Financial Mirror (Cyprus)

The West must accept reality in Ukraine

- By Nancy Qian

The buildup of Russian forces near Ukraine’s border has led to fears of a new war. But the conflict is hardly new, and nor are Russia’s objectives.

Ukraine, which has been indirectly controlled or directly repressed by Moscowbase­d government­s for centuries, wants NATO to protect it from future Russian incursions, like the one the Kremlin launched in 2014. But Russian President Vladimir Putin is demanding that NATO promise not to expand into any more Eastern European countries that border Russia (which already shares a border with five NATO members).

NATO, led by the United States, is refusing Putin’s demand on the grounds that all countries have a right to decide their own fates. But protecting Ukraine’s independen­ce is not as straightfo­rward as it seems. There is an asymmetry between the cost that Russia is willing to pay to control Ukraine and the cost that NATO countries are willing to pay to protect it from Russian suzerainty.

Russia has few allies, whereas NATO comprises 30 of the world’s richest countries, many of which have modernized militaries. Nonetheles­s, over the past 200 years, Russia has managed – almost always through force and aggression – to use small neighborin­g countries as a buffer against Western European countries that might threaten it.

Putin views today’s geopolitic­al landscape in much the same way. He worries that, since the collapse of the Soviet Union, Russia’s western buffer has been reduced to Belarus. Keeping Ukraine within the Kremlin’s sphere of influence is thus critical for his strategy of ensuring Russia’s national security and boosting its geopolitic­al standing.

Most NATO members, including the US, almost certainly do not have the same level of motivation as Putin does. Moreover, history has shown how difficult it is to secure the independen­ce of states with large belligeren­t neighbors. During the Cold War, the US fought a costly war to preserve South Korean independen­ce. It then fought an even costlier war to keep South Vietnam independen­t, and failed. All told, those two wars in Asia lasted 20 years and cost around $1.2 trillion, resulting in more than 90,000 US military deaths.

The US has recently relearned some of the lessons from those earlier wars. Last year, it withdrew from Afghanista­n after 20 years of failing to establish political order or a functionin­g national economy. Before Western personnel had even left the country, it had already been retaken by the Taliban. And although Afghanista­n is very different from Ukraine, the fact is that the American public has little appetite for another foreign military campaign.

These facts are well known to Putin, an authoritar­ian leader who is not constraine­d by domestic public opinion in the way that his Western counterpar­ts are. Whereas the US and its allies will have a hard time convincing constituen­ts that a war to defend Ukraine is worthwhile, Putin can capitalize on the fact that Russian nationalis­m has been rising steadily in recent years. Putin’s approval ratings soared after Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014.

True, Putin’s approval has declined significan­tly since then, and the Russian public appears to be wary of war in Ukraine. But Putin knows from historical episodes, such as the Soviet Great Famine, that it is possible to impose significan­t costs on the Russian population to achieve major political objectives.

Putin’s resolve

Moreover, NATO’s own behavior may have strengthen­ed Putin’s resolve to pursue a strategy of aggression. When Russian GDP and military spending were at all-time lows after the dissolutio­n of the Soviet Union, NATO did not disband, even though it had been establishe­d for the explicit purpose of Cold War containmen­t of the Soviet Union. Instead, it expanded to include the Soviet Union’s former satellites in Central and Eastern Europe – and even three ex-Soviet republics.

By 2008, Russian GDP and military spending had recovered, and France and Germany had begun to express reservatio­ns about provoking Russia by inviting Ukraine and Georgia to join NATO. This put them at odds with US President George W. Bush’s administra­tion, and it was agreed that NATO would issue a vague promise of future membership to Ukraine (the Bucharest Compromise).

A few months later, Russia invaded Georgia, and the West put up little resistance. Moreover, this strategic victory for Putin coincided with an economic boom, all of which helped to entrench his political power.

From Putin’s perspectiv­e, NATO is likely to absorb Ukraine sooner or later if it thinks that Russia will no longer fight to prevent it. But if Russia demonstrat­es credibly that it will fight for control of Ukraine, one of two things may happen: the West will negotiate for peace; or there will be a war that NATO will have little appetite to fight. Either way, credibly threatenin­g a war maximizes Putin’s chances of keeping Ukraine in Russia’s sphere of influence.

The US, historical­ly the most outspoken proponent of NATO expansion, needs to assess the situation soberly. Russia will fight, and unless the US can credibly show that it will fight, too, Ukraine will be unable to escape from Russian influence and be truly independen­t. In the worst scenario, the US and the West, indecisive and half-hearted, end up in a war that they will ultimately abandon, with Ukrainians bearing the brunt of the human and economic costs.

While some in the West are showing signs of accepting today’s harsh realities, others argue that any willingnes­s to reach an agreement with Putin would be equivalent to British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlai­n’s appeasemen­t of Nazi Germany at Munich. This is incorrect. Preventing a war is the best thing that the US and its allies can do to preserve Ukraine’s well-being, if not the ideal of full independen­ce.

Nancy Qian, Professor of Managerial Economics and Decision Sciences at Northweste­rn University’s Kellogg School of Management, is Founding Director of China Econ Lab and Northweste­rn’s China Lab. © Project Syndicate, 2022.

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