Saturday, April 9, 2022

SINGAPORE SANCTIONS RUSSIA - A BETRAYAL OF FIRST PRINCIPLES IN FOREIGN RELATIONS


Some time in 2009 Lee Kuan Yew met with Dr Mahathir in Kuala Lumpur. The issue of water supply was discussed. There have been different versions of whether LKY threatened war if Malaysia cut off our water life line. Dr Mahathir had said no such threat happened. In his memoir "From third world to first world" LKY had this to say of that meeting:

"He was direct and asked what we were building the Singapore Armed Forces for. I replied equally directly that we feared that at some time or other there could be a random act of madness like cutting off our water supply which they had publicly threatened whenever there were differences between us … In the agreement [Singapore-Malaysia Separation Agreement], the Malaysian government had guaranteed our water supply. If this was breached, we would go to the UN Security Council. If water shortage became urgent, in an emergency, we would have to go in, forcibly if need be, to repair damaged pipes and machinery to restore the water flow. I was putting my cards on the table. He denied that such precipitate action would happen. I said I believe that he would not do this, but we had to be prepared for all contingencies.”

In another interview at another time LKY said if the Malaysians breached the Water Supply Agreement, "it means war" because water is a matter of life and death.

Thankfully, friendly relations between our two countries prevailed. I broach this issue to discuss 'first principles' in foreign relations. Suppose Malaysia cut off the water supply and Singapore invade Johore to secure the pipelines. Would Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan then say our invasion is justified? Cutting off the water supply is the "casus belli" - an act or event that provokes or justifies a war. We act on the principle of self-defence from an existential threat by the Malaysians breach of obligations grounded in a legal contract. Surely all Singaporeans whether PAP or opposition supporters, whether pro-Ukraine or pro-Russia, would share a single opinion that the invasion of Johore is justified because their life depends on it.

The Russian invasion of Ukraine has narratives normalised by blistering lies of western media. It is as if Russians woke up one morning and decided on the invasion. What is the casus belli for the Russo-Ukraine war? Most folks are shallow on the background history and simply take the official line of an angelic helpless Ukraine invaded by a dictatorial Putin who holds Russian irrenditist views. Ukraine has a hotch potch demographic with divisions along religious and language fissures, with Catholics and Ukrainian speakers on the West, and Eastern Orthodox Church and Russian speakers in the East and Crimea. The western region has a strong presence of ultra-right wing elements of neo-nazis with its Azov battalion, and Azov Youths which is practically a movement. Nazi symbolism of the iron cross, wolfsangel and sonrendah are everywhere. The conflict between the West and the East started in 2014 when President Yanukovych rejected the deal to join the EU.  Maidan Revolution erupted, with  assistance from George Sorros and CIA. The West has rained thousands of missiles on the East for 8 long years. Russia has fought 2 terrible wars against Nazi Facisim where millions perished and Western Ukrainians fought for Germany. Into this mess comes the interference from New World Order elites and corrupt US officials that forment unrest to have their own man installed in the presidency. Add to this the secretive US biolabs and the ambition of Ukraine to join Nato.

Crimea was an independent Khanate under the influence of the Ottoman Empire 500 years ago. In the 1770s a weakened Ottoman Empire ceded control of Crimea to Russia. During the Soviet era, Crimea was passed over to several administrations but mainly under Russian Republic of SSR. Finally in 1954 Nikita Kruschev transferred Crimea administratively to Ukraine. In 1991 after the collapse of USSR, Ukraine became an independent state with Crimea as part of it. However, Crimea had an independent constitution that allowed its parliament to decide on their own sovereignty. In 2014 following a referendum where 97% voted to break away from Ukraine, Crimea returned to Russia's fold. Western press had the world believe Russia annexed Crimea by force. Following this, Ukraine made several provocative intrusions into Russian waters in the Black Sea where they had their naval bases. Russia reacted with great restraints in these provocative naval intrusions.

What indeed was the casus belli for Russia to invade Ukraine? Does Russia have no right to a view on national security threats? This is not to deny that Ukraine has a right to view a Russian threat and want the Nato umbrella. What it means is that it's complex and our tiny little island is in no position to really take a stand. It is more difficult than the Schleswig-Holstein question, a long ago territorial dispute between Denmark and Germany which British Prime Minister Lord Palmerstone famously joked what the conflict was all about: "Only three people have ever really understood - the Prince Consort (of Queen Victoria), a German professor, who has gone mad, and I, who have forgotten about it".

Singapore Foreign Minister Vivian Balakrishnan explained the sanction on Russia is not taking sides, but an act on principles. “..., unless we, as a country, stand up for principles that are the very foundation for the independence and sovereignty of smaller nations, our own right to exist and prosper as a nation may similarly be called into question.”

How is this unilateral act to sanction not against the principles of neutrality that Singapore has always stood for. In the "annexation" of Crimea in 2014, Singapore strongly condemned the Russian action (despite the referendum). In 1963 Singapore held a referendum to join Malaysia. Should it similarly be said Singapore was annexed by Malaya? 

