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Who’s won the ‘sanctions war’ so far?

Hasbara Buster

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Who’s won the ‘sanctions war’ so far?

By Andrew KORYBKO (USA)

It’s been one year since European sanctions were first enacted against Russia on 17 March, 2014, and it’s worthy to briefly highlight their consequences on Moscow. Likewise, the counter-sanctions that Russia imposed on the EU last summer must also be critically looked at in order to assess the economic and political impact of the ‘sanctions war’ on both parties. The results are certainly not at all what the West had anticipated.

Russia

Economic:

Although there have been mild price increases, no significant consumer shortages of any kind have occurred. In fact, most contemporary economic issues (or speculation thereof) in the country are related more to the oil price slump than to the sanctions. The greatest unintended economic effect of the sanction war on Russia has been that the country has begun to diversify its agricultural suppliers, seeing the counter-sanctions as an impetus to look for more non-Western economic partners such as Egypt. This correlates to its larger multipolar-oriented policy that it’s been practicing with vigor ever since the New Cold War started.

Political:

Russian patriotism has been solidified and the people have united in support of their country and government. The sanctions redirected Russia’s political and economic trajectory towards non-Western countries, which fulfills its stated multipolar objective. While not abandoning the West, Russia now recognizes the vulnerability of depending mostly on a singular bloc of economic partners, since this makes it susceptible to forms of economic blackmail like sanctions. In retrospect, the sanctions war can be seen as the watershed event that placed Russian firmly on the path of multipolarity, with the full support of its citizenry.

Europe

Economic:

The weaker economies of the Union have been direly affected, such as Poland and Greece, since Russia’s counter-sanctions targeted their vulnerable agricultural sectors. Excess product in these countries, plus a lack of new customers, means that they either have to sell them for unprofitable margins and receive miniscule capital in return, or simply get rid of the perishable products and lose all their investment.
The damage that this has dealt to the agricultural field in
these respective countries might lead to the creation of a lobby group (of uncertain impact) that could influence upcoming elections, either by acting on their own or by teaming up with current opposition parties in each of those states.

Political:

The EU has been divided into countries that support the sanctions and those who are against them. Most notably, Italy, Hungary, Greece, and Cyprus are against them, as well as the Czech Republic, Slovakia, Spain, and Austria to an extent, which creates a type of ‘bloc within a bloc’ comprising South, Central, and Southeastern Europe. Serbia and Macedonia, which are not EU members but ‘officially’ aspire to join one day, refused to sanction Russia, thus creating problems between their governments and Brussels. There is now a division between pro-Atlantic Europe (those who are siding with the US’ interests), such as Poland, the Baltic States, and Romania, and pro-Continental Europe (those who pursue Europe’s genuine interests and are against the sanctions). France and Germany are currently in the pro-Atlantic camp, but if one of them ‘switches sides’, then it would create a major shift and division within the entire EU, which would of course have a resultant aftereffect on EU-US relations.

Concluding Thoughts

As a simple summary, the sanctions war united Russia but divided Europe, giving the former a unique and pressing opportunity to diversify its partnerships, while depriving the latter of what was inarguably its most important one. The EU didn’t anticipate the extent to which the US would exploit it amidst the New Cold War, but as has been widely analyzed, the whole point of renewed US-Russian tensions has been for Washington to divide the EU from Russia and preempt the type of collusion between the two that would torpedo America’s Eurasian hegemony (as per Brzezinski’s forecast in “The Grand Chessboard”). While the US has been partially successful in dividing Europe from Russia, it’s totally failed in keeping Moscow and Beijing apart, and the two are now making rounds across the world in strengthening multipolarity and pushing back against the US’ designs. It is this inter-civilizational partnership, more so than confluence of European-Russian interests, that has proved its potential to upend unipolarity and usher in a new era of global affairs.

Andrew Korybko is the political analyst and journalist for Sputnik who currently lives and studies in Moscow, exclusively for ORIENTAL REVIEW.

Who’s won the ‘sanctions war’ so far? | Oriental Review
 
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Sanction is not war. Tens of millions died to beat facism in WW2. Did sanctions beat Germany? Did sanctions beat Japan? No they did not.

