Albuquerque Journal

US, Russia tensions only rise in talks

High-stakes summit yields no solution over Ukraine

- BY MATTHEW LEE AND VLADIMIR ISACHENKOV

WASHINGTON — The failure of last week’s high-stakes diplomatic meetings to resolve escalating tensions over Ukraine has put Russia, the United States and its European allies in uncharted post-Cold War territory, posing significan­t challenges for the main players to avoid an outright and potentiall­y disastrous confrontat­ion.

Unlike previous disagreeme­nts that have arisen since the collapse of the Soviet Union, the current Ukraine crisis and seemingly insurmount­able difference­s between Washington and Moscow carry real risks of debilitati­ng economic warfare and military conflict that are exacerbate­d by the dangers of miscalcula­tion and overreacti­on.

For the U.S. and its NATO and other European allies, nothing less than a vast pullback of the roughly 100,000 Russian troops now deployed near the Ukrainian border will prove that Russian President Vladimir Putin has any intention of negotiatin­g in good faith. For the Russians, the West’s absolute refusal to consider a ban on NATO expansion and the withdrawal of troops from Eastern Europe is proof of its perfidy. Potential concession­s are complicate­d by the fact neither Putin nor U.S. President Joe Biden wants to be seen as backing down before either domestic or foreign audiences.

The refusal thus far by each side to climb down from what the other regards as unrealisti­c and maximalist demands has left the prospects for diplomacy in limbo, with the U.S. and its allies accusing Russia of stoking tensions for no legitimate reason and the Russians complainin­g again that the Americans are the aggressors.

Some believe the situation will have to become even more dire before the impasse can be broken.

“The gap in perception­s is so broad that a new and dangerous escalation could be necessary to make the parties open up their imaginatio­n and search for agreements,” Fyodor Lukyanov, the head of the Moscow-based Council for Foreign and Defense Policies, observed in a commentary.

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