US Secretary of State John Kerry heads today on one of his most diplomatically delicate missions to date, seeking to restore frayed ties with key player Moscow at a moment of global turmoil.
From Syria to the Boston bombings, missile defense, Iran and North Korea and rows over a ban on US adoptions of Russian children and the shuttering of US aid agencies, the litany of troubles awaiting resolution is huge.
“[There is] too much to frontload the agenda with when he gets there,” said Russia expert Fiona Hill, director of the Center on the United States and Europe at the Brookings Institution.
While Kerry knows many of the Russian leadership from his days as a US senator, this is his first trip to Moscow since taking up his post in February.
US-Russian ties — famously reset with an embarrassing photo-opportunity under former US secretary of state Hillary Rodham Clinton when she and Russian Minister of Foreign Affairs Sergei Lavrov pushed a mock red button — have plunged to new lows since Russian President Vladimir Putin’s return to power in May last year.
Analysts cautioned that little concrete progress is likely to be made, although there were expectations Kerry would meet tomorrow with Putin, in a rare break with diplomatic protocol by Moscow.
“Obviously one of the main points of the trip is to try to take the edge off all of the rhetoric and try to find some way of figuring out if there are some concrete areas where we can go forward,” Hill said. “If there’s just a glimmer that they are in the mood, at least for now, to try to put things on a more cordial level, that in itself would be an achievement.”
The timing of the two-day visit is also key, coming after last month’s carnage at the Boston Marathon — which was blamed on two brothers of Chechen descent — and as the US says it fears chemical weapons may have been used in Syria.
Kerry will seek to loosen Moscow’s stubbornly strong ties to the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad by sharing US fears of Syria’s use of chemical weapons — an avowed “red line” by both sides.
Increased US talk that the administration of US President Barack Obama may consider arming Syrian rebels may also be designed to pressure Moscow to use its sway over al-Assad to stop the bloodshed.
However, “I don’t think the Russians will make any compromise,” Hill said. “The Russians have no interest whatsoever in dealing with the opposition. They don’t see any perspective for stability or any kind of solution to emerge out of arming the opposition.”
“Moscow is not in favor of more death and violence,” said Matthew Rojansky, deputy director for the Russia and Eurasia program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. “They are simply concerned that the next step is going to be an Islamist regime that no one can contain.”
Kerry will also be preparing the way for talks expected in Northern Ireland next month between Obama and Putin on the sidelines of the G8 summit, with the US president also searching for more bilateral nuclear arms cuts.
Despite their tense ties, the two nations have managed to collaborate on the issue of Iran and North Korea’s suspect nuclear programs.
Rojansky said that particularly after the Boston attacks, such high-level interaction was “positive.”
“They need to have a discussion to satisfy the Russians that: ‘No we are not blaming this whole thing against you,’” he said, calling for better security cooperation between the two former Cold War foes.
Moscow is likely to fear that “the US is now warming up to some kind of crusade against Russia as the enabler of some kind of global post-Soviet terrorism,” he said, after it emerged that one of the Tsarnaev brothers had been in the sights of the Russian authorities as early as 2011.
“God forbid for both sides that something should come out in the press indicating that the Russians knew more than they let on,” Rojansky said.
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