – including
On the surface, this reiterated the old U.S. position, which was that NATO expansion was between NATO and individual nations of the former Soviet Union, and did not — and should not — concern Moscow. The terms of expanding, reforming and contributing to NATO remained the same.
But immediately after the Obama-Putin meeting, Russian sources began claiming that an understanding on NATO expansion was reached, and that the Americans conceded the point. We see some evidence for this in the speech — the
In many ways, however, this is splitting hairs. The French and Germans have long insisted that any NATO expansion should be limited to countries with strong public support for expansion, and which meet certain military thresholds that
Since NATO expansion requires unanimous support from all members,
Therefore, we come away with the sense that the summit changed little, but that it certainly didn`t cause any deterioration, which could have happened. Having a summit that causes no damage is an achievement in itself.
The Kennedy Trap
Perhaps the most important part of the summit was that Obama does not seem to have fallen into the Kennedy trap. Part of the lack of serious resolutions at the summit undoubtedly resulted from Obama`s unwillingness to be excessively accommodating to the Russians.
With all of the comparisons to the 1961 Kennedy-Khrushchev summit being bruited about, Obama clearly had at least one overriding goal in
It appears, however, that the Russians did fall into the Kennedy trap a bit. The eagerness of Putin`s advisers to tout
But that is for the gossip columns. The important news from the summit was as follows:
First, no one screwed up, and second, U.S.-Russian relations did not get worse — and might actually have improved.
No far-reaching strategic agreements were attained, but strategic improvements in the future were not excluded. Obama played his role without faltering, and there may be some smidgen of tension between the two personalities running
In the meantime, BMD remains under development in
We wish there were more exciting things to report about the summit, but sometimes there simply aren`t. And sometimes the routine might turn out significant, but we doubt that in this case. The geopolitical divide between the United States and Russia is as deep as ever, even if some of the sharper edges have been rounded. Ultimately, little progress was made in finding ways to bridge the two countries` divergent interests. And the burning issues — particularly
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