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Showing posts with label oil. Show all posts
Showing posts with label oil. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 1, 2023

The New World (Dis)order: Part IV: Crony Capitalism and the West’s Achilles Heel

Empty shopping cart in an empty parking garage
(Image: Xavi Cabrera on Unsplash)


NOTE: This is the fourth in a five part series.
PART I: American Adventurism, Non-Interventionism, Trumpism and Afghan Chaos
PART II: The Misunderstanding of Vladimir Putin
PART III: China Awakens Under Xi Jinping
PART IV: Crony Capitalism and the West’s Achilles Heel

PART V (
November): The New World (Dis)order

Part IV: Crony Capitalism and the West’s Achilles Heel


“Private individuals can corrupt free markets by using the government to procure for themselves ‘systems either of preference or of restraint’.”

 

-Adam Smith on Crony Capitalism (via Heritage Foundation Report)


Have you ever visited Londongrad and strolled along Moscow-on-the-Thames? No, seriously these nicknames were conferred upon the British capital city, with good reason.


Since the fall of the Soviet Union, successive British governments of every political stripe had an open door policy to welcome in Russian money. In 1994, PM John Major, a Conservative, launched a ‘golden visa’ scheme offering residency visas to anyone who invested £1m pounds. Tony Blair and the Labour Party continued the visa scheme. Even Ken Livingstone, London's Mayor from 2000 to 2008, a socialist, declared he wanted “Russian companies to regard London as their natural base in Europe.


The scheme was rebranded the Tier 1 investor visa by Gordon Brown, in 2008. The BBC reports that since the rebrand, 2,581 visas have been issued to Russian citizens. In 2020, Boris Johnson made his friend Evgeny Lebedev, owner of the Evening Standard newspaper and son of a former KGB officer, a peer in the House of Lords.


Even after Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 and release of the Panama Papers in 2016, which detailed how 214,488 offshore entities shell companies invested in places like London, nothing was done. Russian oligarchs continued to launder money by buying luxury mansions and even English Premier League football teams.


In 2020, UK’s parliamentary intelligence and security committee issued a damning report about the growing influence of Russian money in the country. The report stated that the UK had become the ‘most favourable’ destination for oligarchs and that the visa scheme offered the ‘ideal mechanisms’ to launder money. 


It warned that dirty money was being used to “extend patronage and build influence across a wide sphere of the British establishment – PR firms, charities, political interests, academia and cultural institutions…” Another report issued that same year by the Home Office cautioned that “Russian-linked illicit finance” was being used by individuals to successfully "launder their reputations”.


A 2022 analysis by independent anti-corruption group, Transparency International, found £1.5 billion worth of property owned by Russians accused of financial crime, or with links to the Kremlin. The actual figure is likely much higher because they found another 90,000 properties owned by shell corporations, which prevents the British Government, law enforcement and the public from uncovering who owns them.


Despite the obvious red flags the visa scheme remained open and was only shut down one week before Mr. Putin invaded Ukraine. However, a new book by Oliver Bullough argues that even though the UK sanctioned Russian companies, banks, tycoons and pushed through a hastily crafted anti-crime bill, there remains a big “gulf between rhetoric and reality”.


According to Mr. Bullough, the UK became the preferred destination for oligarchs, gangsters and kleptocrats not by accident, but by design. He says the government’s new law lacks teeth, and more importantly does nothing to dismantle the underlying systems that have led to Britain having an estimated £100 billion-a-year money-laundering problem.


According to him, the lawyers and public-relations firms that scare away anyone prying into their clients’ business, along with plaintiff-friendly libel and privacy laws, remain in place. As does access to a network of secretive offshore territories like Jersey and the Cayman Islands. Extradition to Russia is still a no-no in the eyes of British judges and oligarchs rest easy knowing they spent years investing large sums of money building deep ties to every part of the British establishment.


While the UK has a big dirty money problem, it is not alone in Europe. 


In 2005, less than three weeks after Gerhard Schröder stepped down as chancellor of Germany, he got a call from Mr. Putin asking him to lead the shareholding committee of Nord Stream, the Russian pipeline which delivered 55% of Germany’s natural gas, prior to the Ukraine invasion. Despite the obvious ethical conflict of Mr. Schroder being the one who pushed through approval of the pipeline, during his final weeks in office, he accepted the job.


It is true that successive German chancellors, captains of industry and journalists believed that binding Russia in trade would deter Mr. Putin from risking a conflict with Europe, while securing Germany’s economic interests. After the Ukraine invasion this calculus changed for every German, but not Mr. Schröder. 


He has made millions pushing Russian energy interests and far from expressing regret, he accepted a new position to be on Gazprom's board last year. He refuses to condemn the invasion and is still pushing Germany to reopen Nord Stream.


The European Parliament too has been rocked by a recent corruption scandal. A series of raids carried out by Belgian investigators, last winter, uncovered that politicians had pocketed cash in exchange for praising Qatar and downplaying its human rights abuses, leading up to the 2022 World Cup.


A New York Times investigation found that Qatar used bribes to turn the International Labor Organization, the United Nations workers’ rights watchdog, from critic to ally. Qatar’s campaign included “free travel; a parliamentary hearing with planted questions and a $25 million Qatari contribution to the labor organization”. 


