“Sometimes the stories we tell to
win the conflict help us lose the peace. After the 9/11 attacks, the United States
decided the Taliban government in Afghanistan was as culpable as the Qaeda
terrorists who struck America. It then spent 20 years trying to keep the
Taliban entirely out of power, only to cede the whole country to them.
The story we are telling ourselves
today about the conflict in Ukraine runs its own risk. Since events in Ukraine
started last year, the debate in Western capitals about the origins of the
conflict settled on one leading cause: Russia took up arms exclusively out of
aggressive and imperialistic drives, and Western policies, including the
yearslong expansion of NATO, were beside the point.
When NATO weighs Ukraine’s prospects
for membership at its summit in Vilnius, Lithuania, next month, it must
recognize that the conflict has more complex causes than this popular narrative
suggests. Partly because of those attitudes, Russia’s leaders are also reacting
to NATO’s expansion. Folding Ukraine into the alliance won’t end that impulse,
even with U.S. backing and the nuclear guarantee it brings. Ukraine’s best path
to peace is to be well armed and supported outside NATO.
Since the last year’s events, a
chorus of current and former U.S. officials has insisted that, as a former
ambassador to Russia, Michael McFaul, tweeted, “This conflict
has nothing to do with NATO expansion.” In their account, the conflict emanated
chiefly from motives internal to Russia. In one version, Putin the Autocrat
seeks to destroy the democracy
on his doorstep, lest ordinary Russians demand freedom themselves. In another,
Putin the Imperialist wants to restore the Russian empire by annexing
territory. Either way, the West’s actions played little part.
It’s hard to imagine that future
historians will be so simplistic. Conflict
with Ukraine, the second-largest country in Europe by land area, entailed
enormous costs and risks for Mr. Putin. He spent more than two decades as
Russia’s leader, tacking toward the West and then against it. The dismissal of
any Western role reeks of what psychologists call the fundamental attribution
error: the tendency to ascribe the behavior of others to their essential nature
and not the situations they face.
Ample evidence suggests that
enlarging NATO over the years stoked Moscow’s grievances and heightened
Ukraine’s vulnerability. After the Cold War ended, Moscow wanted NATO,
previously an anti-Soviet military alliance, to freeze in place
and diminish in significance. Instead, Western countries elevated NATO as the
premier vehicle for European security and began an open-ended process of
eastward expansion. Even though, as the former secretary of state Madeleine
Albright noted, the
Russians “were strongly opposed to enlargement,” the United States and its
allies went ahead anyway, hoping differences would smooth out over
time.
Time instead had the opposite
effect. While NATO claimed to be directed at no state, it welcomed new entrants
that clearly — and
understandably — sought protection against Russia. Russia, for its part,
never stopped claiming a “zone of influence ” over the former Soviet space, as
President Boris Yeltsin baldly stated in 1995. Though Ukraine did not initially
seek NATO membership after gaining independence in 1991, that calculus pivoted
in the early 2000s, especially after Russia meddled in
Ukraine’s presidential elections in 2004. That year, NATO took in seven new
members, including the three Baltic States, leaving Ukraine in a narrow band of
nations caught between the Western alliance and a bitter ex-empire.
As Ukraine’s domestic struggles
became entangled in a resurgent East-West rivalry, it sought to join NATO and
found a powerful backer: President George W. Bush.
In the run-up to NATO’s summit in
2008, Mr. Bush wanted to give Ukraine and Georgia a formal path to enter the
alliance, called a Membership Action Plan. Before the meeting, William Burns,
the current C.I.A. director who was then ambassador to Russia, cautioned that
such a move would have deadly consequences.
“Ukrainian entry into NATO is the brightest of all red lines
for the Russian elite (not just Putin),” Mr. Burns advised
from Moscow. He specifically predicted that attempting to bring Ukraine into
NATO would “create fertile soil for Russian meddling in Crimea and eastern
Ukraine.” Senior intelligence officials like Fiona Hill delivered similar
warnings.
Undeterred, Mr. Bush pressed his case, meeting widespread
opposition from America’s European allies. In the end, they forged a
compromise: NATO declared that
Ukraine and Georgia “will become members” of the alliance but offered no
tangible path to join. It was a strange solution, provoking Russia without
securing Ukraine. Yet NATO leaders have kept doggedly repeating it, including
at the last summit held
before Russia’s 2022 actions.
Ukraine stopped seeking to join NATO
in 2010 once the Russia-leaning Viktor Yanukovych became president. After a
revolution caused Mr. Yanukovych to flee in 2014, Mr. Putin feared Ukraine’s
new leaders would adopt a pro-Western stance, and he promptly accepted Crimea.
He tried to use this move to gain leverage over Kyiv but obtained no
concessions. In fact, Russia’s move only drove Ukrainians further West.
Ukraine enshrined its quest for NATO membership in its Constitution in
2019.
No matter how this conflict ends, the risk of recurrence may
be high. Since 2014, NATO has demonstrated it does not wish to fight Russia
over Ukraine. Should Ukraine join and invade Russia, the United States and the
rest of NATO would have to decide whether to wage “World War III,” as President
Biden has aptly called a direct conflict with Russia, or decline to defend
Ukraine and thereby damage the security guarantee across the alliance.
Any formula for lasting peace must
acknowledge this complexity. When negotiations take place, President Volodymyr
Zelensky should return to a proposal Ukraine reportedly broached in March
of last year to stop pursuing NATO membership. Instead, a postwar Ukraine, as
Mr. Zelensky has suggested, should adopt an “Israeli model,”
building a large, advanced army and a formidable defense industrial base with
extensive external support.
The European Union, for its part,
should establish a path for Ukraine to join the bloc quickly to attract
investment for reconstruction. That would come with its own security
guarantees, to which the United States and other non-E.U. partners could add a
promise to provide material assistance in the event of further conflicts.
There are no silver bullets. Russia
will probably also object to Ukraine joining the E.U. or other Western
institutions. But Moscow is more likely to put up with Ukrainian membership in
the E.U. than in U.S.-led NATO. So much the better if European states take the
lead in postconflict assistance, minimizing the scope for Mr. Putin to believe
Americans are encircling his country and pulling every string.
Ukraine needs a vision of genuine
victory — of a prosperous, democratic and secure future — not the Pyrrhic victory
of NATO dreams and conflicts with Russia. Its international partners should
start to provide that vision this summer. It’s time to move to a less
propagandistic phase of public debate, one that learns from the past to shape
the future. However one judges the wisdom of NATO enlargement to date, it is a
good thing that Ukraine, the United States and their allies can still take
actions to affect Russia’s conduct and are not simply hostage to Moscow’s
darkest drives. They should make the toughest choices with the clearest eyes.
Stephen Wertheim (@stephenwertheim)
is a senior fellow in the American Statecraft Program at the Carnegie Endowment
for International Peace and a visiting lecturer at Yale Law School and Catholic
University. He is the author of “Tomorrow, the World: The Birth of U.S. Global
Supremacy.””
Our government in Vilnius is sacrificing our security for political theater. If Ukraine becomes a NATO member and attacks Russia (again with drones over the Kremlin, only bigger), and the USA does not start World War III and defend NATO member Ukraine, all NATO guarantees to Lithuania will become worthless promises. With our military's division, we will only be able to wipe ourselves clean.
Komentarų nėra:
Rašyti komentarą