By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
How To Prepare For Peace Talks In Ukraine
When a Russian
fighter jet collided with a large U.S. surveillance drone over the Black Sea on Tuesday, it was a rare but
serious incident that triggered a U.S. diplomatic protest and raised concerns
about the possibility Russia could recover sensitive technology.
U.S. and Russian
officials had conflicting
accounts of the collision between the MQ-9 Reaper drone and the Russian
Su-27 fighter jet, each blaming the other. But a Pentagon spokesman raised the
possibility that the Defense Department could eventually declassify and release
video of the collision.
Another issue is
that Russia and Ukraine are still preparing for direct talks,
and important third parties could accelerate their prior preparations and
begin pre-negotiations. They should aim to build confidence, persuade the
parties to confront harsh realities, and remove impediments to diplomatic
progress. Otherwise, Russia and Ukraine could fall into a vicious cycle of
self-deception, denial of diplomacy, and endless war.
Russia’s brutal
war in Ukraine continues unabated. Seesawing military actions alternate with
on-again, off-again interest in peace negotiations. But no clear end is in
sight. Neither side has a realistic expectation of military victory or
unconditional surrender.
All parties to
the conflict have clarified that they believe it is too soon for
diplomacy. But at some point, the time will come for negotiations, and the
United States must plan carefully for that day. Failure to do so will condemn
Washington to a hurried and poorly thought-through approach to ending the war—a
mistake the United States has made in every serious conflict it has
become embroiled in since 1945. No war ends without political
consequences. Either the United States shapes those consequences to serve
its interests, or others will shape them.
Ending a war occurs
in three phases: prior preparations, pre-negotiations, and the
negotiations themselves. The first phase involves resolving internal
differences of opinion and opening communications among the parties: each party
irons out its disagreements and reviews the other parties’ positions and
attitudes to determine priorities and strategy. The second involves laying
the groundwork for official negotiations, including deciding where and when
they will occur and with whom to participate. And the third involves the direct
talks that most people associate with diplomacy.
Each phase of
peacemaking involves choices. No process is a template for others. Decisions
lead to forks in the road, which open some possibilities and close off others.
Political circumstances, leverage, and changing military realities all
influence preparations. Like battle plans, peace plans may not survive first
contact with the enemy. However, the groundwork laid before negotiations will
still inform decision-making and improve the odds of a favorable outcome.
First Things First
Russian
President Vladimir Putin and Ukrainian President Volodymyr
Zelensky remain deeply committed to winning the war. Slight openings for
negotiations have begun to appear, primarily thanks to Russia’s declining
military prospects. These may be actual openings reflecting a greater
willingness to talk or false ones created by two adversaries still trying to
outfox each other. The two sides cooperate in minimal areas: shipping grain,
exchanging prisoners, and informally (and perhaps
coincidentally) aligning their actions to avoid catastrophe at
nuclear power stations. But for now, at least, each side’s objectives
still far exceed what the other appears ready to concede: for Russia, control
of Ukraine, and for Ukraine, return of all its territory.
Prior preparations do
not require the parties to agree on issues of substance fully. They don’t need
the parties to agree among themselves; that is what this peacemaking phase is
for. Early resolution, or even just understanding, of differences among key
players—in the case of the United States, among the National Security
Council, the State Department, and the Department of Defense—is vital for
diplomatic readiness. American diplomats often say that in any
negotiation, up to 60 percent of what must be resolved involves
disagreements between the administration and its negotiating team. Early
harmony among these players is not just beneficial; it is essential.
Resolving internal differences
can be slow and complex, but starting this process can signal that negotiations
may become possible even when differences between the parties appear
insuperable. Right now, the United States is in the early stages of prior
preparation, and it has yet to resolve disagreements over the role, pace,
and effect of military actions—and how they can best be timed to shape
favorable outcomes, including through negotiations.
It is unclear when
progress toward the next peacemaking phase—pre-negotiations—will be possible.
World leaders have intensified their calls for peace, and Washington and other
third parties have begun informal and confidential contacts with the other
parties to gauge their attitudes about diplomacy. But the road to
pre-negotiations is sometimes circuitous. Efforts to get internal houses in
order are beneficial for preparing strategies, but they are also challenging,
unpredictable, and constantly subject to change.
Toward Diplomacy
As
Washington and the other relevant parties establish more unified
positions, pre-negotiations to bring Russia and Ukraine into direct
talks can receive more attention. The task will be to
convince both sides that diplomacy can support and advance their
interests. U.S. officials should emphasize to their Russian and Ukrainian
counterparts (and others who might be able to influence them) that a positive
military outcome will be time-consuming, expensive, and uncertain and that
diplomacy may be a surer path to getting what they want. The goal should be to
focus both sides on the punishing realities of further combat and the
opportunities for negotiation and to develop a shared understanding of the
situation.
One practical way to
do this would be to hold so-called proximity talks, which bring both parties to
the same city and allow third-party intermediaries to shuttle back and forth
between them, exchanging information on positions, preparing ideas, and working
to foster direct contacts. This can be especially helpful when, as is the case
now, domestic political considerations make it harder for the belligerents to
speak directly. To start, one or more third parties deemed acceptable by
Russia and Ukraine could meet individually with the leaders of both
countries (or their trusted designees) to quietly explore ideas,
objectives, possibilities, and attitudes, eventually identifying areas of
overlap that could form the basis of agreements. These talks could
also begin to set the agendas for future direct negotiations, settle
logistical questions such as the time and location of meetings, and determine
who, aside from the warring parties, will participate.
