rus s i a n dy n a m i c s
If we are going to understand Russia’s behavior and intentions, we have to
begin with Russia’s fundamental weakness—its borders, particularly in the
northwest. Even when Ukraine is controlled by Russia, as it has been for
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centuries, and Belarus and Moldavia are part of the Russian empire as well,
there are still no natural borders in the north. The center and south are an
chored on the Carpathian Mountains, as far north as the Slovakian- Polish
border, and to the east of them are the Pripet marshes, boggy and impassa
ble. But in the north and south (east of the Carpathians), there are no
strong barriers to protect Russia—or to protect Russia’s neighbors.
On the northern European plain, no matter where Russia’s borders are
drawn, it is open to attack. There are few significant natural barriers any
where on this plain. Pushing its western border all the way into Germany, as
it did in 1945, still leaves Russia’s frontiers without a physical anchor. The
only physical advantage Russia can have is depth. The farther west into Eu
rope its borders extend, the farther conquerors have to travel to reach
Moscow. Therefore, Russia is always pressing westward on the northern Eu
ropean plain and Europe is always pressing eastward.
That is not the case with other borders of Russia—by which we mean to
include the former Soviet Union, which has been the rough shape of Russia
since the end of the nineteenth century. In the south, there was a natural se
cure boundary. The Black Sea leads to the Caucasus, separating Russia from
Turkey and Iran. Iran is further buffered by the Caspian Sea, and by the
Kara Kum Desert in southern Turkmenistan, which runs along the Afghan
border, terminating in the Himalayas. The Russians are concerned with the
Iranian–Afghan segment, and might push south as they have done several
times. But they are not going to be invaded on that border. Their frontier
with China is long and vulnerable, but only on a map. Invading Siberia is
not a practical possibility. It is a vast wilderness. There is a potential weak
ness along China’s western border, but not a significant one. Therefore, the
Russian empire, in any of its incarnations, is fairly secure except in northern
Europe, where it faces its worst dangers—geography and powerful Euro
pean nations.
Russia had its guts carved out after the collapse of communism. St. Pe
tersburg, its jewel, was about a thousand miles away from NATO troops in
1989. Now it is less than one hundred miles away. In 1989, Moscow was
twelve hundred miles from the limits of Russian power. Now it is about two
hundred miles. In the south, with Ukraine independent, the Russian hold
on the Black Sea is tenuous, and it has been forced to the northern extreme
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of the Caucasus. Afghanistan is occupied, however tentatively, by the Amer
icans, and Russia’s anchor on the Himalayas is gone. If there were an army
interested in invading, the Russian Federation is virtually indefensible.
Russia’s strategic problem is that it is a vast country with relatively poor
transportation. If Russia were simultaneously attacked along its entire pe
riphery, in spite of the size of its forces, it would be unable to easily protect
itself. It would have difficulty mobilizing forces and deploying them to mul
tiple fronts, so it would have to maintain an extremely large standing army
that could be predeployed. This pressure imposes a huge economic burden
on Russia, undermines the economy, and causes it to buckle from within.
That is what happened to the Soviet state. Of course, this is not the first
time Russia has been in peril.
Protecting its frontiers is not Russia’s only problem today. The Russians
are extremely well aware that they are facing a massive demographic crisis.
Russia’s current population is about 145 million people, and projections for
2050 are for between 90 million and 125 million. Time is working against
it. Russia’s problem will soon be its ability to field an army sufficient for its
strategic needs. Internally, the number of Russians compared to other eth
nic groups is declining, placing intense pressure on Russia to make a move
sooner rather than later. In its current geographical position, it is an acci
dent waiting to happen. Given Russia’s demographic trajectory, in twenty
years it may be too late to act, and its leaders know this. It does not have to
conquer the world, but Russia must regain and hold its buffers—essentially
the boundaries of the old Soviet Union.
Between their geopolitical, economic, and demographic problems, the
Russians have to make a fundamental shift. For a hundred years the Rus
sians sought to modernize their country through industrialization, trying to
catch up to the rest of Europe. They never managed to pull it off. Around
2000 Russia shifted its strategy. Instead of focusing on industrial develop
ment as they had in the past century, the Russians reinvented themselves as
exporters of natural resources, particularly energy, but also minerals, agri
cultural products, lumber, and precious metals.
By de-emphasizing industrial development, and emphasizing raw mate
rials, the Russians took a very different path, one more common to coun
tries in the developing world. But given the unexpected rise of energy and
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commodity prices, this move not only saved the Russian economy but also
strengthened it to the point where Russia could afford to drive its own se
lective reindustrialization. Most important, since natural resource produc
tion is less manpower-intensive than industrial production, it gave Russia an
economic base that could be sustained with a declining population.
