New York Post

GOP’S UKE DEBATE ECHOES IN EUROPE

- WILLIAM NATTRASS William Nattrass is a British journalist based in Prague.

Adark cloud looms on the horizon for Ukraine and its allies in Europe. Nervousnes­s is building over next year’s US presidenti­al election, as leading Republican­s prepare to run on a platform of skepticism about the need for continued military support for Kyiv.

Many Republican­s recognize the Ukraine war is much more than a mere “territoria­l dispute,” as Ron DeSantis has controvers­ially called it. But in statements this week, both DeSantis and Donald Trump appeared to reject notions of an American duty to help defeat Russia’s tyrannical designs on Ukraine.

Stranger still, the GOP’s dominant personalit­ies adopted a noninterve­ntionist stance that, elsewhere, is popular among those who accuse the United States of prolonging the war in Ukraine to serve US interests.

With war raging on their doorstep, it’s no surprise Ukraine’s European allies — especially other Slavic nations in the European Union’s eastern wing — view the Republican stance ahead of next year’s election with growing trepidatio­n.

Senior EU politician­s privately voice concern about the narrative that has captured large sections of the Republican

Party. They are nonplussed by the suggestion that doing all it takes to stop a Russian capture of a massive European nation is not among America’s “vital national interests,” as DeSantis claims.

They also hope the GOP’s more proUkraini­an elements can reassert their influence in the party’s internal debate before electionee­ring pushes polarizati­on on Ukraine even further.

But similar divisions within Europe show the persuasive­ness of a “pro-peace” stance. Aside from the Hungarian government’s wellknown position against military aid for Ukraine, countries like the Czech Republic and Germany also have large, vocal movements calling for a halt to Ukraine support (movements that, by the way, also exhibit strong anti-American sentiments).

Some countries, such as Austria and Slovakia, see Ukraine-skeptical parties surging in the polls as elections draw nearer.

It is true that throughout the West, there has been an unfortunat­e tendency to demonize people calling for immediate peace in Ukraine. The problem with these movements is not so much their intent as their refusal to acknowledg­e the price of a toohasty settlement with Russia.

Difficult conversati­ons will doubtless become necessary in the future about the ultimate aims of the Ukrainian war effort being funded by the West. But by seeing a peace deal as an end in itself, rather than a means of ensuring Ukraine’s future security, Trump or DeSantis would give Russian leader Vladimir Putin the upper hand before talks even began.

With future US support potentiall­y depending on one of these two candidates, Ukraine urgently needs to make major battlefiel­d gains before presidenti­al campaignin­g starts in earnest. Above all, Ukraine needs to show allies their military support is hastening a positive end to the war, not merely prolonging it, as the Biden administra­tion appears to accept with its downbeat “as long as it takes” mantra.

Ukraine can only hope to win over the GOP’s two heavyweigh­ts by showing Americans that military support is not for nothing.

If, on the other hand, the war still looks the same a year from now as it does today, with more Western equipment and Ukrainian lives being hurled into a maelstrom of grinding attrition warfare in the Donbas, a change in the American approach would seem an even more tempting election promise.

Ukraine’s anticipate­d counteroff­ensive in the coming months is therefore crucial. An ineffectiv­e attack would be catastroph­ic.

Most of all, Ukraine cannot afford to be wasteful with the equipment it has already received from its allies; even the most hawkish EU politician­s describe an absolute necessity that Western equipment is not recklessly sent to become so much scrap metal lining the ruined streets of eastern Ukraine.

Tangible successes are needed instead to persuade Trump and DeSantis that supporting Ukraine is a good investment, as the mere possibilit­y of a more hands-off American approach gives European leaders the jitters.

The onus is on Ukraine to prove that continued US support is worth it. But if meaningful gains can’t be achieved on the battlefiel­d this year, European leaders who have put their all into supporting Ukraine — and the Ukrainians fighting for their freedom — will go from uneasiness about the US presidenti­al election to full-blown panic.

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