                                        {"id":40,"date":"2026-05-13T07:05:00","date_gmt":"2026-05-13T07:05:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/housingnewsamerica.com\/?p=40"},"modified":"2026-05-13T07:05:00","modified_gmt":"2026-05-13T07:05:00","slug":"this-is-not-the-world-russia-wants","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/housingnewsamerica.com\/?p=40","title":{"rendered":"This Is Not the World Russia Wants"},"content":{"rendered":"<div>\n<p>The 2022 invasion of Ukraine marked only the peak of Russia\u2019s long turn toward revisionism. Since the Cold War ended, Russia has sought to shape Europe\u2019s security architecture and impose its will on smaller neighbors. The Kremlin has also clashed with the United States and Europe at the United Nations and in other multilateral bodies. Its leaders condemned the concept of a rules-based international order as a Western invention meant to cement U.S. hegemony. Styling itself as a vanguard promoting a more multipolar order, Russia sought to increase its own global clout, unencumbered by restraints and rules.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/housingnewsamerica.com\/?p=38\">The Case for a Grand Bargain Between America and China<\/a><\/p>\n<p>But now it finds itself in the curious position of watching the United States behave more like Russia. On the surface, this may seem a boon for Russian President Vladimir Putin. Instead of contending with a Washington that resists his land grabs and tussles with him in multilateral forums, he has a simpatico U.S. president who appears to ascribe to his might-makes-right worldview. Donald Trump has bashed international institutions in language reminiscent of Russian broadsides, withdrawing the United States from dozens of UN agencies and stripping them of funding while launching a rival conflict-settlement body, the Board of Peace. And he has asserted a right to coerce, even attack, smaller countries in the style of Russia\u2019s bullying.<\/p>\n<p>But in the long term, this turn of events may well be a loss for Russia. Putin\u2019s strategy succeeded only insofar as the United States did not copy it\u2014in other words, as long as Moscow unbound itself from rules while insisting that Washington remain shackled. And in truth, even as Russia decried legacy international institutions, it relied on them for leverage, using its veto power on the Security Council to wield influence. Trump\u2019s actions now threaten to dilute that power. And tied up with the war on Ukraine, Putin has had to stand by and watch as Trump has eagerly used U.S. military force to throttle two key Russian partners, Iran and Venezuela.<\/p>\n<p>The Kremlin is reaping some benefit from Trump\u2019s bludgeoning approach to adversaries. The U.S.-Israeli war on Iran has allowed Russia to rake in billions in extra oil revenues. And Russia may hope that Trump gets embroiled in one foreign policy disaster after another, ultimately weakening the United States\u2019 global standing and helping Russia outlast the West in Ukraine. But it is far from certain that Putin can durably capitalize on Trump\u2019s hit-and-run belligerence\u2014and a mistake to imagine that if the United States begins to behave more like Russia, that will automatically benefit the Kremlin. The more likely outcome is that Russia will see its global power projection, already weakened by its war against Ukraine, erode further at the hands of the United States.<\/p>\n<h3>HAVING IT BOTH WAYS<\/h3>\n<p>Russia has long channeled its resistance to U.S. primacy into disagreements with the United States and allied countries over international treaties and institutions. Putin memorably vented his frustrations in a 2007 speech in Munich, bemoaning the United States\u2019 \u201cdisdain\u201d for international law and the transformation of the Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe into a \u201cvulgar instrument designed to promote the foreign policy interests of one or a group of countries.\u201d After the Obama administration and its allies responded to the 2014 annexation of Crimea by sanctioning and reducing their cooperation with Russia, Russian diplomats clashed with Western counterparts in multilateral bodies even more frequently. At meetings of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, for example, Russia faced disputes with the United States and its partners over efforts by Syria, a Russian ally, to retain and use chemical weapons. These spats allowed Moscow to build a narrative that Western states were merely using multilateral institutions as a cover to push an anti-Russian agenda. Russia succeeded in assembling a small coterie of supporters among nations discontented with Western dominance. It also threw wrenches into the gears of these legacy institutions, hampering their ability to fulfill their mandates.<\/p>\n<p>Meanwhile, Russia made it clear that it would go its own way when it wished, cooperating with like-minded countries rather than relying on what Fyodor Lukyanov, a prominent foreign policy expert close to the Kremlin, contemptuously described as \u201cglobal structures issuing rules.\u201d Russia\u2019s 2016 Foreign Policy Concept (a document that set out the country\u2019s worldview, interests, and goals) announced Moscow\u2019s intent to turn more to network diplomacy, which it defined as a \u201cflexible approach to participating in multilateral mechanisms\u201d\u2014in other words, to work selectively with countries whenever it suited. Starting in 2017, Russia put this theory into practice, joining Iran and Turkey in the Astana Process to negotiate and oversee so-called de-escalation zones in Syria\u2019s armed conflict; the Astana Process gradually came to overshadow the more inclusive, UN-led Geneva Process in the search for a political settlement. And after its full-scale invasion of Ukraine, Russia took its promotion of new formats to the next level. As U.S. and European diplomacy with Russia atrophied, the Kremlin enthusiastically championed the expansion of the non-Western BRICS alliance, backing China\u2019s initiative to add new members and then, in 2024, presiding over hundreds of events as chair to integrate the newcomers.