By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
The War Started Due To Policy
Failure
Continuing our
article about Russia’s Patriotic Death Cult
at the Munich Security Conference in February 2022, mere days before the
Russian invasion of Ukraine, Annalena Baerbock,
Germany’s newly minted foreign minister, argued that Europe faced a stark choice between
“Helsinki or Yalta.” To one side was the 1975 conference in Finland, where 35
countries signed an agreement that recognized Europe’s post–World War II
boundaries as final and called for the promotion of international cooperation
and human rights; to the other was the 1945 summit in Crimea, where Western
leaders betrayed the countries of eastern Europe by granting Stalin free rein
in the region. The choice, Baerbock said, was “between a system of shared
responsibility for security and peace” or “a system of power rivalry and spheres
of influence.” By March, Ursula von der Leyen, the president of the European
Commission, claimed that the West had made the right decision in
refusing to discuss the issues of NATO enlargement or Ukrainian neutrality.
“Putin is trying to turn back the clock to another era—an era of brutal use of
force, of power politics, of spheres of influence, and internal repression,”
she argued. “I am confident he will fail.”
One year into the
war, this view—that spheres of influence are a thing of the past—is more widely
held than ever. The first significant war on European soil since World War II
is seen by many
American
and
European
foreign policy elites, paradoxically, not as a sign that the realities of
rivalry and international power politics are back but instead that Western
values and security cooperation can triumph over them. For many commentators in the United States, U.S. President Joe Biden’s
response to the war has been his most significant foreign policy triumph and a
clear sign that U.S. foreign policy is on the right track. Indeed, the National
Security Strategy that the White House released in October all but took a
victory lap, noting, “We are leading a united, principled, and resolute
response to Russia’s invasion, and we have rallied the world to support the
Ukrainian people as they bravely defend their country.”
However, take a step
back from the triumphalism, and that picture is less clear. The war in Ukraine
is—if not precisely a deterrence failure for the United States—then at least an
apparent failure of U.S. policy decisions over the last few decades to maintain
peace in Europe. It is undoubtedly true that the war has shown the West’s
willingness to confront the return of power politics. But it has also
demonstrated the practical limitations of that strategy. The last year has not
been a refutation of a world of rivalry, great-power competition, or spheres of
influence, as some have described it, but rather a demonstration of
what all these look like in practice. It proves that the United States cannot
always deter a resolute revisionist state without bearing unacceptably high
costs and risks.
This misdiagnosis
matters: if policymakers view the war in Ukraine as a triumph of U.S. policy,
they will be more likely to make similar mistakes elsewhere. And as the United
States enters a period of growing contestation over the borders of the Western
sphere of influence and how it will interact with those of Russia and China,
learning the proper lessons from Ukraine could not be more urgent.
Policy Failure
Many assessments
published after Biden’s tenure hit the two-year mark have glossed over the
president’s first year in office, praising his response to the invasion of
Ukraine without considering his messaging about the impending crisis throughout
2021. “Biden’s Russia policy is arguably the most successful in more than a
decade,” crowed the scholar Liana Fix. Even critics of the
foreign policy status quo have deemed the administration’s handling of the
crisis adept, with Stephen
Wertheim and Matt Duss, for example, contending that “Biden has dealt with Russia adroitly.” They
are undoubtedly correct. The Biden administration has responded pragmatically
and competently to the biggest geopolitical crisis in decades, the first
warning of the likelihood of war and then providing support for Ukraine while
keeping one eye on the risk of escalation.
But few observers
commented on the first year of Biden’s term in the same way. Most failed to
highlight the mismatch between the administration’s statements before Russia’s
invasion and the White House’s response afterward. As late as December 2021,
for example, administration officials promised that the United States’
commitment to Ukrainian sovereignty was “unwavering”; in November of that year,
they privately discussed sending U.S. military advisers to assist the
Ukrainians. But by February 24, 2022, the administration’s tone had decisively
shifted: the United States would not engage directly in the fighting in
Ukraine. The U.S. response would be hands-off, participating in the war via
sanctions, aid, and intelligence support.
This was quite
clearly the correct choice. Direct U.S. involvement in a war with a
nuclear-armed Russia would be a disastrous mistake. But it calls into question
the administration’s strategy for preventing the war in preceding months. By
all accounts, Biden had decided weeks or even months before the invasion that
the cost of fighting Russia directly would be too high;
administration officials openly mused about arming a
future Ukrainian insurgency after
a widely expected Russian victory. Yet if they knew all along that the odds of
preventing conflict were slim—and that the United States would not directly
engage—then why did they not consider other policy options, such as offering a
moratorium on admitting Ukraine to NATO?
Why Continue To Play Such A Feeble Hand, Hoping It
Would Deter Russian Action?
The most likely
answer is that they were unwilling to acknowledge what an open admission that
the United States wouldn’t defend Ukraine would imply more broadly about U.S.
power in a growing rivalry: that it is limited in what it can achieve. This
cognitive dissonance cannot be entirely blamed on the Biden administration. The
idea that Ukraine and Georgia would someday join NATO—and that to accept any
other course would be to accept limits on U.S. power—has been an underlying
assumption of U.S. foreign policy since at least the George W. Bush
administration, even as many other member states rejected the idea.
