Why Putin Has Not Been Deterred
1/27/2022 - Victor Davis Hanson Townhall.com
Americans want an autonomous Ukraine
to survive. They hope the West can stop Russian President Vladimir Putin's
strangulation of both Ukraine and NATO.
Yet Americans do not want their troops to venture across the world to Europe's
backyard to fight nuclear Russia to ensure that Ukraine stays independent.
Most Americans oppose the notion that Russia can simply dictate the future of
Ukraine.
Yet Americans also grudgingly accept that Ukraine was often historically part
of Russia. During World War II, it was the bloody scene of joint
Russian-Ukrainian sacrifices - over 5 million killed - to defeat the Nazi
German invasion.
Americans publicly support NATO.
Yet most Americas privately worry that NATO has become diplomatically impotent
and a military mirage - a modern League of Nations.
NATO members have a collective GDP seven times larger than Russia's. Their
aggregate population is 1 billion. Yet the majority will not spend enough on
defense to deter their weaker enemies.
The second-largest NATO member, Turkey, is closer to Russia than to the United
States. Its people poll anti-American.
Germany is NATO's richest European member and the power behind the European
Union. Yet Germany will soon be dependent on imported Russian natural gas for
much of its energy needs.
In a recent Pew Research Center poll, 70 percent of Germans voiced a desire for
more cooperation with Russia. Most Americans poll the exact opposite.
Worse, 60 percent of Germans oppose going to the aid of any NATO country in
time of war. Over 70 percent of Germans term their relationship with the United
States as "bad."
We can translate all these disturbing results in the following manner: The German
and Turkish people like or trust Russia more than they do their own NATO
patron, America.
They would not support participating in any NATO joint military effort against
even an invading Russia - even, or especially, if spearheaded by an unpopular United
States.
So, assume that NATO's key two members are either indifferent to the fate of
nearby Ukraine or sympathetic to Russia's professed grievances - or both.
Indeed, most Americans fear that if Ukraine ever became a NATO member, Putin
might be even more eager to test its sovereignty.
Putin assumes that not all NATO members would intervene to help an attacked
Ukraine, as required by their mutual defense obligations under Article 5.
If they did not, Putin could then both absorb Ukraine and unravel the NATO
alliance all at once.
There are more complications in the Ukrainian mess.
President Joe Biden, in wacky statements, has confirmed Putin's bet that the
United States is currently divided, confused, weakened, and poorly led.
Putin knows that the secretary of defense and chairman of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff appear more worried about "white privilege" and climate change
than enhancing military readiness to deter enemies such as himself.
Putin sees polls that only 45 percent of Americans have confidence in their new
politicized military.
The flight from Afghanistan, Putin further conjectures, has made the United
States both less feared by enemies and less trusted by allies.
The prior failed American policy of Russian "reset," the appeasement
of Putin's aggressions during the Obama years, together with the concocted hoax
of "Russian collusion," have all variously emboldened - and angered -
Putin.
He knows a twice-impeached Donald Trump left office unpopular. So, he assumes
with Trump gone, American deterrence against Russia also vanished.
Trump's now rejected agenda was to increase American and NATO defenses, and
pump oil and gas to crash the global price of Russia's chief source of foreign
exchange.
Putin was once furious that Trump unilaterally left an asymmetrical U.S.-Russia
missile accord. Trump ordered lethal force to be used against large numbers of
Russian mercenaries who attacked a U.S. installation in Syria. He sold
offensive weapons to Ukraine. He acted forcibly in taking out terrorist enemies
such as Iran's General Qasem Soleimani, the Islamicist Abu al-Baghdadi, and
ISIS itself.
With Putin's nemesis, Trump, gone, Russia assumes the appeasement years of the
Obama-Biden Administration are back again. As in 2014, once more Putin is
moving against his neighbors.
Finally, there is the unfortunate role of recent Ukrainian government
officials. Some were deeply involved in greenlighting the Biden family grifting
and profiteering to ensure massive American foreign aid.
Some Ukrainian expatriates and current government members worked with the
American Left to ensure the first impeachment of Trump.
Now Ukrainians are exasperated that their prior intrusions into domestic
American politics have backfired with the disastrous Biden presidency - and his
apparent de facto acceptance of an inevitable Russian annexation.
Where does this entire mess leave America?
In trouble.
Putin is undermining a sovereign nation, fissuring NATO, and, if successful,
might continue the Ukraine slow squeeze model in the Baltic states and
elsewhere.
Meanwhile, China smiles, hoping the Ukraine blueprint can be used against
Taiwan.
Exasperated Americans fear that Putin will be deterred neither by sanctions nor
by arms sales but follows only his own sense of cost-to-benefit self-interest.
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