




On balance, the threat looks mild. But that judgment rests on Russia acknowledging that it needs foreign help in energy, and on Dmitri Medvedev, Putin’s anointed successor, being more pragmatic. Both are gambles.
Why should the poor British Council be the Kremlin’s target? This one comes with baggage; Russia has been irked for ages by the council’s promotion of British culture, out of proportion to its success, although that is solid.
Despite a few rhetorical swipes, the Kremlin has managed to maintain this separation. Britain hopes to reach a new resolution in the United Nations Security Council on more sanctions against Iran in punishment for its refusal to curb its nuclear programme. This will need Russian support. Britain also expects Kosovo to declare independence from Serbia, possibly next month, and for Russia not to intervene in any way that seriously destabilises the region.
British officials have taken encouragement from the Kremlin’s apparent willingness not to let these rows contaminate relations with investors, including BP, which has invested $8 billion cash and assets in its joint venture. A spokesman for BP said that despite the British Council row it was “business as usual”, and that the company felt no impact on its own affairs. “We’ve been in Russia since the 1990s and have been through all sorts of changes, and it feels the same,” Tony Odone said.
These mammoth energy projects have their own political difficulties, and even if Russia has chosen to keep them separate from its disputes with national governments, it has hardly left them alone.
... contd.


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