Oman Daily Observer

The West must face reality in Ukraine

- Nina L Khrushchev­a — Project Syndicate @2023

Harvard’s Graham Allison recently commented that, while China “is and will be the fiercest rival a ruling power has ever faced,” the current “demonisati­on” of the country “confuses more than it clarifies.” To “create and sustain a strategy for meeting the China challenge,” Allison insists, the United States “must understand China for what it is” — neither “ten feet tall” nor “on the brink of collapse.” Post-soviet Russia has never received such considerat­ion.

On the contrary, the US has spent decades caricaturi­ng Russia as both a quintessen­tial villain and a fragile hasbeen. After Russia’s 2014 annexation of Crimea, then-president Barack Obama dismissed it as a “regional power” displaying its own weakness. And following the full-scale attack of Ukraine last year, the apparent assumption was that Russia — and Vladimir Putin’s regime — would quickly crumble under the weight of Western sanctions.

Putin’s decision to attack Ukraine was fuelled by delusion. But that does not mean that the West’s assessment of the situation was sensible.

On the contrary, most Western observers seemed to be able to imagine just two scenarios: either Putin takes Kyiv in a matter of days, turning Ukraine into a Kremlin puppet, or Russia is quickly defeated, forcing Putin to withdraw his troops and recognise Ukraine’s territoria­l integrity.

This helps to explain why, when Russia’s initial offensive stalled, then

British Prime Minister Boris Johnson, visiting Kyiv, reportedly recommende­d that Ukraine should “just fight,” rather than negotiate a peace deal.

Better to let Russia lose — weakening the country’s economy, depleting its military, and damaging Putin’s position, possibly beyond repair — than to reward it for its attack.

And Russia would lose, the narrative went. Whereas Ukraine had the West’s full-throated support — with weapon and aid flows to match — Russia did not have enough equipment, and what it did have was as outdated as its tactics.

Beyond the battlefiel­d, unpreceden­ted Western sanctions were destined to trigger a harsh backlash against Putin; Russians might even storm the Kremlin to regain access to European handbags and American fast food. No one seemed to imagine that the demonisati­on and dismissal of most things Russian could galvanise Russians against the West, or that Russia would be able to sustain a long war.

Yet this is precisely what has happened. Russia continued to leverage its numerical advantage while updating its battlefiel­d strategy and boosting the production of military hardware. At home, it minimised the costs of the sanctions, not only by circumvent­ing them, but also by making sure that local actors – including the Russian state – gained ownership of departing Western firms’ Russian operations at rockbottom prices. Meanwhile, it built up its war economy.

For ordinary Russians, things are not bad at all. Store shelves are well-stocked, and restaurant­s are bustling. Pensions and salaries have increased – not as much as inflation, but enough to support the Kremlin-backed narrative that Russia is standing strong, despite the West’s best efforts to destroy it.

Far from recognisin­g how dangerous this narrative is, Western leaders continue to reinforce it, with Polish President Andrzej Duda, for example, saying in June, at the start of Ukraine’s failed counteroff­ensive that “Russians need to feel the bitter taste of defeat.

The war is still not popular in Russia: 56 per cent of the Russians surveyed in October by the Levada Center expressed support for transition­ing to peace talks. At the same time, just 34 per cent of respondent­s reported that they would support withdrawin­g Russian troops from Ukraine and returning Russian-controlled Ukrainian territory. Meanwhile, Putin’s approval rating remains above 80%. Call it the Stalingrad effect.

While Russians rally around Putin, Ukraine’s Western backers seem to be losing their resolve. Earlier this month, European Union leaders failed to push through a €50 billion ($55 billion) financial aid package for Ukraine, though they have agreed to start EU accession talks. This failure came as the US Congress gave up on passing a new military aid package for Ukraine this year.

Now, President Joe Biden is promising that the US will stand with Ukraine not for “as long as it takes,” as he used to claim, but for “as long as we can.” He still argues that Russia lacks the “resources and capacity” to sustain a long war in Ukraine, and, indeed, sanctions will ultimately take a toll on Russia’s economy. But Putin will throw everything he has at this war — and will likely maintain considerab­le popular support along the way.

The decline in foreign aid is already weakening Ukraine’s position on the battlefiel­d, after a year of few tangible gains by Ukrainian forces. Meanwhile, a rift seems to be growing between Zelensky and the Ukrainian military’s commander-in-chief, General Valery Zaluzhny.

There are three plausible scenarios. First, the West recommits to supporting Ukraine. But the political hurdles — Republican opposition in the US, and a Hungarian (and now Slovak) veto in the EU — are high. Even if they are cleared, Ukraine will struggle to recruit enough new soldiers.

The writer is the Professor of Internatio­nal Affairs at The New School and co-author with Jeffrey Tayler

DESPITE THE WEST’S LAVISH SUPPORT FOR UKRAINE, THE POSSIBILIT­Y OF AN OUTRIGHT RUSSIAN DEFEAT IS UNREALISTI­C

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 ?? ?? Putin’s decision to attack Ukraine was fuelled by delusion.
Putin’s decision to attack Ukraine was fuelled by delusion.

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