The Missed Opportunities of the War in Ukraine
by Ted
Snider | Feb 6, 2023
https://libertarianinstitute.org/articles/the-missed-opportunities-of-the-war-in-ukraine/
The devastation has unfolded in Ukraine. As former
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and former Secretary of Defense Robert
Gates say in The
Washington Post, Ukraine’s “economy is in a shambles, millions of its
people have fled, its infrastructure is being destroyed, and much of its
mineral wealth, industrial capacity and considerable agricultural land are
under Russian control.”
As of January 23, almost 8 million people,
or around 19% of the population, have fled Ukraine for Europe.
So many Ukrainian soldiers have died that a Ukrainian
commander in Bakhmut, where the fighting is at its heaviest, said that
“the exchange rate of trading our lives for theirs favors the Russians. If this
goes on like this, we could run out.” Estimates of the number of Ukrainian
soldiers killed range from over 300 to nearly 450 a day. Der Spiegel reports that
German intelligence is “alarmed” by the “high losses suffered by the Ukrainian
army” in the battle for Bakhmut. They told German politicians in a secret
meeting that the loss of life for Ukrainian soldiers is in “three-digit
number[s]” every day on that battleground alone.
What is so sad is that there were so many missed
opportunities to avoid this suffering. The biggest was the opportunity missed
by Russia to continue to pursue a resolution to their security concerns in a
theater other than war. But there were opportunities that were missed both
before and after that biggest of missed opportunities. Sadly, there were at
least six.
Minsk: Not Pushing Poroshenko
Negotiated in 2014 and 2015, the Minsk agreements
represented the best opportunity for peace between Russia and Ukraine. The
Minsk agreements were brokered by France and Germany, agreed to by Ukraine and
Russia, and accepted by the United States and United Nations. They promised to
peacefully return the Donbas to Ukraine while granting it full autonomy.
But Pyotr Poroshenko, the Ukrainian president who
negotiated it, said that “he had known that it would never be implemented
because neither the political establishment nor public opinion in Ukraine would
accept it,” according to Putin biographer Philip Short. Though they had
brokered the agreement, Germany did not push Poroshenko to implement it. According to Fedor
Lukyanov, professor at the National Research University Higher School of
Economics in Moscow, “It was then said on the sidelines that Merkel actually
did not advise Poroshenko to sign the proposed text.” Though the U.S.
officially accepted the Minsk agreements, they never did anything to encourage
or force their implementation. There have also been reports that
“the U.S., the only party who could have really pressured [Poroshenko], told
him not to follow up on the agreement.”
The first opportunity was lost when Poroshenko never
implemented the Minks agreements. The U.S. never pushed him toward the
diplomatic solution and may have even subtly encouraged the military
alternative. On the heels of the signing of the agreements, by March 2015 the
Obama administration had sent $75 million of defensive military aid to Ukraine.
By April, hundreds of American, British, and Canadian military trainers were in
Ukraine.
Minsk: Not Supporting Zelensky
In 2019, Zelensky was elected in large part because
his platform of making peace with Russia and signing the Minsk II Agreement won
him the Russian speaking vote in the south and east. But to fulfill his
promise, Zelensky had to have the support of the U.S. He didn’t get it.
Pushed off the path of diplomacy by ultranationalist
elements in Ukraine, Zelensky reversed his campaign pledge and refused to
implement the agreement. The U.S. then failed to pressure him back onto the
road of diplomacy. Richard Sakwa, Professor of Russian and European Politics at
Kent, told me that “As for Minsk, neither the U.S. nor the EU put serious
pressure on Kiev to fulfil its part of the agreement.” Anatol Lieven of the
Quincy Institute for Responsible Statecraft agrees. Though the U.S. officially
endorsed Minsk, Lieven told me that “they did nothing to push Ukraine into
actually implementing it.”
By the end of 2021, according to Nicolai Petro,
the Minsk agreements were “explicitly rejected by senior Ukrainian government
officials.”
When first elected, Zelensky seems to have been
sincere about keeping his campaign promise to implement Minsk. Upon being
elected, Zelensky told reporters that
he would “reboot” peace talks with separatists in Donbas. He told them that “we
will continue in the direction of the Minsk [peace] talks and head towards
concluding a ceasefire.” On October 1, 2019, Zelensky signed the German and
French brokered Steinmeier Formula that
called for elections in Donbas and recognition of their autonomy.
Being forcefully pushed off the path of diplomacy,
Zelensky was abandoned by the U.S. Again, the U.S. may have done the opposite
of supporting diplomacy. Reporting on the signing of the Steinmeier
Formula, Foreign Policy said that “U.S. officials have pushed
for the reinstatement of Ukrainian control of its international border” and for
“a tougher stance on Russia’s annexation of parts of Ukraine.”
The second opportunity was lost when the U.S. failed
to support Zelensky, which was a second opportunity to prevent war by
implementing the Minsk Agreements.
Minsk: On the Eve of War
Russia remained committed to the Minsk agreements as
the only path to peace right up to the days before the war. Putin said that he
was “convinced” there is “still…no alternative.”
