by Sam Collings-Wells
The news that Putin convened the upper House of
the Russian parliament sent shockwaves throughout the world. The swift movement
of Russian troops into the Crimea, the blockade of highways leading into the
province and the taking over of major airports sent a clear sign of Putin's
aggressive intentions. Obama should act quickly and decisively, and encourage
the rest of Europe to punch back hard at Russia’s irresponsible actions.
Obama and Putin (Wiki commons) |
Barack Obama’s reputation on the international stage is in tatters. His bungling
of almost every foreign policy during his tenure has shown him to be both weak
and indecisive. In Syria, when Assad used chemical weapons against his own
people, he knowingly crossed the ominous red line drawn by Obama. Assad guessed
right, calling Obama’s bluff and the
administration did nothing.
If a rogue dictator in Syria does not find an
explicit threat from America frightening, then why should Vladamir Putin
respond with anything but indifference to Obamas chest-puffing? In the
aftermath of the Maidan Revolution, the US publicly warned Russia against any
military intervention. Yet, a few days later, Putin still waltzed into the
Crimea. Putin was presumably confident that the West would respond in a similar
way to his invasion of Georgia in 2008, with strong statements of disapproval
but not a lot else.
This time, Obama should respond with economic
sanctions on Putin's Russia. Inevitably, there will be those that argue that
this will foster the Western discontent that Putin’s Presidency so thrives upon. Then again, William Hague, asserting
that Russia has caused the ‘worst crisis in the
Europe in the 21st Century’, and Obama’s threat that ‘there will be costs’ largely do the same
thing and are probably being greedily lapped up by pro-Russian media outlets
as examples of Western antagonism.
Opponents of economic sanctions, or any action
at all, will also point towards the 25% of the EU’s gas that comes from Russia. To this criticism I would say that
Russia’s woefully unbalanced
economy means that they are just as reliant on the revenues from EU gas
purchases as the EU is on Russian gas. Furthermore, America is undergoing a ‘Fracking revolution’, unlocking vast reserves of natural gas. If America relax their
overly protectionist oil export laws, it could potentially reduce the
diplomatic leverage that Russia has as a result of their energy reserves,
leading to a profound re-alignment in global diplomacy.
Putin clearly, and probably correctly, predicts
that Barack Obama’s diplomacy is all
talk and no action. I agree with Putin; Obama will bottle it, Germany are
already reeling, and an incompetent aide this week spelled outCameron’s lack of enthusiasm for doing anything
significant. Obama should prove me and Putin wrong, and bring the rest of the
West with him. This is not an open-ended ‘war on terror’, in a region in the
Middle East Washington knows nothing about. This is a clear violation of
another country's sovereignty, with Russia trying to take advantage of an
unstable situation in Ukraine. Obama should send a clear message.This time,
America should not let Putin get away with it.
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