By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
The objective should be fortifying
Ukraine
As a continuation of our previous article nearly a year
after Vladimir Putin unleashed carnage in Ukraine — a war triggered by Kyiv’s
aspiration to be fully democratic, pluralistic, European, and forever free of
Moscow’s yoke — the West’s overarching goal must be ensuring that the Russian
tyrant gains nothing by his aggression. To allow an outcome that rewards the
Kremlin in any way would be a moral travesty. It would also deal a potentially
lethal blow to the principle of Western stability and civilized international
conduct: sovereign states cannot be invaded, subjugated, and subjected to mass
slaughter with impunity.
To thwart Russia and
safeguard Ukraine’s sovereignty, the United States and its European allies have
little choice but to intensify their military, economic, and diplomatic support
for Kyiv. That means equipping Ukrainian forces with more decisive weapons and
in greater numbers, imposing more aggressive sanctions on Moscow, and
galvanizing a more muscular international coalition to isolate and ostracize
Russia.
That agenda is
urgent; the status quo of relatively static battle lines is untenable. As
Russia mobilizes hundreds of thousands of recruits to support a massive new
offensive and shifts its economy to an all-out wartime footing, the West’s
piecemeal, reactive, only-what’s-essential-to-avoid-disaster approach has
become a prescription for stalemate.
Putin is hoping for such a stalemate, which he
regards as a way to wear down Western resolve and popular support for Ukraine.
What’s needed is a game-changing shift in momentum, of which Ukrainian forces
have shown themselves capable — if they have the resources. “It’s very clear to
us that we don’t have any other alternatives,” Oksana Markarova, Ukraine’s
ambassador to the United States, told us. “We will fight.”The
top priority is weaponry. Mr. Biden and his European counterparts dawdled
this winter in deciding to equip Ukraine with top-grade Western battle tanks,
including German-made Leopards. They were finally approved, but it will take
weeks more before they reach the front line, and so far, only Germany and
Poland have cleared the way for substantial numbers to be sent. It would
be folly to repeat the same foot-dragging blunder with other arms the
Ukrainians need.
Those include more
U.S.-made High Mobility Artillery Rocket System launchers, known
as HIMARS, precision weapons that the Ukrainians have used to good effect
against Russian command posts and ammunition depots behind the front lines. The
Biden administration has supplied at least 20 of them; Kyiv needs more. It
also needs longer-range missiles such as the MGM-140 Army Tactical Missile
System, whose range is about 190 miles; they could hit Russian targets in
Ukraine now out of reach, including in Crimea.
Kyiv will
need greater numbers of almost every type of weaponry — artillery
shells, which it is firing at a rate of nearly 100,000
per month; fighting
vehicles; advanced drones; and, especially, high-tech air defense systems. The
United States and its allies, especially Germany, should accelerate their
production and supply of air defense systems to The United States and
its allies, especially Germany, should accelerate their production and supply of
air defense systems to blunt Russia’s systematic campaign to pulverize
Ukrainian power stations and degrade critical infrastructure. Kyiv will
also need advanced Western fighter jets. Providing that air capability has
been ruled out for now by Biden in the case of
U.S.-made F-16s. He should reconsider the condition that Kyiv commits that
the jets will be used to defend Ukraine on its territory, not for attacks
inside Russia. Sooner or later, the West will need to provide Ukraine with
weapons systems that not only help to end the war but also dissuade Russia from
launching new ones. The most effective deterrent will be a convincing array of
military muscle on the ground and in the skies — as well as, eventually, NATO
membership and the security guarantee it provides. The main purpose of
beefing up Ukraine’s arsenal is not to kill more Russian soldiers. Mr. Putin
sends waves of poorly trained troops as cannon fodder to the front
lines. Instead, the aim should be to convince Russia’s dictator of the futility
of his military escalation by demonstrating that the West — richer,
stronger more technologically advanced — will not scrimp on the hardware needed
to repel his attacks. Only when the Kremlin grasps that victory is impossible —
that it cannot hold sovereign Ukrainian territory seized illegally — will
negotiations be possible.
Russia’s economy had
proved more resilient than most Western officials assumed when they
imposed unprecedented sanctions after Putin launched his full-scale
invasion. Russian GDP contracted much less than expected last year and is
projected to grow slightly this year. That should signal Biden and
European leaders to undertake a more thorough crackdown.
One place to start is
with more than $300 billion in Russian central bank reserves, currently
frozen in Western and Japanese banks. Those funds should be seized by the Group
of Seven or some other Western entity, which could establish an agency to use
them as a down payment for the eventual reconstruction of Ukrainian power
plants, apartment buildings, train stations, hospitals, and other structures damaged
and destroyed in the course of the war.
At least the bill for
Ukraine’s reconstruction is likely to be two or three times more than Russia’s
frozen reserves. Every dollar Moscow is compelled to pay to rebuild Ukraine is
one less from the wallets of Americans, Europeans, and Ukrainians themselves.
The legal mechanism for seizing the Russian funds remains to be determined, and
the process would be complex and take years. But there is precedent for seizing
central bank funds; Iraq was compelled to pay more than $50 billion
in restitution decades after it invaded Kuwait in 1990.
Washington and its
allies have other levers to squeeze Putin’s regime and its enablers and supporters.
Western companies that have not yet severed ties with Russia can be pressed to
do so. The price ceiling on Russian oil exports, set at $60 a barrel by
the G-7 last year, could be lowered further, slowing the flow of revenue
that undergirds Putin’s war machine. The European Council should also take up
the question of banning imports of Russian gas, both to deprive Moscow of an
easy source of revenue and a means of political leverage.
Western public
opinion has so far remained relatively solid behind Ukraine’s plight, despite
signs of slippage in some countries. In a January poll by Gallup,
nearly two-thirds of Americans supported Ukraine’s effort to regain
its territory taken by Russian aggression. That’s roughly the same proportion
that held that position last summer, although Republican backing for the
war is wobbly. As costs mount to sustain Ukraine’s survival, Kyiv’s
successes on the battlefield would help buttress public opinion in the United
States and Europe.
Biden and allied
leaders will also be crucial in stiffening Western resolve by reminding their
electorates that the bloodletting in Ukraine is a war of aggression led by a
dictator deluded by dreams of imperial revival. They need to drive home the
point that the inevitable result of a Russian victory would be a far more
dangerous world — and an invitation to further aggression by Moscow. The
targets of that aggression would likely be other nearby states, including NATO
members whose security rests on the assumption that U.S. and European troops
will ride to the rescue.
By maintaining and
strengthening Western unity in the face of the biggest war in Europe in
three-quarters of a century and a potentially catastrophic energy cutoff by
Moscow, Mr. Biden has helped achieve what many would have said was impossible a
year ago. He has taken a cautious and calibrated approach, arming Ukraine
incrementally for fear of the risk of escalation.
But a principal
lesson from the past year is that the risk of escalation is overblown. Ukraine
is in a defensive war to recapture its territory. As for the Russian autocrat,
he has nothing to escalate with other than manpower and nuclear weapons. If the
West adequately arms Ukraine, he cannot win with the former and is unlikely to
resort to the latter, which would alienate its most important ally, China. A
tactical nuclear strike by Russia would be one of history’s greatest acts of
strategic self-immolation, cementing Russia’s pariah status for decades.
This is a pivotal
moment in 21st-century history and critical for U.S. interests, leadership, and
prestige. The crucial objective should be fortifying Ukraine so that Russia’s
unwarranted war is understood by dictators as a cautionary tale — and not as a
template for remaking the world to their liking.
For updates click hompage here