Russian specialist Geoffrey Roberts, professor
emeritus of history at University College Cork, says that in a November 13
interview, Putin “reiterated Russia’s commitment to the implementation of the
Minsk agreements, saying there was no other mechanism to resolve the Donbas
problem.”
Putin continued to meet with his Minsk counterparts
right up to the eve of the war. On August 20, 2021, Putin complained to
Merkel that “Ukraine has adopted a number of laws and regulations that
essentially contradict the Minsk agreements. It is as if the leadership of that
country has decided to give up on achieving a peaceful
settlement.” Roberts reports that Putin spoke with Macron on February 12
and complained of the West’s failure to prompt Kiev to implement the
agreements. The next day he told German Chancellor Olaf Scholz that he believed
a solution within the Minsk agreements was still possible but that Germany and
France had to pressure Ukraine. That was nine days before Russia made the
decision to invade Ukraine.
Though the key players in the Minsk
negotiations—France, Germany, Russia. and Ukraine—met in the days before the
war, “it was clear,” Richard Sakwa says,
“that Ukraine was in no mood to fulfill the Minsk-2 agreement.” It was clear,
too, that the U.S. and Europe did nothing to pressure them. Putin complained to
both Macron and Scholz that the West had failed to pressure them.
That was the third and final missed opportunity on
Minsk. The Minsk agreements were now dead.
Russia’s Security Proposals
On December 17, 2021, Russia delivered proposals on
security guarantees to both the U.S. and NATO. The key demands included no NATO
expansion to Ukraine and no deployment of weapons or troops to Ukraine.
On January 26, the U.S. and NATO rejected Russia’s
essential demand for a written guarantee that Ukraine would not join NATO.
Derek Chollet, counselor to Secretary of State Antony Blinken, has admitted that
the U.S. told Moscow that negotiating NATO expansion into Ukraine was never
even on the table. Putin simply remarked “that fundamental Russian concerns
were ignored.”
The official Russian response came on February 17,
2022. It said that the U.S. and NATO offered “no constructive answer” to
Russia’s key demands. It then added that if the U.S. and NATO continued to
refuse to provide Russia with “legally binding guarantees” regarding its
security concerns, Russia would respond with “military-technical means.”
The last best opportunity to prevent the invasion was
missed. One week later, Russia “respond[ed] with ‘military-technical means.’”
Istanbul: Discouraging Talks
In April 2022, negotiations in Istanbul produced a “tentatively agreed”
upon settlement. A negotiated end to the war seemed to be within reach. Then
the U.S. and the United Kingdom put a stop to it, and the war went on. From
that moment on, the U.S. shared responsibility for the war.
Ukraine and Russia were ready to end the war. But the
U.S. and UK pressured Ukraine not to pursue its own goals and sign an agreement
that could have ended the war. They then pressured Ukraine to continue the war
to fight for larger American goals.
The State Department rejected ending the war on
Ukraine’s terms because “this is a war that is in many ways bigger than Russia,
it’s bigger than Ukraine.” The war could have ended with Ukraine’s interests
addressed. But the U.S. insisted that it continue until American interests were
addressed.
British Prime Minister Boris Johnson then rushed to
Kiev to tell Zelensky
that Putin “should be pressured, not negotiated with.” He added that, even if
Ukraine was ready to sign some agreements with Russia, the West was not.
Turkish Foreign Minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, said in
an interview that “There are countries within NATO who want the war to
continue.” He said that “following the NATO foreign ministers’ meeting, it was
the impression that…there are those within the NATO member states that want the
war to continue, let the war continue and Russia get weaker.”
The first missed opportunity to stop the war came in
the early days. Russia and Ukraine had reached a tentative agreement that
satisfied their interests. But they did not satisfy the interests of the United
States. The war now raged on in pursuit of U.S. goals.
Inflection Point: the Missed Window
In November, the war reached what military analysts
call an inflection point. Ukraine’s military gains seemed to have reached an
apex at which point continued fighting might lead to no further territorial
gains for Ukraine but possible territorial losses to Russia. Some military analysts suggested that
Kherson was likely the last Russian held ground that Ukraine will be able to
retake in the foreseeable future.
The Biden administration had long said that
the goal was to put Ukraine in the best possible position “on the battlefield”
to “be in the strongest possible position at the negotiating table.” That time
seemed to have arrived. The German and French militaries began to believe that
“parity will not last long and that now is the optimal time for Ukraine to
start talking.” On November 9, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Gen. Mark
Milley said,
“There has to be a mutual recognition that a military victory is probably, in
the true sense of the word is maybe not achievable through military means,”
adding, “and therefore you need to turn to other means.”
Ukraine was at the best possible position on the
battlefield to be in the best possible position at the negotiating table. And the West was at a fork in the
road. They could now exert pressure on Ukraine to turn to negotiations. Or they
could resolve the problem of Ukraine getting as far as they could with the
weapons they had by providing them with heavier more advanced weapons.
The U.S.
missed the opportunity to escort Ukraine to the negotiating table. Instead,
they chose the weapons route and sent Bradleys and Strykers and tanks.
That was the
most recent of the six missed opportunities to avoid or end the tragedy
unfolding in Ukraine.
No hay comentarios:
Publicar un comentario