Authors: Philip Longworth
The collapse of the Soviet Union left some successor states even worse off than Russia. Belarus has ever since been seeking reunion, and Ukraine, despite chances of being accepted into NATO’s protective embrace, needs the Russian market and therefore remains ambivalent about the West, keeping its options open. Both states have large numbers of Orthodox communicants as well as other historic ties which make many of their citizens sympathetic to Moscow. Russia may yet prove the preferable option for Ukraine both for trading purposes and to ensure energy supplies. Russia’s ability to interrupt or cut off the flow of oil and natural gas not only to what Russians call ‘the near abroad’ but to Western Europe and the Balkans too gives it considerable clout. So does its continuing occupation of Kaliningrad, the Baltic port once called Konigsberg which it acquired in the eighteenth century and contrived to hold on to both in 1945 and in 1991.
This powerful naval base wedged in between Lithuania and Poland on the Baltic frightens its neighbours and is a serious nuisance for NATO, but when the withdrawal of Russian troops from Lithuania in August 2003 prompted demands for its demilitarization Moscow refused. The retention of the enclave provides it with a powerful lever, and it is not the only one at Moscow’s disposal. The presence of large Russian-speaking minorities in the Baltic states provides another. The states which host them distrust them, and, as we saw in Chapter 15, there have been charges that Russians in the ‘near abroad’ are denied civil and political rights. Moscow can exploit and even manipulate this situation to its advantage.
Russia’s position in the Caucasus is no less strong, though the commitment is expensive because of the need to contain Chechen extremism. Since 11 September, however, the Western Powers have become more sympathetic to Moscow’s point of view. The troubles will eventually subside for a time when the insurgents tire, as has always happened in the past. Meanwhile, despite the dreadful costs, no Russian government dare give in. The safety of the northern Caucasus, of oil pipelines from the Caspian Sea, and of communications to the south is an interest which Moscow cannot afford to jeopardize.
Georgia has become an American client - though an unstable one — but with allies in the Georgian provinces of Abkhazia and Ossetia, which dislike rule from Tbilisi, Russia can still exert influence there. Armenia, to the south of Georgia, still aligns with Russia and, thanks to careful nurturing over many years, Russia’s relations with Iran are good. Along with the other states bordering the Caspian Sea, the two countries have agreed the bases of exploiting its oil and gas reserves, but Russia’s position is stronger than the rest because of its pipeline facilities.
In Central Asia Russia’s position is stronger still. Kazakhstan, the largest state in the region, is a firm ally, and Russia maintains test sites, an air base and a cosmodrome on its territory. The Uzbeks and the Kyrgyz as well as the Kazakhs know the Russians well and trust them more than other outsiders. Turkmenistan exports its natural gas through Russia, and Tajikistan has so far allowed Russian troops to patrol its frontiers with Afghanistan. A common concern to combat Islamic fundamentalism and to stabilize Afghanistan have recently brought Russia and the United States closer than for decades, but Russia now seems to be the preponderant strategic influence in Central Asia once again.
In May 2003 Russia, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan, as well as Belarus and Armenia, agreed to set up a collective security organization with headquarters in Moscow, a rapid-reaction force for Central Asia under
Russian command, and a common air-defence system. They also agreed to co-ordinate foreign policy and security.
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The Collective Rapid Deployment Force was set up within a year, and, in return for rescheduling part of that country’s sizeable debt,
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Russia also obtained a permanent lease on a military air-base at Kant in Kyrgyzstan, at the heart of the region and within range of Afghanistan, Pakistan, India and China.
Russo-Chinese relations since the collapse have prospered. Trade between the two countries almost tripled during Putin’s first term. Both powers are involved together with three Central Asian states in the ‘Shanghai Forum’, and their common interests include anti-terrorism and counter-insurgency (China approves of Moscow’s policy in Chechnya, Russia of Chinese policy in Taiwan and Tibet), international conflict management, and Iraq. China implicitly recognizes Russia’s leading role in Central Asia. Divergent interests may divide them in future, but for the moment the Russo-Chinese entente holds.
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Furthermore, as in the Soviet period, relations with India are good, and India remains a major importer of Russian arms and military technology. In Asia, then, Russia’s power and influence have been growing again.