On the eve of the World Cup, Qatari officials succeeded in getting the U.N. watchdog to refrain from making comments that might overshadow the tournament and to withdraw an earlier complaint “accusing Qatar of forced labor and exploitation”


The reality is that dirty money’s tentacles have spread to every part of the West and infiltrated sectors ranging from startups and real estate, to colleges and cultural institutions. 


The Atlantic Council estimates $1 trillion in Russian "dark money" is hidden around the globe. The National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) estimates that 60% of the wealth of Russia’s richest households reside outside the country’s borders. 


Another place swimming in dirty money is Silicon Valley. Russian oligarchs have sometimes invested openly, like when Mikhail Fridman made a $200 million investment in Uber, in 2016. However, most use shell companies and middlemen that are hard to trace, and through them invest in blue chip companies like Meta, Twitter and Airbnb.


Saudi Arabia is one of the largest investors in US startups. A 2018 estimate by Quid put their direct investments at $6.2 billion in companies like Tesla, Uber, Lyft and Twitter. In 2020 they bought a $500 million stake in LiveNation, the parent company of Ticketmaster and Taylor Swift fans’ worst nightmare. Prior to that they wrote a $45 billion cheque to SoftBank’s Vision Fund. Through it they have made around 26 investments in startups like WeWork, Magic Leap, GM CruiseWAG, Slack, Sofi and DoorDash. 


After the World Cup in Qatar, the Saudis managed to pull off their first professional sports coup by signing one of the greatest footballers of our time, Cristiano Ronaldo. They are paying him over $200 million a season to play for a local club. They also offered football legend, Lionel Messi, a $400-$600 million a year deal to sign with another Saudi club, but he decided to sign with FC Miami in the end. According to press reports Miami managed to make him a sweeter deal.


In 2022, five European football clubs were owned by Russian oligarchs and five by Arab billionaires, including one by Saudi crown prince Mohammad Bin Salman. Russian oligarch Roman Abramovich only agreed to sell Chelsea to a US consortium, after he was sanctioned for the Ukraine invasion.


As they continue to sportswash their human rights record, last year the Saudis upended the genteel world of US professional golf. First, they divided the PGA tour by luring away some of their biggest stars to join a rival Saudi-backed LIV Golf circuit. Last month, Saudi Arabia effectively bought off the PGA Tour when it was announced that LIV and the PGA were going to merge


While financial details of the merger have not been disclosed, the head of the Saudi Public Investment Fund (PIF), who happens to be the right-hand man of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, will be the new Chairman, and the current PGA commissioner its CEO. The deal also gives the Saudis the first right to refusal on any outside investment in the future, effectively giving them total control over a major U.S. sport.


The real estate markets of Los AngelesMiami and New York are another magnet for dirty money. Current US law makes it easy to make large purchases through untraceable shell companies with few questions asked. 


According to PropertyShark, $8 billion is spent each year on New York City homes that cost more than $5 million each. That is triple the amount spent a decade ago and over half these purchases are made by shell companies.


In 2010, a entity named 25CC ST74B L.L.C. paid $15.65 million to buy a condo on the 74th floor of the Time Warner Center. A NY Times investigation traced it to the family of Vitaly Malkin, a former Russian banker who is barred from entering Canada because of his suspected ties to organised crime. 


The condo down the hall was bought by a shell company for a Greek TV magnate, who was later arrested on fraud and corruption charges. A few floors down, three condos were purchased by another shell company that belongs to a Chinese businessman, Wang Wenliang. His construction company was fined for housing workers in hazardous and unsanitary conditions in New Jersey.


The same NY Times investigation found that two-thirds of Time Warner Center residences were owned by shell companies. They managed to uncover the names of 16 owners. All sixteen were the subject of government investigations into housing and environmental violations or financial fraud in their home countries. They hailed from places like Russia, Colombia, Malaysia, China, Kazakhstan and Mexico.


Remember the Chinese businessman who owns the three Time Warner condos and was cited for labour violations? Turns out that Mr. Wenliang managed to secure a seat on the NYU board of trustees after making a donation to New York University. 


In 2020, the US Department of Education (DoE) sent letters to Harvard and Yale for failing to "disclose donations and contracts" from foreign governments that included China, Iran, Russia, Qatar and Saudi Arabia. While the majority of money these institutions received was from legitimate sources, the department said the lack of “institutional controls” was making it easy for dirty money to go unnoticed. The DoE's letter cited Yale for failing to disclose “a single foreign source gift or contract in 2014, 2015, 2016 and 2017.”


These colleges are not alone. A 2021 report by the National Endowment for Democracy found that US educational institutions and think tanks have become vulnerable to “transnational kleptocratic activity”. 


Kleptocrats are using major gift giving as a way to launder their reputations by influencing academic remits, serving as guest lecturers and gaining admission for family members. Russian oligarchs have donated $1 million to MIT, $4 million to NYU and more than $10 million to Brandeis.


