LONDON - In his autobiography, Georgi Arbatov, the  eminence grise of the Soviet foreign policy establishment, asked this question,  referring to the Soviet intervention in Angola and Afghanistan, “Why did we in  the eyes of the world become an aggressive expansionist power in the second half  of the 1970s?” But he didn’t really answer it.
So given the opportunity  to talk to him for a good three hours I had the time to push him for an answer,  an answer that presidents Carter and Reagan wished they knew when they had to  deal with the Soviet Union. Both overreacted, the former by arming the mujahidin  that later transfused into Al Qaeda and the latter by licensing the South  Africans to fight an Angolan liberation army (the MPLA, now the government)  which then turned to Cuba to help them defeat South Africa and make a negotiated  peace possible. Of course, it is true if they known the answer their policies  might not have changed one wit.
“My guess”, replied Arbatov, “is that our  military-industrial complex had grown to such proportions that it escaped  political control. The leaders depended on the military-industrial complex to  stay in power. So they didn’t want to estrange relations with it. Not everything  was controlled by one man. The whole system was infiltrated by the military  industrial complex.”
I then asked Arbatov if the military-industrial  complex was today under control. “The economic difficulties of post Soviet  Russia”, he replied, “make military expenditures much more modest than they  were, but we have a new thing, our new leader, Putin. He is in the hands of this  military-industrial complex, and a lot of his appointments go to these people. I  don’t know how much control he has over them. In general they have to worry  about their survival in the military-industrial complex, not about enhancing  peace… Maybe Putin is afraid of being blamed for neglecting the needs of the  military. The communists would blame him, Zhironovsky would blame him. You have  a lot of adventurers now.”
Clearly, this pressure on Putin would have led  to a degree of hardening of Russian foreign policy even without the provocation  of the expansion of Nato, the growing influence of the U.S. in the soft  underbelly of Russia, the former Asian republics, and the decision to build on  Polish and Czech soil an anti-missile system. But for those with a bent towards  traditional Russian paranoia, an urge to recapture a past imperial status, this  is all the evidence they need to justify an attempt to rebuild the Soviet  military machine.
“But the main thing is that real negotiations have  stopped”, adds Arbatov in an important caveat. “Both sides are at fault. We need  to start with two or three summits to discuss the new international situation,  possible lines on the behaviour and responsibilities of big countries… You need  to meet your adversary regularly and you get to know him and then it is easier  to negotiate. This meeting in Kennebunkport. This wasn’t a negotiation. I know  how the old summit meetings were. All organisations, including mine, were busy  up to the ears- the whole political and military establishment. We had to work,  work, work. Now they have lost interest. Now it is theatre, just to show. I have  no idea where they get their information from. Putin’s is the least transparent  governmental system in my memory. Even in Stalin’s time we knew Malenkov meant  this and this, and after it became much more visible.”
Once launched on a critique of Putin, Arbatov does not  spare the knife. “ Putin has done a lot of good work- he has re-established the  governmental system. But at the same time he gives not a single speech that  gives the prospect. What are we striving for? What do we want to have in  internal policy, in foreign policy?”
In Arbatov’s view it is time overdue  that the two countries cut back their nuclear armaments. “Both sides have lost  their enemy. They see no imminent danger from the other side. Neither seems to  understand that it can quickly reappear. Just the existence of so many weapons  makes deteriorating relations more likely and stability less dependable…Being  honest, we in Russia are not right in our approach. We have so many weapons we  could decrease the numbers unilaterally and show an example.”
Arbatov’s  final point: “If you have so many nuclear weapons you have to say there is a  plan to get rid of them even if you can’t give an exact date. Otherwise other  countries say, if you have them why can’t we?”
Later that evening I  walked by the Kremlin. Who is listening? Neither the military-industrial complex  in Russia nor, come to that, its almost equally powerful counterpart in the  U.S.
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