By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
Why 2023 Is The Decisive Year
The regime of Russian
President Vladimir Putin is living on borrowed
time. The tide of history is turning. Everything from Ukraine’s advances on
the battlefield to the West’s enduring unity and resolve in the face of Putin’s aggression points to 2023
being a decisive year. If the West holds firm, Putin’s regime will likely
collapse shortly.
Yet some of Ukraine’s
key partners continue to resist supplying Kyiv with the weapons it needs to
deliver the knockout punch. The administration of U.S. President Joe Biden, in
particular, seems afraid of the chaos that could accompany a decisive Kremlin
defeat. It has declined to send tanks, long-range missile systems,
and drones that would allow Ukrainian forces to take the fight to their
attackers, reclaim their territory, and end the war. The end of Putin’s
tyrannical rule will radically change Russia (and the rest of the world)—but
not the way the White House thinks. Rather than destabilizing Russia and its
neighbors, a Ukrainian victory would eliminate a powerful revanchist force and
boost the cause of democracy worldwide.
Pro-democracy
Russians who reject the totalitarian Putin regime—a group to which the authors
belong—are doing what we can to help Ukraine liberate all occupied territories
and restore its territorial integrity by the internationally recognized borders
of 1991. We are also planning for the day after Putin. The Russian Action
Committee, a coalition of opposition groups in exile that we co-founded in May
2022, aims to ensure that Ukraine is justly compensated for the damage caused
by Putin’s aggression, that all war criminals are held accountable, and that
Russia is transformed from a rogue dictatorship into a federal parliamentary
republic. The looming end of Putin’s reign need not be feared; in other words,
it should be welcomed with open arms.
Unfounded Fears
Putin’s effort to
restore Russia’s lost empire is destined to fail. The moment is, therefore,
ripe for a transition to democracy and devolution of power to the regional
levels. But for such a political transformation, Putin must be defeated
militarily in Ukraine. A decisive loss on the battlefield would pierce Putin’s
aura of invincibility and expose him as the architect of a failing state,
making his regime vulnerable to challenge from within.
The West and the
United States can provide the military and financial support to hasten the
inevitable and propel Ukraine to a speedy victory. But the Biden administration
still hasn’t coalesced around a clear endgame for the war. Some U.S. officials
have suggested that Kyiv should consider giving up part of its territory in
pursuit of peace—suggestions that are not reassuring. Ukrainian President
Volodymyr Zelensky has clarified that the Ukrainian people will never accept
such a deal. Any territorial concessions made to Putin will inevitably lead to
another war.
At the root of
Washington’s unwillingness to supply the necessary weapons lies a fear of the
potential consequences of decisively defeating Russia in Ukraine. Many in the
Biden administration believe that Putin’s downfall could trigger the collapse
of Russia, plunging the nuclear-armed state into chaos and potentially
strengthening China.
But such fears are
overstated. The risk of a Russian collapse is, of course, real. But it is
greater with Putin in office—pushing the country in an ever more centralized
and militarized direction—than under a democratic, federal regime. The longer
the current regime remains in power, the greater the risk of an unpredictable
rupture. Putin’s aggression has exposed the inherent instability of his model
of government, which is built on the need to confront foreign enemies. The Kremlin
Mafia, having turned Russia into a staging ground for its military plans, has
already threatened to use nuclear weapons in Ukraine. Therefore, it is not the
collapse of Putin’s regime that Washington should fear but its continued
survival.
For nearly two
decades, some Western pundits have claimed that the Russian people will never
accept democracy and that Russia is doomed to revanchism. Indeed, Putin’s
propaganda has managed to instill in a sizable segment of Russian society the
view that Western values are entirely alien to Russia. But economic integration
with the West has enabled other countries to overcome a fascist heritage. And
deeper integration with Europe and the conditional easing of Western sanctions
could help Russia do the same.