The United States is the world’s only superpower, but even a superpower’s ability to control territory and peoples has its limitations, as the intervention in Iraq has demonstrated. Russia lacks the strength to challenge America in the foreseeable future, yet nothing is immutable. The world changes, and the strategic order will change with it. Russia has begun to recover. Its military capability is considerable albeit much reduced, and its tradition of careful diplomacy based on superior intelligence, realism and understanding of other cultures gives it advantages which others lack, and will stand it in good stead. History provides no sure guide of things to come, but, as I write in September 2004, it would be unwise to write off Russia’s chances of future power.
Geology/climate | ||
and selected events in | Russian history and | |
Date | European/world history | imperial development |
Before present | ||
20,000-26,000 | Age of mammoths | Sungir remains |
24,000 | Onset of the Ice Age | |
7,000-8,000 | Global warming; ice retreats | Aspen, birch, hazel, willow, |
hornbeam, linden, oak, elm, | ||
etc. | ||
Animals, wildfowl | ||
6,000 | Palaeolithic era | Agriculture and animal |
husbandry | ||
4,000 | Babylonia | Tripolye settlements |
3,5oo | Hunter-gatherers in Finland | |
3,000 | Iron Age | Swidden agriculture |
Persian Empire | Cimmerians, Scythians, | |
Alexander the Great | Sarmatians | |
2,000 | Roman Empire | |
Common Era (CE) | ||
330 CE | Constantine the Great founds Constantinople | Khazar kaganate |
c. 650- | Spread of Islam: Baghdad Caliphate | |
c. 856 | Riurik at Ladoga | |
858 | Askold and Dir take Kiev | |
860 | Vikings raid Constantinople | |
882 | Alfred the Great | Oleg defeats Askold and Dir |
Khazar hegemony over Kiev | ||
c. 955 | Olga visits Constantinople | |
Sviatoslav conquers Khazars | ||
Christianization of Rus | ||
Vladimir builds St Sofia in Kiev Iaroslav the Wise (d. 1054) | ||
1066 | Normans conquer England | |
1068 | Rus defeated by Polovtsians (Cumans) | |
1113 | Vladimir Monomakh, | |
Prince of Vladimir-Suzdal | ||
1204 | Crusaders sack Constantinople | |
1232 | Baty Khan routs Russians Mongol era begins | |
1240 | Collapse of Kievan Rus Alexander Nevskii beats | |
off Swedes and German | ||
Knights | ||
c. 1300 | Rise of Vladimir-Moscow | |
1325 | Metropolitan of Kiev moves | |
to Moscow | ||
1331 | Ivan I (Money-Bag) becomes | |
grand prince | ||
1380 | Dmitrii defeats Tatars at | |
Kulikovo | ||
1400 | St Sergius. Monastic colonization | |
1413 | Treaty of Horodlo | Catholicization in Lithuania |
1425 | Growth of Inca Empire | Vasilii 11 |
1441 | Council of Ferrara | Ivan III (the Great) |
Louis XI of France | ||
1453 | Constantinople falls to Turks Lorenzo de’ Medici | |
Henry the Navigator | Novgorod subjected to Moscow | |
1472 | Ivan III m. Zoe Palaeologue | |
1485 | Henry VII of England | |
Aztec Empire | ||
1547 | Ivan IV (the Terrible) | |
1550 | Spain and Portugal build empires | Law book issued |
Kazan captured | ||
First Russian outposts in | ||
Caucasus | ||
Conquest of Siberian khanate | ||
Livonian war | ||
English merchants discover | ||
Russia | ||
Archangel established | ||
Boris Godunov | ||
1601 | Onset of Little Ice Age | Mangazeia founded |
1605 | Russia in turmoil | |
Collapse of Muscovite state | ||
Pretender Dmitrii takes Moscow | ||
1606 | Swedes invade | |
1612 | Moscow recaptured | |
1613 | Michael Romanov crowned tsar | |
1630-31 | War with Poland Smolensk recaptured | |
1648 | Fronde in France | Dezhnev reaches Pacific |
English Civil War | Ukrainian Cossacks rebel against Polish rule | |
1654 | War with Poland Ukrainian Cossacks submit to Tsar Alexis | |
1660 | Restoration of monarchy | |
in England | ||
1667 | Peace of Andrusovo: Russia | |
gains eastern Ukraine | ||
1676 | Death of Alexis, accession | |
of Fedor | ||
1689 | Treaty of Nerchinsk with China | |
