Is Russia Vulnerable?
The Inquiry
BBC
4.6 • 1.7K Ratings
🗓️ 13 October 2015
⏱️ 23 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
Russia’s intervention in Syria caught the world by surprise. Moscow gave Washington just one hour’s notice before it began its aerial bombardment. Russia claims its jets are attacking the so-called Islamic State. But reports suggest the Russian pilots are in fact targeting groups linked to the Free Syrian Army - the main opposition to Syria’s President Assad, who is a Russian ally. It is the first time President Putin has deployed force beyond the borders of the former USSR and another dramatic step in his increasingly assertive foreign policy. But Josh Earnest, President Obama’s press secretary, has described Russia’s action as motivated by “weakness”. Is he right?
Ambassador William Courtney of the Rand Corporation argues that the Middle East is the last place in the world where Russia can play a great power role, and that Syria is the last place in the Middle East where Russia can exert its power.
Andrei Kolesnikov explains what he sees as Russia’s weaknesses; a weak economy, declining living standards and a working age population that is deteriorating.
Dr Andrei Korolev disagrees. While international isolation and a faltering economy may have forced Russia to adapt, he says, it has done so in ways that make it stronger such as by forming a new alliance with China.
The Hudson Institute’s Hannah Thoburn explains how a new politics is emerging. Russians are being asked to accept financial sacrifices in order to help return the country to its place as a global super power, and that so far its working.
(Photo: President Putin at the UN General Assembly. Credit: Getty Images)
Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | You're listening to the BBC World Service. This is Helena Merriman with the |
| 0:09.6 | Inquiry. This week is Russia vulnerable. |
| 0:15.0 | We're going to take you back to three days in September |
| 0:18.0 | because they were truly extraordinary. |
| 0:23.6 | It all starts here, the United Nations Building in New York, late in the afternoon of Monday, the 28th of September. |
| 0:32.0 | Photographers are lined up, waiting for President's Obama and September. of course Syria. |
| 0:45.0 | Suddenly they appear. |
| 0:53.4 | They walk stony-faced into the press room and shake hands. Briskly. |
| 0:54.6 | The body language is clear. |
| 0:56.6 | Putin and Obama do not like each other, |
| 0:59.5 | nor do they trust each other. |
| 1:02.0 | Even so, they managed to produce a statement. Russia and the |
| 1:06.9 | US might be able to work together over Syria and that message is repeated by a |
| 1:12.3 | State Department spokesman on CNN the following day. |
| 1:15.0 | There's absolutely room to have a conversation and a dialogue with Russia going forward in Syria in terms of this political transition. |
| 1:24.2 | The day after that, Wednesday the 30th of September, |
| 1:27.8 | a Russian general makes his way across Baghdad |
| 1:30.4 | to the American embassy. |
| 1:33.7 | It's an unexpected visit with an astonishing message. |
| 1:38.4 | He tells them that Russia has decided to carry out airstrikes on so-called Islamic State in Syria today in fact in one hour. |
| 1:47.9 | You'd better get your planes out of the way he says. As American embassy staff scrambled to pass on the warning to the White House, |
| 1:58.0 | Russian jets are getting ready to go. |
... |
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