Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Uncomforta­ble need to talk about d iplomacy with Russia

- ISHAAN THAROOR Tharoor is a columnist on the foreign desk of The Washington Post

WHATEVER his prepostero­usness and historical ignorance, Elon Musk touched on a genuine problem. The tech billionair­e drew flak earlier this month for tweeting his vision of a peace plan between Russia and Ukraine that appeared to favour the Kremlin’s agenda.

He called for a resolution to the ongoing war that, among other things, would see Ukraine cede its claims to Crimea. The rationale for this, Musk argued, was that Russia would sooner deploy tactical nuclear weapons on the battlefiel­d than countenanc­e the loss of the strategic and culturally symbolic peninsula. Concession­s to the invading power would be preferable to falling into a spiralling nuclear conflict.

The backlash was scathing – with policy experts and Ukrainian and Western officials scoffing at the logic of nuclear blackmail imposed by Russian President Vladimir Putin and parroted by Musk.

“There can’t be a compromise based on him not setting off a nuclear weapon if we hand over Ukraine,” Fiona Hill, a Russia scholar and former Trump administra­tion official, told Politico. “Putin is behaving like a rogue state because, well, he is a rogue state at this point … We have to ensure that he’s not going to have the effect that he wants with this nuclear brinkmansh­ip.”

How to do that is the giant conundrum surroundin­g the war in Ukraine. The US and its European partners continue to provide military aid and arms to Kyiv in the hope that Ukraine can press its current advantage, reclaim territorie­s seized by Russia over the past eight months and, at the very least, win itself a stronger hand whenever the warring parties do attempt meaningful negotiatio­ns.

The Kremlin, meanwhile, has responded to its recent setbacks with violent escalation, launching indiscrimi­nate strikes on civilian areas in Ukraine while also targeting the country’s energy infrastruc­ture.

The latter tactic is part of Russia’s broader strategy to weaponise the imminent winter in its favour, leaving Ukrainians in the cold and dark while also raising energy costs – and domestic anger – across Europe.

“Putin seems to believe he can coerce his enemies into quitting before he suffers a major defeat, while the US is acting as though it can deter Putin from escalating long enough for Ukraine to prevail,” wrote Hal Brands for Bloomberg Opinion.

“The result of all this is a violent, unstable equilibriu­m, one that cannot hold forever as committed participan­ts pursue irreconcil­able goals.”

The spectre of nuclear conflict looms, though Western observers believe Putin should be called on his bluff. Others more sensitive to the Kremlin’s position disagree.

“Nato leaders seem convinced that Putin, whom Biden recently described as a ‘rational actor’, would not dare reach for the nuclear arsenal,” wrote Dimitri Simes of the Centre for the

National Interest, a Washington think tank. “Some leaders even seem to believe that Moscow is now paralysed by concern over Western retaliatio­n.

“But the time when Moscow is prepared to use all available options short of strategic nuclear weapons may be much closer than Western leaders and experts seem to think.”

US officials have warned that all options for reprisal in the event of a Russian tactical nuclear attack are on the table, but it’s an untested threat – for decades, Western strategist­s have seen the option of military action as a deterrent. What happens when deterrence fails?

Biden himself has likened the peril to that of the Cuban missile crisis. It’s a grim analogy, given how some analysts argue that, 60 years ago, Cold War channels of communicat­ion between Washington and Moscow were more robust than they are now.

“The current crisis is far worse than the Cuban missile crisis, in part because during the Cuban missile crisis both (president John F) Kennedy and (Soviet leader Nikita) Khrushchev were willing to discuss a way of walking back the confrontat­ion,” Cynthia Hooper, a Russia expert at the College of the Holy Cross, told Insider. “There is no such option on the table here.”

Multiple European officials visiting Washington have said in recent months that their visibility into the Kremlin’s thinking is more limited now than it has ever been.

Though the US privately conveyed warnings to Russia about the consequenc­es

of using a nuclear weapon, the contacts are narrow in scope and access. Putin may be bunkered and warmongeri­ng in isolation, but the sense of uncertaint­y and danger surroundin­g the war is only deepening.

Attempts by some Western European leaders, including French President Emmanuel Macron, to locate an off-ramp for Putin have only incurred the scorn and wrath of those more hawkish on Russia.

“For some of Ukraine’s most ardent backers, even talking about diplomacy amounts to appeasemen­t,” wrote Financial Times columnist Gideon Rachman.

“Their argument is that the only acceptable and realistic way to end the war is for Putin to be defeated. This is fine as a statement of principle, but not hugely helpful in practice.”

Diplomacy should not be the alternativ­e to prosecutin­g the war effort, Rachman argued, but take place simultaneo­usly – although it’s difficult to see where the momentum for such dialogue may come.

“Privately, US officials say neither Russia nor Ukraine is capable of winning

the war outright, but they have ruled out the idea of pushing or even nudging Ukraine to the negotiatin­g table,” my colleagues reported last week. “They say they do not know what the end of the war looks like, or how it might end or when, insisting that is up to Kyiv.”

The engagement of non-Western actors could move the needle.

An earlier round of talks between Russia and Ukraine went nowhere, but we did see the success of a Turkish-led effort that helped release Ukraine’s blockaded grain stocks to a hungry world. Other regional leaders, including the UAE president and the emir of Qatar, have also stepped up calls for a cessation of hostilitie­s and offered to mediate between Moscow and Kyiv.

“Turkey has made it no secret that it wants to help mediate a broader cease-fire agreement between Ukraine and Russia, hoping the experience of the grain deal can be leveraged toward this,” wrote Eugene Chausovsky, senior analyst at the New Lines Institute.

 ?? | EPA ?? TURKEY’S President Recep Tayyip Erdogan with Russian President Vladimir Putin during a meeting in Sochi, Russia, in August. Turkey’s diplomatic efforts helped release Ukraine’s blockaded grain stocks for export, says the writer.
| EPA TURKEY’S President Recep Tayyip Erdogan with Russian President Vladimir Putin during a meeting in Sochi, Russia, in August. Turkey’s diplomatic efforts helped release Ukraine’s blockaded grain stocks for export, says the writer.

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