US Cultural institutions too, have been busy opening their doors to dirty money. The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts got more than $5 million from Russian billionaires. Viktor Vekselberg donated to Lincoln Center, Carnegie Hall and the Museum of Modern Art. Vladimir Potanin is a major donor to the Guggenheim Museum and recently gave over $6 million to the Kennedy Center in Washington.


The Brooklyn Museum received $1 million from Mikhail Prokhorov, former owner of the Brooklyn Nets basketball team. Even the Mayo Clinic has accepted at least $1 million. According to the co-founder of the Anti-Corruption Data Collective, these gifts do not even start to scratch the surface of oligarch donations, as most are impossible to trace.


Many reputed US firms have been caught engaging in corruption while doing business abroad. Goldman Sachs paid a $3 billion fine to end a probe into its role in the 1MDB corruption scandal. The scheme involved paying $1 billion in bribes to Malaysian government officials, including a former prime minister. US officials concluded that Goldman played a "central" role in the "massive corruption scheme”. 


Even McKinsey, the world’s most prestigious consulting firm, has gotten their hands dirty. They were barred from doing business in Mongolia after allowing a government official to double as a profit-seeking business partner. More recently, they were criticized for nepotism when they hired the children of high-ranking Saudi officials while being paid millions to advise the Saudi government on its economic transformation.


In 2018, McKinsey found itself embroiled in a corruption scandal involving South Africa’s largest power company, Eskom, in a deal that had ties to shady businessmen brothers who bankrolled the former president, Jacob Zuma. In 2021, McKinsey agreed to repay $63 million in fees to Transnet, a South African logistics company, after being linked once again to bribery-tainted contracts. Last year McKinsey was officially charged in the Transnet case by the country’s National Prosecuting Authority. 


Not to be outdone, their rival Bain & Company got themselves banned from bidding on public contracts in South Africa for ten years, after they helped corrupt government officials degrade the country’s revenue services’ ability to probe tax evasion.


Meanwhile across the pond, Europe’s biggest bank HSBC decided to become the local bank of drug cartels in Mexico. The ‘world’s local bank’ had created a Ponzi scheme to help cartels funnel money. They did this while on probation for past ties to drug kingpins.


A UK government investigation found that HSBC’s subsidiaries helped traffickers transport billions of dollars in armored vehicles, cleared suspicious travelers cheques for them and helped one drug lord purchase an airplane to transport drugs. 


The same UK investigation found that HSBC employees helped terrorists move money outside Iran and Syria, and a Saudi bank with links to Al-Qaida transfer money to America. British lawmakers concluded that the bank had a "pervasively polluted" culture that had persisted for years.


Much before the HSBC scandal, Siemens, a German company and the world’s largest electrical engineering firm shocked the world in 2012 when they agreed to pay a $1.6 billion fine. The penalty related to a bribery scheme that began in the 1990’s and ran through the 2000’s, spanning the globe from Azerbaijan and China, to Iraq and Russia. 


German investigators found that the corruption started in Siemens executive suite and flowed from there to every corner of the firm. It was so pervasive that Siemens actually had an internal accounting euphemism for bribes. One German prosecutor summed up the case saying, "bribery was Siemens' business model”


Even Scandinavian companies, long considered the gold standard for corporate responsibility, have been caught in dirty money scandals. Danske Bank, the largest Danish bank, was the first to get caught conducting suspicious activities, after which the scandal spread to the highly respected Swedbank. Both are accused of helping Russian oligarchs, corrupt politicians and organized crime lords transfer hundreds of billions to offshore tax havens.


Earlier this year, the Swedish telecom giant Ericsson pled guilty to and agreed to pay $206 million in criminal penalties. They were fined for covering up bribes they paid between 2000 and 2016 to government officials in Kuwait, Saudi Arabia and China. Credit Suisse, the 167 years old Swiss bank that was recently sold to UBS, was criminally charged in 2022 for laundering money for a Bulgarian cocaine smuggler. 


While corruption seems endemic, there is a more fallible weakness the West has when it comes to their ties to autocratic regimes, and it has to do with their reliance on these countries for critical raw materials, minerals and energy. 


Take for example the fanfare with which US, UK and EU imposed sanctions on Russian billionaires. An analysis by Bloomberg found that the EU sanctioned nine and U.S. just four of twenty billionaires with ties to Putin. Sanctions experts say the decision not to sanction some was based on their "critical stakes in energy, metals and fertilizer companies”. It is the same reason that Russian agricultural products, like fertilizers, have not been a target of Western sanctions.


Russia is the world’s largest supplier of fertilizers, followed by China, which means the two countries effectively have a stranglehold on the world’s food supply. Russia and its closest ally Belarus, account for nearly a quarter of all crop nutrients, followed by China. 


According to the US Department of Agriculture, fertilizer accounts for almost one-fifth of a U.S. farmer’s cash costs. For corn and wheat it is even higher, accounting for 36 percent and 35 percent, respectively.


After the Ukraine invasion, global fertilizer prices skyrocketed but US consumers did not feel these effects because for 2022 plantings, purchases had been made in 2021. This year, wheat prices have increased 21 percent, barley 33 percent and fertilizers 40 percent. The longer the war continues, the more likely it is that Americans will start to feel some pain at their dinner table. However, for poorer counties the impact of these price rises will result in starvation. 


