Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

West recalibrat­es response to Putin’s war

It remains unclear whether commitment to Ukraine will be enough to help it win.

- By Courtney Subramania­n and Eli Stokols

WASHINGTON — With a war many thought would be over in days bogging down into a protracted conflict, the U.S. and its NATO allies are recalibrat­ing their response, scaling up defense aid for Ukraine as it digs in for a longer fight with Russian forces.

But even as President Biden has vowed not to let Russia win, it’s not at all clear an enhanced response will help Ukraine win the war or avoid a years-long conf lict that is likely to strain the transatlan­tic alliance, cost billions in additional aid, further disrupt global economic markets and lead to more bloodshed on the front lines.

“It’s going to be a different kind of war, and there has to be a greater urgency,” said Eric Edelman, a former undersecre­tary of Defense. “If Russia isn’t successful right away, Ukraine might still hold a strategic advantage in the long term. But that depends on how long they can absorb casualties and maintain a will to fight, and how long the West can keep this up.”

As part of Washington’s continuing efforts to bolster Ukraine’s war-fighting capabiliti­es, Biden announced Tuesday a new tranche of $800 million in defense assistance for Kyiv. It includes advanced weapons and ammunition including artillery systems, armored personnel carriers and the transfer of more helicopter­s to help Ukraine blunt Moscow’s latest offensive in the eastern Donbas region and the besieged city of Mariupol.

The announceme­nt, following an hourlong call between Biden and Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, came as the White House is facing pressure to take stronger actions as the war stretches into its eighth week.

Although the latest aid package increases the U.S. commitment to what administra­tion officials have conceded could be a yearslong conflict, the White House remains wary of greater U.S. involvemen­t that might change the trajectory and length of the war — even as Biden has called Russian President Vladimir Putin a “war criminal” and characteri­zed the Russian campaign as “genocide.”

Such presidenti­al rhetoric — which went beyond official White House policy — raises the stakes for U.S. and NATO involvemen­t, according to Ivo Daalder, the president of the Chicago Council on Global Affairs.

“The president needs to signal that we will do whatever it takes for Ukraine to succeed because you can’t call people out for war crimes, let alone genocide, and not do everything possible,” said Daalder, who served as U.S. ambassador to NATO in the Obama administra­tion.

“The more ratcheted up the rhetoric,” he added, “the more incumbent it comes on us to actually fulfill what that means.”

Since Russia’s invasion in February, the White House has tried to strike a balance between backing Ukraine and avoiding direct and potentiall­y escalatory engagement with a nuclear power that could turn a regional war into a global one. Biden has made clear he will not send American troops to Ukraine or establish a no-fly zone, steps officials say could bring the U.S. into conflict with Moscow. So far, the White House has focused on bolstering the NATO alliance, punishing the Kremlin with sanctions and supplying Ukrainians with weapons and intelligen­ce.

The Department of Defense said this month it had delivered thousands of antiarmor and antiaircra­ft systems, including Stinger and Javelin missiles, laserguide­d rocket systems and more than 50 million rounds of ammunition as part of two packages of security assistance the president approved in March.

The latest package expands on the $1.7 billion in security assistance the U.S. has provided Ukraine since Russia launched its invasion on Feb. 24 and the $2.4 billion

in aid since Biden took office.

It’s unclear if, or how, the West might send more powerful weapons, such as U.S. military jets and Apache helicopter­s, that it has thus far avoided.

The Biden administra­tion has resisted such transfers for logistical reasons — the U.S. would not only have to train Ukraine’s military how to operate, say, an F-16, but also establish supply lines and infrastruc­ture to maintain such equipment. U.S. officials believe that would take too long to be helpful.

Ukrainians, meanwhile, are pleading for Washington to ship them advanced arms as they are urging U.S. officials to consider the geopolitic­al realities of a protracted fight.

“Russia will be here forever as a neighbor of Ukraine,” said Daria Kaleniuk, cofounder of Ukraine’s AntiCorrup­tion Action Center. “We need to get prepared for a sustainabl­e solution with advanced NATO-style weapons.”

Kaleniuk and a delegation of Ukrainian civil society advocates and former government officials met with dozens of U.S. lawmakers this month, including House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, and officials from the State Department and White House.

“There’s still some fear about being too provocativ­e to Russia. There’s fear of nuclear weapons,” she said after her White House meeting. “But deterrence works both ways and Putin uses deterrence.”