Realpolitik is a system of politics or principles based on practical rather than moral or ideological considerations, or even some international laws. Henry Kissinger and Richard Nixon were the primary proponents of this approach which led to decisions for acceptance of a defeat of the Vietnam War, Detente in the Cold War, and rapprochement with Communist China.

Heaven forbid that one day a foreign country invades Singapore. Minister Vivian has us believing that countries will come to our assistance because we have been goody-two shoes with principles of international laws on national sovereignty. The cold dispassionate fact is, in realpolitik, first principles of foreign relations stand on the shaky pillar of national interest. The only consideration for all countries is what's in it for them. Every country acts in its own national interest. One understands why Kishore Mahbubani refers to the 'naive' in one of his wonderful articles on foreign relations.
 
Lord Palmerstone said about 160 years ago : "We have no eternal allies, and we have no perpetual enemies. Our interests are eternal and perpetual, and those interests it is our duty to follow."  This famous quote has been paraphrased in so many ways by so many equally famous personality. French President de Gaulle kept it short : "No nation has friends, only interests."

Scholars of foreign relations have looked at national interest in world politics in terms of three major objectives of security, economic development and community interest. It is multidimensional and therefore a careful analysis of policy impact is required. Are there AI applications that can unburden the decision making? Not likely due to its qualitative and stochastic nature. Scholars have been trying to develop decision making models that help.

Let's look at these 3 major objectives and see how Singapore stands in relation to the Russo-Ukraine war and our sanction.

'Security' deals with the territorial and physical integrity of Singapore. Weak nations pursue alliances but Singapore does not, prefering to be a neutral state. Our defence doctrine is based on adopting national service to build a civilian army to make up for lack of manpower, and acquire the latest defence technology for hardware advantage (thus higher defence budget spending). Strong defence capability is a deterrence which means lower likelihood of onset of war, or a shorter war duration, if ever. Ukraine is 8,600 km away, events there present no threat here.

'Economic development' is the pursuit of free trade, open markets and foreign direct investments. In this regards, try to do a Singapore-Russia vs a Singapore-Ukraine analysis. Trade with Russia is not significant, but it has been growing substantially by more than 10% annually in the past few years. Last year, Singapore signed FTA with the EAEU or Eurasian Economic Union (comprising of Russia, Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan and Kyrgyzstan) which has a combined GDP of US$5.1T compared to Singapore's US$340B. With this FTA, the EAEU countries were primed to enter the huge Asean market using Singapore as the Hub or gateway. The EAEU are also in the process of setting up their regional reserve currency. Warmer climate is now making Russian agricultural production in abundance. Russia is 3rd largest producer in oil and 2nd in gas. With their shift away from Europe as energy supplier, how might all related services and financing of the industry be like in future? As for Singapore's membership in the Artic Council, the role and opportunities is unlikely to remain unaffected. Compare this to Ukraine which has a GDP of US$155B, no FTA with Singapore, and far less trade.

'Community interest' is the building of a shared sense of values and identity among countries. Countries having similar ideologies, institutions, or interests tend to develop somewhat similar policies. In the context of Asean, these values pull us together. Singapore's unilateral sanction of Russia broke ranks. Moving away from neutrality and siding with rich Western nations certainly do not sit well with other Asean member countries. Something is lost. It's called TRUST.

Realpolitik deals with realism. Is national interest really national? The national interest of a country is often hijacked by the interest of power plays of various actors. In Ukraine, the interests of philantrocapitalism of Sorros, US elites like Mitt Rommey, John Kerry, Nancy Pelosi, Biden Crime Family are all at play. This is not a nuanced claim that the Singapore decision have been driven by some personal interests, but it is not very clear whether it has been a policy aligned and synchronised to the New World Order agenda. But what is very clear is the sanction on Russia is not an act on First Principles in foreign relations.

The myopic view of the war is an unprovoked Russian invasion of Ukraine. The bigger picture is a clash of giants, of the West (EU, Canada, US, New Zealand & Australia) against Russia/China. It is a New World Order grouping, a diminishing economic power against a new rising empire. Lee Kuan Yew would have read the situation differently from our current leadership for he was an avid believer of Machiavelli. In a clash between two major powers, Machiavelli's advice to small principalities was never to take sides. Betting on the loosing side has consequences. In this current war, the more astute action is a vocal disapproval of the Russian invasion but encourage the two sides to negotiate for peace. The majority of countries took this step. Singapore sabre-rattled with the sanction. The Russians aren't shutting down the water pipelines in Johore.


10 comments:

JM Durana said...

Thanks so much for your insight - appreciate your POV. This post was a real education for me on Singapore political history.

Unknown said...

Spore n Malaysia has enjoing good relation all this while. Not sure why you want u want to damage it? U cld find ways to disagree with d Spore sanction on Russia but u chose to quote using ur own interpretation of this sensitive msg instead. Wat is ur intention then?

Pat Low said...

@ JM Durana
Thank you for visiting and your encouragement.

Pat Low said...

