Baltimore Sun

The curious case against defending Ukraine

- Bret Stephens Bret Stephens is a columnist for The New York Times, where this originally appeared.

One of the stranger features of the politics of the war in Ukraine is that the most vocal opposition to it tends to come from the hard right. In some ways, that right sounds like the hard left it used to oppose so fiercely.

On April 20, 19 Republican lawmakers, including Sens. Rand Paul, Mike Lee and J.D. Vance, sent a letter to President Joe Biden decrying “unlimited arms supplies in support of an endless war.” Donald Trump and Ron DeSantis have each expressed their opposition to Western support for Ukraine (though the Florida governor seemed to walk his opposition back); both are keenly attuned to what they think will play well in GOP primaries.

Opposition also comes from what passes for an anti-war conservati­ve intelligen­tsia. Peter Hitchens, the brother of Christophe­r Hitchens, is a fierce critic, as is Orbanist American writer Rod Dreher, whose manner of critique is “Russia is wrong, but … “Tucker Carlson routinely used his prime-time pedestal to disparage Volodymyr Zelenskyy, calling the Ukrainian president a “dictator” and comparing his dress style to that of the manager of a strip club. The Buchananit­e American Conservati­ve is against the war on principle; the Trumpian Federalist is against it as a matter of political opportunis­m.

“While forcing his own people — and those whose migration keeps the cartels supplied with the billions to buy military-grade weaponry — to suffer murder, rape and other heinous crimes, Biden is abroad encouragin­g ongoing violence in Ukraine,” wrote The Federalist’s executive editor, Joy Pullmann, giving readers a taste of the quality of both her thinking and her prose.

Is there a coherent philosophi­cal grounding for these anti-war conservati­ves? On the surface, no.

From Vietnam to Iraq, the anti-war left (both in the United States and abroad) tended to be united by a kind of instinctiv­e pacifism, a belief that war was almost never the right answer. There has also often been a fair amount of anti-Americanis­m on the left — the Chomskyite view that Washington’s foreign policy is generally a force for neo-imperialis­m and rapacious capitalism.

But that’s not the case with the anti-war right.

Some of the more dovish conservati­ve voices on Ukraine, who fear that the war could set off a nuclear conflagrat­ion with Moscow, are uber-hawks when it comes to China: They argue that the resources we are pouring into Ukraine should be held in reserve for a looming battle with Beijing over Taiwan. They are also the same people who fault Biden’s shambolic withdrawal from Afghanista­n for making America seem weak, without appearing to be the least bit concerned about the signal that an American abandonmen­t of Ukraine might also send.

Some of the Tuckerite conservati­ves who accuse Zelenskyy of illiberal policies in Ukraine — such as banning pro-Russian political parties that could be expected to serve as Vladimir Putin’s puppets in the event of a Russian military victory — go out of their way to celebrate the illiberal policies of the government in Budapest, Hungary.

Some of the historical revisionis­ts who embrace Putin’s pretext for invasion — that he was provoked by the West into coming to the defense of ethnic Russians who were “stranded” in a “Nazi” Ukraine after the breakup of the Soviet Union — would never accept those arguments in any other context: They’re the people who believe in the absolute inviolabil­ity of America’s southern border when it comes to the “invasion” of Latin American immigrants.

Much of this incoherenc­e is partly explained via the George Costanza school of modern conservati­sm: If a Democrat is for it, they’re against it.

But something darker is also at work. In Putin’s cult of machismo; his suppressio­n of political opposition; his “almost sublime contempt for truth” (Joseph Conrad’s memorable line about Russian officialdo­m); his opportunis­tic embrace of religious orthodoxy; his loathing of “decadent” Western culture; his sneering indifferen­ce to internatio­nal law; and, above all, his contempt for democratic and liberal principles, he represents a form of politics the Tuckerites glimpsed but never quite got in Trump’s presidency.

It isn’t new. In the 1930s, there were Ezra Pound and Charles Lindbergh and Diana and Oswald Mosley. The hard right’s reverence for the principles of raw strength and unblinking obedience runs deep.

This is not true of every conservati­ve. The Senate minority leader, Mitch McConnell, remains firmly on Ukraine’s side, as do the editoriali­sts at The Wall Street Journal and National Review and even conservati­ve firebrands like Mark Levin. A narrow plurality of Republican-leaning voters feel the same way. To tar the entire American right as pro-Putin is a slur, much as old right-wing allegation­s about liberal softness on communism used to be. But there’s also more than a nugget of truth to it.

Certain conservati­ve readers of this column will no doubt feel insulted and claim that it should be possible to oppose U.S. support for the war on strategic grounds without being labeled pro-Putin.

It’s worth reminding them what George Orwell wrote in 1942 about the position of Western pacifists vis-à-vis Nazi Germany: “Pacifism is objectivel­y pro-fascist. This is elementary common sense. If you hamper the war effort of one side, you automatica­lly help that of the other.”

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