The ongoing political and military crisis in Ukraine will continue to play a central role in relations between the West and Russia in the coming years, making or breaking the warming or cooling of bilateral ties between Moscow and Washington, a comprehensive analysis by the Washington-based Center for the National Interest suggests.

The scenarios are presented as an analysis of events which may unfold in and around Ukraine between 2016 and 2018, and how they will affect Russian-American relations. To be sure, each of the scenarios presents events from the point of view of America's assumed national interests.
The first scenario, written by Samuel Charap, a senior fellow for Russia and Eurasia at the Washington-based International Institute for Strategic Studies, considers the conditions necessary for an improvement in US-Russian relations.
The second scenario, written by The National Interest contributing editor Nikolas Gvosdev, presupposes a growing division among European countries in relation to Russia, with the conflict in eastern Ukraine remaining unresolved and risking becoming 'frozen'. In 2017, in preparation for national elections, German Chancellor Angela Merkel is assumed to soften her tone toward Moscow, with other countries following Berlin's lead.
Anti-Russian sanctions are extended, with a Europe, fearful of Russia, turning to NATO as its chosen institute of collective security. Moscow, for its part, attempts a shift to China, but Beijing, due to its economic relations with the US and Europe, hesitates an open alliance. Ultimately, none of the players in the Ukraine conflict achieve their ambitious goals of regional economic integration, with China emerging the victor as the West and Russia focus on Ukraine.
In his write-up of the think tank's analysis, Svobodnaya Pressa journalist Andrei Polunin points out that "in all three scenarios, Washington is expected to consolidate its gains in Ukraine, and to secure the advantages gained in global geopolitical structures. At the same time, the Americans do not intend to 'defeat' Russia at the cost of losing to China."
Speaking to the independent online newspaper, Sergei Ermakov, the deputy director of the Moscow-based Russian Institute for Strategic Studies, noted that the study indicates that the US realizes the Ukrainian crisis's central role to European security.
"In practice, Washington is now seriously discussing the idea of Ukraine's federalization. Kiev had rejected Moscow's proposals in this regard, but now the West is attempting to 'implant' it, with Ukrainian intellectuals reacting quite favorably. In this situation, the think tank's 'probe' on the idea of a possible conflict between Poroshenko and Yatsenyuk indicates that the path to federalization may progress exactly along such a scenario."

Asked to outline his own vision on how relations between Moscow and Washington might unfold in the next several years, Ermakov noted that in his view, in the next three years, Russia will make an effort to modernize its military and to achieve a sense of parity with the US.
"At the same time, Moscow will try to find compromises with Washington on a tactical level, followed by a more stable model, based on a balance of power. Another possibility, of course, is a worsening of the situation in the Middle East or the Donbass. But here much will depend on the new US administration – on which forces support the new president, and whether they will be able to come to an agreement on the reformatting of relations with Russia."
Read more: http://sputniknews.com/politics/20160111/1032956487/ukraine-us-russia-relations.html#ixzz3wy1cfkVf



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