<\/p>\n<p>But at the same time, the Kremlin has jealously guarded its veto power on the UN Security Council. After its invasion of Ukraine, Russia was initially cautious not to paralyze the council, coordinating with Western members on issues such as a new sanctions regime on Haitian gangs and the delivery of aid to Afghanistan. But as the Ukraine war settled into a grinding battle of attrition, Russia began wielding its veto to benefit allied governments or factions in Mali, North Korea, and Syria. Russia has helped entrench the UN\u2019s paralysis while continuing to treat the body as a key vehicle to project influence. Moscow\u2019s appetite for disruption has extended to the UN General Assembly: in September 2024, Russian diplomats made a brazen effort to prevent the adoption of the widely supported Pact for the Future. Although Russia failed, its intervention greatly complicated what had already been an arduous negotiation process, even by UN standards.<\/p>\n<p>Over the past several years, Russia has continued to use other legacy multilateral institutions to wield influence, too. With respect to nuclear-negotiating forums and governance bodies such as the International Atomic Energy Agency, the UN First Committee, and the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty, Russia has pursued a dual strategy: it has thrown procedural wrenches and sown distrust in the bodies\u2019 impartiality, and has conducted outreach\u2014for instance, with the Group of 77, a coalition of developing countries at the UN\u2014to corral states in support of its anti-Western agenda.<\/p>\n<h3>JOIN AND CONQUER<\/h3>\n<p>At first, Trump\u2019s return to the White House in January 2025 seemed to be cause for celebration in Moscow. That February, Washington broke with past practice and sided with Moscow in vetoing a UN General Assembly resolution that condemned Russia\u2019s war against Ukraine. Trump\u2019s skepticism of NATO, dismantling of the U.S. Agency for International Development, and assault on policies protecting LGBT rights all seemed to usher in a new U.S. foreign policy that was antiglobalist, anti-interventionist, and antiliberal\u2014and therefore much to Russia\u2019s liking.<\/p>\n<p>But Trump also began to take material steps to dilute the power of the UN and other legacy multilateral institutions\u2014the very system that Russia had relied on as a foil. In early February 2025, he ordered the State Department to review all U.S. memberships to and funding for international organizations. That summer, Trump withdrew the United States from UNESCO. In January 2026, he announced that the United States would quit 66 international bodies, including 31 UN agencies. Under his watch, the United States has also delayed its annual UN dues payments and threatened to withhold further funding, exacerbating the organization\u2019s financial woes.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/housingnewsamerica.com\/?p=36\">Trump, Xi, and the Case for Strategic Calm<\/a><\/p>\n<p>And Trump pursued his own version of network diplomacy by establishing the Board of Peace. When he invited Putin to join the board, many U.S. foreign-policy experts viewed it as a sign of Russia\u2019s rehabilitation. But the board\u2019s establishment put Russia in a particularly awkward position once it became apparent that Trump wants it to do much more than implement his Gaza peace plan. Trump has made it clear that he is the board\u2019s supreme authority and that Russia will not have the kinds of privileges there that it enjoys on the UN Security Council.<\/p>\n<p>In an attempt to pander to Trump\u2019s susceptibility to flattery, Putin offered to support the board\u2019s budget with $1 billion, to be taken from Russian assets currently frozen in the United States. But Russia skipped the board\u2019s inaugural meeting, and its foreign ministry has since said it is \u201cassessing\u201d the board\u2019s \u201cmodalities\u201d\u2014diplomatic jargon for \u201cRussia is not going to join.\u201d Little did Putin know that his strategy for wielding global power required a functioning UN in which Russia has a say equal to the United States; membership in the Board of Peace is a demotion.<\/p>\n<h3>HUMBLE PIE<\/h3>\n<p>Trump\u2019s overtly might-makes-right foreign policy has also upended Moscow\u2019s aspirations. For several decades, Russia\u2019s revisionism was undergirded by growing military might. The financial windfall that high oil prices bestowed in the first decade of the twenty-first century expedited the country\u2019s military modernization and allowed it to pursue a less quiescent foreign policy. Russia claimed some 20 percent of Georgia\u2019s territory in 2008. It annexed Crimea in 2014. A year later, it intervened in the Syrian civil war to prop up Bashar al-Assad, launching its first large-scale operation outside the former Soviet Union since the end of the Cold War.<\/p>\n<p>By 2022, Putin had arrogated to himself an assertiveness that a few decades ago had been uniquely American. If the United States could use military force in pursuit of its objectives, so could Russia. Putin\u2019s decision to launch a full-scale invasion of Ukraine epitomized his belief that Russia\u2019s own might would henceforth make right\u2014or, as a prominent Russian international relations scholar put it days into the war, that \u201cgreat powers behave as great powers.