But in the global court of opinion, indifference or professed neutralism at the service of individual interests still prevail, however limited these interests may be with today’s Russia. If we turn to the Middle East, not one oil producer supports Western sanctions, despite benefiting richly from the resulting oil price rises. For these states, the fear of Western sanctions over their own abuses, and the wish to preserve an understanding with Russia over a hard-won entente on oil price cartels, matters more than the fate of Ukraine. The expected catastrophe over missing grain exports from Ukraine, the world’s third-largest exporter behind Russia itself, should incentivize the hardest hit countries to remonstrate against Russia’s blockade of the Black Sea, or to ask China to release grain from its currently abundant storage reserves. It is telling that these countries - which essentially form an arc around the Mediterranean - do not make this attempt; they know it is fruitless. And although India’s purchases of Russian oil do not amount to much, the decision to accept payment in Russian rubles or Indian rupees, bypassing all sanction issues, testifies to a harsh reality: bad guys can get their way over polite requests by others.
Given these diverging international interests, reservations, and expressions of indifference, what should Europe do? At any rate, the last thing it should do is to join the line of least resolve, concluding that the only way out is to talk Putin into a ceasefire, without tougher sanctions on Russia and more commitments for Ukraine. Even World War II had its share of neutrals, including at the heart of Europe. As impressive as Europe’s support has proven to be, it still has glaring gaps - above all, the continuing purchase of energy. The unity of Europe, and joint transatlantic action, matter more than a hypothetical global front against Russia. In principle, such a front already exists, as is demonstrated by Russia’s isolation at the United Nations - when voting has no consequence. But Russia’s veto power means that the UN is now practically irrelevant, and that many states follow immediate interests and the least risky course rather than abiding by principles. If Europe continues to waver, Putin will gain the time needed to reorient energy and other exports to Asia, assuming that there will be no further leverage exercised by the United States on allies and partners that need its defense commitment.
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