ASCF Report | 3.1.18
By Alan W. Dowd
During the Cold War, Washington and
Moscow became adept at sending signals to each other, often through
military moves and countermoves. Some were subtle and private, like
Eisenhower’s response to Khrushchev’s boast about the Red Army’s
overwhelming conventional edge in Germany: “If you attack us in
Germany,” the steely former general explained, “there will be nothing
conventional about our response.” Some were public and overt, like
Truman’s deployment of nuclear-capable B-29 bombers to Europe during the
Berlin Crisis of 1948-49 or Nixon’s nuclear alert in 1969. However,
after the Soviet Empire’s collapse and America’s emergence as the sole
superpower, U.S. civilian leaders seldom had to engage in the sort of
messaging that kept the Cold War from turning hot. With Vladimir Putin
seemingly intent on triggering Cold War 2.0, Washington is relearning
the fine art of signal-sending.
Leverage
Putin, like most dictators, is adept at
contriving grievances to justify his actions. But let’s keep in mind the
events of the past 10 years: Putin’s Russia has invaded, occupied and
annexed parts of Georgia and Ukraine; provided diplomatic and military
cover for Assad’s beastly war in Syria; threatened nuclear strikes
against Poland, Norway and other NATO members; conducted extensive,
destructive and destabilizing cyberattacks against the U.S., Estonia and
other NATO members; hacked into the U.S. political system in an attempt
to sway the outcome of a presidential election; conducted similar “strategic influence operations” against
the Netherlands, Estonia, Germany, Italy, Macedonia, France and
Britain; attempted a coup in Montenegro; laid claim to most of the
Arctic; armed the Taliban; broken the INF Treaty; and withdrawn from the
CFE Treaty.
What Churchill said of his Russian
counterparts remains true of Putin and his puppets: “There is nothing
they admire so much as strength, and there is nothing for which they
have less respect than for weakness.” In short, the best way to get
Putin’s attention, change his behavior, persuade him and dissuade him is
to answer his actions with proportional responses.
Initially committed to a “reset” in
U.S.-Russia relations, the Obama administration recognized the
importance of these responses and messages late in the game. The Trump
administration has taken a hard-nosed approach from the outset.
Consider military spending. Russia’s
military outlays have mushroomed by 125 percent since 2006, and Russia’s
military budget now consumes 4.5 percent of GDP—up from 2.4 percent of
GDP in 2006.
Yes, Putin’s military is a shell of the
Red Army. But it pays to recall that his military-spending binge
occurred as the U.S. and NATO slashed military outlays. In a time of
war, the bipartisan gamble known as sequestration allowed the defense
budget to fall from 4.7 percent of GDP in 2009 to 3 percent by 2016.
The Trump administration has reversed
this decline. President Donald Trump signed a $700-billion defense
budget for 2018—a 13.2-percent increase over the previous year—and $716 billion for 2019.
However, a couple budget cycles are not enough to repair the damage.
“It took us years to get into this situation,” Defense Secretary James
Mattis explains. “It will require years of stable budgets and increased
funding to get out of it.”
The Trump administration, like the
Reagan administration in the 1980s, recognizes that America’s ability to
deploy and equip a military capable of deterring Moscow (and Beijing)
depends on a vibrant economy. Thus, the administration has pared back
the regulatory state and cut taxes—opening the way for economic growth,
technological innovation and industrial resurgence.
Related, the Trump administration has
moved rapidly to leverage America’s advantages in fossil fuels. “My
administration will seek not only American energy independence,” Trump declared in 2017, “but American energy dominance.” Toward that end, the White
House has opened up vast stretches of offshore oil fields to
development, approved pipelines and secured deals to deliver U.S. energy
resources to Eastern Europe. This, too, sends a message to Moscow.
In 2016, the U.S. rocketed past Russia and Saudi Arabia intotal oil reserves, with
the U.S. sitting atop at least 264 billion barrels of oil, compared to
Russia’s 256 billion barrels and Saudi Arabia’s 212 billion barrels. In
addition, new discoveries reveal that the Rocky Mountain states hold as
much as 260 trillion cubic-feet of natural gas. The U.S. Geological
Survey estimates the Arctic holds some 90 billion barrels of oil (a
third of it in Alaskan territory). But conventional reserves are just a
tiny part of the picture. The U.S. possesses vast deposits of oil-shale
and oil-sands. The Government Accountability Officereportsthat
oil-shale deposits in Colorado, Utah and Wyoming “contain up to 3
trillion barrels of oil, half of which may be recoverable.” As RAND’s
James Bartis observes, “We’ve got more oil in this very compact area
than the entire Middle East.”
The implications are far-reaching. As Gen. James Jones (national security advisor to President Barack Obama)concludes,
“We are blessed with abundant and diverse energy resources that are
unmatched anywhere else in the world. What we do with this abundance and
diversity will have geostrategic consequences that we are just now
beginning to comprehend”—especially vis-à-vis Russia.
Oil and gas account for more than 40
percent of Russia’s federal budget revenue. Flooding global energy
markets with American oil, gas and coal will weaken Russia’s
one-dimensional economy, limit the Russian government’s influence and
deprive the Russian military of resources. “If we increase our supply of
oil, especially into Eastern Europe,” as Gen. Martin Dempseysuggestedduring
his stint as chairman of the Joint Chiefs, “we will dent Russia’s
leverage on other countries and reduce the revenues that fund Russia’s
aggression.”
