“But that oversimplifies a complex global situation, others
say, with a weakened Russia and with China facing serious problems of its own.
President Biden and his national security team have
contended since he took office that all the easy, tempting comparisons between
this era and the Cold War are misleading, a vast oversimplification of a
complex geopolitical moment.
The differences are, indeed, stark: The United States never
had the kind of technological and financial interdependence with its Cold War
adversary, the Soviet Union, that so complicates the increasingly bitter and
dangerous downward spiral in the relationship with China.
And Mr. Biden’s advisers often argue that Russia is not the
Soviet Union. Yes, it has nuclear weapons, they say, but its conventional
military capacity has now been severely degraded in Ukraine.
And in Soviet times, the United States felt compelled to
fight an ideological battle around the world. In the new era, it is fighting
China’s efforts to use its economic and technological power to spread its
influence.
Nonetheless, the echoes of the Cold War are growing louder.
Mr. Biden himself added to the din this week. In Vilnius, Lithuania, on
Wednesday night, addressing a crowd that was waving American, Lithuanian and
Ukrainian flags, he repeatedly invoked the struggle of the Baltic nations to
free themselves from a collapsing Soviet Union, and told Vladimir V. Putin that
the United States and its allies would defend Ukraine, and with it other
vulnerable parts of Europe, “as long as it takes.”
Mr. Biden never quite said explicitly that the United States
must again “bear the burden of a long, twilight struggle” — President Kennedy’s
famous description of the Cold War in his 1961 inaugural address, as it entered
its most dangerous phase. But Mr. Biden’s message was essentially the same.
“Our commitment to Ukraine will not weaken,” he said. “We
will stand for liberty and freedom today, tomorrow, and for as long as it
takes.”
While Mr. Biden’s rhetoric sometimes links this moment to
the past — as he compared Lithuania’s struggle for freedom with Ukraine’s —
those who work with him say his analysis of the current dynamic is that the
underlying forces are quite different.
“Fundamentally there still is a challenge,”
Jake Sullivan, the president’s national security adviser, said in an interview
on Thursday in Helsinki, Mr. Biden’s last stop. “A need to stand up in defense
of sovereignty, territorial integrity, freedom and democracy. But those
elements can be present without returning to ‘Back to the Future’ on the Cold
War.”
What went unspoken during the summit, at least publicly, is
another major difference between now and three decades ago: the uncertain level
of bipartisan support for continuing to push back on Russian actions.
From the Truman administration through George H. W. Bush’s
years in office, both major American political parties were devoted to
outlasting America’s geopolitical adversary, even if they argued over tactics
and whether to get involved in local conflicts. That is not clear now. On the
edges of the NATO summit in Vilnius, foreign ministers and aides from close
allies and distant ones were asking whether Congress would begin to slow aid to
Ukraine when the current appropriations run out at the end of the summer.
And they asked what the chances were that the opposition to
American involvement in the conflict from the two leading Republican presidential
candidates — former President Donald J. Trump and Gov. Ron DeSantis of Florida
— might take hold in a broader swath of the population.
“The Americans are worried that Europe will flag,” one
senior European official, who requested anonymity, said during the Vilnius
summit. “We worry America will flag. And everyone worries that the Ukrainians
will run out of ammunition and air defenses.”
Mr. Biden was asked about those concerns at a news
conference with President Sauli Niinisto of Finland on Thursday and responded
that “there is overwhelming support from the American people” to back Ukraine
and NATO. But then he stated the obvious: “No one can guarantee the future, but
this is the best bet anyone could make.”
If there was an overarching theme to Mr. Biden’s trip this
week, it was that the West should prepare for a long, expensive confrontation
that will require levels of cooperation and integration of intelligence and
military forces unlike any attempted before.
“At this critical moment in history, this inflection point,
the world watching to see, will we do the hard work that matters to forge a
better future?” he said at the news conference. “Will we stand together, will
we stand with one another? Will we stay committed to our course?”
Buried in the NATO communiqué are the building blocks for
the next twilight struggle. There are plans for larger defense budgets, though
nearly a decade after NATO set a minimum military spending standard of 2
percent of each member’s GDP, most of the wealthier Western European nations
have yet to hit the goal. (The smaller former Soviet republics have done a lot
better.) There are plans for a truly integrated NATO military strategy,
including specific ways to integrate cyber defenses, and to ramp up the
production of conventional artillery rounds, which almost no one thought would
ever be needed again in Europe.