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>Trump, however, has taken that principle to new extremes. Despite having campaigned on an antiwar platform, in 2025 he ordered the use of force against seven countries\u2014more than any other U.S. president in the modern era. And he unleashed the U.S. military on close Russian partners. These displays of American power unnerved Moscow: patriotic Russian bloggers reacted with envy to last June\u2019s U.S. strikes against Iran and to the lightning removal of Venezuela\u2019s leader earlier this year. The swiftness and apparent success of these interventions stood in stark contrast to Russia\u2019s own so-called special military operation, which was intended to be similarly snappy but is now bogged down in its fifth year. The fact that U.S.-led or -supported operations have taken aim at heads of state, resulting in the capture of Venezuelan President Nicol\u00e1s Maduro and the killing of Iranian Supreme Leader Ayatollah Khamenei, particularly spooked Putin, who appears to have grown more fearful of drone attacks and even assassination attempts in recent months.<\/p>\n<p>Trump\u2019s ventures have also put a spotlight on Russia\u2019s diminished capacity to project military power beyond Ukraine. Last June, Russia took a back seat when the United States and Israel attacked Iran. And although it has lent Tehran some support in the form of targeting data and operational guidance, Moscow has refrained from intervening directly to defend Iran in the current war. Russia\u2019s refusal to risk entanglement on behalf of its partners has been a matter of political calculation, not just a function of resource constraints. Still, as Moscow sees it, Trump is shaping a world in which \u201cthe weak get beaten,\u201d as Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov put it in a March interview. To ensure that the United States cannot beat Russia, Russian experts and officials have hinted, it must leave no doubt as to the formidability of its nuclear weapons.<\/p>\n<h3>BE CAREFUL WHAT YOU WISH FOR<\/h3>\n<p>For years, Russia mocked international rules, norms, and institutions. But as much as Russia squirmed and jolted, resisting a global order it viewed as stacked against it, that order gave Russia power and predictability. Now, Trump\u2019s desire to bypass the UN and engage in unconventional diplomacy threatens to dilute Russia\u2019s veto. And his intoxication with deploying U.S. military force leaves Russia looking like a second-tier player. This is not the world Putin wanted. He hoped to see Russia unbound, not the United States. And he wanted Russia to be consulted on matters of global import, not ignored. Yet Trump did not even bother to accept Putin\u2019s offer, made last September, that both countries pledge to abide by their limits on nuclear warheads after the expiration of New START, the last remaining U.S.-Russian nuclear arms treaty. Trump is taking everyone \u201cback to a world where nothing existed\u2014no international law, no Versailles system, no Yalta system,\u201d Lavrov complained in March.<\/p>\n<p>Russia\u2019s hope now is that Trump has bitten off more than he can chew. Nine weeks into his campaign against Iran, the U.S. president is struggling to end what he has rhetorically characterized as a \u201cminiwar\u201d or \u201cexcursion\u201d\u2014and Russia is benefiting. Iran\u2019s closure of the Strait of Hormuz has roiled global energy markets, prompting the United States to ease its oil sanctions on Russia. Russian bloggers have mocked Trump\u2019s war with the phrase \u201cTehran in three days\u201d\u2014a nod to \u201cKyiv in three days,\u201d the ironic shorthand used to describe the Kremlin\u2019s hubris in believing it could defeat Ukraine quickly. The longer Trump\u2019s Middle East gambit lasts without entering a clear endgame, the more Russia could profit\u2014from higher prices on the fuel and fertilizer it exports, the diversion of critical U.S. air-defense munitions from Ukraine to the Persian Gulf, and the exposure of American incompetence.<\/p>\n<p>But the fact remains that Trump\u2019s world may not be a hospitable milieu for Russia. Trump could come for Cuba, one of Russia\u2019s closest partners in the Western Hemisphere, next, further chipping away at the power of Moscow\u2019s circle of friends. More fundamentally, Trump seems in no mood to accommodate Russia as a great-power equal to the United States\u2014to consult Putin on Iran and other geopolitical dossiers; to rely on the UN, where Moscow is Washington\u2019s peer, as the world\u2019s foremost peacemaking body; and to grant Russia its sphere of influence. Instead, by dismantling the post\u2013Cold War international system, Trump is taking over Russia\u2019s mission. And Moscow will have to contend with something messier, a world with no stable frameworks or reliable rules of the game.<\/p>\n<p>Read more <a href=\"https:\/\/housingnewsamerica.com\/?p=34\">Trump, Xi, and the Specter of 1914<\/a><\/p>\n<div>Loading&#8230;<br \/><noscript><span>Please enable JavaScript for this site to function properly.<\/span><\/noscript><\/div>\n<\/div>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>A belligerent America is foiling Putin\u2019s strategy.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":39,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"closed","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[2,14,3,28,5,15],"tags":[29],"class_list":["post-40","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","has-post-thumbnail","hentry","category-diplomacy","category-donald-trump-administration","category-geopolitics","category-political-development","category-u-s-foreign-policy","category-u-s-politics","tag-vladimir-putin"],"yoast_head":"<!-- This site is optimized with the Yoast SEO plugin v27.6 - 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