At the 52nd Munich Security Conference on February 12–14, Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev delivered the speech Vladimir Putin would have made had he cared to come to Munich this year writes Dimitri Trenin. In fact, the Russian president has not attended this annual gathering of political leaders and security experts since 2007. Medvedev’s words were tough and his analysis exceedingly bleak, but his main point was an offer to put the glaring Russian-Western differences and bitter conflicts to one side and focus on a common threat coming from extremism.
In November 2015, when the Turks shot down a Russian bomber over the Syrian border, NATO had shivers running down its spine. Dying for Warsaw and Riga was one thing; dying as a result of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s failed brinkmanship was another. Luckily, that time Putin decided to give Ankara a nonmilitary answer. Next time, however, luck might run out. Erdoğan seems to believe that after having served NATO well for forty years against the Soviets, Turkey now has the right to count on the alliance’s support where it matters for Ankara—and Syria matters to Erdoğan as much as Ukraine does to Putin.
The United States does not share Erdoğan’s apparent logic, but U.S. influence in Turkey does not amount to full control over Ankara’s actions and policies. Should Turkey and Russia indeed clash in Turkey, then not only NATO’s credibility but also peace in the Euro-Atlantic region and the whole world would be at risk. While Kerry in his statement in Munich evoked former U.S. president John F. Kennedy’s 1963 “Ich bin ein Berliner” speech and alliance solidarity, Medvedev referred to the 1962 Cuban missile crisis: a chilling and telling comparison.
NATO’s defense and deterrence of Russia is a familiar undertaking. Essentially, the alliance again sees Russia as an adversary to be contained. The dialogue option, however, is less clear. Russia and the West are generally talking past each other. The West is waiting for the combination of the Russian economy’s structural problems, low oil and commodity prices, and Western sanctions to bite Moscow hard enough to make it change course and surrender its outsize and outdated ambitions. The Kremlin realizes that such a surrender would lead to a collapse of the Russian regime and probably the Russian state as well. The Ukrainians are openly looking forward to that prospect.
In the present environment, war prevention remains the only big item on the agenda for Russian-NATO dialogue. When the NATO-Russia Council, which has been suspended since 2014, finally meets again, this instrument of cooperation will need to be converted to a crisis-management mechanism. Its new mission will be to avert dangerous incidents in the air and at sea, make sure that surprise military exercises are not taken for preparation for an attack, and see that communication channels are functioning properly to avoid tragic misunderstanding.
In the nine years that separate Putin’s and Medvedev’s appearances at the Munich Security Conference, the strategic climate between Russia and the West has experienced a dramatic change.
Dimitri Trenin is the Director of Carnegie Europe’s Moscow centre. this article was first published by Carnegie Europe. More information can be found at www.carnegieeurope.eu