Ukraine is the latest neocon disaster
Jeffrey
D. Sachs
27.06.2022
https://www.ekathimerini.com/opinion/1187692/ukraine-is-the-latest-neocon-disaster/
The war in Ukraine is the culmination of a 30-year
project of the American neoconservative movement. The Biden Administration is
packed with the same neocons who championed the US wars of choice in Serbia
(1999), Afghanistan (2001), Iraq (2003), Syria (2011), Libya (2011), and who
did so much to provoke Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. The neocon track record is
one of the unmitigated disasters, yet Biden has staffed his team with neocons. As a
result, Biden is steering Ukraine, the US, and the European Union towards yet
another geopolitical debacle. If Europe has any insight, it will separate
itself from these US foreign policy debacles.
The neocon movement emerged in the 1970s around a
group of public intellectuals, several of whom were influenced by University of
Chicago political scientist Leo Strauss and Yale University classicist Donald
Kagan. Neocon leaders included Norman Podhoretz, Irving Kristol, Paul
Wolfowitz, Robert Kagan (son of Donald), Frederick Kagan (son of Donald),
Victoria Nuland (wife of Robert), Elliott Cohen, Elliott Abrams, and Kimberley
Allen Kagan (wife of Frederick).
The main message of the neocons is that the US must
predominate in military power in every region of the world, and must confront
rising regional powers that could someday challenge US global or regional
dominance, most important Russia and China. For this purpose, US military force
should be pre-positioned in hundreds of military bases around the world and the
US should be prepared to lead wars of choice as necessary. The United Nations
is to be used by the US only when useful for US purposes.
This approach was spelled out first by Paul Wolfowitz
in his draft Defense Policy Guidance (DPG) written for the Department of
Defense in 2002. The draft called for extending the US-led security network to Central and Eastern Europe despite the explicit promise by German Foreign
Minister Hans-Dietrich Genscher in 1990 that German unification would not be
followed by NATO’s eastward enlargement. Wolfowitz also made the case for American
wars of choice, defending America’s right to act independently, even alone, in
response to crises of concern to the US. According to General Wesley Clark,
Wolfowitz already made clear to Clark in May 1991 that the US would lead
regime-change operations in Iraq, Syria, and other former Soviet allies.
The neocons championed NATO enlargement to Ukraine
even before that became official US policy under George W. Bush, Jr. in 2008.
They viewed Ukraine’s NATO membership as key to US regional and global dominance.
Robert Kagan spelled out the neocon case for NATO enlargement in April 2006:
[T]he Russians and Chinese see nothing natural in
[the “color revolutions” of the former Soviet Union], only Western-backed coups
designed to advance Western influence in strategically vital parts of the
world. Are they so wrong? Might not the successful liberalization of Ukraine,
urged and supported by the Western democracies, be but the prelude to the
incorporation of that nation into NATO and the European Union — in short, the
expansion of Western liberal hegemony?
Kagan acknowledged the dire implication of NATO
enlargement. He quotes one expert as saying, “the Kremlin is getting ready for
the ‘battle for Ukraine’ in all seriousness.” After the fall of the
Soviet Union, both the US and Russia should have sought a neutral Ukraine, as a
prudent buffer and safety valve. Instead, the neocons wanted US
“hegemony” while the Russians took up the battle partly in defense and partly
out of their own imperial pretensions as well. Shades of the Crimean War
(1853-6), when Britain and France sought to weaken Russia in the Black Sea
following Russian pressures on the Ottoman empire.
Kagan penned the article as a private citizen while
his wife Victoria Nuland was the US Ambassador to NATO under George W. Bush,
Jr. Nuland has been the neocon operative par excellence. In
addition to serving as Bush’s Ambassador to NATO, Nuland was Barack Obama’s
Assistant Secretary of State for European and Eurasian Affairs during 2013-17,
where she participated in the overthrow of Ukraine’s pro-Russian president
Viktor Yanukovych, and now serves as Biden’s Undersecretary of State guiding US
policy vis-à-vis the war in Ukraine.
The neocon outlook is based on an overriding false
premise: that the US military, financial, technological, and economic
superiority enables it to dictate terms in all regions of the world. It
is a position of both remarkable hubris and remarkable disdain for evidence.
Since the 1950s, the US has been stymied or defeated in nearly every
regional conflict in which it has participated. Yet in the “battle for
Ukraine,” the neocons were ready to provoke a military confrontation with
Russia by expanding NATO over Russia’s vehement objections because they
fervently believe that Russia will be defeated by US financial sanctions and
NATO weaponry.
The Institute for the Study of War (ISW), a neocon
think-tank led by Kimberley Allen Kagan (and backed by a who’s who of defense
contractors such as General Dynamics and Raytheon), continues to promise a
Ukrainian victory. Regarding Russia’s advances, the ISW offered a typical
comment: “[R]egardless of which side holds the city [of Sievierodonetsk], the
Russian offensive at the operational and strategic levels will probably have
culminated, giving Ukraine the chance to restart its operational-level
counteroffensives to push Russian forces back.”
The facts on the ground, however, suggest otherwise.
The West’s economic sanctions have had a little adverse impact on Russia, while
their “boomerang” effect on the rest of the world has been large. Moreover, the
US capacity to resupply Ukraine with ammunition and weaponry is seriously
hamstrung by America’s limited production capacity and broken supply chains.
Russia’s industrial capacity of course dwarfs that of Ukraine’s. Russia’s GDP
was roughly 10X that of Ukraine before the war, and Ukraine has now lost much of
its industrial capacity in the war.
The most likely outcome of the current fighting is
that Russia will conquer a large swath of Ukraine, perhaps leaving Ukraine
landlocked or nearly so. Frustration will rise in Europe and the US with the
military losses and the stagflationary consequences of war and sanctions. The
knock-on effects could be devastating if a right-wing demagogue in the US rises
to power (or in the case of Trump, returns to power) promising to restore
America’s faded military glory through dangerous escalation.
Instead of risking this disaster, the real solution is
to end the neocon fantasies of the past 30 years and for Ukraine and Russia to
return to the negotiating table, with NATO committing to end its commitment to
the eastward enlargement to Ukraine and Georgia in return for a viable peace
that respects and protects Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity.
Jeffrey D. Sachs is an economics professor; Director
of the Center for Sustainable Development in the Earth Institute at Columbia
University.
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