In early 2023 the IMF raised the alarm saying that 48 countries in Africa, Asia and Latin America were at serious risk from “acute food insecurity,” because of the war in Ukraine. 


Many low-income countries in Middle East, Africa and Central Asia get 75% of their wheat from Russia and Ukraine. Prior to the invasion Ukraine accounted for 46% of global exports for sunflower oil, 37% of millet, 15% for corn, 13% of barley, 10% of wheat, 8% of honey, and 7% of walnut.


With the Russian navy blockade of the Black Sea the situation has grown more precarious. Russia now controls the main shipping corridor for these critical food exports. Last year, the UN had to step in to broker the Black Sea Grain Initiative for exports to resume, after Mr. Putin halted them.


Late last year Russia again refused to renew the initiative unless the West softened sanctions, and last month they withdrew from the deal altogether. A few days later Russia said it would treat any ship heading to Ukrainian grain ports as a military target and they started bombing grain facilities in Odesa and other cities. 


While there is no question Mr. Putin will continue to use this as a bargaining chip, I do not believe he will completely halt exports because much of it goes to countries like Turkey, Iran, Egypt and African and Latin American nations that have refused to publicly condemn Russia’s invasion.


Instead, Mr. Putin might try to cut it off for European nations like Germany, France, Spain who rely on Ukraine to a lesser extent but would see a rise in prices if he managed to stop their supply. The bottom line is that the longer this war goes on, the greater the threat to global food security.


The West’s energy needs are another weakness that Mr. Putin and Mr. Xi are aware of. The EU surprised the world by how quickly they managed to cut their reliance on Russian gas but they pulled it off with a mix of expensive and short-term fixes like buying from higher priced suppliers, getting citizens to cut back on their energy use and doling out costly subsidies.


It is worth noting that the EU has not sanctioned Russian gas sales and member nations continue to import large volumes of Russian liquefied natural gas. It is also true that Europe got lucky with a mild winter last year. There is a long road ahead and no guarantees that these temporary solutions will be sufficient to withstand a harsher winter next year.


Unlike the EU, the US was only dependent on Russia for 8% of its oil imports, so Americans did not feel the same bite from sanctions. However, America's insatiable thirst for big cars and cheap gas still has dangerous consequences. 


A Berkeley study found that the average American consumes more than 300 gallons of gas a year, which puts the U.S. at the top of 128 countries studied. A typical American consumes more than what three Germans consume and the equivalent to the consumption by six Frenchwomen.


Last year, as global energy prices rose, fuel-guzzling Americans feeling the pinch at the pump were immediately up in arms. Being an midterm election year, gas prices turned into a hot button political issue, which led the US President to tuck his tail and run to Saudi Arabia. 


Mr. Biden, who had promised to turn Saudi Arabia into a ‘pariah’ over their human rights record, instead rushed to fist bump Mohamed Bin Salman. The man who, according to the CIA, had personally approved the murder of Jamal Khashoggi. 


Coincidentally, just when Americans were complaining about high gas prices, another dictator got a free pass. The Biden administration eased sanctions on Nicholas Maduro’s regime, giving Chevron permission to start producing and exporting oil from Venezuela. This is the cost of satisfying American’s insatiable thirst for oil. 


To be fair, while we can criticize American oil consumption, there was no shortage of countries looking to buy cheap Russian oil, including India and China. Another unintended consequence of Europe’s price cap on Russian oil is that it created a thriving black market. 


Russian crude managed to find back doors into Europe through middlemen, with one suspected route being through Azerbaijan. Data shows that Azerbaijan exported 242,000 barrels a day more than it produced last year. Another is through Turkey, which not only doubled its direct oil imports last year, but has refused to impose sanctions on Russia.


Russia has also been busy building a shadow fleet of oil tankers. They are estimated to have 600 vessels known as "dark" ships, which turn off their AIS transponder, technology used to identify and locate vessels. This playbook was written by Venezuela and Iran, who for years used these tactics to skirt sanctions. These dark vessels are operated by hard to trace shell companies located places like Dubai, Hong Kong and Cyprus.


Far from crippling Russia's economy, the sanctions have not even dissuaded many countries from trading with Russia. A NY Times analysis finds that over the last year, trade with Russia actually grew. 


This was not just with countries like China, Brazil and India but EU countries like Germany, Belgium, Spain and Netherlands, reaffirming how deeply the West is reliant on countries like Russia for their energy and other needs. 


Europe is weaning itself off Russian energy, with plans to replace it with clean energy solutions. However, in order to make their clean energy future a reality, they need Russia, because it is the leading producer of copper, nickel, platinum and other minerals. All critical raw materials Europe needs to build solutions for a low-carbon future.


In America, over the last few years there has been growing political rhetoric about “breaking-up” with China, but reality does not support this. President Trump first took a hard line with China by putting in place a number of trade tariffs. President Biden has not only kept these in place but he has also increased scrutiny of Chinese firms, adding new export controls on national security grounds. 


However, what no U.S. politician will admit is that behind all the rhetoric, the reality is that breaking up with China would cause untold economic pain for Americans. 


