Publications /
Opinion

Back
As Reliable as Kalashnikovs
September 13, 2021

When Argentina’s President Alberto Fernandez tested positive for COVID-19 on his 62nd birthday, April 2, 2021 it might not have seemed unusual when there have been almost 200 million cases worldwide. But the leader of Argentina received two doses of the Russian vaccine Sputnik V, on January and in February 2021, a virus terminator advertised by Moscow as potent like almost no other on the globe, with an efficiency rate given by Russia’s Gamaleya Institute at 96.1%. The risk of infection should be minimal for those vaccinated with it.

Argentina’s President has recovered, yet Moscow’s PR nightmare continues. Headlines were splashed on the local news media, when, on December 24, 2020 containers of Sputnik V were unloaded at Ezeiza Airport in Buenos Aires, the first delivery of 30 million doses. However, only 9.3 million first jabs, and only 2.4 million second shots, were received. Seven months later, in July 2021, Argentina complained publicly to Moscow about delays and breach of contract. The Latin American nation fears infections driven by the highly contagious Delta variant of the coronavirus, supposedly not yet circulating in Argentina. In its containment battle, Buenos Aires has also introduced the Astra Zeneca and the Chinese Sinopharm vaccines, and recently received a U.S. donation of Moderna, but, in total, just about 17 million Argentinians (out of 44 million) have received a first jab, and fewer than six million have received two vaccinations. Moscow explained the delay on “production problems”, and said new deliveries would be made as soon as possible.

For the Russians urgency is required. Sputnik V was first offered to the world on August 11, 2020. Vladimir Putin pulled up his sleeve and accepted the first jab. Moscow seeks to convey the impression that its medical science is prevailing over the West’s, according to Michael Leigh (April 27, 2021) of the Brussels-based think tank Bruegel, “despite low vaccination rates in Russia’s 146 million population itself” (and about 158,000 COVID-19 deaths at time of writing). The BBC reported (May 6, 2021), that Sputnik V “late stage trials have found it offers high level of protection against COVID-19”. In May, UNICEF signed a supply agreement with Moscow: 220 million doses of Sputnik V, to be delivered this year. Putin declared three months ago in a video conference with the deputy prime minister Tatyana Golikova that his nation’s vaccine is “as reliable as Kalashnikovs” (BBC, May 6, 2021).

‘Pandemic Savior’

Sputnik “is the image of Russia the Kremlin wants to project”, wrote Valentia Lares, managing editor of Armando.info (IPS Interpress Service, May 7, 2021). “Far from the authoritarian, bellicose, annexationist Moscow, that poisons its domestic political opponents and interferes in its rivals elections, Sputnik cast Russia in the role of scientific superpower and pandemic savior,” according to Lares. “While we were not looking, Russia’s Sputnik V became the cornerstone of pandemic response for the developing world. The vaccine offers a unique chance to launder Russia’s reputation”. Madrid-based Lares is convinced that the Sputnik V jab “is about more than image. It’s a calculated campaign to increase the Kremlin’s power and influence through a global scientific, diplomatic and media influence operation”. Planeloads of Russian vaccines have landed in Armenia, Laos, Israel, Mexico, Serbia, Peru, Colombia. The Hungarian Foreign Minister, Peter Szijjarto revealed in March 2021 that he was the first citizen in his nation vaccinated with Sputnik V. Tunisia has been offered 30,000 doses by Moscow and the African Union received an offer, without confirmed delivery dates,  of 300 million doses from Russia, which had already signed agreements to produce tens of millions of doses in China, Brazil, and Iran. First in line, Lares reported, “have been Moscow’s longtime allies typically led by autocrats like Nicolas Maduro of Venezuela”. Meanwhile, “the west stumbles on getting vaccines to the developing world” and has left “a leadership vacuum that Russia is determined to exploit”.

“The vaccines underline the anti-Western bloc’s scientific prowess”, according to Felix Arellano, a professor of International Relations at the Universidad Central de Venezuela in Caracas quoted by Lares. “Ideology demands it be portrayed as greater than the West’s. Russia’s posture, in offering up highly effective vaccines at a low price for countries like Venezuela, is media driven. It’s how Russia and its allies seek to show that authoritarian governments can also grow in the scientific realm, that it’s possible to grow without democracy”. Despite numerous sanctions, because of fundamental disagreements on foreign policy, such as the conflict in Ukraine, the occupation of the Crimea, and the imprisonment of democratic opposition leaders, the Sputnik vaccine is gaining increasing acceptability in Europe. Even the conservative leader of German state Bavaria has announced a preliminary purchase order for 2.5 million doses of Sputnik V.

