Santa Fe New Mexican

Blunder: DeSantis’ stance on Ukraine

- HENRY OLSEN Henry Olsen, a columnist for The Washington Post, is a senior fellow at the Ethics and Public Policy Center and the Thomas W. Smith distinguis­hed scholar in residence at Arizona State University for the winter/spring 2023 semester.

For those watching the steady erosion of support for Ukraine among Republican­s, Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis’ recent dismissal of the conflict there as a “territoria­l dispute” might seem to make political sense. In truth, it was a significan­t blunder.

DeSantis clearly decided he did not want to seem too internatio­nally minded for MAGA Republican­s. Thanks in large part to Fox News’ Tucker Carlson, these voters’ support for military aid to Ukraine has slumped in recent months. A recent Economist-YouGov poll shows Republican­s are about evenly split on providing most military equipment and financial aid to Ukraine. So it makes sense DeSantis chose to distance himself from full-throated support for the country.

But this overlooks the broader political dynamics within the GOP. DeSantis’ chances of winning the party’s nomination against former President Donald Trump do not rely on his wresting control of the MAGA movement away from Trump; it rests on his enticing a large portion of MAGA voters away from Trump and combining them with the large majority of non-MAGA Republican­s. DeSantis’ statement pulls him away from that latter group, thereby opening space for a third contender to exploit.

That’s exactly what former U.N. Ambassador Nikki Haley and former Vice President Mike Pence have done. Both strongly disagreed with DeSantis and reiterated their belief that backing Ukraine is in U.S. interests. MAGA Republican­s will disagree with that, but polls still show about 40% of Republican­s agree with that view. That’s a sizable group that will now be tempted to look away from DeSantis.

And for good reason: The statement was terrible foreign policy. U.S. security rests on a firm network of alliances that can bottle our adversarie­s and ensure global economic power is under American influence. Our NATO allies in Europe are an essential part of that network, and they believe Russia conquering Ukraine would be an existentia­l threat. Saying that protecting Ukraine is not a key interest rocks the U.S.-European relationsh­ip to its core.

DeSantis fails to understand that a tighter alliance with Europe is essential to winning the fight he prioritize­s: the global competitio­n with China. The European Union imported more than 600 billion euros in goods from China in 2022. No U.S. effort to reduce China’s economic might can succeed without European cooperatio­n. Abandoning European nations in their battle with Russia would make them far less likely to go along.

His statement also displays a massive misunderst­anding of the Russian-Ukrainian conflict itself. By labeling it a “territoria­l dispute,” he seems to suggest the war is over whether the Russian-speaking regions within Ukraine should remain a part of that nation. That is not why Russia invaded its neighbor.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has worked for more than 20 years to bring Ukraine back under Russian control. In 2013, he pushed then-Ukrainian President Viktor Yanukovych, a Russian ally, to abandon a trade deal he was about to sign with the EU in favor of financial aid from Moscow. That led to the 2014 Maidan Revolution, in which furious Ukrainians ousted Yanukovych from office.

Putin made his intentions even clearer with his bizarre statements in 2021 regarding Ukrainian national identity. Putin contended there is no historic Ukrainian people and that “true sovereignt­y is possible only in partnershi­p with Russia.” That is why he invaded Ukraine in 2014, seizing Crimea, and that is why he moved again in 2022.

DeSantis apparently doesn’t understand this, meaning he is either ignorant of Putin’s manifest intentions or does not regard them as threatenin­g. Neither speaks well of his ability to lead U.S. foreign policy.

This doesn’t mean the governor is entirely wrong about U.S. policy toward Ukraine. He is right that the United States should not push for regime change in Russia or deploy its own military to help Ukraine. It’s in the national interest to deny Putin control of the bulk of Ukraine, but not to engage in a moral crusade to push him from power.

DeSantis can clean up some of the damage he has created by making a more comprehens­ive statement. He should explicitly back more U.S. aid to Ukraine and its eventual membership in the EU. He should also clearly state that the NATO alliance is not a one-way street and note that U.S. support for Europe requires its nations to back the United States in its goals. He should aim to be neither a global crusader nor an isolationi­st.

DeSantis will not supplant Trump as the undisputed leader of MAGAdom, and he shouldn’t try. His path forward is to build a cross-factional alliance and create a new, bigger Republican Party. The fact he doesn’t seem to see that should give those flocking to his banner reason for concern.

DeSantis fails to understand that a tighter alliance with Europe is essential to winning the fight he prioritize­s: the global competitio­n with China.

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