Santa Fe New Mexican

Talking about peace is fight of its own

Analysts say leaders’ willingnes­s to negotiate is strategic rather than attempt to end conflict

- By Michael Crowley

WASHINGTON — As the fight in Ukraine has dragged on for the past year, another battle has unfolded in parallel: a war of words between Russia and the West over who is more interested in ending the conflict peacefully.

For now, analysts and Western officials say, serious peace talks are extremely difficult to envision. Both sides have set conditions for negotiatio­ns that cannot be met anytime soon and have vowed to fight until victory.

And Ukraine’s president has ruled out dealing directly with Russian President Vladimir Putin because of atrocities committed by his military forces.

At the same time, both sides also have a keen interest in showing an openness to negotiatio­ns.

But far from pointing to a peaceful end, such talk is largely strategic. It is intended to placate allies, cast the opposition as unreasonab­le and, especially on the Ukrainian side, tamp down a growing desire within Western countries to find an end to the costly war.

Major countries such as India, South Africa and Brazil have not taken clear sides in the conflict, which has raised energy prices and exacerbate­d a global food crisis.

Russia relies on economic relations with these countries and benefits when they express impatience with the West over the war’s duration because a swift end to the conflict now would leave Russia occupying large parts of Ukraine.

By claiming to be more willing than the West to negotiate, Russia gives the countries a pretext for not taking a stance against it. “We are ready to negotiate with everyone involved about acceptable solutions, but that is up to them,” Putin said on Russian state television in late December. “We are not the ones refusing to negotiate, they are.”

Such rhetoric “is aimed largely at India and other nonaligned powers,” said Samuel Charap, a Russia analyst with the Rand Corp.

At the same time, U.S. officials, mindful of their open-ended talk of supporting Ukraine for “as long as it takes,” contend their goal is to strengthen Ukraine’s hand in eventual peace negotiatio­ns, without specifying when they might come.

U.S. officials call Putin’s own talk of peace absurd. They note Russia is brutally attacking its neighbor and insists Ukrainians accept Russian annexation of large swaths of their territory as a condition of peace. Speaking at the Munich Security Conference last weekend, Secretary of State Antony Blinken warned of a “false equivalenc­e” between an aggressor and a victim.

“If Russia withdraws its troops today, the war is over,” he said. “Of course, if Ukraine stops fighting today, Ukraine is over.”

Biden administra­tion officials also fear the Russian leader might simply exploit any peace talks for tactical advantage.

And while stressing Ukraine must make its own decisions about when and how to make peace, Blinken said Russia’s aggression must not be rewarded with territoria­l gains, lest it set an example for other would-be aggressors. A United Nations resolution passed Thursday with overwhelmi­ng support endorsed the same principle, saying “no territoria­l acquisitio­n resulting from the threat or use of force shall be recognized as legal.”

Still, U.S. officials express concern Putin might be getting the better of the argument, at least with some unaligned nations. Putin blames Western sanctions on Russia for driving up global food prices and claims the United States and its allies could quickly relieve the problem by settling with Moscow. (In fact, Western sanctions exempt food products, and Russia’s invasion has made shipping grain and other food from Ukraine more difficult.)

At the same time, support is growing in several countries for more active peace efforts. In a December poll by the Chicago Council on Global Affairs, Americans were almost evenly divided on the question of whether the United States should support Ukraine for “as long as it takes” or urge Ukraine to settle for peace “as soon as possible.” Forty-eight percent of respondent­s favored fighting on indefinite­ly, with 47% preferring peace efforts.

But pro-negotiatio­n efforts in Western government­s have gained little traction. After progressiv­e Democrats released a public letter in late October calling on President Joe Biden to seek a “rapid end to the conflict,” the group’s leader quickly retracted it. Around the same time, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Gen. Mark A. Milley, argued in internal meetings that Ukraine was unlikely to make substantia­lly greater battlefiel­d gains and should move to the bargaining table. The White House quickly squelched such talk.

 ?? ARMANDO FRANCA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A girls holds up a sign Friday during a gathering to mark the one-year anniversar­y of the invasion of Ukraine outside the City Hall in Porto, Portugal. Analysts and Western officials say serious peace talks are extremely difficult to envision for now.
ARMANDO FRANCA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A girls holds up a sign Friday during a gathering to mark the one-year anniversar­y of the invasion of Ukraine outside the City Hall in Porto, Portugal. Analysts and Western officials say serious peace talks are extremely difficult to envision for now.

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