@ Anonymous
Thank you for visiting.
I'm just a blogger writing my personal opinions under my real name. I would think there is less likelihood of a hidden agenda than someone posting as 'anonymous'.
Where were you when LKY made those comments?
Should we go and expunge all those articles in the government archives?
I think a matured relationship can discuss sensitive issues without the emotion.
There you go being emotional to say I use this incident and use my own interpretation. The fact is I interpreted nothing of the incident. I merely brought in a factual event for context.
Lay back, chill, and the world can be a better place.

Anonymous said...

This is nonsense!

David Yoong said...

Everyone who read the article knows and understands the comprehensive intent and accurate, objective analysis of the writer. Pls stop creating nonsense here because of your own shallow understanding of facts, your focus on the wrong plane, plus obvious incapibility for sound reasoning.

Chiang Ming Yu said...

This is interesting. Does the Ministry of Foreign Affairs know of these first principles you speak of? Is it not in Singapore's interest to uphold the existing rules-based world order and side with like-minded nations? Should the United Nations include them in its Charter - or should Singapore leave the United Nations and stop paying dues to them since the UN Charter does not seem to contain these first principles you speak of? If you are right then the UN is a waste of time, is it not?

Pat Low said...

@ Chiang Ming Yu

Thank you for visiting and your sensible questions.
To your questions, these are my opinions. Certainly many Singaporeans will dispute because abeyance to laws is in our dna.

MFA staffers certainly know national interest is first priority - it is uno numero. They most certainly know de Gualle's quote, studied Kissinger's books, probably Zbigniew Brzezinski's too if they go through a formal foreign relations course. These are standard fare.

"Is it not in Singapore's interest to uphold the existing rules-based world order and side with like-minded nations?". Certainly - if all nations subscribe to same. Do they? In realpolitik, this is not the case. For the simple reason as the blog tries to argue -- national interest precedes all other considerationss.

'National interest first' isn't a scientific principle to be cast in stone for the UN. As the blog suggests, it stands on shaky grounds. Every nation's interests shift, depending on time and space, circumstances and political leadership.

Is UN a waste of time? It started off as a venue that all nations can gather and talk and settle issues. It has grown too big and into every sphere of human endeavour. Its various agencies have been captured by non-state entities and personalities - eg Bill Gates is Czar of vaccines in WHO, dictatorial countries have taken over UNCHR, WEF has penetrated deep into UN, etc. The Securities Council is innutile because certain countries have veto rights (China has exercised the veto for years for a resolution to go after some terrorists sheltered by Pakistan). In the US 2020 presidential elections, UN elections committee personnel held meetings with Democrats, whatever for is left to conjecture.

A current issue I am concerned with is the growing inclination of self-interest group actors using the UN and its agencies to springboard diabolical schemes that subjugate state sovereignty. Case in point is the Pandemic Treaty that WHO is working on. It is obvious these are agendas of the New World Order. 16 nations have signed the Pandemic Treaty. Wiser nations are baulking at the idea. I wonder if law abiding Singapore is amongst the first.

I could go on with the failings of UN. Despite its failings, I think it still has an important role to play.

Milex said...

Thank u for a constructive n articulate critique on FP.

I think there r 2 opposing 'rules based order' (RBO) in contest today. The US definition is one where there is only one rule maker, judge, jury n executioner (guess who?). No evidence is required for any allegations (eg Xinjiang genocide), one is guilty unless proven innocent ...

The other rising RBO is mainly centred on UN Charter, principles n all the related organisations. Eg sovereign rights, free from foreign interference. It is supported by China, Russia n most countries in the world. But the US has done its best to destroy this in the last 1 to 2 decades (eg WTO, UNHRC, WHO...).

I believe this is the real contest going on now? Ukraine might better clarify who the winners may b. N as SGP takes the US RBO side, there may be unfortunate downsides n ramifications.

P.S Self defence per ur eg (Russia-Ukraine war, Singapore 'invades' or do SMO to M'sia if Johor cuts water supply) is permitted as legal under UN article 51.

Pat Low said...

@ Milex

Thks for visiting.

I agree the US-centric RBO has prevailed for too long. This is the privilege of winning the last world war and being pre-eminent in power both financially and militarily. That is ebbing away under the Biden admin. For the better or not for the world is still left to be seen.

The other RBO under Russia and China is not exactly of the benevolent kind. In a tri-polar world, they serve the rest of us smaller nations well as a balance to the Western nations, something that is manifestly clear to many in the current international status. What will they (R & C) be like without a powerful US is yet to be seen. Their violent past does not offer great confidence I would think.

Regarding WHO UNCHR WHO etc, I think the Liberal-Democrats are for these organisations. Dems are pro-globalist elites. But don't think for a moment they meant well for everyone. They are riding the tiger along their One World Government agenda, with them governing of course. It is the conservative-Republicans who want to move away from these organisations because they see in it the subjucation of state sovereignty to a central external body. This is something our men-in-white fail to see. I suggest you go do some research on something that is coming up. Its the Pandemic Treaty. This one is very bad. We surrender everything to Bill gates.

Re UN charter art 51, you are right, self-defence is permitted. But that is stating the obvious, we don't need a law to tell us we have the right of self-defence. Note that art 51 is about self-defence when we are invaded. The water supply cut-off scenario, we will be the invaders, the other way round.

Just my 2 cents worth.