Texarkana Gazette

Biden now has space to put pressure on Putin

- Eli Lake

President Joe Biden and the Democratic Party spent the last four years warning that former president Donald Trump was compromise­d by Russia. Now the Biden administra­tion has cut a deal with Moscow more favorable to Russia than the one the outgoing Trump team was trying to negotiate: Last month it extended for five years a major arms control treaty with Russia, known as New START.

Under Trump, the U.S. strategy was to press the Russians to freeze the devel- opment of nuclear warheads for weapons systems that are not covered in the treaty, such as artillery shells and short-range missiles. Ryan Tully, the senior director for European and Russian Affairs in Trump’s National Security Council until he resigned on Jan. 6, told me that he thought the New START treaty was flawed because it “covers almost the entirety of the U.S. deployed deterrent, but less than half of Russia’s.”

At the same time, Tully said there was a benefit to extending the treaty for another five years. Now “there will be less opportunit­ies to extract concession­s from U.S. negotiator­s looking to cut a deal,” he said.

This may sound like a contradict­ion. But in the context of broader U.S. policy toward Russia, it makes sense. Drawn-out arms-control negotiatio­ns can suck up precious foreign-policy bandwidth. They can also give Russia potential leverage over other aspects of the relationsh­ip. If the U.S. pushes hard on political prisoners or Russian meddling in Ukraine, for example, Russia can threaten to walk away from New START, even though it’s in the interest of both countries to limit each other’s nuclear arsenal.

A version of this dilemma plagued the Obama administra­tion’s first-term diplomacy with Russia. While the U.S. tried to get Moscow to support its sanctions against Iran (which it did, eventually) and allow new supply routes through former Soviet republics for U.S. forces in Afghanista­n, it largely ignored Russia’s occupation of Georgian territory following its invasion in 2008. The administra­tion also tried hard to block Congress from imposing new human-rights sanctions on Russian officials connected to the killing of a Russian lawyer Sergei Magnitsky.

Biden himself made this point earlier this month in an address at the State Department. “I made it clear to President Putin, in a manner very different from my predecesso­r, that the days of the United States rolling over in the face of Russia’s aggressive actions — interferin­g with our elections, cyberattac­ks, poisoning its citizens — are over,” Biden said.

This is a welcome sign. For now, the Biden administra­tion is awaiting an intelligen­ce community review of Russia policy before unveiling more detailed initiative­s. Areas under review include allegation­s that Russia paid bounties for U.S. soldiers in Afghanista­n; the recent Solar Winds hack; Russian interferen­ce in U.S. elections; and the poisoning of dissident Alexey Navalny.

The new administra­tion will almost certainly discover what most careful observers of the Trump administra­tion have known for a while: The previous administra­tion’s policies were often at odds with the former president’s tweets and public ramblings.

All of this is to say that Biden has many options for making good on his promise of a tough Russia policy. By avoiding an arms-control negotiatio­n with Moscow, the president has also removed a powerful temptation to weaken those policies.

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