Uber Russia-hawk Victoria Nuland rises to acting deputy secretary of state
She’s done as much as anyone to sour US-Russia ties;
now, she is one of Washington’s top diplomats.
JULY 25, 2023
Written by
Connor
Echols
In a little-remarked move, the Biden
administration announced Monday
that Victoria Nuland will take over as the acting second-in-command at the
State Department. She
replaces Wendy Sherman, who plans to retire at the end of this week.
Nuland’s
appointment will be a boon for Russia hawks who want to turn up the heat on the
Kremlin. But, for those who favor a negotiated end to the conflict in Ukraine,
a promotion for the notoriously “undiplomatic
diplomat” will be a bitter pill.
A few quick
reminders are in order. When Nuland was serving in the Obama administration,
she had a
now-infamous leaked call with the U.S. ambassador to Ukraine. As the Maidan
Uprising roiled the country, the pair of American diplomats discussed
conversations with opposition leaders, and Nuland expressed support for putting
Arseniy Yatseniuk into power. (Yatseniuk would become prime minister later that
month, after Russia-friendly former President Viktor Yanukovych fled the
country.) At one memorable point in the call, Nuland said “Fu–k the EU” in
response to Europe’s softer stance on the protests.
The
controversy surrounding the call — and larger implications of U.S. involvement
in the ouster of Yanukovych — kicked up tensions with Russia and contributed to
Russian President Vladimir Putin’s decision to seize Crimea and support an
insurgency in eastern Ukraine. Her handing
out food to demonstrators on the ground in Kyiv probably didn’t
help either. Nuland, along with State Department sanctions czar Daniel Fried,
then led the effort to punish Putin through sanctions. Another official at
State reportedly asked Fried
if “the Russians realize that the two hardest-line people in the entire U.S.
government are now in a position to go after them?”
Nuland’s
hawkish inclinations continued after she left the Obama administration. Back in
2020, she penned a Foreign Affairs essay entitled “Pinning Down Putin” in which
she called for a permanent expansion of NATO bases in the alliance’s eastern
flank, a move that would be sure to ratchet up tensions between the United
States and Russia. As I’ve previously noted, Nuland also
opposed the idea of a “free rollover of New START” — the only remaining
agreement that limits Washington and Moscow’s nuclear weapons stockpiles — when
it was set to expire in 2021.
Since
returning to the State Department under President Joe Biden, she has showed
little interest in a dovish turn. In an interview earlier
this year, Nuland called Putin a “19th century autocrat” and justified
Ukrainian attacks in Crimea, which Russia has called a red line. “If we don’t
[defeat Putin], every other autocrat on this planet is going to go looking to
bite off pieces of countries and destabilize the order that has largely kept us
safe and prosperous for decades and decades,” she argued.
To recap,
Nuland 1) was allegedly involved in a conspiracy to overthrow Ukraine’s
president, 2) was definitely behind a strict sanctions regime on Russian
officials, and 3) has never softened her uber-hawkish stances since. With
U.S.-Russia tensions at their highest point in decades, there should be little
doubt as to how her appointment would be received in Moscow.
There is, of
course, some reason for hope. In the statement announcing Sherman’s retirement,
the Biden administration did not give a clear indication of whether Nuland
would be nominated to formally take over as deputy secretary of state. “Biden
has asked Victoria Nuland to serve as Acting Deputy Secretary until our next
Deputy Secretary is confirmed,” the statement said. This leaves some reason to
believe that there is internal opposition to her nomination, or that the
administration has someone else in mind.
For now, we
can only wait and see as Kyiv struggles to retake territory through its grinding
counteroffensive in the east. “In one month, we have only advanced one
kilometer and a half,” a Ukrainian medic told Kyiv Post. “We move
forward by inches, but I don’t think it’s worth all the human resources and
materiel that we have spent.”
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