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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, February 11, 2015
Smoking Putin Out of His Cave
Will Putin escalate if Washington arms Ukraine? Yes -- but it’s the only way to bring his covert war into the open, where it belongs.

BY JAMES JEFFREY-FEBRUARY 10, 2015
With battles raging in eastern Ukraine, it should be abundantly clear
that the euro-Atlantic community is involved in the most serious
conflict since the end of the Cold War — less bloody, so far, but more
dangerous than the Balkan wars. Absent a true breakthrough in the Angela
Merkel-Francois Hollande effort to broker peace this week, the United
States must decide whether to provide weapons systems to Ukraine.
This decision is fraught with danger; regardless of what the Obama
administration decides to do, blood will be spilled. After leading
thinkers from three think tanks, and Secretary of Defense nominee Ash Carter, advocated (in Carter’s case, hinted at) providing lethal weapons, various commentators typically skeptical of muscular foreign policy — includingJohn Mearsheimer and, in Foreign Policy, Stephen Walt —
spoke out against such a step. Like the advocates of further
intervention, they have reasonable arguments: I agree with both of them
that Ukraine should remain neutral, for example.
But I challenge the key argument they make, specifically Walt’s argument
that Washington faces not a “deterrence” but a “spiraling” scenario
generated by Vladimir Putin’s fears of Western encroachment — which thus
makes deterrent action counterproductive. I know that argument well,
because I, as acting national security advisor, agreed with it in August
2008, when Russian troops invaded Georgia. Not acting aggressively was
the right choice then, but that is exactly why it is the wrong choice
now.
Even if the lethal “defensive” weapons like anti-tank missiles that
Ukraine’s government is calling for were shipped quickly (for once) to
Kiev, the hard truth is that it really won’t make much of a difference
on the ground. While better weapons would likely allow Ukrainian forces
to do greater damage to insurgents and Russian paramilitary forces,
Vladimir Putin is not likely to be dissuaded by body bags. American
weapons would be a shot in the arm for the Ukrainian government, but
that likely will not change the outcome of disguised Russian control of
much of eastern Ukraine.
But something simpler and more powerful is at stake here:Providing arms
would end Washington’s “not providing arms” policy, thereby establishing
moral clarity as a first step in a long duel with Moscow. It is the
established position of NATO, the European Union, and the United States
that Ukraine is facing external aggression from Russia. Under those
circumstances, to not provide arms is to undercut that position — to
intimate that somehow the democratically elected government in Kiev is
not fully legitimate, and is to blame for the conflict.
Critics of this policy argue that arming Kiev would only intensify
Moscow’s reaction. That may be true, but it’s not entirely without
utility. From a practical perspective, weapons shipments would give a
battlefield edge to the Ukrainian Army and would force Putin into a less
covert means of pursuing his aggression — which has both moral and
diplomatic value.
Of course, U.S. arms deliveries are not cost free; they would generate
diplomatic headaches by splitting Washington from most of Europe, and
possibly even encourage intransigence in Kiev. Worries that shipping
weapons would lead to a direct U.S.-Russian confrontation, however, are
overblown: President Obama is not about to deliver munitions to Kiev
that would put Moscow within shooting distance. But accidents happen in
war, and thus this risk has to be managed. Still, the strongest
theoretical argument against providing weapons to Ukraine is Walt’s
“spiraling” worry — that, as Putin is not an aggressor but reacting
defensively, it would only pour gasoline on the fire.
This is essentially the position the United States took in 2008 in
resisting calls by Georgia’s president, Mikheil Saakashvili, to provide
military support and weapons. The arguments against doing so made at
that time are similar to those heard today: that Georgians were not
spotless in triggering the conflict, that Putin was deeply committed,
and that Russia possessed escalation dominance in the Caucasus (even
more so than in Ukraine today). But the argument that prevailed above
all in the National Security Council was that too strong a U.S. response
would lock Putin’s Russia into a great power struggle — which we
believed neither country really wanted.
In avoiding escalation by refusing to allow move troops or significant
amounts of weapons into Georgia, however, we made a bet with history: If
our restraint led to Moscow’s restraint, then a “win-win” relationship
was possible. But if our restraint led to further Russian aggression —
in particular in Ukraine given its proximity to NATO countries, size,
resources, and location (and there was talk within the Bush
administration that Kiev was next on Putin’s list) — then the jury was
out on who we really were dealing with.
We lost that bet with history, and I think it’s pretty clear who we’re
dealing with today. Putin has said that the breakup of the Soviet Union
was the biggest geopolitical disaster of the century. But the biggest
geopolitical question in European security in the last 25 years is not
whether Russia accepts its loss in the Cold War — but whether it
recognizes that, in modern Europe, losing the Cold War has no more
impact on a state’s status and its people’s welfare than Germany losing
World War II. The liberal international order whose apogee is found
today in Europe rejects not only the world of Hitler, Stalin, and Tojo,
but the world of 1914. And a Russia stuck in that worldview not only
cannot participate in post-war European society, it actually threatens
it.
It would be foolish after Georgia, after Crimea, and after what has
transpired in eastern Ukraine to believe that Putin still doesn’t quite
“get it” — that a bit more forbearance, or a little more understanding
of how our mistakes fueled Russia’s resentment, will bring him to his
senses. Rather, it is many in the West, for ideological or economic
reasons, who don’t get it: Putin rejects a “win-win” liberal
international order. It is he who plays by a different set of rules that
harken back to 1914.
That is why the time has come to take risks, and why Barack Obama must
introduce military force — however limited — into a dynamic that affects
more than just Ukraine. Not because these steps will necessarily deter
Vladimir Putin, but because it steels America and our allies, generates a
new unity around the reality that is today’s Kremlin, and sends a clear
signal to Moscow that we have bent and acquiesced for long enough. That
the period of testing is over, and that Washington will resist, not
submit.
YURIY DYACHYSHYN/AFP/Getty Images