China is the U.S.’s largest trading partner with two-way trade totaling $559.2 billion in 2020. That same year the U.S. was China’s 3rd largest export market. By contrast, US-Russia trade accounted for $28.0 billion in 2019, making them the 26th largest trade partner.


Severing ties with Russia would feel like a paper cut, but cutting them with China would be akin to transplanting every organ in the body, without anesthesia.


Beginning in the 1990’s and a trend that accelerated in 2001, after China joined the World Trade Organization (WTO), American firms began offshoring manufacturing to China. This enabled them to bring down prices, while increasing profits. Today, the depth of America’s reliance on China, across every industry sector, cannot be underestimated. 

 

Apple relies on China for 85% of its manufacturing, according to market-research firm Counterpoint. Recently, Apple has been talking about moving production out of China, and started manufacturing iPhones in India and Vietnam, yet, the truth is starkly different. Bloomberg Intelligence estimated that it would take Apple eight years to move just 10% of their production capacity out of China, where 98% iPhones are still made. 


This is why Apple’s CEO, Tim Cook, on a recent visit to China said at a conference hosted by the Chinese government, “I am thrilled to be back in China, “It means the world to me and I feel really privileged to be here”.


For Tesla, China accounts for a quarter of its revenues and is their second largest market. Similar to Apple, they rely on China for around 85% of their manufacturing. Tesla just announced they are building a new battery megafactory in Shanghai, where they already have a Gigafactory that makes cars. This will deepen their investment in China, while helping to cement the China’s leadership role in the energy storage supply chain.


Other US companies may have less visible ties, but are equally reliant on China. Take Amazon, which entered the Chinese market through a local acquisition in 2004 but found itself unable to compete with local e-commerce behemoths. While they shuttered Amazon China in 2019, a 2021 Marketplace Pulse analysis found that 75% of new sellers of goods in their top four markets of U.S., U.K., Germany, and Japan, are based in China.


A few years ago, Nike’s CEO proclaimed that “Nike is a brand that is of China and for China”. He was referring to the fact that China had become Nike’s fastest growing market, accounting for 15.8% of total revenues in 2020; five years prior it was less than 1%. Nike is not alone. Numerous American brands are made in China like Barbie, Levis Gillette, Melissa and Doug and Chevy Silverado, to name a few from a much longer list. 


It is not just in manufacturing that America is beholden to China. In 2022, China overtook US as the world’s largest film market. Hollywood relies on China to stay afloat and this is why they kowtow to Chinese censors and stay away from storylines about Uyghurs and Taiwanese independence. 


Giants in the music industry have also been collecting big money for years, doing private performances for leaders of unsavory regimes. Beyonce, Mariah Carey, Seal, Nikki Minaj, Kanye, Jennifer Lopez and Sting are just a few of the names stars have entertained autocrats and their families.


Another important area where the West is reliant on China is critical rare-earth minerals. These are integral to nearly all high-end electronics from cell phones, computers, electric vehicles and flat-screen TVs, to defense equipment ranging from guidance systems, lasers, to radar and sonar systems. According to a U.S. Geological Survey report, China accounts for 80 percent of rare earth mineral imports to the U.S.


American reliance goes even deeper when we consider that approximately 80 percent of the active ingredients (APIs) used to make U.S. pharmaceutical drugs comes from China, and to a lesser extent from India. 


A US Department of Commerce study found that 97 percent of US antibiotics came from China. The FDA states that China ranks first among countries that export medical devices to the U.S., accounting for 40 percent of imports.


The same Bloomberg Intelligence report concluded that while it may be easier to move manufacturing of clothes and toys outside China, U.S. tech companies that have invested over two decades and spent billions of dollars setting-up sophisticated supply chains will not find it easy to unwind them. 


More worryingly nobody can predict the negative impact that a real decoupling of the world’s two largest economies will have on global markets.


Read final installment in November:

PART V: The New World (dis)Order

Thursday, June 1, 2023

The New World (Dis)order: PART II: The Misunderstanding of Vladimir Putin


(Image: Wallpaperflare dotcom)

NOTE: This is the second in a five part series.

PART I: American Adventurism, Non-Interventionism, Trumpism and Afghan Chaos
PART II: The Misunderstanding of Vladimir Putin
PART III: China Awakens Under Xi Jinping
PART IV: Crony Capitalism and the West’s Achilles Heel
PART V (
November): The New World (Dis)order


PART II: The Misunderstanding of Vladimir Putin


To anyone who would consider interfering from the outside: If you do, you will face consequences greater than any you have faced in history. All relevant decisions have been taken. I hope you hear me.”

-Vladimir Putin, 24th February 2022


In February, 2014 after three months of violent and sustained demonstrations in Ukraine, their Russian-leaning President Victor Yanukovych fled Kyiv. The Ukrainian parliament appointed an acting president and prime minister who immediately announced they wanted to bring the country closer to Europe and further away from Russia.


Fearing the Arab Spring could arrive at Moscow’s doorstep and banking on Mr. Obama’s non-interventionism, Mr. Putin invaded Crimea, days after Mr. Yanukovych fled. There is an argument to be made that his decision to annex Crimea was driven less by a desire to rewrite history and more as a strategic maneuver to ensure Russia’s Black Sea Fleet would not get evicted from its base in Sevastopol, as Ukraine drew closer to Europe.