Besides, modern economics is all about an artificial number in a digital computer. It has been delinked from materialism. Therefore, modern economy is not concrete.
 
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If the Euzone has a -0.5% slash of its GDP altough it's a 30k per capita,fully developed zone,Europe is dying and heading for a catastrophy.If the same thing happens to Russia,with half that GDP per capita and a nation under development,well,it's a great Russian victory.Got to love the propaganda machine and those buying it.
 
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Fact is that every stakeholder is suffering one way or the other, apart from the USA (they're just having some fun) ...

Ukraine is fundamentally a quagmire. The country and ethnic Ukrainians wanted to move forward by joining EU...but the ex-boyfriend Russia and the Russian minorities think otherwise.

Think about it...who would want to be with the ruskies? They've nothing to offer (vis-a-vis EU) in terms of development, education etc

Ukraine should just let Crimea and eastern regions go to Russia as the local population there are ethnic Russians and wants to be with Russia.

The longer this conflict drags...the more loss Ukraine, EU and the Russians will have to swallow.
 
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Fact is that every stakeholder is suffering one way or the other, apart from the USA (they're just having some fun) ...

Ukraine is fundamentally a quagmire. The country and ethnic Ukrainians wanted to move forward by joining EU...but the ex-boyfriend Russia and the Russian minorities think otherwise.

Think about it...who would want to be with the ruskies? They've nothing to offer (vis-a-vis EU) in terms of development, education etc

Ukraine should just let Crimea and eastern regions go to Russia as the local population there are ethnic Russians and wants to be with Russia.

The longer this conflict drags...the more loss Ukraine, EU and the Russians will have to swallow.


Eastern Ukrainians are orthodox Christians. They don't want to go to the EU because the EU is liberal and have gay marriage.
 
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Eastern Ukrainians are orthodox Christians. They don't want to go to the EU because the EU is liberal and have gay marriage.

Romania, Poland, Bulgaria, the Baltic countries etc. are all Orthodox Christian countries yet vehemently anti-Russia and pro-EU....

Wait...did I just get trolled?!
 
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Romania, Poland, Bulgaria, the Baltic countries etc. are all Orthodox Christian countries yet vehemently anti-Russia and pro-EU....

Wait...did I just get trolled?!


They are not pro EU. Bulgaria is actually quite friendly with Russia. Sharapova's boyfriend is a Bulgarian.

Romania and Poland are neutral to Russia.

Lithuania is the most hostile to Russia out of all European countries.
 
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They are not pro EU. Bulgaria is actually quite friendly with Russia. Sharapova's boyfriend is a Bulgarian.

Romania and Poland are neutral to Russia.

Lithuania is the most hostile to Russia out of all European countries.

From today,in one of the leading Romanian Defence blogs/forums:title says "Russia,Romania's natural enemy"(the rest you can google translate if you want).This is how "neutral" we are.

Rusia dusmanul natural al Romaniei - Romania Military
 
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Romania, Poland, Bulgaria, the Baltic countries etc. are all Orthodox Christian countries yet vehemently anti-Russia and pro-EU....

Wait...did I just get trolled?!
You are correct except Bulgaria.
The rest are not truly an Orthodox Christian countries, they already lost their real identities since joining the EU.

From today,in one of the leading Romanian Defence blogs/forums:title says "Russia,Romania's natural enemy"(the rest you can google translate if you want).This is how "neutral" we are.

Rusia dusmanul natural al Romaniei - Romania Military
Good Riddance, who wants to be friend with the poorest country in Europe.
 
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You're happy with how things are going, I'm happy with how things are going, everyone's happy! Yay us!

Well sir, the price of oil was going to crash anyway right? It was due to a perfect storm of falling demand from Asia and Europe, more cost efficient technology, the shale boom in America, and the oversupply from the Gulf Arab states who wanted to weaken the US shale producers (as well as their rivals Iran and Russia).

When oil crashed then the Russian people might have blamed Putin, for not diversifying the Russian economy enough.

But instead now they blame the Western sanctions? And Putin is more popular than ever in Russia.

So it seems to have backfired in a way, by taking the anger of the Russian people and redirecting it towards the West.
 
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