1689-1725 | Peter I (the Great) | |
Great Northern War | ||
1703 | Foundation of St Petersburg | |
1709 | Russians rout Swedes at Poltava | |
1711 | Russians defeated by Turks | |
on river Pruth | ||
1716 | Orenburg Line begun (base for | |
future expansion into Central | ||
Asia) | ||
Annexation of Baltic states | ||
1724 | War with Persia | |
1725 | Catherine I | |
1726 | Alliance with Habsburg Emperor | |
1727 | Peter II | |
1730 | Anna Iovanovna | |
1741 | Elizabeth Petrovna | |
1756-63 | Seven Years War | |
1761 | Peter III | |
1762 | Catherine II | |
1769-73 | American Revolution | War with Turks |
First partition of Poland | ||
1783 | Annexation of Crimea | |
1787-93 | French Revolution | War with Turks |
1793 | Second partition of Poland | |
1795 | Revolutionary Wars | Third partition of Poland |
18oo | Napolean | A Russian fleet enters the |
Mediterranean | ||
1803 | A Russian ship circumnavigates | |
the globe | ||
1808 | Finland annexed | |
1811 | Bessarabia annexed | |
1812 | Russia invaded by | |
Napoleon’s Grande Armée | ||
1815 | Waterloo | Russian troops in Paris |
1820s | War in Chechnya | |
Russia sponsors Greek independence | ||
1828-9 | Russians take Tabriz and | |
Erzurum | ||
Russia penetrates Central | ||
Asia and Far East; gains | ||
access to Mediterranean | ||
Russia sponsors autonomous | ||
Serbia | ||
Russian colonization of | ||
Alaska | ||
1837-1901 | Queen Victoria | |
1853-6 | Crimean War | |
1864 | American Civil War | Russians take Chimkent |
1865 | Samarkand | |
1873 | Khiva Kokand | |
1877-8 | War with Turks | |
Russia sponsors Bulgarian | ||
Independence | ||
Railway-building | ||
1885 | Heyday of British Empire | Russians defeat Afghans at |
Pendjeh | ||
1890s | Russia industrializes Trans-Siberian Railway | |
1896 | Russia—China accord | |
1904 | War with Japan | |
1905 | Battle of Tsushima | |
1914-18 | First World War | |
1917 | Nicholas II abdicates; end of | |
Romanov Empire | ||
Bolsheviks remove | ||
Provisional Government | ||
I918- | Civil War | |
War with Poland | ||
Loss of Baltic states, | ||
Ukraine, etc. | ||
1924 | Death of Lenin; power | |
gravitates to Stalin | ||
1928-9 | Great Depression | Stalin launches |
Collectivization and first | ||
Five-Year Plan | ||
1933 | Hitler in power in Germany | |
1934-8 | Purges and show trials | |
1938 | Munich Agreement | |
1939 | Second World War begins in West | |
1940 | Occupation of Baltic states | |
1941 | Pearl Harbor; US enters WWII | Hitler invades Soviet Union |
1942 | Battle of Stalingrad | |
1943 | Battle of Kursk; Germans | |
in retreat | ||
1944 | Invasion of Normandy | Yalta Conference |
1945 | Atomic bomb dropped on Japan | Soviet forces take Berlin Potsdam agreement |
1947 | Marshall Plan | Onset of the Cold War |
Chinese Communists defeat | Soviet Bloc formed | |
Nationalists | ||
1949 | Soviet Union acquires atom | |
bomb; breach with China | ||
1953 | Death of Stalin | |
1954 | COMECON becomes active | |
1955 | Warsaw Pact | |
1956 | Soviet intervention in Hungary | |
1959 | Cuba aligns with Moscow | |
1961 | Soviet Union puts first astronaut | |
into space | ||
1964 | Brezhnev replaces Khrushchev | |
1968 | Soviet intervention in | |
Czechoslovakia | ||
1979 | Soviet intervention in Afghanistan | |
1982 | Andropov becomes Party | |
Secretary | ||
1984 | Death of Andropov; Chernenko | |
succeeds him | ||
1985 | Death of Chernenko; Gorbachev | |
becomes Party Secretary; | ||
detente with West | ||
1986 | Chernobyl disaster | |
1988-91 | Reunification of Germany | Collapse of Bloc |
Dissolution of Soviet Union | ||
1992 | Yeltsin as Russian president | |
Catastrophic decline | ||
Russia reverts to frontiers | ||
of c. 1650 | ||
1994-6 | NATO extends eastward | First Chechen War |
US warships enter Black Sea | ||
2000 | Putin becomes president | |
Reassertion of Russian interests | ||
Economic recovery |