He may not be running, but Vladimir Putin is already a formidable presence in the 2020 US presidential campaign. From about Russian aggression abroad to about electoral interference at home, Putin has become a question to which all presidential candidates are expected to have a strongly worded answer 鈥� particularly in the wake of Donald Trump鈥檚 failed impeachment, in which the Democratic party sought to make the case that 鈥� 鈥�.
The conventional wisdom in US foreign policy is that military competition is necessary to contain Putin and circumscribe the Russian sphere of influence. 鈥淭he United States aids Ukraine and her people so that they can fight Russia over there, and we don鈥檛 have to fight Russia over here,鈥� the Republican adviser Tim Morrison during the impeachment hearings 鈥� a quote then by Adam Schiff, chairman of the House intelligence committee, in his opening argument.
It is in this context that the rise of Bernie Sanders is raising fears inside the Democratic party establishment. Sanders has long been a leading advocate of military restraint, and he is campaigning on a platform of 鈥� 鈥� that promises to end America鈥檚 鈥渆ndless war鈥�. Despite after in which the senator decries Putin鈥檚 criminal authoritarianism, a narrative is now developing that his presidency would amount to a to the Kremlin. 鈥淚f I鈥檓 Russian, I go with Sanders this time around,鈥� the former Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein.
But most advocates of military competition fundamentally misunderstand the nature of Kremlin power 鈥� a misunderstanding that has led the US to fail, time and again, in its attempt to contain Putin. The promise of Sanders鈥� foreign policy platform is precisely that it turns the conventional wisdom on its head, showing how the US government can use domestic reform as a strategy to undermine Putin鈥檚 authoritarian aggression abroad.
To make sense of this strategy, it is necessary to see the three pillars on which Putin鈥檚 regime rests. The first of these pillars is hydrocarbons: the vast reserves of oil and gas in Russia that deliver large revenues and deep political loyalties both within Russia and across Europe. Russian oil and gas output is currently at a 11.25m barrels per day, generating each year from countries such as Germany that have become on Russian gas exports.
The second pillar of Putin鈥檚 power is corruption. Russia is today a kleptocracy, a political system that runs on kickbacks, bribes and pocketed public money for loyal oligarchs. Their dark money, of course, does not stay in Russia. Instead, it circulates through the vast international system of murky finance 鈥� into and into and 鈥� buying allegiance to the regime along the way.
And the third pillar is propaganda: Putin and his allies actively seek to stir up conflict abroad in order to strengthen nationalist loyalties at home. From the very beginning of his tenure, Putin has fomented violence and aggression against Russia鈥檚 鈥渆nemies鈥� 鈥� be they Chechen, Ukrainian or American 鈥� as a strategy to boost his own popularity.
Far from attacking these pillars of Kremlin power, recent US foreign policy has served to strengthen them. The Barack Obama administration, for example, aggressively pursued a against Russia, further entrenching the global addiction to hydrocarbons. Meanwhile, Obama presided over a flood of into the US, even as his secretary of state, Hillary Cinton, between Putin and Hitler.
Sanders, by contrast, seeks to dismantle each of the three pillars at their base. Rather than deepening US dependence on oil and gas, he is promoting a with major provisions to support a green transition beyond US borders. By driving decarbonisation among US allies in Europe and around the world, Sanders promises to reduce Putin鈥檚 geopolitical leverage.
Rather than ignoring the illicit financial system, Sanders is advocating a programme of 鈥� 鈥� to shut down tax havens, eliminate anonymous shell companies and strictly regulate the Wall Street banks that have facilitated the flow of kleptocrats鈥� cash all around the world.
Finally, Sanders avoids the lazy cold war rhetoric about 鈥渢he Russians鈥� that helps boost Putin鈥檚 legitimacy back at home. Instead, his approach is infrastructural, attacking the nodes of the illicit finance network rather than the individual 鈥渂ad actors鈥� operating within it.
In short, Sanders is shifting away from the antiquated paradigm of 鈥渇oreign policy鈥� 鈥� with its clear demarcations of home and abroad and its appeals to a unified national interest 鈥� and towards 鈥� 鈥�. He is targeting the global architecture of kleptocracy in which many US firms and passport holders are complicit, and building ties with social movements around the world that can serve as allies in the fight against state corruption.
Progressives cannot afford to be naive in their approach to Putin. His efforts to consolidate a sphere of influence are unlikely to abate, regardless of the 2020 election outcome. But for all the Democratic party鈥檚 legitimate fears about Russian aggression, it cannot retreat to an outdated paradigm that approaches as a question of military security alone.
It should come as no surprise, therefore, that those who understand Putin鈥檚 kleptocratic system 鈥� such the leader of the Russian opposition, Alexei Navalny 鈥� are now rooting for Sanders. It is only by undermining that system, not competing with it, that the US can truly weaken Putin鈥檚 authoritarian grip, and make way for a new democratic movement to flourish in Russia.
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