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Caucasus/Russia/Central Asia
Target the Kremlin pocketbooks
2008-08-28
By David B. Rivkin Jr. and Carlos Ramos-Mrosovsky

Further escalating the crisis in the Caucasus, Russian President Dmitry Medvedev recognized the independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia yesterday; their annexation by Russia is likely to follow shortly. Russian promises to withdraw troops to pre-conflict positions ring increasingly hollow. Russian officials have threatened to use nuclear weapons against Poland and Ukraine. All signs point to the Kremlin's decision to launch a new Cold War.

The free world's response has been feeble. Western spokesmen have warned that Russia's aggression will hurt its international "standing." NATO has suspended formal dialogue, and Russia may be blocked from entering the World Trade Organization. Moscow is clearly unworried by this talk. Europe's dependence on Russian energy, and claims that the West needs Russia's cooperation on many international issues, reinforce its confidence. Yet the West is in a stronger position than it or Vladimir Putin may realize. A properly managed "soft power" response -- such as a law enforcement campaign targeting Russia's ruling elites -- could be extremely effective in punishing aggression against Georgia and in deterring future misconduct. Indeed, Russia's governing elites place their personal interests ahead of Moscow's raison d'etat. If enough pain is inflicted on them, they will demand foreign policy changes or even seek to replace Putin as the power behind the throne.

The fusion of private business interests and state policy in today's Russia differs from the endemic corruption of Soviet times. Moscow is dominated by a network of ex-KGB siloviks and wealthy Kremlin-friendly tycoons. Despite their gangsteresque behavior -- including assassinations of business and political rivals -- Russia is a member, albeit a thuggish one, of the global economic system. Bereft of any significant civilian manufacturing, Russia's economy depends on natural resources exports. As a result, Russia, though grotesquely corrupt, is tightly plugged into global financial and commercial networks. The shady cadre running modern Russia has embraced globalization. These "Chekist oligarchs" -- to distinguish them from the Western-oriented robber barons who rose in the 1990s, only to be purged by Putin -- increasingly dominate lists of the world's richest individuals. They invest their ill-gotten wealth abroad and maintain opulent residences in London, Paris and the Cote d'Azur. They educate their children at Western universities and even collect Western sports teams.

These tycoons bankrolled Putin's rise and are the medium by which he has consolidated control over Russia's vast wealth. Putin and his cronies have used the levers of state power (including trumped-up prosecutions and official intimidation) to enrich themselves and crush rivals. Complex financial mechanisms -- often involving major international financial institutions -- are in place to launder vast sums for reinvestment abroad. Western banks seeking to profit and curry favor with Russia's rulers have rushed to underwrite the dubious transactions used to place Russia's natural resources under Kremlin control.

The oligarchy's widespread corruption, disrespect for the rule of law and embrace of globalization make it a perfect target for Western "soft power." Whenever they have jurisdiction to do so -- which should be often -- U.S. and E.U. regulators should examine the business transactions of people close to Putin's regime for money laundering or for securities, tax and other economic irregularities. Asset tracing and long statutes of limitation should enable Western authorities to examine years' worth of business activities. The U.S. Justice Department should aggressively prosecute any instances of Kremlin-connected market manipulation, fraud, tax evasion and money laundering that fall within its reach. Subpoenas, indictments, asset forfeitures, judgments and travel restrictions will hit where even the most callous bullies feel pain: squarely in the wallet. Western governments should also support private investors who try to challenge Kremlin-backed thievery. Moscow's blatant manipulation of oil and gas deliveries, often masquerading as technical problems, should be vigorously contested by Western customers and substantial penalties sought. Russian efforts to purchase additional refineries and pipelines in the West should be challenged on antitrust grounds.

Careful diplomacy could ensure that Europe's energy fears do not lead it to shy away from legal challenges to Putin and his cronies. Crucially, pursuing the oligarchs through the courts would not require the United States or Europe to take a single action "against Russia." U.S. and allied governments could note that these activities are consistent with overarching Western efforts to curb public and private corruption. Meanwhile, publicizing Western investigations into illegal activity by Moscow businessmen and returning the ill-gotten gains to the Russian people should please even the fiercest Russian nationalists.

The question of what connection, if any, exists between the demise of Russia's democracy and Moscow's renewed imperialism has long dominated Western debates. Clearly, something far more dangerous than mere authoritarianism has arisen in Putin's Russia. A peculiar blend of political autocracy and corruption, seamlessly fusing political, economic and military power, threatens world peace. Challenging this state of affairs is a strategic necessity.
Posted by:ryuge

#6  The biggest button to push would be a variable tariff on imported oil maintaining a floor price of $100 a barrel to increase with inflation. That would significantly spur investment in domestic energy sources.The second would be to open up all offshore areas to domestic drilling and to cut off all highway funds for those states that do not allow drilling.

The final would be to strengthen the dollar.

The sum result would be to crash the price of oil, perhaps at the cost of a deeper recession. Nonetheless, it would be a cheaper way out than gearing up for conflict.
Posted by: Nimble Spemble   2008-08-28 15:01  

#5  Someone has to start pushing buttons. I'd suggest the biggest and hottest button to push would be to eject Russia from the International Olympic Committee and refuse to allow Russia to participate in any future Winter or Summer Olympics. That's a major political showcase for the Russians, and would hurt them badly. Secondly, I'd halt all licencing of all patents to Russian companies, and halt all joint cooperative agreements. That, too, would be a damaging blow. Finally, I'd eject all Russian students from schools anywhere else other than Russia. I would also halt all "exchange" programs, regardless of what they are (cultural, economic, student, military, political, etc.). If the whole world did that, and treated Russia as a pariah nation, they'd soon change their behavior. The ONLY way you're going to change Russia's behavior is to HURT them badly enough they WANT to change. The three things I've mentioned above would go a long way toward inflicting that pain.
Posted by: Old Patriot   2008-08-28 14:53  

#4  Looks like we are about to see a shakedown cruise of western soft power. If that doesn't work, guns and bombs can always solve it the old fashioned way. Demographically, Russia is dying. The outcome is not in doubt, only the pace.
Posted by: Richard of Oregon   2008-08-28 10:11  

#3  Clearly, something far more dangerous than mere authoritarianism has arisen in Putin's Russia. A peculiar blend of political autocracy and corruption, seamlessly fusing political, economic and military power, threatens world peace.

Adolf Hitler and Joe Stalin would be quite envious.
Posted by: Besoeker   2008-08-28 08:33  

#2  Right, but they will throw some dumbass in prison for 5 years for letting people download tracks from Chinese Democracy. It doesn't make much sense, does it? My personal advice is that if you are going to break the law, do it big and get off Scott Free.
Posted by: bigjim-ky   2008-08-28 08:29  

#1  Good idea. Too bad nobody will ever actually do it. Nobody ever goes to jail for financial crimes, no matter how big.
Posted by: gromky   2008-08-28 06:08  

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