More formal
face-to-face talks could follow, also mediated by third parties. The UN
secretary-general could help facilitate this process by appointing a special
representative to encourage the parties and shepherd them toward direct
negotiations with the help of China, India, Turkey, the United States, and
other countries that could facilitate an agreement.
The European Union and the Organization for Security and
Cooperation in Europe could also guide the parties toward face-to-face
talks.
Starting the
pre-negotiation process in an informal setting can help get the ball rolling,
so proximity talks are often useful. But too much informality can unnecessarily
complicate things: it opens the door to more third parties, creates more
opportunities for third-party interference, potentially prolongs negotiations,
and increases the probability of misunderstandings. Even if discussions occur
in a common language, multiple-word meanings and ambiguities in syntax can
impede progress and plant landmines that will later blow up a deal. On the
other hand, using multiple languages to accommodate more parties poses
difficulties.
Whether the parties
are willing to move from pre-negotiations into negotiations will partly depend
on events on the battlefield and perceptions of who is winning and who is
losing. It will also depend on interests, international position, and
pressures created by everything from sanctions to shifts in public
opinion and morale. But third-party negotiators can play an essential role in
keeping the peace process on track, providing positive reassurance, and
supplying innovative ideas about overcoming differences.
The Hard Part
Once the parties
agree on a process for direct negotiations, then the hard part begins.
Confidentiality is usually advisable for face-to-face talks, but achieving it
can be challenging. Even if the mediators have succeeded in limiting press
and public access during the pre-negotiations, they will likely need help to do
so during direct negotiations.
Peace between Russia
and Ukraine should, of course, be the primary goal of such talks. But the
United States and its European partners will also want to ensure that any peace
arrangement makes the region more secure and helps stabilize the bilateral
U.S.-Russian relationship, especially in the nuclear arena.
One issue that is
sure to be contentious and thus requires careful handling is the role
of Ukraine’s economy in Europe. Some have suggested that Ukraine is well placed
to become a bridge between the European Union and Russia’s Eurasian Economic
Union. Designing such an economic arrangement will be challenging, even though
Ukrainian industry and agriculture once played a significant role in the Soviet
economy. Ukraine will also need a framework for rebuilding after
the war, rehabilitating its population, battling corruption, and ensuring equal
status for its two main languages—Ukrainian and Russian. Quebec, for all its
trials, may present a useful model.
Harder will agree on
security relationships: should Ukraine join NATO or be pressed
into the Collective Security Treaty Organization of former Soviet states?
Will it make that decision after a referendum that captures the views of its
citizens and a waiting period of, say, ten years?
Most challenging of
all—and as a result, likely to be resolved last—will be territorial questions.
Military realities and other sources of leverage will influence these. Neither
party has made enough progress on the battlefield to achieve all its
territorial claims: Ukraine for Moscow and Ukraine’s boundaries at independence
in 1991 for Kyiv.
The safest and
fairest way to settle territorial disputes is to ask the region’s people what
they want. Referendums are only sometimes perfect. But carefully handled by
the United Nations, they can be the best approach to facilitating
self-determination. One option would be to put all occupied areas of Ukraine
under a UN trusteeship and require both militaries to withdraw for a period of
three to five years, after which Ukrainian citizens would vote separately in
the Donbas and Crimea on whether they wanted to be part of Russia, part of
Ukraine, or an autonomous region of either country. These UN-led referendums
would be conducted under comprehensive international observation to ensure they
were free and fair.
Another option would
be to temporarily accept Ukraine’s February 23, 2022, borders as a line of
control separating military forces and the 1991 boundaries as the official
border between Russia and Ukraine until an UN-led referendum could be held to
determine the status of everything between those two boundaries. Both the
Donbas and Crimea would then hold popular referendums to settle their precise
affiliation with Russia or Ukraine within five to seven years.
A Fair And Lasting Deal
Although any deal’s
contours are primarily determined by leverage, reciprocity, negotiating skill,
and quid pro quo, some basic principles could help facilitate a fair and
lasting agreement. For starters, once negotiations have commenced, they should
continue regularly with only short, mutually agreed recesses until a final
agreement can be reached. Both parties should be allowed to invite a
limited number of states and international organizations to assist in
negotiation, verification, monitoring, observation, and peacekeeping. And
the principle that “nothing is agreed until everything is agreed” should apply
unless the parties agree to implement some measures early—for instance, a
cease-fire to enable humanitarian access.
All agreements should
be made at the negotiating table, put in writing, signed
by the parties, guaranteed by a UN Security Council resolution, and
registered under the UN Charter. Wherever possible, the agreed-on
measures should be reciprocal, such as standard trade tariffs, or at
least incorporate asymmetrical exchanges of concessions, such as different
but complementary trade benefits for nontariff barriers. The
international community should commit to financing the reconstruction of
Ukraine and rehabilitating those affected by the war. And finally, Ukraine
should have the right to apply to join any international organization or body
on equal terms with other members—unless it explicitly agrees to limit this
right in the peace deal.
Russia and Ukraine
are still getting ready for direct talks. But with care and confidentiality,
the leaders of the United States and other necessary third parties could
accelerate their prior preparations and begin pre-negotiations. They
should aim to build confidence, persuade the parties to confront harsh realities,
and remove impediments to diplomatic progress. Otherwise, Russia and Ukraine
could fall into a vicious cycle of self-deception, denial of diplomacy, and
endless war.
For updates click hompage here