However, regardless of his motivations, what is laughable is Mr. Putin’s claims that Crimea has always been a part of Russia, and that he was liberating its ethnic Russian population. Records in Russian government archives show that Crimea was transferred to Ukraine in 1954, under Stalin, and in 1991 Ukrainians voted overwhelmingly in favour of independence from the Soviet Union.


At the time Mr. Obama condemned the Russian aggression in Crimea but insisted that the country was a "regional power” and said that Mr. Putin’s actions were a sign of weakness, not strength. He said the US remained committed to defending NATO allies but non-members, like Ukraine, could only count on non-military pressure and sanctions to dissuade Russia from making further territorial encroachments.


Again, Obama rejected the recommendations of his national security advisors and overruled Congress when they tried to send lethal military aid to Ukraine. A senior Obama administration official said that they did not want to “provoke Russia”. 


Unlike after Putin’s invasion of Georgia, this time the international community did impose economic sanctions and target members of Putin’s inner circle. Vice-president Biden vowed the sanctions would leave Russia standing "naked before the world”.


There is no question that the sanctions that were imposed after Putin’s invasion of Crimea hurt Russia’s economy. However, it is hard to pinpoint the direct impact they had because Russia retaliated by issuing a ban on food imports from Western nations, which contributed to rising food prices and inflation at home. Also, a drop in oil prices that occurred around the same time, put downward pressure on the Rouble. The combined effect of sanctions and these events helped exacerbate underlying weaknesses in the Russian economy.


The more important thing that happened is that Mr. Putin took on the post-Crimea sanctions as a challenge and decided to enact measures that would make the Russian economy less reliant on the West and sanction-proof in the future. 


Russia grew its foreign currency reserves to $631 billion, the fourth largest in the world. They adopted a new fiscal policy, cutting expenses to enable greater financial stability and withstand future volatility. They created their own payment system, in the event the West blocked them from SWIFT. They invested in homegrown food production to become self-reliant and far less dependent on imports from the West. 


All these measures should have been a clear indication to the West that Mr. Putin’s territorial ambitions were far from satiated. Also, Mr. Putin believed he held the ultimate trump card - he supplied 40% of Europe’s energy and the Georgian and Crimean invasions had not deterred Europe’s thirst for Russian oil.


From Putin’s perspective, it was a victory. The post-Crimea sanctions caused pain, but they did not cripple Russia or leave her standing "naked before the world”. If we reviewed his tally sheet, we would see that he achieved his goals in Georgia, annexed Crimea without a shot being fired and occupied the Donbas with scant resistance and with no consequences from NATO or the US. In addition, his popularity soared back home with the majority of Russians supporting the annexation of Crimea.


On the heels of his annexation and illegal occupation of Crimea, confident the U.S. would again not intervene militarily, an emboldened Putin sent Russian troops to Syria in 2015. It was Russia's intervention that made the difference and helped turned the tide in favour of Assad’s regime. 


Obama’s non-intervention in Syria had given Mr. Putin an opportunity to get a foothold in the Middle East. This was something Russia had wanted since the end of the Cold War, and now they were able to do it while sidelining America.


The fact is that every post-Cold War US President has underestimated Mr. Putin and failed to understand his motivations. A fundamental miscalculation of successive administrations is that unlike in democracies, where we think in four or five year terms, autocrats play the long game and plan their moves over decades, not over election cycles.

 

In 2001, Bush famously said that he had looked in Putin’s eyes and had,“seen his soul” and found him to be “very straightforward and trustworthy”. Bush was partly right because in 2008, Putin told Bush in a straightforward way during a one-on-one meeting that Ukraine was not a real country, a comment the US President laughed off.


President Obama, like his predecessor, believed he could tame Mr. Putin and declared the infamous Russia ‘reset,’ after taking office in 2009. This foreign policy reboot was launched with much fanfare when Hillary Clinton presented Sergei Lavrov with a cartoonish “reset” button which misspelled the word in Russian. 


Mr. Obama scrapped plans to deploy a missile defense system in Poland and the Czech Republic. The administration claimed it was due to a reduced threat from Iran and technological challenges, but it was widely seen as a move to appease Mr. Putin in order to win Russian support for a vote in the UN Security Council. The vote would support tougher sanctions on Iran and bring them to the negotiating table for the deal Mr Obama sought.


Obama’s most memorable quip, reinforcing his naivety about Russia, came in the form of his response to Mitt Romney during the 2012 Presidential debate. After candidate Romney stated that Russia remained one of America’s greatest national security threats, Obama retorted, “The 1980s are now calling to ask for their foreign policy back because the Cold War's been over for 20 years”.


To understand Mr. Putin, we have to go back to the days before the fall of the Soviet Union. His worldview was formed during this time, while he was in the KGB. In 1989, when the Berlin Wall came down, he was stationed in Dresden, Germany. He witnessed first-hand how leaders and systems could be toppled when citizens grew too powerful. While Putin acknowledged that the Soviet Union had been in decline, he believed it was ailing due to paralysis of power and the frailty of political elites.


