By Olga Rotenberg, NICOSIA Cyprus
Russia's invasion of Ukraine risks making President Vladimir Putin an international pariah, but he does not fear such isolation -- quite the contrary, experts say.
The attack on Thursday led the
United States and its allies to agree on a "devastating" sanctions
package against Russia, after NATO, EU and G7 leaders condemned the invasion
and vowed to hold Moscow accountable.
"Putin is now recognised
as THE most imminent threat to our system of Western liberal market
democracy," said Timothy Ash, an emerging markets strategist at BlueBay
Asset Management.
Western leaders "feel
totally let down and threatened by Putin", who has marked himself out as
"the number one pariah" of the West, he added in a note to clients.
The result, said Comfort Ero,
president and CEO of the International Crisis Group think-tank, is that Russia
"is likely to find itself in unprecedented political and economic
isolation for a long time".
Russia was already targeted
with rounds of sanctions after Moscow's 2014 annexation of Ukraine's Crimean
Peninsula and after the poisoning of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny in 2020.
But no measure seemed to have
any effect on the Russian president, other than increasing his intransigence.
"For a year and a half
the Kremlin has actively prepared for the fact that the West will impose the
most severe sanctions possible," Tatiana Stanovaya, founder of the
R.Politik analysis firm, told AFP.
For Putin, "sanctions
don't have the aim of preventing Russian aggression but of curbing Russia's
development," she said, adding that Moscow expects a long confrontation
with the West.
Among possible further
measures, Washington and Brussels could cut Russia off from SWIFT, the global
financial messaging system used to move money around the world, although US
President Joe Biden noted on Thursday that is not a step much of Europe yet
"wishes to take".
Russia has prepared itself,
particularly by growing its foreign exchange reserves, which total about $640
billion.
"Abundant currency
reserves, the soaring price of oil and a low debt-to-GDP ratio will help Russia
weather the immediate hit of the sanctions," said Oleg Ignatov, a Russia
expert with the International Crisis Group.
"But in the longer-term,
they will compound the country's economic stagnation."
Russia is one of the world's
leading producers of crude, which soared to levels not seen since 2014 after
the invasion began.
Massive sanctions would make
Russia "a global market pariah and uninvestable", said Ash, pointing
to the free-fall experienced by Russia's stock market on Thursday.
The Kremlin says it has
foreseen such developments. "In order that this emotional period, be as
temporary as possible, all necessary measures have been taken," Kremlin
spokesman Dmitry Peskov told reporters.
He also downplayed the
diplomatic impact.
"Of course, we could have
problems with a number of states. But we were having problems with these states
even before," Peskov said.
In fact, Putin's Russia seems
determined to shake the foundations of international security.
"This is not just a
European security crisis," said Ero. "The repercussions of this war
for global security, too, will be severe and lasting."
Alexander Baunov, a senior
fellow at the Carnegie Moscow Center, said Russia will obviously become
"for a time, a pariah", and the longer its Ukraine operation lasts
"the more economic links and engagements between Russia and other
countries will unravel".
Isolated diplomatically and
economically from the West, Putin could turn elsewhere, such as China or Iran.
Both of those countries have so far seemed hesitant to condemn Russia.
Pakistan's Prime Minister
Imran Khan was visiting Moscow on Thursday.
Beijing said it understands
Moscow's "reasonable concerns on security issues" over Ukraine, while
Tehran said "the Ukraine crisis is rooted in NATO's provocations."
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