Reference Text
Time Left10:00
The
U.K.
led
the
way
when
it
expelled
23
Russian
diplomats,
but
the
week
before
that
the
U.S.
had
slapped
Russia
with
sanctions
against
multiple
individuals
and
entities
for
interfering
in
the
2016
U.S.
presidential
election
through
covert
online
propaganda,
including
fake
news.
Beyond
these
specific
charges
lie
other
alleged
violations:
in
Afghanistan,
President
Donald
Trump’s
senior
most
ground
commander
has
accused
Russia
of
arming
Taliban
militants;
on
the
North
Korean
crisis
Mr.
Trump
mentioned
in
January
that
Russia
was
helping
Pyongyang
avoid
UN
sanctions;
and
the
EU
last
year
voted
to
extend
into
2018
sanctions
that
prohibit
its
businesses
from
investing
in
Crimea.
Has
Russia
truly
gone
rogue,
and
is
this
its
grand
strategy
to
reclaim
its
superpower
status?
The
answer
is
yes
and
no.
To
an
extent
the
U.S.
response,
significant
though
it
may
appear
on
the
surface,
signals
to
Russia
an
inconsistent
application
of
any
principles
of
bilateral
and
multilateral
engagement.
Scarcely
a
week
ago,
Mr.
Trump
congratulated
Russian
President
Vladimir
Putin
on
his
re
election,
apparently
against
the
advice
of
senior
White
House
officials,
and
this
drew
sharp
criticism
even
from
fellow
Republicans.
He
apparently
did
not
deem
the
nerve
agent
attack
a
subject
deserving
of
mention
on
that
phone
call.
Yet,
shortly
thereafter
he
replaced
National
Security
Adviser
H.R.
McMaster
with
John
Bolton,
a
long
standing
Russia
hawk.
What
would
concern
democracy
minded
Americans
is
that
the
expulsion
of
Russian
diplomats
might
serve
as
an
easy
distraction
device
in
the
ongoing
investigation
into
whether
Mr.
Trump
or
his
associates
colluded
with
Russian
entities
to
influence
the
2016
presidential
election.
Whatever
the
true
intentions
of
the
current
U.S.
administration
are,
it
would
be
naive
to
assume
that
Moscow
will
miss
any
opportunity
to
tighten
its
strategic
grip
on
global
geopolitics,
whether
in
terms
of
influencing
foreign
elections,
undermining
Western
coalition
forces
in
Syria,
Iraq
and
Afghanistan,
or
shadow
manoeuvres
that
exacerbate
instability
in
the
context
of
North
Korea
and
Iran.
Contrarily,
it
is
imperative
that
the
West,
perhaps
led
by
the
U.S.
or
the
EU,
find
some
means
to
bring
Mr.
Putin
to
the
negotiating
table,
the
corollary
of
which
is
that
he
must
eschew
his
current
preference
for
political
subversion.
The
U.K.
led
the
way
when
it
expelled
23
Russian
diplomats,
but
the
week
before
that
the
U.S.
had
slapped
Russia
with
sanctions
against
multiple
individuals
and
entities
for
interfering
in
the
2016
U.S.
presidential
election
through
covert
online
propaganda,
including
fake
news.
Beyond
these
specific
charges
lie
other
alleged
violations:
in
Afghanistan,
President
Donald
Trump’s
senior
most
ground
commander
has
accused
Russia
of
arming
Taliban
militants;
on
the
North
Korean
crisis
Mr.
Trump
mentioned
in
January
that
Russia
was
helping
Pyongyang
avoid
UN
sanctions;