The
One of the ironies of recent frictions is that at this juncture neither NATO nor the EU is in a position to offer full-scale membership to any of the In-Betweens. This would be the case even if there were no frozen conflicts in the region, and even if the In-Betweens met the standards of good governance, functioning markets and democratic practices required for either EU or NATO membership. NATO member states are at odds on extending security guarantees to countries that Russia habitually threatens and sometimes invades. The EU is in the deepest crisis of its existence, given the eurozone mess, economic torpor, unruly waves of migration from the Middle East and North Africa, terrorism and Brexit. With its survival in question, adding new members is not a priority.
Recognising the reality that the policy of institutional enlargement in post-communist Europe and Eurasia, its past successes aside, has run its course does not mean that the West must accept Russian domination of its neighbours. In fact, the further enlargement of Russia-led institutions in the region is not a plausible solution either, regardless of what policy the West adopts. Those already in the Russian institutional fold remain there either under duress or for lack of better options; most would likely run for the exits if they could.[58] There is little support anywhere else for the Russian blueprint for regional governance.
Western and Russian policymakers would also be well advised to rethink the geo-ideas that often underpin their policies. It is not tenable for the West to insist on the right of all countries to make their own choices while at the same time being unable or unwilling to grant them those choices (like NATO and EU membership) or to take responsibility for the consequences of choosing. The EU is poorly served by the pious assertion of normative hegemony – the inherent superiority of its systems and structures – in an area where that hegemony is contested, both by Russia and by the reform-allergic systems of the In-Betweens.[59] Russia’s concept of indivisible security often boils down to a yearning for an accord among great powers, Yalta-style, that would reinforce rather than remove divisions in the region. Such a deal would not work even if it were agreed to, which it will not be. The Kremlin’s
The towel should also be thrown in on the geo-ideational shadow-boxing over the Russian assertion of a sphere of influence in post-Soviet Eurasia and the Western opposition to it. Would either side be able to specify what precisely they mean by a regional sphere of influence? How would it differ from, say, US relations with western-hemisphere states, or from Germany’s with its EU neighbours? Clearly there are differences, but they are rarely specified. Is it realistic to think that Russia, an order of magnitude weightier than the states at its doorstep, would have