Experts have applauded

the White House’s efforts to assist Ukraine but say the Biden administra­tion and its allies took too long to act, complicati­ng Ukraine’s ability to fend off the invasion.

“They were always slow and way too cautious about actually implementi­ng it,” said John Herbst, a former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine. “They repeatedly refused to take steps in fear of provoking Putin.”

Pressed about whether aid is arriving too late as Russia shifts its focus to an eastern offensive, Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said Tuesday that “we are going to move this as fast as we can,” arguing the assistance the U.S. has already sent is playing a role in Ukraine’s defense.

“We’re aware of the clock and we know time is not our friend,” Kirby told reporters.

Daalder, the former U.S. ambassador to NATO, said the administra­tion’s challenge on timing is in whether it can quickly acquire the equipment and weapons that Ukrainians are trained to use. Much of it was manufactur­ed by Russia or in countries that were once part of the Soviet Union (Ukraine was a Soviet republic).

“The delay is not really, what is the U.S. providing,” Daalder said. “It’s: How do you get the equipment that’s among the former Warsaw Pact countries rapidly to Ukraine and what do you do to backfill those capabiliti­es in order to make sure that NATO is still defended?”

Biden this month announced that the U.S. reposition­ed a Patriot missile system to Slovakia, which

borders Ukraine, to backfill its transfer of a Soviet-era S-300 defense system to Kyiv to fend off airstrikes. But in March the administra­tion rejected a three-way deal to transfer MiG-29 fighter jets from Poland, a NATO member and regarded as a former Soviet satellite, to Ukraine after deeming it too “high risk.”

Despite such fissures, the North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on has remained mostly unified even if members’ interests aren’t always aligned. Major gulfs could emerge as the conflict drags on, however.

Germany, Europe’s largest economy, has waffled on cutting off imports of Russian oil and gas because of recession fears; the country’s coalition government is split on whether to send German-made tanks to Kyiv.

If far-right candidate and Putin ally Marine Le Pen ousts French President Emmanuel Macron in a runoff election this month, it would puncture NATO’s newfound solidarity. That unity may deepen this summer if Finland and Sweden end decades of neutrality and join the alliance, as is expected. But even if bonds among democratic leaders hold, the threat of Putin in Ukraine and to the rest of Europe could only grow.

Constanze Stelzenmue­ller, a Germany expert at Washington’s Brookings Institutio­n, said NATO’s response to Putin in Ukraine has been “the most considered, forceful and effective Western response to any crisis that I’ve seen. But events on the ground may still show

that what we’re doing is not enough, because Putin is clearly determined to test us. And we may have to change our definition of what we can do.”

As the grisly nature of past Russian atrocities is uncovered and as Ukrainian losses mount during what’s expected to be heavy fighting in the Donbas, the political pressure for the West to do more is likely to grow. But the cold, hard reality, many experts believe, is that the war quickly becomes a frozen conflict.

“Putin is not going to capitulate,” said Ian Bremmer, president of the Eurasia Group. “The reason why the administra­tion believes this is likely to be a stalemate is that, in some ways, that is the least worst plausible outcome that we are headed towards.”

Dan Baer, former U.S. ambassador to the Organizati­on for Security and Cooperatio­n in Europe during the Obama administra­tion, said that “the scenarios by which it ends tomorrow are not necessaril­y ones that are satisfacto­ry for the longterm stability of the region or the world.”

“If it’s going to be protracted, what you want is a slower and lower burn so there’s less human cost. Because faster could mean Ukrainian defeat,” he said. “Of course I don’t want it to drag out, but if you take all of the possibilit­ies for a fast [resolution], there are fewer of them that look good for the Ukrainians.

“This is a Russian novel and we’re in Chapter 3, and the bad news is that there are 57 chapters.”

 ?? Rod Lamkey Consolidat­ed News Photos ?? PRESIDENT Biden is joined by Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, left, Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Army Gen. Mark A. Milley as he signs a bill last month on the assistance the United States is providing to Ukraine.
Rod Lamkey Consolidat­ed News Photos PRESIDENT Biden is joined by Secretary of State Antony J. Blinken, left, Deputy Secretary of Defense Kathleen Hicks and Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff Army Gen. Mark A. Milley as he signs a bill last month on the assistance the United States is providing to Ukraine.

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