It also gave Russia leverage in the international system. Europe is hungry
for energy. Russia, constructing pipelines to feed natural gas to Europe,
takes care of Europe’s energy needs and its own economic problems, and
puts Europe in a position of dependency on Russia. In an energy- hungry
world, Russia’s energy exports are like heroin. It addicts countries once they
start using it. Russia has already used its natural gas resources to force neigh
boring countries to bend to its will. That power reaches into the heart of
Europe, where the Germans and the former Soviet satellites of Eastern Eu
rope all depend on Russian natural gas. Add to this its other resources, and
Russia can apply significant pressure on Europe.
Dependency can be a double- edged sword. A militarily weak Russia can
not pressure its neighbors, because its neighbors might decide to make a
grab for its wealth. So Russia must recover its military strength. Rich and
weak is a bad position for nations to be in. If Russia is to be rich in natural
resources and export them to Europe, it must be in a position to protect
what it has and to shape the international environment in which it lives.
In the next decade Russia will become increasingly wealthy (relative to
its past, at least) but geographically insecure. It will therefore use some of its
wealth to create a military force appropriate to protect its interests, buffer
zones to protect it from the rest of the world—and then buffer zones for the
buffer zones. Russia’s grand strategy involves the creation of deep buffers
along the northern European plain, while it divides and manipulates its
neighbors, creating a new regional balance of power in Europe. What Rus
sia cannot tolerate are tight borders without buffer zones, and its neighbors
united against it. This is why Russia’s future actions will appear to be ag
gressive but will actually be defensive.
Russia’s actions will unfold in three phases. In the first phase, Russia will
be concerned with recovering influence and effective control in the former
Soviet Union, re- creating the system of buffers that the Soviet Union pro
vided it. In the second phase, Russia will seek to create a second tier of
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buffers beyond the boundaries of the former Soviet Union. It will try to do
this without creating a solid wall of opposition, of the kind that choked it
during the Cold War. In the third phase—really something that will have
been going on from the beginning—Russia will try to prevent anti- Russian
coalitions from forming.
It is important to step back here and look at the reasons why the former So
viet Union stayed intact in the latter half of the twentieth century. The
Soviet Union was held together not simply by force but by a system of eco
nomic relationships that sustained it in the same way that the Russian em
pire before it was sustained. The former Soviet Union shares a common
geography—that is, vast and mostly landlocked, in the heart of Eurasia. It
has extremely poor internal transport systems, as is common in landlocked
areas where the river systems don’t match with agricultural systems. It is
therefore difficult to transport food—and after industrialization, difficult to
move manufactured goods.
Think of the old Soviet Union as that part of the Eurasian landmass that
stretched westward from the Pacific Ocean along the wastelands north of
populated China, northwest of the Himalayas, and continued along the
border with South Central Asia to the Caspian, and then on to the Cauca
sus. It was buffered by the Black Sea and then by the Carpathian Moun
tains. Along the north, there was only the Arctic. Within this space, there
was a vast landmass, marked by republics with weak economies.
If we think of the Soviet Union as a natural grouping of geographically
isolated and economically handicapped countries, we can see what held
it together. The countries that made up the Soviet Union were bound to
gether of necessity. They could not compete with the rest of the world
economically—but isolated from global competition, they could comple
ment and support each other. This was a natural grouping readily domi
nated by the Russians. The countries beyond the Carpathians (the ones
Russia occupied after World War II and turned into satellites) were not in
cluded in this natural grouping. If it weren’t for Soviet military force, they
would have been oriented toward the rest of Europe, not Russia.
The former Soviet Union consisted of members who really had nowhere
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else to go. These old economic ties still dominate the region, except that
Russia’s new model, exporting energy, has made these countries even more
dependent than they were previously. Attracted as Ukraine was to the rest of
Europe, it could not compete or participate with Europe. Its natural eco
nomic relationship is with Russia; it relies on Russia for energy, and ulti
mately it tends to be militarily dominated by Russia as well.
These are the dynamics that Russia will take advantage of in order to re
assert its sphere of influence. It will not necessarily re-create a formal politi
cal structure run from Moscow—although that is not inconceivable. Far
more important will be Russian influence in the region over the next five to
ten years, which will surge. In order to think about this, let’s break it down
into three theaters of operation: the Caucasus, Central Asia, and the Euro
pean theater, which includes the Baltics.
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