It’s time for a US push to end the war in Ukraine
With a long, bloody stalemate on the horizon, the
conflict’s negative ripple effects worldwide will continue to mount.
JULY 18,
2022
https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2022/07/18/its-time-for-a-us-push-to-end-the-war-in-ukraine/?
Written by
Mark Hannah
Two months after Ukrainians impressively repelled
Russia’s attack on Kyiv, the war is taking a different course.
Russian troops are consolidating their gains in Donbas
as up to 1,000 Ukrainian fighters are killed or
wounded daily. This puts the war on track to be among the
bloodiest in modern history. Despite the delivery of
heavy weaponry from the West, Ukraine is outmatched by Russian
artillery — for each shell or rocket fired by
Ukraine, Russia fires about ten.
The war has been difficult to predict, but time is not on Ukraine’s side.
So the time for aggressive diplomacy in Ukraine is
now, and the recent G7 and NATO summits, and the G20 foreign minister's meetings
last week, were colossal missed opportunities to restart the peace process.
Rather than strategizing about how to extract the best terms from a Russia
that appears ready to
negotiate, leaders of the most powerful democracies have worked to “starve”
Russia of oil money and further “weaken”
the Russian military, and even resorted to schoolyard
taunts to Putin. This is during a moment when we most
need the adults in the room to help de-escalate the conflict.
There is still time — and leverage — to achieve a
diplomatic settlement, after all. The United States could make clear that,
while it supports Ukraine’s fight, it has different stakes. Washington has a
definite interest in curbing Russian aggression in Europe but it’s not as
invested in restoring Ukraine’s pre-invasion borders as, well — Ukraine is.
Kyiv has nothing to lose (and potentially a lot to gain) if the war escalates
into a wider confrontation between NATO and Russia. But NATO countries,
including the United States, would have a lot to lose — especially if this
escalation turns nuclear.
None of us wants to live in a world
where “might makes right” and where Ukraine feels compelled to make concessions
after Russia’s illegal invasion. But all of us do live in a
world where national leaders face real and intensifying domestic political
pressure to rapidly end this war.
Gas prices have surged globally and in the United
States, President Biden is seeming to recognize that
Americans may rather have lower gas prices with “Putin’s iron fist in Europe.”
as he pushes for a suspension of
the federal gas tax. In Germany, leaders have declared a “gas crisis”
and may look to rationing as Russia
cuts exports to western Europe. This
problem will only become more pronounced as winter
approaches.
A new poll by
my organization, the Eurasia Group Foundation, suggests the U.S. response to
the war in Ukraine has broad international support but that this is primarily
because it has avoided a direct confrontation with Russia. Asked about the most
important U.S. goals, avoiding a U.S.-Russia war and preventing Ukrainians’
suffering were the two most frequently chosen answers. (The two least frequent
were: defending democratic countries from the threat of autocratic ones and
weakening Russia.) A diplomatic settlement would better ensure the success of
these two internationally popular goals.
A push for diplomacy is consistent with President
Biden’s commitment to curb escalation. He repeatedly commits to limiting
U.S. intervention against Russia’s invasion. He
privately called on Secretary of State Antony Blinken and Secretary of Defense
Lloyd Austin to tone
down their talk of weakening Russia by proxy. If
war between Ukraine and Russia were an indispensable part of a global contest
between democracy and autocracy, the United States would not limit the
types of weapons it sends nor abstain from putting its
troops in harm’s way.
So far, Washington has succeeded primarily by avoiding
unachievable war aims. U.S. shipments of weapons helped thwart the intended
encirclement of Kyiv. The United States rallied wealthy European countries to
take more responsibility for the continent’s security and to join international
sanctions on Moscow. Without firing a shot, Washington has helped Ukraine
maintain most of its territorial integrity and all of its political
autonomy.
In comparison, the stated war aims of Vladimir Putin
have abjectly failed.
He was not able to install a pro-Russian government in Kyiv. Far from stopping
NATO enlargement, his invasion prompted long-neutral Sweden
and Finland to make a bid to join the
alliance. Finally, the Russian military has revealed itself to be exquisitely
capable of operational blunders and
tactical failures. As one former NATO leader told me, Russia has been exposed
as “a medieval pillaging army rather than a sophisticated modern force, more of
a mere missile launching army than a deep-strike army.”
This is hardly a success for Putin. Although he has
weathered economic sanctions, enjoyed soaring approval ratings, and might even
end up peeling off a Russophilic and Russophonic piece of Ukraine, any
diplomatic end to this war will see Putin with reduced military strength, a
weakened economy, and diminished geopolitical influence.
There is little to suggest Ukraine might get better
terms through a long proxy war. Analysts are skeptical of Ukraine’s ability to
reconquer territory — a problem more weapons shipments won’t solve. Short of an
all-out intervention by the United States or European powers, it’s far-fetched
to think the West will compel Russia to surrender, or put Putin on trial before
the International Criminal Court (however cathartic such an idea is).
So, what’s to be done? The United States needs to open a diplomatic channel with
Moscow to get a clearer sense of what would be an acceptable settlement for all
parties. Right before the invasion, Deputy Secretary of State Wendy Sherman
indicated “possible
support” for an approach in which Ukraine would pledge
military neutrality and give up its bid for NATO membership. If it will stop
the suffering of ordinary Ukrainians, why should the United States not
encourage Ukraine to put that back on the table now? Given its ongoing
struggles with corruption and undemocratic practices, Ukraine is still
far from meeting the democratic criteria of NATO
membership anyway.
Promises of unlimited support only embolden what is
starting to be seen as the Ukrainian president’s “reckless
stubbornness” in outright rejecting the
possibility of territorial concessions. President Biden has repeatedly
expressed that there are limits to U.S. assistance — it does not help Ukraine
to pretend otherwise. It is rare that war ends in total defeat, and it is not
realistic to expect Moscow will fully retreat. U.S. policy must now shift to
embrace this reality and plan for the months ahead when deep divisions within
the Western coalition grow, and when, in a lopsided war of attrition, Ukraine
might lose even more ground.
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