ROPV CONTRIBUTORS
Critics of the "reset" in U.S.-Russia relations often argue that a true strategic partnership between the two countries is impossible because Russia recognizes few, if any, geopolitical priorities of the United States and doesn't adhere to its "values." Writing for the January 2010 issue of The Washington Quarterly David Kramer, for instance, points to "a widening values gap between the two countries." He elaborates:
"[T]he current
Russian leadership does not...share U.S. interests or threat perceptions,
to say nothing of U.S. values. As long as that is the case, extensive
cooperation and significantly improved relations will be difficult to
achieve."
Arguments like
Kramer's won't go well with many folks in Moscow used to viewing
"values" in international relations as a Trojan Horse of
sorts brought to their shores by the neocons. To those folks, I say,
relax. "Values" are an important part of America's
self-identity, and, as such, will always play a role in U.S. foreign
policy. Russians who want to work on improving U.S.-Russia relations must
learn to take "values" in stride, without suffering from debilitating
bouts of heartburn.
And yet, I have a problem
of my own with the "values gap" school of thought. Albeit the
"values gap" between the United States and Russia is often invoked,
it is never clearly defined, so one must figure out for themselves what exact "values" are
being advanced, how the much-celebrated "gap" is formed,
and why this "gap" is, if one is to believe Kramer, "widening."
A discussion on this subject is urgently needed, and this post is my
honest attempt at initiating such a discussion.
It's very common, in
certain circles in the United States, to call Russia a "police state"
while describing the U.S. as a "beacon of liberty." However, as
a recent article in The
Economist has reminded us, the United States leads the world in
the number of incarcerated people. Roughly one in 100 adult Americans is
behind bars (and this number is even higher for certain ethnic and
age groups).
This is obviously not
because America is an intrinsically criminal nation. Quite to the
contrary, by and large Americans are very law-abiding
citizens. It's overzealous prosecutors advancing their careers
-- and craving to look "tough on crime" politicians --
whose actions result in the excessive locking up of ordinary folks, like the
mentioned by The Economist George Norris of Spring, TX whose
"crime" was sloppy paperwork in the process of importing
orchids from Latin America. Facing a 10-year jail term, Mr. Norris
pleaded guilty and was sentenced to "only" 17 months in
prison.
But who cares about Mr.
Norris when we have a Russian human rights activist, Lev Ponomarev, who
was recently sentenced, by a Moscow court, to a three-day prison
term? (Let me make it absolutely clear: in my opinion, Mr. Ponomarev,
like Mr. Norris, has committed absolutely no
crime. But in Russia, they too have overzealous police bosses
loving to please their own, "tough on crime", nachal'stvo.)
The logic of the "values gap" disciples would be that because Mr.
Ponomarev is an opponent of the current Russian regime, the value of his
liberty is higher than that of the people accused in "common"
crimes in the United States. Well, try to explain this logic to Mr.
Norris -- and also to Heidi Halibor of Grafton, WI who was arrested
for having forgotten to return two books to the local library. A beacon
of liberty indeed!
Characteristically, The
Economist's article puts the blame for
the situation on "the system."
In contrast, the disciples of the "values gap" show
no restraint in calling names: they quickly accused directly Russia's
Prime Minister Vladimir Putin in Mr.
Ponomarev's arrest. The logic of that is questionable. Why should
Putin be blamed for every stupidity of the Moscow law
enforcement authorities while no one is blaming President Obama for
the jailing of a Florida man, Harry Bruder, who
sent a Facebook "friend" request to his estranged
wife?
While the United States
leads the world in the incarceration rate (748 inmates per 100,000 population),
it's trailed by Russia (600 inmates per 100,000 population). So I do see
a numbers gap here, but not a values gap.
For those who believe that
only in Russia people die in prisons as a result of medical inattention, here
is a story of
Adam Montoya who died in a federal prison in Pekin, IL of internal
bleeding. For days preceding his death, Mr. Montoya pleaded with his
guards to take him to the doctor. They refused. The only medication
Mr. Montoya had in his prison cell was Tylenol. So far, no one has
been charged with Mr. Montoya's death; we're told, however, that the
Justice Department "is reviewing the case."
I'm sure that the disciples of the "values gap" will argue that
the value of life of "ordinary" criminals like Mr. Montoya is no
match to that of, say, Sergei Magnitsky,
a lawyer for a well-connected American investment firm. Go and explain
that to the relatives of Mr. Montoya!
It's hardly a secret to
anyone that people get murdered in the United States too.
True, investigative journalists usually don't become targets of such a
crime. (Is it because their investigations don't threaten any powerful
interests? Is it because they've got better protection from their
employers?) You have a better chance to get killed if you're an abortion doctor;
a high-school or a college student; or just happen to work alongside a crazie whose
constitutional rights allow him to run around brandishing a personal
AK-47. Go and explain to the parents of the Columbine High victims
that the lives of their children were less valuable that the one of Anna Politkovskaya because
the innocent kids weren't in opposition to any "regime".
Speaking of issues of life
and death, the United States is one of the world's countries
still practicing the death penalty as a means of punishment in criminal
cases (finding itself in a nice company of China, Iran, and North
Korea). The death penalty was de facto outlawed
in Russia in 1996 (as a precondition for Russia joining the Council of Europe), and no one has been
executed since then. However, capital punishment is still formally on the
books, partly because the majority of Russians -- as the majority of
Americans -- support the death penalty. So I do see a governance
gap here, but again not a values gap.
I'll talk about other
aspects of the "values gap" issue in future posts.

Very interesting.. I totally agree. Most criticism of Russia (not all, some is legitimate) from Americans I think is a legacy of cold war relations. Put differently a desire for world power superiority. They have a difficulty acknowledging respect for quality. Secretly I also think many Americans envy Russia for having a leader as Vladimir Putin, particulary his no-nonsense brutal honesty and take no prisoners strength of character. So they project their envy, and it is expressed in condemnation for his alleged toughness which is allegedly 'undemocratic'.
At least thats my interpretation! ;-)
Posted by: Lara Zhivago | September 10, 2010 at 01:33 PM