Bruegel author Michael Leigh noted that Germany’s Angela Merkel, and the French President Emmanuel Macron communicated about possible joint production of the Russian vaccine. Pierre Viment, former French diplomat and Senior Fellow of Carnegie Europe, is certain that the Putin administration is “enjoying this, let’s not be fooled. The use of vaccines by Russia and by China is a diplomatic instrument, a tool for soft power. Playing EU member states off against each other is naturally important to Russia”. Or, as an Eastern European diplomat confided off the record to Brussels-based BBC correspondent Kevin Connolly (April 17, 2021) Sputnik diplomacy, is “potentially the most powerful tool of soft power that Moscow has had in its hands for generations”.

 

The opinions expressed in this article belong to the author.

RELATED CONTENT

  • April 25, 2022
    Retrouvez en exclusivité l’interview de Abdelhak Bassou, Senior Fellow au Policy Center for the New South, qui se livre à Helmut Sorge, Columnist au Policy Center for the New South, au sujet des multi-disparités présentes en Afrique. Abdelhak Bassou est l’auteur du Chapitre 5 du rapport...
  • Authors
    Alessandro Minuto-Rizzo
    Bernardo Sorj
    Frannie Léautier
    Iskander Erzini Vernoit
    Kassie Freeman
    Nathalie Delapalme
    J. Peter Pham
    March 7, 2022
    The COVID-19 pandemic has had a huge impact on the global economy and has challenged the best minds to rethink how to design and implement an effective recovery. Countries in the wider Atlantic region have exhibited differential trajectories in traversing the pandemic. A number of countries in Europe succeeded in vaccinating most of their eligible populations, enabling life to return somewhat to normal. A smaller group of countries in Europe could manage infection rates even more ti ...
  • Authors
    February 3, 2022
    His message was one of reassurance, just as a great leader has to react in a crisis. The concerns about Covid 19 was nothing but “a frenzy and psychosis”. The President knew the secret to defeat the virus: vodka, sauna, tractor. Didn’t a US president named Donald Trump suggest  that toilet cleaning disinfectants chase the virus out of infected lungs on national television? (New York Times, April 24, 2020) That was Trump-speak, sure, but the man who uttered the tractor/vodka/nonsense ...
  • Authors
    October 11, 2021
    The current global pattern of democratic retrenchment has multiple causes, including economic inequality, American imperial overreach, and increased migration, all of which have led to disillusionment with democratic systems, and inspired a populist demand for populist leaders. This populist wave has also led to the personalization of political regimes, democratic and authoritarian, with power highly concentrated in the hands of a single individual, as seen in Turkey, Philippines, P ...
  • September 13, 2021
    When Argentina’s President Alberto Fernandez tested positive for COVID-19 on his 62nd birthday, April 2, 2021 it might not have seemed unusual when there have been almost 200 million cases worldwide. But the leader of Argentina received two doses of the Russian vaccine Sputnik V, on January and in February 2021, a virus terminator advertised by Moscow as potent like almost no other on the globe, with an efficiency rate given by Russia’s Gamaleya Institute at 96.1%. The risk of infec ...
  • Authors
    July 16, 2021
    The BDA Currents: Where Diplomacy Meets Business, is the Brussels Diplomatic Academy’s annual report covering the wider geopolitical and other factors influencing and affecting the world of diplomacy, international relations and global business. The journal focuses on issues of topical interest around the centers of global power, influence and importance, including the continents of Europe and Africa, the Middle East, China, India & Asia, Russia and the Commonwealth of Independe ...
  • June 04, 2021
    The COVID crisis has demonstrated that health can be described as both (geo)political and economic capital, thus emphasizing the role it can play in power struggles at different scales. A ...
  • Authors
    Eugène Berg
    Pascal Chaigneau
    Jérémy Ghez
    May 3, 2021
    Les Dialogues Stratégiques, une collaboration entre HEC Center for Geopolitcs et Policy Center for the New South, représentent une plateforme d’analyse et d’échange biannuelle réunissant des experts, des praticiens, des décideurs politiques, ainsi que le monde universitaire et les médias au service d’une réflexion critique et approfondie sur les tendances politiques mondiales et les grandes questions d’importance commune pour l’Europe et l’Afrique. Cette publication est issue de la ...
  • Authors
    Hanae Bezad
    Maximo Plo Seco
    Roger Hilton
    December 10, 2020
    The Atlantic basin faces considerable challenges on multiple fronts. Financial and economic struggles, coupled with political shifts and social turmoil, are reshaping the region’s geopolitical landscape. Unemployment, poverty, violence, migration, extremism, climate change and other problems are on the rise and the need to tackle them effectively is pressing. To find adequate solutions to these challenges, it is crucial to create inclusive discussions between the North and the Sout ...