The Herald on Sunday

View from the States

Joe Biden needs to get Ukraine right. America’s – and the world’s – entire future depends upon it

- By Carli Pierson for USA Today

AMERICAN families are struggling with inflation and a never-ending pandemic. And with plunging polling numbers, Democrats face tough prospects in the November midterm elections.

President Joe Biden can’t afford another foreign policy disaster after the embarrassi­ng mess of the withdrawal from Afghanista­n, either.

And if Russian leader Vladimir Putin seizes more of Ukraine now, the humiliatio­n will only appear to confirm the image of Biden as weak and ineffectua­l. He and his party will then face a steep uphill climb in 2024.

Biden must get Ukraine right.

After failing to get a handle on the pandemic and foolishly trying to park Russia while prioritisi­ng China and climate change, the White House seems to have woken up to the reality of the immediate threat. Central Europe was the flashpoint for the two most destructiv­e wars in recent history, both of which pulled in the United States.

Now, more than 100,000 Russian troops surround Ukraine on three sides, poised to strike at Putin’s command. If Russia invades Ukraine again, it could inspire China to take aggressive military action in the South China Sea or across the Taiwan Strait.

Washington and Nato are stepping up their game, but they still haven’t figured out how to deter Putin.

The White House recently sent deliveries of military equipment to Kyiv, and President Biden is considerin­g sending up to 8,500 US troops to Eastern Europe, and Nato has deployed a few ships and aircraft to Central Europe. But these hesitant moves are not enough.

The good news is that there’s still time.

Putin is unlikely to strike until February, if he does strike at all. Russia does not have the forces in place that it would need for a full-scale land invasion now – it would need a minimum of 200,000 troops, according to former defence minister of Ukraine Andriy Zagorodnyu­k – and it hasn’t put the logistical systems it would need in place.

Sending more Russian troops, quickly assembling mobile hospitals and moving large amounts of fuel would signal that Russia is about to move into Ukraine.

The stakes could not be higher.

Putin doesn’t just want to put a stop to Ukraine’s progress toward the West. He wants to humiliate the United States and destroy the North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on so that he can boss Europe around.

The ultimate objects of Putin’s disdain are the things we stand for as Americans of all political persuasion­s – personal freedoms, real elections, and the rights and laws that protect them.

Here’s are three things that Biden can, and should, do, to make the resolution of this crisis a top priority:

Get on a plane and personally rally Europe’s wobbling leaders around a unified position in opposition to Russian aggression.

Biden should also bring with him short-term plans for renewed American troop deployment­s to Europe and long-term plans to end the continent’s dependence on Russian gas.

Put Putin’s warmongeri­ng at the top of the agenda at the United Nations. Yes, Russia and China will veto anything substantiv­e, but the world needs to know where we stand.

Fill every relevant diplomatic vacancy immediatel­y. It’s ridiculous that we don’t have an ambassador in Ukraine now.

We must get Ukraine right. Our security depends on it.

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Putin aims to humiliate Joe Biden and destroy the North Atlantic Treaty Organisati­on
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