But the reality is that those changes are just a beginning —
and hardly sufficient if the West is entering years, or decades, of enmity with
Russia, officials say. Jens Stoltenberg, who agreed last week to extend his
tenure as secretary general of NATO, acknowledged the reality in an article for
Foreign Affairs.
“Even if the conflict were to end tomorrow,” he wrote about the
Ukraine conflict, “there is no sign that Putin’s broader ambitions have
changed. He sees NATO as a threat and wants a world where big
states dictate what their neighbors do. This puts him in constant confrontation
with NATO’s values.”
Like Mr. Biden, he made the case that letting Mr. Putin gain
any territory from events in Ukraine would “send a message to other
authoritarian regimes that they can achieve their objectives through force.
China, in particular, is watching to see the price Russia pays, or the reward
it receives, for its actions.”
Mr. Stoltenberg’s observation is indisputable. But as
several American and European officials acknowledged during the Vilnius summit,
such commitments make it all the more difficult to begin any real cease-fire or
armistice negotiations. And promises of Ukraine’s eventual accession to NATO —
after the conflict is over — create a strong incentive for Moscow to hang onto any
Ukrainian territory it can and to keep the conflict alive.
As President Volodymyr Zelensky of Ukraine told reporters in
Vilnius, “We want to recover our lands, restore security on our territory.
That’s victory.” He added: “A frozen conflict is not a victory.”
Mr. Biden used his visit to Helsinki to celebrate one clear
difference from the Cold War: Finland and Sweden’s move, weeks after the start of events in Ukraine, to apply to join the alliance after decades of formal neutrality —
though in recent years they trained and cooperated with NATO.
American officials regard Finland as a model new member:
While the country is tiny, with a population of 5.5 million, it has nurtured
some of the most skilled intelligence capabilities in the air and on the sea in
all of northern Europe. And its 800-mile land border with Russia complicates
the choices Mr. Putin must make about how to deploy his stretched military resources.
Once Sweden joins as well, which may be only months away now
that Turkey has lifted its long-running objections, the Baltic Sea will
essentially become Lake NATO. Its entire shoreline would be composed of NATO
nations except for Russia’s small accesses around St. Petersburg and
Kaliningrad.
Lurking in the background of the summit meeting was another
factor that makes this era sharply different from the Cold War: the role of
China.
The communiqué issued in Vilnius included extensive
discussion of the risks of supply chain dependency on suppliers like China, an
issue NATO did not think about much in the past.
In the Cold War, there was a single major adversary; now
there are two, and the contours of their “no limits” relationship are still
something of a mystery. American officials believe Beijing is providing
technology to Russia, but not the weaponry it craves. China’s president,
Xi Jinping, talks of his close relationship with Mr. Putin.
And Mr. Xi may be hesitant to fuel yet another conflict with
the United States when he has so many on his hands that more directly affect
China’s future. Those include the effects of the cutoff of high-end computer
chips — which Chinese officials complain about regularly — and the likelihood
of new restrictions from Washington on Western investments in critical technologies,
including artificial intelligence.
There was never a debate about such issues in Cold War days,
of course, because the United States and the Soviets barely traded with each
other, and neither made any of the products that the other depended upon.
“The Cold War is just not a particularly useful analogy in
fundamental respects,” Mr. Sullivan said, ticking off “the level of economic
interconnectedness, the nature of the technology competition, the need to
cooperate on global challenges that spill across borders” with China.
“These are such fundamentally different drivers of the
relationship and geopolitics today than anything in the Cold War.””
The comparison with the Cold War is misleading. That era is over. It should be compared with the period before the beginning of the events in Ukraine. It is now becoming clear that NATO's expansion to the East is not a lamb's march. It
is now clear that China and Russia do not accept Western messengers
bringing bad news to the Chinese and Russians with bread and salt. Continuing to pretend that nothing is happening here does not work. Not directly involved in the West-East conflict, the rest of the world is not dancing now to
the West's music, and this is changing the balance of power, as Western
sanctions' grenades unexpectedly explode in the hands of the sanctions'
enforcers. All the characters in this story have to answer for all their actions. Now danger awaits everyone, literally, behind every bush.
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