In the aftermath of
Putin’s military defeat, Russia would have to become a vassal of China either
or begin reintegrating with Europe (having first justly compensated Ukraine for
the damage inflicted during the war and punished those guilty of war crimes).
For most Russians, the choice in favor of peace, freedom, and flourishing would
be obvious—and made even more so by the rapid reconstruction of Ukraine.
Hope Over Fear
On the home front,
the state council would begin to demilitarize Russia, reducing the size of the
armed forces and, by extension, the maintenance cost. It would also dissolve
the organs of Putin’s police state, including the repressive Federal Security
Service and Center for Combating Extremism and repeal all repressive laws
adopted during Putin’s rule. All political prisoners would be released and
fully rehabilitated, and a broader amnesty program would be adopted to reduce
the overall number of prisoners in Russia.
At the federal level,
the state council would pursue lustration, conducting open and thorough
investigations of former officials to disqualify those responsible for the
prior regime’s abuses. In addition, it would liquidate all political parties
and public organizations that supported the invasion of Ukraine, so they cannot
interfere with constructing a new Russia. At the same time, the council would
liberalize electoral laws, simplify the process for registering political
parties, and scrap Putin-era restrictions on rallies, strikes, and
demonstrations.
The state council
would also begin decentralizing the country, transferring broad powers to the
regions, including in the budgetary sphere. Such reforms would weaken
Russia’s all-powerful imperial center: if the federal government does not have
total control over state finances, it won’t have the means to wage military
adventures.
Finally, the council
would ensure that war criminals and senior officials from Putin’s regime were
held accountable. Those responsible for the worst war crimes would be tried in
an international tribunal, and Russia itself would try the rest. To do so, it
would need to draw a clear line between war criminals and former regime
operatives—offering various forms of compromise with the latter to ensure a
peaceful transition better.
This is a
make-or-break moment for Ukraine. Biden can turn the tide in Kyiv’s favor by
backing up his declarations of support with the delivery of tanks and
long-range weaponry. He can also hasten the demise of Putin’s regime, opening
up the possibility of a democratic future for Russia and demonstrating to the
world the folly of military aggression. The United States cannot let its fears
stand in the way of Ukraine’s hopes.
Putin’s military
defeat would help catalyze a political transformation in Russia, making it
possible for those seeking a brighter future to dismantle the old regime and
forge a new political reality. The Russian Action Committee has laid out
a blueprint for
this transformation, aiming
to reestablish the Russian state “on the principles of the rule of law,
federalism, parliamentarian, a clear separation of powers and prioritizing
human rights and freedoms over abstract ‘state interests.’ ” Our vision is for
Russia to become a parliamentary republic and a federal state with limited
centralized powers (those necessary to conduct foreign and defense policy and
protect citizens’ rights) and much stronger regional governments.
Getting there will
take time. Within two years of the dissolution of Putin’s regime, Russians
would elect a constituent assembly to adopt a new constitution and
determine a new system of regional bodies. But in the short term, before
that assembly could be seated, a transitional state council with legislative
powers would be needed to oversee a temporary technocratic government. Its
nucleus would be composed of Russians committed to the rule of law, those who
have publicly disavowed Putin’s war and his illegitimate regime. Most have been
forced into exile, where we have been free to organize and create a virtual
civil society in absentia. Such preparations will enable us to act swiftly and
work with the Western powers whose cooperation the new Russian government will
need to stabilize the economy.
Immediately after
assuming power, the state council would conclude a peace agreement with
Ukraine, recognizing the country’s 1991 borders and justly compensating it for
the damage caused by Putin’s war. The state council would also formally reject
the imperial policies of the Putin regime, both within Russia and abroad,
including by ceasing all formal and informal support for pro-Russian entities
in the countries of the former Soviet Union. And it would end Russia’s
long-running confrontation with the West, transitioning instead to a foreign
policy based on peace, partnership, and integration into Euro-Atlantic
institutions.
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