He wrote in his autobiography that after his office was surrounded by protestors threatening to storm the building, he called the Red Army’s German tank unit, stationed nearby, and asked them for protection. They said they could not do anything without orders from Moscow. They had reached out but no orders came. The words “Moscow is silent” are said to have haunted Putin his whole life, and shaped his worldview. 


Putin watched helplessly as everything he spent years building collapsed in the blink of an eye. First, East Germany disappeared when it was reintegrated into the West, and then the mighty Soviet Union disintegrated. In his mind, this was a direct result of the weakness of its current leadership.

 

Mr. Putin’s ambition has always been to rebuild the Russian Empire and unite all the people displaced after its collapse. He has publicly stated these aims many times. In a 2005 address to the Russian Duma, he said ”…the collapse of the Soviet Union was a major geopolitical disaster of the century. Tens of millions of our co-citizens and compatriots found themselves outside Russian territory.”


In a 2007 speech at the Munich Security Conference he started by asking the audience not to get angry, or turn on the red light because his remarks might seem “polemical, pointed or inexact”. Then he launched into a tirade about United States “unipolar” global domination after the Cold War and how America’s “Unilateral and frequently illegitimate actions have not resolved any problems” but created more conflict and human tragedy. 


Alluding to the US invasion of Iraq he said “We are seeing a greater and greater disdain for the basic principles of international law” and added that  “… the United States has overstepped its national borders in every way.” “This is visible in the economic, political, cultural and educational policies it imposes on other nations. Well, who likes this? Who is happy about this?”


He expressed concerns about NATO’s expansion, saying it had less to do with “modernization” or “ensuring security” and was a “serious provocation that reduces the level of mutual trust.” He spoke of a new world order that would upend the current one. 


He pointed to the fact that the combined GDP of India and China was greater than the U.S. and that the BRICs - Brazil, Russia, India and China - cumulative GDP surpassed that of the EU. He warned that the “economic potential” of these new centers of power would soon translate into political influence”.


Mr. Putin is convinced that the West actively works to undermine Russia, inflicting their woke, weak and morally bankrupt ideology to foment and finance colour revolutions across former Soviet republics. We saw this paranoia on display when Mr. Putin rapidly deployed “peacekeeping” troops as part of the Russia-led Collective Security Treaty Organisation (CSTO) to quell growing unrest in Kazakhstan last year.


In March 2014, Mr. Putin made a speech to both houses of parliament about the annexation of Crimea. He claimed, after holding an illegal referendum, that 96% of people had voted in favour of reuniting with Russia. In the same speech, he put the West on notice that Russia would be staking further territorial claims. 


Then in July, 2021 he laid out his mission in a 5,000 word essay entitled “On the Historical Unity of Russians and Ukrainians” in which he argued that Belarusians, Russians, and Ukrainians are all descendants from Ancient Rus. That they are still bound by a common language and faith. According to his version of history, Ukraine has never been a sovereign nation, except for a few times when it tried and failed to become an independent state.


He accused the West of using Ukraine to undermine Russia and made false claims about Zelensky’s government actively supporting “Neo-Nazi’s” and burning people alive in Odessa. He concluded that the sovereignty of Ukraine was only possible in partnership with Russia and declared “we are one people.”


Mr. Putin has never hidden his ambitions to restore Russian greatness which he is convinced was robbed by the West, making it hard to believe that he will stop at Ukraine, even though his invasion had not gone according to plan. 


He has made it amply clear that until every former Soviet republic is fully subservient or part of Russia, Russia's very existence is threatened. Along the way he seeks to diminish US influence in Europe, degrade NATO and form a new anti-US global alliance.


There is no question that Mr. Putin’s and his generals badly miscalculated the Ukrainian invasion on every front. They underestimated the level of resistance from a disciplined and well-trained Ukrainian army, while overestimating the capability of their own forces. The biggest surprise , which nobody saw coming, was President Zelensky’s Churchillian rise and his ability to rally not just his fellow countrywomen, but the U.S. and Europe. 


With Putin’s invasion of Ukraine not going according to plan, some observers believe it might dissuade him from achieving his goals and lead him to look for an off-ramp. I disagree. 


Despite the Russian army’s battlefield humiliation, Mr. Putin remains in a strong position to finance his war because the Russian economy, while it did wobble, is far from hobbled. In fact, it weathered the sanction storm better than anyone predicted. 


Russian economic output contracted a mere 2.1% in 2022, surprising some economists who had expected a catastrophic meltdown. Meanwhile, the war has damaged billions of dollars of infrastructure and caused the Ukrainian economy to shrink by more than 30% in 2022.


An independent poll taken immediately after the invasion found that 58% of Russians approved of Putin’s military action, while 23% opposed it. Most people expected support to drop as the average Russian began to feel the day-to-day pain of Western sanctions and losses on the battlefield mounted, but the opposite has transpired with support for the war hardening and less than one fifth of Russians now opposing it. 


But Russian support must be taken with a bag of salt because Mr. Putin has unleashed a wave of repression with new laws that punish people who spread misinformation. Sharing “false information" includes using the word ‘war’, for which people can face up to 15 years in prison. 


