Is the Biden Administration Trying to Prolong the Ukraine War?
by Ted Galen Carpenter Posted on April 12, 2022
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has created a
humanitarian tragedy for that country, and all reasonable people should want
the increasingly bloody conflict to end as soon as possible. Policies that the
Biden administration is pursuing, however, threaten to prolong the war and its
suffering. The troubling question arises about whether Washington’s policies
are merely inept, or whether they reflect a deliberate strategy to bleed
Russian forces and inflict a geo-strategic defeat on a great power adversary –
regardless of the cost to Ukraine. Indications are mounting that it’s the
latter scenario.
Even the decision by the United States and other NATO
members to pour weapons into
Ukraine, including Javelin anti-tank weapons, Stinger anti-aircraft missiles,
and Switchblade drones,
has had the inherent effect of prolonging the armed conflict. Without those
arms shipments, it is likely that the Russian invasion would have proceeded
faster, perhaps much faster, and more decisively. Western leaders, though, had
understandable motives for wanting to deny the invader an easy victory. From
their viewpoint, not assisting Ukraine would mean seeing a case of military
aggression against a sovereign state rewarded. Because the aggression occurred
in Europe, the United States and its NATO allies had an even greater incentive
to inflict pain on Russia for creating the biggest disruption of the
continent’s peace in nearly eight decades.
Some other Western, especially U.S., actions are less
understandable. Administration officials have been noticeably unenthusiastic
about statements by Ukraine’s president, Volodymyr Zelensky, expressing a
willingness to renounce his country’s ambitions to
join NATO and instead accept a neutral status with multilateral
guarantees. A firm, written commitment that
Ukraine will never become a NATO member was a long-standing Russian demand even
before the war began. Zelensky’s newfound receptivity has increased the
prospects for a peace accord. So, too, has Moscow’s decision to scale-back military operations near
Kyiv and other areas in northern Ukraine.
US leaders should be expressing explicit support for such
diplomacy and the compromises it has begun to reflect. Furthermore, Washington
should state explicitly that it will respect the terms of any peace settlement
the two belligerents might be able to reach. Thus far, however, the Biden
administration’s reaction to the bilateral peace talks has been tepid at best,
and it even remains uncertain whether the United States would refrain from
discouraging or undermining an accord.
Washington’s apparent ambivalence regarding the peace
talks is not the most worrisome aspect of the administration’s behavior,
however. Far more troubling have been the president’s indiscreet, combative
public remarks. Biden startled observers around the world with an apparently
impromptu statement near the end of his speech in Warsaw, Poland: "For
God’s sake, this man [Putin] cannot remain in power!" The comment was
widely interpreted as embracing a new US policy of regime change with respect
to Russia. Both the president and his aides tried to insist that there was no
shift in policy, but their muddled explanations lacked
credibility.
Moreover, Biden’s comment (and his subsequent
anti-Putin diatribe at a press conference) may well have been more than just
the gaffe-prone president’s latest
verbal blunder. The administration is heavily
populated by officials who have been fans of forcible regime-change initiatives
for more than two decades. The substance of US policy, especially the extensive
sanctions that Washington and the European powers have imposed on Russia
following the invasion, certainly seems designed to achieve that goal.
The underlying logic of Washington’s approach is to exert such excruciating
pressure on Russia’s economy that powerful oligarchs and other members of the country’s
elite will take steps to remove Putin from power. Biden’s public call for
regime change may have been indiscreet, but it was not inaccurate. It also is
an approach that influential individuals in
the foreign policy community and the news media openly embrace.
The thesis that Washington is intent on regime change
gained new credibility when the administration endorsed calls to charge Putin
with war crimes. Seizing on videos indicating that Russian troops may have
summarily executed civilians in the Ukrainian city of Bucha, Biden stated on
April 4 that the Russian leader "is brutal, and what’s happening in Bucha
is outrageous, and everyone’s seen it." The president then called for
gathering more evidence for "a war crimes trial."
Given the US track record of brutality against
civilians in the Balkans, Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria and other places,
Biden’s call for putting a foreign head of state on trial for war crimes is
more than a little hypocritical. If such a principle were to be applied with
any degree of consistency, Clinton, Bush, Obama, Trump, and Biden would need to
be in the dock right next to Putin. But the reality is that leaders of powerful
nations (or even leaders of smaller countries that have powerful patrons in the
international system) need never worry about being held accountable for war
crimes.
Consequently, the only way Putin would have to fear
such a proceeding would be if he were overthrown (and remained alive after that
episode). And the only way he is likely to be overthrown is if Russia is
defeated in Ukraine or accepts a peace treaty that appears to be a defeat for
Moscow’s policy goals. The prospect of a coup and subsequent war crimes trial
thus creates a very powerful incentive for Putin to continue the war
indefinitely if success cannot be achieved through diplomacy. Indeed, it
creates an incentive to escalate if necessary – perhaps even to the use of
tactical nuclear weapons.
The Biden administration’s strident moral posturing
may needlessly prolong the Ukraine war at great cost in both treasure and blood
to the Ukrainian people. Calls for regime change and putting Putin on trial for
war crimes are dangerously irresponsible.
Ted Galen Carpenter, a senior fellow in defense
and foreign policy studies at the Cato Institute, is the author of 12 books and
more than 950 articles on international affairs.
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