Treat Putin like the despot he has become
There was a time when Vladimir Putin seemed to see himself as a czar — an omnipotent monarch ruling over a quiet, subservient, grateful populace.
“The monarch doesn’t have to worry about whether or not he will be elected, or about petty political interests, or about how to influence the electorate,” the Russian president said in “First Person,” a biography published in 2000. “He can think about the destiny of people and not have to be distracted by trivialities.”
When the biographer asked him whether the return of monarchy in Russia was possible, Putin answered: “You know, there’s a lot that seems impossible and incredible, and then — bang!”
Putin may liken himself to a czar, but the rest of the world now knows his true nature is even worse. The world has suspected Putin’s essence for a long time, but his brutal, bloody invasion of Ukraine has confirmed it. Putin is a despot, a brutish thug. It’s time that the rest of the world treats him with condemnation, isolation and no quarter.
While Russian soldiers have encountered stiffer-than-expected resistance, Ukraine’s military forces cannot match Russia’s troop strength and air superiority. Still, Putin is likely to inherit a fierce insurgency that could endure for years.
President Joe Biden has been careful to mete out sanctions against Putin and Russia so that every cudgel in the West’s arsenal isn’t prematurely expended. He followed up on a set of modest sanctions with more robust punishment, including imposing harsh penalties on Russia’s two largest banks and shutting down the import of American technology vital to Russia’s aerospace, defense and shipping industries. Sanctions against one of the banks will shut it out of American commerce and bar it from transacting in U.S. dollars. Another bank will have all of its assets in American financial institutions frozen.
Sanctions against the bulwark of the Russian economy, the country’s energy sector, should be on the table. So should penalties against Putin himself. Tracking down his illgotten troves should be a top priority for the West.
The value of sanctions lies not just in potentially deterring Putin from further aggression in Ukraine. Sanctions also must be harsh enough to inflict lasting damage to Putin, his circle of corrupt billionaires and the Russian economy so that the Kremlin becomes vulnerable to blowback from the Russian masses.
Regime change may one day stare Putin in the face. He wants it in Ukraine, but he may eventually get it at home.
If sanctions upend the lives of Russians, if the economy slows to a point that the gross domestic product plummets and joblessness soars, Putin may find himself coping with demonstrations too large and angry for his riot squads to quash. It may take time for sanctions to lay such a foundation, but the West must consider the long game in this crisis, alongside the immediacy of Ukraine’s plight.
Russian media offers a skewed view of what happens outside and inside of Russia. But Russians know all too well the inhuman indifference he is capable of showing to his own people. When Chechen militants took over a packed theater in Moscow in fall 2002, Putin’s commandos pumped into the building a toxic gas that killed not just the 40 hostage takers, but 130 hostages. Putin didn’t care that children and elderly people were inside. He was just as indifferent about innocents when his forces used tanks, flame throwers and grenade launchers to put down the 2004 Chechen militant takeover of a school in the town of Beslan. As many as 334 innocent people died in the siege, 186 of them children. Putin sees human lives as pawns on a chessboard — expendable.
Biden’s right when he says Putin chose this war. Putin also chose the role of despot. He has brought the consequence of being a pariah on himself. Now it’s up to the world to ensure that becomes cemented as Putin’s fate. The longtime spy who lavished himself with coronation-like inaugurations may one day find himself a global outcast, and if there’s any justice in the world, throne-less.