The White House is following Dempsey’s
playbook. “We are committed to securing your access to alternate sources
of energy,” Trumpdeclaredin
his July address to the Polish people, “so Poland and its neighbors are
never again held hostage to a single supplier of energy.” Thanks to newcontractsfor
American natural gas, crude oil and coal, Poland recently announced it
will not renew its energy deal with Moscow, which has been Poland’s
exclusive natural-gas supplier since 1944.
Tests
Washington, under both Obama and Trump, has begun sending overt military signals to Moscow as well.
After Putin’s invasion of Ukraine, the
Obama administration quadrupled military spending in Europe (from $789
million to $3.4 billion), launched the European Reassurance Initiative
to provide evidence of America’s commitment to NATO, increased air
deployments in Eastern Europe, returned three armored brigades to
Europe, expanded NATO exercises and committed U.S. troops to NATO’s
forward-deployment plan in the Baltics and Poland.
The Trump administration has earmarked
another $1.4 billion for Europe’s defense, brought Montenegro into NATO,
authorized weapons deliveries to Ukraine, increased naval operations in
theBlack Sea, deployed troops to Georgia fortraining exercises, pointedlyrebrandedthe
European Reassurance Initiative as the “European Deterrence Initiative”
and cajoled several NATO members to invest more in the common defense.
In addition, the Pentagon is spending
hundreds of millions of dollars to repair and/or update U.S. military
installations in the Atlantic and across Europe. As Air Force Times
reports, the new resources will be used to construct or enhance
installations in Iceland, Luxembourg, Norway, Slovakia, Hungary,
Romania, Latvia and Estonia.
Beyond Europe, the U.S. has increasedsupportto
Syrian rebels fighting the Russia-backed Assad regime; conducted
missile strikes against Syrian government targets in response to Assad’s
use of chemical weapons; announced its intention to maintain a
long-termmilitary presence in Syria; and, most dramatic of all, conducted kinetic strikes against pro-Assad units advised by Russian mercenaries.
In early February, Russian mercenaries working for a private military firmlinked to the Kremlinrepeatedly shelled positions where U.S. Special Operations personnel were co-located with friendly forces. According toReuters, the Russians’ objective was “to test if the U.S.-led coalition would react.” The U.S. responded to Russia’s test with athree-hourpummeling
that included artillery fire, F-15Es, B-52s, AC-130s, Apache attack
helicopters and Reaper drones. The U.S. counterpunch—a firsthand account
is availablehere—left hundreds of pro-regime soldiers dead. Among that number were as many 200 Russian nationals.
This may seem too dangerous a message
to send. But we must remember that on a tactical level, U.S. forces were
defending themselves, their partners and their positions. And on a
strategic level, if this is indeed Cold War 2.0, the first Cold War
reminds us that Moscow will push until America pushes back—and that
Mattis knows how to employ language Moscow understands.
All for One
Doubtless, the Pentagon, CIA and State Department are crafting other messages for Moscow.
Russia is trying to prevent NATO’s
further expansion and to drive wedges between Europe and America. In
response, Trump should use the NATO summit in July to make amends for
his previousmissteps on Article Vby
reiterating America’s unequivocal support for NATO’s all-for-one
collective defense clause. And the U.S. should make sure thatMacedonia, which has been left in NATO’s waiting room for almost a decade, is finally welcomed into the alliance this year.
Russia lays claim to half the Arctic
Circle and the entire North Pole, underlining its claims with massive
exercises in the Arctic, six new bases north of the Arctic Circle andnine new airfieldsin
the Arctic by the end of 2018. In response, the U.S., Canada, Denmark,
Norway and Iceland—NATO members all—should develop an Arctic
partnership, either within or outside NATO auspices. Along withSweden, which
is a de facto member of the alliance, these Arctic allies should forge a
common approach to Arctic security, pool their resources, maximize
their joint capabilities, play niche roles in the Arctic, and block
another landgrab by Putin.
In hopes of sowing discontent and
undermining democratic institutions, Russia is continuing to interfere
in Western elections. In response, Washington should rejoin the battle
of ideas. As Reagan argued, “a little less détente…and more
encouragement to the dissenters might be worth a lot of armored
divisions.”
The White House should highlight how
Putin has engineered his way from prime minister to president to prime
minister to president the past 18 years; point out the vast freedom gap
between Russia and its neighbors; and offer a platform to Putin’s
enemies—journalists, religious minorities, NGOs, political dissidents.
Congress should reopen the U.S.
Information Agency (USIA), which was shut down in 1999, after decades of
countering Moscow’s Cold War propaganda. Former Director of National
Intelligence James Clapper says America needs “a USIA on steroids” to
meet the Russia challenge.
Just as Reagan helped create the
National Endowment for Democracy “to foster the infrastructure of
democracy,” it’s time for the world’s foremost groupings of democratic
nations—the G-7, European Union, NATO and its partners in Israel, Japan,
South Korea and Australia—to create a pool of resources to reinforce
the infrastructure of democracy worldwide; expose Moscow’s meddling; and
help democracies under assault preserve the integrity of their
political institutions.
Further up the ladder, it’s not
difficult to imagine the U.S. executing a cyber-operation that turns
Putin’s stage-managed elections into a full-blown farce: returns showing
Leonid Brezhnev finishing second or Czar Nicholas II winning a few
oblasts.
Putin will get the message.