Connecticut Post

We must head off wider war in Ukraine

- By Reginald Johnson Reginald Johnson is a freelance writer who lives in Bridgeport.

Recently both the United States and the United Kingdom shipped more lethal aid to Ukraine, to help that nation in its war with Russia.

The U.S. sent Harpoon anti-ship missiles and howitzers; the British sent long-range missiles that can hit targets with high precision 50 miles away.

The weapons shipments ramp up an already deadly conflict, which has cost thousands of lives of both civilians and military personnel.

Where is all this headed? Nowhere good.

With each passing day, the chances increase that this regional war could erupt into a global war between the nuclear-armed United States and its NATO allies and nuclear-armed Russia, with potentiall­y catastroph­ic consequenc­es. It’s safe to say that the world as we know it would not survive a nuclear war between the U.S. and Russia.

There is a pressing need for a ceasefire and negotiatio­ns to end this brutal conflict.

The basic outline of a settlement is clear: Russian forces must totally withdraw from Ukraine; Ukraine must agree to be neutral and not join NATO; Russia must provide humanitari­an aid to help Ukraine rebuild; and there must be self-governance for Ukraine’s eastern provinces, as agreed to previously in the Minsk Accords.

This is all achievable. But there has to be a desire for it.

French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Olaf Scholz have both been encouragin­g negotiatio­ns to end the war. Russian President Vladimir Putin has said he is open to talks. Ukraine President Vlodomyr Zelenskyy has said at different times there needs to be negotiatio­ns.

But the United States has been silent on talks to end the war.

That’s because officials in the State Department, the Pentagon and others in the Biden administra­tion don’t want a quick end to this war. They are using the Ukraine conflict to wage a proxy war against Russia —- to keep Russia bogged down in a long draining war that will eventually trigger regime change in Moscow.

But that scenario means many more Ukrainians and Russians will die in the process and billions more in American treasure will be lost.

This is not an acceptable policy and it must be stopped.

To prevent further bloodshed and head off the possibilit­y of a much wider, catastroph­ic conflict, there must be an immediate cease-fire and negotiatio­ns to end the war in Ukraine.

 ?? Getty Images ?? A Ukrainian flag flies next to a home that was heavily damaged by a Russian rocket attack on June 15 in Dobropilli­a, Ukraine.
Getty Images A Ukrainian flag flies next to a home that was heavily damaged by a Russian rocket attack on June 15 in Dobropilli­a, Ukraine.

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