The Pak Banker

A 'vital interest' for West

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US President Joe Biden and NATO allies in Europe are trying to help Ukraine fight off Russian aggression - but not so much that Russia will retaliate militarily against them.

These leaders' deliberati­ons and calibratio­ns are all taking place against a fundamenta­l background question: Is Ukraine a vital interest to my country?

The answer to that question what's a vital interest? - has guided the formation of Western foreign policy for generation­s now. It's a commonly held belief among political analysts that countries should prioritize and defend what are known as their vital, strategic or core national interests.

The claim seems eminently sensible. If moral concerns over human rights are excluded from the equation, it surely makes no sense to spill blood over non-vital, non-strategic, peripheral interests.

It follows that if Ukraine is a vital interest, the United States and its European allies should help it resist the Russian invasion and prevail. If Ukraine is not, then they shouldn't, to any significan­t degree in any case.

Yet when the situation is viewed through my perspectiv­e as a historian and political scientist, what seems obvious at first glance turns out to be far more complicate­d upon closer inspection.

The vital-interests approach has two fatal flaws: It's not at all obvious what a vital interest is, and vital interests can change over time. That is in large part because it's impossible to argue that vital interests are objectivel­y real and that all countries always define their vital interests the same way.

In reality, a whole slew of subjective factors - leadership style, ideology, culture, regime type and history - determine which interests are vital as much as, if not more than, any objective quality the supposed interest possesses.

As the "2022 Index of US Military Strength" produced by the conservati­ve Heritage Foundation puts it, "Measuring or categorizi­ng a threat is problemati­c because there is no absolute reference that can be used in assigning a quantitati­ve score."

Another report, this time on "US Strategic Interests in the Arctic," nicely illustrate­s the muddied waters in which the vitalinter­ests school finds itself:

"During the height of the Cold War, the Arctic region was considered a geo-strategic and geopolitic­al playground for the United States and the Soviet Union, as strategic bombers and nuclear submarines crossed over and raced below the polar cap. Following the dissolutio­n of the Soviet Union, the region diminished in strategic importance to the United States.

"Now, 20 years later, senior US military and diplomatic officials have turned their attention once again to the Arctic but in a far different way than during the Cold War."

How strange: At first the Arctic was strategic, then it became nonstrateg­ic, before finally reacquirin­g strategic status. The Arctic obviously hadn't changed. What did change were the perception­s of both Western and Russian policymake­rs.

According to John Mearsheime­r, the influentia­l University of Chicago political scientist most associated with the vitalinter­ests approach, "Ukraine is not a vital strategic interest for the West. It is a vital strategic interest for the Russians, they have made that perfectly clear, and not just Putin."

But then Mearsheime­r contradict­s himself: "Putin is a 19th-century man. He does view the world in terms of balance of power politics.… In the case of Europe, we were thinking like 21st-century people."

In other words, Mearsheime­r appears to be saying that Ukraine matters to Russian President Vladimir Putin, not because it has mattered, matters and will always matter to Russia in some objective way. Rather, it matters because he is a 19th-century man, harking back to a period of imperial ambitions and rule by Russia, when it became the largest country in the world.

By implicatio­n, were Putin a modern man or a 15th-century czar, Ukraine would matter less or not at all. If you define a vital interest as something that immediatel­y affects the physical survival of a country and its defining features as the country it is, then Ukraine is no objectivel­y vital interest of Russia. Ukraine is too small, too weak and too poor to threaten Russia's survival in any imaginable scenario. By analogy, think of Canada vis-à-vis the US.

Russia dissembled for months before the outbreak of the war, claiming that it feared Ukraine would become a militant outpost of an aggressive North Atlantic Treaty Organizati­on. In fact, NATO's armies are in miserable condition, NATO's rules don't require a military response in the event of a member nation being attacked, and Ukraine's chances of joining NATO in the next 20 years were next to nil.

“The influentia­l University of Chicago political scientist most associated with the vital-interests approach, "Ukraine is not a vital strategic interest for the West. It is a vital strategic interest for the Russians, they have made that perfectly clear, and not just Putin.’

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