M A Hossain,
Wars have a way of exposing illusions. Some collapse instantly; others linger, propped up by wishful thinking and selective analysis. The latest conflict in the Gulf does both. It reveals a Russia that cannot protect its partners, yet paradoxically profits from their peril. Weakness and advantage—coexisting, uneasily.
That contradiction sits at the center of Moscow’s current calculus. It is not a new pattern. History is littered with powers that lost influence on the battlefield but gained leverage in markets, diplomacy, or timing. The question is whether such a balance can last—or whether it inevitably breaks under its own contradictions.
The Illusion of Strategic Control
There was a time when Moscow prided itself on being a decisive actor in the Middle East. Syria was the showcase. Intervention there signaled a return to great-power status, a declaration that Russia could shape outcomes far beyond its borders. That confidence now looks overstated.
Recent events tell a different story. A partner falls here, another is pressured there. A war erupts—and Moscow watches, reacts, adjusts. It does not lead. It does not deter. It adapts.
The latest confrontation underscores this shift. A major ally comes under direct military assault. The response from Moscow? Calibrated, cautious, indirect. Intelligence sharing, diplomatic cover, rhetorical opposition—but no decisive intervention. No dramatic show of force. No reversal of events. This is not strategy in the classical sense. It is management of decline, disguised as restraint.
History offers parallels. Late Soviet foreign policy often relied on proxies and posturing when direct engagement became too costly or risky. The British Empire, in its twilight years, frequently masked retreat as prudence. Great powers rarely admit erosion; they reinterpret it.
What makes the current moment striking is not just the limitation—it is the visibility of it. Allies can see it. Rivals can exploit it. And markets, as always, respond with ruthless clarity.
The Windfall of Chaos
If geopolitics exposes Russia’s limits, economics tells a more forgiving story. War disrupts. Disruption inflates prices. And in a world still dependent on hydrocarbons, higher prices mean one thing: revenue.
The ongoing conflict has done precisely that. Oil markets, shaken by uncertainty and logistical bottlenecks, have moved upward. Supply routes are threatened. Insurance costs rise. Traders hedge. Prices climb. For Russia, this is not incidental. It is lifeblood.
After a difficult start to the year—sanctions tightening, revenues shrinking—the shift has been dramatic. Oil that once sold at steep discounts now commands far better prices. In some cases, even premiums. Revenues per barrel have effectively doubled in a short span.
The implications are immediate. Budget pressures ease. Difficult political decisions—cuts, austerity, reform—can be delayed. Financial reserves, once nearing depletion, gain breathing room. But the significance goes beyond accounting.
Energy has always been more than an economic asset for Moscow. It is leverage. Influence. A tool of statecraft. When prices rise, so does that leverage. Import-dependent economies feel the strain. Political calculations shift. Dependencies reassert themselves.
Yet here lies the paradox: this advantage is built on instability. It depends on a crisis Moscow did not initiate and cannot control. That is not power. It is opportunism.
The Ukrainian Equation
No discussion of Russia’s strategic position is complete without Ukraine. And here, the Gulf conflict introduces a subtle but meaningful shift.
Wars compete—for attention, for resources, for political will.
As the Middle East demands greater focus, Western priorities adjust. Defensive systems are redeployed. Strategic attention is divided. Supply chains stretch thinner. This does not mean abandonment. But it does mean dilution.
For Moscow, even marginal changes matter. A slight delay in deliveries, a minor reallocation of defenses, a temporary distraction—each contributes to a broader picture. Not decisive on its own, but cumulatively significant.
History again provides context. During the Cold War, peripheral conflicts often influenced central theaters in unexpected ways. The Yom Kippur War, for instance, reshaped superpower dynamics far beyond the Middle East. Resources are finite; priorities shift.
The current situation reflects that same dynamic. A war in one region alters the balance in another—not through direct confrontation, but through redistribution of focus.
Still, it would be a mistake to overstate the impact. Economic relief from higher oil prices does not translate into unlimited military capacity. Structural constraints remain. Sanctions still bite. Logistics still matter. Russia gains time, not transformation.
Balancing Without Commitment
Perhaps the most delicate aspect of Moscow’s position lies in its diplomacy. Supporting one partner risks alienating others. Escalation invites consequences. Restraint invites doubt.
The current approach is a study in careful ambiguity. Public criticism of Western actions is loud and visible. Behind the scenes, engagement remains measured. Assistance is provided—but kept below thresholds that would trigger broader confrontation.
At the same time, relationships with other regional actors are preserved. Lines are not crossed. Signals are calibrated. This is not indecision. It is calculated flexibility.
However, such balancing acts are inherently unstable. They rely on precise calibration in an unpredictable environment. One mistake—too much support, too little restraint—can destabilize the equilibrium.
Empires have previously struggled with this issue. The Austro-Hungarian Empire's attempt to balance competing alliances and internal pressures proved unsustainable. The Ottoman Empire faced similar quandaries, navigating between powers while attempting to maintain autonomy.
Russia’s current posture echoes those historical tensions. It seeks influence without entanglement, support without escalation, presence without overcommitment. That is a narrow path.
The Fragile Future of Energy Power
There is one more layer to this story—less immediate, but more consequential. High oil prices are a blessing in the short term. Over time, they can become a curse.
When energy becomes expensive, alternatives become attractive. Investment flows shift. Technologies accelerate. Consumers adapt. This is not speculation. It is precedent.
The oil shocks of the 1970s prompted efficiency, diversification, and innovation across industrial economies. Dependence did not disappear, but it did decrease.
A prolonged period of high prices could have a similar impact today. Electrification is gaining momentum. Renewable energy becomes more competitive. The structural demand for fossil fuels has weakened.
For a state heavily reliant on hydrocarbon exports, this is a long-term risk that no short-term windfall can offset. Russia’s current advantage, then, contains the seeds of its future challenge.
Between Opportunity and Decline
So where does this leave Moscow? Stronger than it appeared at the start of the year, certainly. Financially more stable. Strategically less constrained in the immediate term.
But also exposed. Dependent on external events. Limited in its ability to shape outcomes. Navigating a landscape where gains are contingent, not guaranteed.
It is tempting to view the current situation as a clever exploitation of global turmoil. There is truth in that. States survive, and sometimes thrive, by adapting to circumstances beyond their control. But adaptation is not the same as mastery.
The deeper reality is more complex. Russia is benefiting from a crisis that underscores its own limitations. It is gaining from instability it cannot direct. It is buying time in a system that is gradually shifting beneath its feet. History suggests such moments do not last indefinitely.
They eventually come to an end, either abruptly or gradually. When they do, the underlying balance of power resurfaces. For now, Moscow plays its hand carefully. Watching. Calculating. Profiting where it can. But the game is not entirely its own. And that may be the most important fact of all.
M A Hossain is a senior journalist and international affairs analyst, based in Bangladesh. He can be reached at: writetomahossain@gmail.com
This article published at :
1. Sri Lanka Guardian, lk: 4 April, 26