advance toward Russia of an American-led and still hostile alliance. Some of the Russian foreign policy elite—
most of whom were actually former Soviet officials—persisted in the long-standing geostrategic view that
America had no place in Eurasia and that NATO expansion was largely driven by the American desire to
increase its sphere of influence. Some of their opposition also derived^ from the hope that an unattached
Central Europe would some day again revert to Moscow's sphere of geopolitical influence, once Russia had
regained its health.
But many Russian democrats also feared that the expansion of NATO would mean that Russia would be left
outside of Europe, ostracized politically, and considered unworthy of membership in the institutional
framework of European civilization. Cultural insecurity compounded the political fears, making NATO
expansion seem like the culmination of the long-standing Western policy designed to isolate Russia, leaving it
alone in the world and vulnerable to its various enemies. Moreover, the Russian democrats simply could not
grasp the depth either of the Central Europeans' resentment over half a century of Moscow's domination or of
their desire to be part of a larger Euro-Atlantic system.
On balance, it is probable that neither the disappointment nor the weakening of the Russian westernizers
could have been avoided. For one thing, the new Russian elite, quite divided within itself and with neither its
president nor its foreign minister capable of providing consistent geostrategic leadership, was not able to define
clearly what the new Russia wanted in Europe, nor could it realistically assess the actual limitations of Russia's
weakened condition. Moscow's politically embattled democrats could not bring themselves to state boldly that a
democratic Russia does not oppose the enlargement of the transatlantic democratic community and that it
wishes to be associated with it. The delusion of a shared global status with America made it difficult for the
Moscow political elite to abandon the idea of a privileged geopolitical position for Russia, not only in the area
of the former Soviet Union itself but even in regard to the former Central European satellite states.
These developments played into the hands of the nationalists, who by 1994 were beginning to recover their
voices, and the militarists, who by then had become Yeltsin's critically important clomestic supporters. Their
increasingly shrill and occasionally threatening reactions to the aspirations of the Central Europeans merely
intensified the determination of the former satellite states—mindful of their only recently achieved liberation
from Russian rule—to gain the safe haven of NATO.
The gulf between Washington and Moscow was widened further by the Kremlin's unwillingness to disavow
all of Stalin's conquests. Western public opinion, especially in Scandinavia but also in the United States, was
especially troubled by the ambiguity of the Russian attitude toward the Baltic republics. While recognizing their
independence and not pressing for their membership in the CIS, even the democratic Russian leaders
periodically resorted to threats in order to obtain preferential treatment for the large communities of Russian
colonists who had deliberately been settled in these countries during the Stalinist years. The atmosphere was
further clouded by the pointed unwillingness of the Kremlin to denounce the secret Nazi-Soviet agreement of
1939 that had paved the way for the forcible incorporation of these republics into the Soviet Union. Even five
years after the Soviet Union's collapse, spokesmen for the Kremlin insisted (in the official statement of
September 10, 1996) that in 1940 the Baltic states had voluntarily "joined" the Soviet Union.
The post-Soviet Russian elite had apparently also expected that the West would aid in, or at least not impede,
the restoration of a central Russian role in the post-Soviet space. They thus resented the West's willingness to
help the newly independent post-Soviet states consolidate their separate political existence. Even while warning
that a "confrontation with the United States ... is an option that should be avoided," senior Russian analysts of
American foreign policy argued (not altogether incorrectly) that the United States was seeking "the
reorganization of interstate relations in the whole of Eurasia ... whereby there was not one sole leading power
on the continent but many medium, relatively stable, and moderately strong ones ... but necessarily inferior to
the United States in their individual or even collective capabilities."4
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