Chattanooga Times Free Press

PUTIN CAN’T TALK HIS WAY OUT OF THIS MESS

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WASHINGTON — Russian President Vladimir Putin told NBC’s Megyn Kelly this month that in using power, you “must be ready to go all the way to achieve the goals.” Now, it seems, Putin has gone all the way too far.

Putin’s aggressive use of covert action to settle scores hit an internatio­nal tripwire after the poisoning of a former Russian spy and his daughter in the quiet British town of Salisbury. An outraged Britain was joined Thursday by France, Germany and America in condemning the murderous use of the banned Soviet-era toxin known as Novichok.

A joint statement denounced the attack as “the first offensive use of a nerve agent in Europe since the Second World War” and called it “a breach of internatio­nal law.”

The Trump administra­tion, after a year of mealy-mouthed, temporizin­g statements, also announced sanctions Thursday against Russia’s “malicious cyberattac­ks.” The sanctions, targeting five Russian organizati­ons and 19 people, will have little practical effect beyond those already in place. What matters is that President Trump finally seems to have eased, at least for the moment, his dubious defense of Putin.

So how can the U.S. and its closest allies alter Putin’s behavior, if they’re truly serious about holding Russia to account? The answer, say several former senior CIA officials, is to use America’s network of alliances to put Russia under strain.

Russia’s greatest vulnerabil­ity is its dependence on sales of oil and gas. Consider the ways in which Trump could stress Russia on the energy front.

Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman visits Washington next week. “MBS,” as he’s known, has a quiet deal with Moscow to limit oil production sufficient­ly to keep prices above $60. If MBS truly wants to reciprocat­e Trump’s friendship, he should suspend this oil deal to punish Russia for its unacceptab­le actions.

A united front should include the United Arab Emirates, which has also cultivated a relationsh­ip with Moscow as well as Washington. The UAE’s military leader, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Zayed, should stand with his American friends now. And Qatar, with one of the world’s biggest gas reserves, can appease Trump and show the West that it’s a reliable friend by playing the energy card as well — offering Russia’s gas customers deals that are too good to refuse.

Russia’s outrageous behavior in Syria should be on the table, too. Moscow betrayed the Syrian Kurds, its longtime allies, when it withdrew its forces in January from the Afrin enclave and allowed Turkey to attack Kurdish forces there.

Russia has been getting a pass for the Syria carnage, thanks partly to its manipulati­on of Turkey and its quiet liaison with Israel. But this back-channel hedging of bets needs to stop. If the U.S. is serious about altering Russian behavior, it must organize a new coalition of the willing.

Putin seems to think he has found the sweet spot of deniabilit­y. Kelly pressed him about last month’s indictment of 13 Russians, led by Putin’s oligarch pal Yevgeniy Prigozhin, for meddling in the U.S. election. Putin responded contemptuo­usly: “I have heard about some of them … but they are just individual­s, they do not represent the Russian government. … There are some names, so what?”

Putin used the phrase “so what” nine times during the interview. That’s his tell. He thinks he can get away with it. He hacks political campaigns around the world and insists he’s blameless. He cynically manipulate­s the battlefiel­d in Syria, causing thousands of civilian deaths there, and pretends he has a peace plan. When he gets caught cheating, he throws up his hands in mock innocence.

By his reckless actions, Putin has sharply raised the price of his admission to the club he needs to join. Putin says he wants to talk. OK, let’s talk. But first, Putin needs to start cleaning up the mess he has created.

 ??  ?? David Ignatius
David Ignatius

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