"One of the hardest challenges in
geopolitics is figuring out how to conduct a successful retreat. We witnessed that reality last summer
in Afghanistan, when the Biden administration made the correct strategic choice
— cutting our losses instead of escalating to preserve a morally bankrupt
status quo — but then staggered through a disastrous withdrawal that wounded
his presidency and laid bare American incompetence to a watching world.
Now we face the same problem with
Ukraine. The United States in its days as a hyperpower made a series of moves
to extend our perimeter of influence deep into Russia’s near-abroad. Some of
those moves appear to be sustainable: The expansion of NATO to include
countries of the former Warsaw Pact was itself a risk, but at the moment those
commitments seem secure. But the attempt to draw Ukraine out of Russia’s orbit,
the partway-open door to Ukrainians who preferred westward-focused alliances,
was a foolish overcommitment even when American power was at its height.
Ukraine is a flawed democracy. When
we gave Ukraine security assurances under Bill Clinton, opened the door to NATO
membership under George W. Bush and supported the Maidan protests under Barack
Obama, we were in each case acting with good intentions. But in geopolitics
good intentions are always downstream from the realities of power.
Whatever its
desires or ours, the government in Ukraine has simply never been in a position
to fully join the West — it’s too economically weak, too internally divided and
simply in the wrong place.
And the actions of the Bush and Obama
administrations — and some Trump administration acts as well — have left us
overstretched, our soft-power embrace of Kyiv ill-equipped to handle hard-power
countermoves from Moscow.
Given those realities, and the
pressing need to concentrate American power in East Asia to counter China, it’s
clear enough where an ideal retreat would end up: with NATO expansion
permanently tabled, with Ukraine subject to inevitable Russian pressure but
neither invaded nor annexed, and with our NATO allies shouldering more of the burden
of maintaining a security perimeter in Eastern Europe.
But as with Afghanistan, the actual
execution is harder than the theory. Coming to a stable understanding with
Putin is challenging, because he’s clearly invested in being a permanent
disrupter, taking any opportunity to humiliate the West. Extricating ourselves
from our Ukrainian entanglements will inevitably instill doubts about our more
important commitments elsewhere, doubts that will be greater the more Kyiv
suffers from our retreat. And handing off more security responsibility to the
Europeans has been an unmet goal of every recent U.S. president, with the
particular problem that a key European power, Germany, often acts like a de
facto ally of the Russians.
Given those difficulties, the Biden
administration’s wavering course has been understandable, even if the
president’s recent news conference was too honest by several orders of
magnitude. The United States cannot do nothing if Russia invades Ukraine; we
also would be insane to join the war on Ukraine’s side. So the White House’s
quest for the right in-between response, some balance of sanctions and arms
shipments, looks groping and uncertain for good reason: There’s simply no
perfect answer here, only a least-bad balancing of options.
But my sense is that we are still
placing too much weight on the idea that only NATO gets to say who is in NATO,
that simply ruling out Ukrainian membership is somehow an impossible
concession. This conceit is an anachronism, an artifact of the post-Cold War
moment when it briefly seemed possible that, as the historian Adam Tooze puts it, the
world’s crucial boundaries “would be drawn by the Western powers, the United
States and the E.U., on their own terms and to suit their own strengths and
preferences.”
That’s not how the world works now,
and precisely because it’s not how the world works I would be somewhat relieved
— as an American citizen, not just an observer of international politics — to
see our leaders acknowledge as much, rather than holding out the idea that
someday we might be obliged by treaty to risk a nuclear war over the Donbas.
And if we cannot give up the idea
outright, the idea of giving it up for some extensive period — like the 25
years suggested by Thomas Graham and Rajan Menon in a recent Politico op-ed
— seems like a very reasonable deal to make.
Something can be reasonable and
still be painful — painful as an acknowledgment of Western weakness, painful to
the hopes and ambitions of Ukrainians.
But accepting some pain for the sake
of a more sustainable position is simply what happens when you’ve made a
generation’s worth of poor decisions, and you’re trying to find a decent and
dignified way to a necessary retreat."
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