Public works deemed critical of the war have resulted in exhibits being torn down and replaced with state propaganda. Actors, writers and artists have been hounded and forced out of jobs. Curricula in schools and universities have been changed, and students are being taught to report teachers who talk of peace, and Russians are encouraged to snitch on anyone who opposes the war.


A single father was recently sentenced to three years in prison for social media posts that came to light after his daughter made a drawing for a school project with the words “No to War” under the picture. The thirteen year old girl has been placed in a state orphanage, after her father fled arrest.


In addition, the Russian government is doling out cash payments in the country’s most impoverished regions to buy public support, and brainwashing the population. Every media outlet that countered the false state narrative has been shut down and replaced by propaganda that paints the war as “far away,” while highlighting Mr. Putin’s “economic successes, new welfare benefits and renovated clinics”.


It is true that Mr. Putin believed that European support for Ukraine would crumble fast because of their reliance on Russian energy. However, while Europe has managed to miraculously cut their reliance on Russian gas by almost half, India and China have massively increased their oil purchases, which has eased part of the hole it might have caused in Mr. Putin’s coffers, and thus his ability to continue financing his war.


To further hurt Mr. Putin’s ability to finance his war, last December the EU added a ban on sea borne Russian oil into the Europe, and prohibited European insurance and shipping services from transporting it anywhere in the world. At the same time G7 nations put a price cap on Russian oil of $60 per barrel, hoping it would deliver the fatal blow to Russia’s war chest.

 

Earlier this year, research by Columbia University found that the ban and price cap have not had the intended effect on the flow of Russian oil, and that Russia has been commanding prices ranging from $74 - $82 per barrel from China, India and other countries. A New York Times investigation used publicly available shipping data to track the movement of some of these shadow oil tankers. However, more recently there is new evidence that the price cap is starting to work and oil revenues have declined substantially, but it is still not to anywhere near a level that would bankrupt Russia, or prevent Mr. Putin from continuing to fund his war.


So, Mr. Putin has no reason either to acquiesce to peace talks or to agree to terms that would amount to a humiliating loss of pride and his political clout. For Mr. Putin to admit he wants an off-ramp, one that would result in a territorial retreat, would be a fate worse than death. For the time being we are at an impasse, with neither side willing to negotiate anything short of complete victory.


Prior to the war the NATO alliance looked fragile and fractured, with President Macron publicly declaring it “brain-dead”. NATO’s weakness is something Mr. Putin likely factored into his calculations, but unfortunately for him Russia’s invasion had the opposite effect, not only jolting NATO back to life but also bolstering European unity. 


Mr. Putin has claimed that his invasion of Ukraine was partly intended to stop NATO expansion by sending a message to other countries that border Russia not to join NATO. This too has not worked out for Mr. Putin, as the previously neutral nordic countries of Sweden and Finland overwhelmingly voted in favor of joining NATO.


Europe also got lucky with an unusually warm winter, which helped avert an energy crisis. Also, they were helped with the US boosting natural gas deliveries and brokering deals with countries like Qatar to fill the gaps. However, these are not long-term solutions and the jury is still out on whether Europe can survive a harsh winter next year.


So, where do we go from here?


Mr. Putin has made it clear that he is digging in for a long, drawn out war of attrition. This is a man who has no respect for life, so he will keep throwing ill-equipped, poorly trained Russian troops as cannon fodder onto the battlefield. While the Ukrainians have shown tremendous courage, resolve and tactical military superiority, they are reliant on the US and NATO for aid, equipment, munitions and weapons. 


To break the stalemate on the battlefield, President Zelensky is pushing for delivery of heavy weaponry like armored vehicles, tanks and fighter jets, and has grown increasingly frustrated at the pace at which they are being supplied. It was this request for heavy weapons which showed the first cracks in the Western alliance. 


Germany pushed back on sending tanks and only reluctantly agreed to send them after US prodding. Germany is also dragging its feet on doubling its defense budget, something Chancellor Schultz had publicly announced he would do three days after Russia invaded.


There are other cracks within the NATO alliance too. Hungary continues to play both sides because it is reliant on Russia for its energy needs. They even secured an exemption on the EU oil ban, along with the Czech Republic and Slovakia. 


Turkey has refused to impose sanctions while significantly increasing trade with Russia, and continues to buy lots of oil. Both President Erdogan and Hungary spent months dragging their feet on approving Finland’s accession to NATO and continue to block approval for Sweden’s. 


While the US remains a staunch ally, President Biden now has to contend with a less Ukraine-friendly Republican Congress. If a Republican were to win the White House in the next election, Ukraine would most likely lose their blank cheque and without US support, they would not be able to stand up to Russia for long.


So it is in Mr. Putin’s interest to drag out this war. The longer it goes, the better the cards he will hold and President Zelensky knows that time is not on his side. He is acutely aware that only a decisive Ukrainian victory on the battlefield, sooner rather than later, will shift the calculus decisively in their favour, and force Russia to the negotiating table.


Read next installment in series:

PART III: China Awakens Under Xi Jinping