Indeed, particularly
after Russia’s 2014 invasion of Ukraine, it was commonly understood among
foreign policy elites that NATO membership for Ukraine and Georgia was more
aspirational than practical. As the scholar Michael O’Hanlon put it last
February, weeks before the
invasion: “To say that Ukraine won’t be joining NATO soon (if ever) is not a
concession to Putin, but an acknowledgment of reality.” Yet even as war loomed,
U.S. policymakers were unwilling to acknowledge that reality, making clear that
they would not discuss NATO’s open-door policy with Russia.
It is impossible to
know whether offering some compromise on Ukraine’s potential membership in NATO
would have prevented war. Russian demands for Ukraine to remain nonaligned
might also have precluded closer ties to the EU, something many Ukrainians
would have been less likely to accept. Others have suggested that the war
resulted from President Vladimir Putin’s insatiable revisionist and imperialist
impulses. His rhetoric often indicates that he views Ukraine less as a country
than a
wayward Russian
province. He may have chosen to roll the dice regardless, considering potential
territorial gains more valuable than Western political concessions.
But it would take a genuinely
blinkered view of the region to argue that the inflexible policies pursued by
U.S. policymakers in eastern Europe over the last few decades played no role at
all in the run-up to the war. The unwillingness to contemplate any alternative
path for Ukraine, Georgia, Moldova, and other states contributed to a toxic
stew of political disputes, security fears, and imperialist ambition that
ultimately brought the region to war. Whatever the outcome of this war, that it
happened at all is a policy failure.
Why Do “Spheres Of Influence” Are Back
In 2017, when the
Trump administration’s National Security Strategy hailed the return of “great
power competition,” it kicked off a debate in Washington over the definition of
that term. Few suggested that it might mean a return to open conflict on the
periphery of Europe. But the war in Ukraine highlights the costs that
great-power competition can bring if poorly managed. And it shows the potential
for catastrophe if U.S. policymakers cannot move past their unipolar mindset.
In a broader
geopolitical sense, the war in Ukraine marks the return of contestation over
spheres of influence in world politics. At its simplest, a sphere of influence
is an area where a great power can shape political or economic outcomes—and
attempt to exclude rival states from doing so—even though they don’t directly
control the territory. Perhaps because “sphere of influence” emerged as a term
of art during the heyday of imperial colonialism, or maybe simply because it has
often been put into practice in
amoral ways it has
come to have a strong negative connotation. It prompts images of the Yalta
conference and the arbitrary divisions of Europe after World War II or of
British Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain appeasing Hitler in Munich in 1938.
Detractors contend that spheres of influence are morally indefensible, as the
great powers condemn smaller countries to suffer at the hands of their larger
neighbors.
Yet this is a
fundamental misunderstanding of the concept. A sphere of influence does not
have to be some courtesy offered by one great power to another over the heads
of smaller, more vulnerable states. It is often a mere fact, an assertion of
geography and power. A sphere of influence is where one great power asserts
dominance and another is afraid or unwilling to challenge it because the
perceived costs are too high. Consider the case of Afghanistan: in an 1869
letter, the Russian foreign minister sought to reassure his British counterpart
that Afghanistan lay “completely outside the sphere within which Russia might
be called upon to exercise her influence.” The two countries would later
formalize this arrangement and set clear lines over which state would influence
which parts of Persia in the 1907 Anglo-Russian Entente. Both reflected a
simple reality: the Russians did not believe that the benefits of fighting the
British for Afghanistan or controlling all of Persia would be worth the costs.
Some commentators
suggest that we cannot accept such arrangements, arguing that the world has
moved past these antiquated, colonialist ideas into a more enlightened era. But
the truth is more mundane. During the unipolar moment, the period of U.S.
global dominance that followed the collapse of the Soviet Union, the United States
did not need to concern itself much with the question of spheres of influence
because its power was unchallenged. The political scientist Graham
Allison put it succinctly: U.S. policymakers had ceased
recognizing spheres of influence “not because the concept had become obsolete”
but because “the entire world had become a de facto American sphere.”
Thus when Russia
asserted in 1999 during NATO’s Kosovo intervention that the former Yugoslavia
fell within its sphere of influence, going so far as to send Russian
paratroopers on a quixotic quest to seize Pristina’s airport, the United States
was able to brush off the complaint essentially. Clearly, Russia, whose
paratroopers were forced to beg their NATO counterparts for food and supplies,
did not have the power to back up its assertions. Likewise, when China engaged
in saber-rattling with Taiwan in the mid-1990s, the United States responded
with massive military force, sailing a carrier group through the Taiwan Strait
and forcing Chinese leaders to back down.
Washington’s
insistence in recent decades that spheres of influence should not exist was as
much a declaration of its global reach and primacy as anything else. Today,
however, the world is entering a period of contestation over the limits of
American power. Russia and China can increasingly assert their interests in the
areas nearest to their borders.
The United States
refused to discuss NATO’s open-door policy before the invasion of Ukraine for
one key reason: that doing so might deny the agency of states in eastern Europe
to make their own foreign policy choices. Just weeks before the invasion, U.S.
Secretary of State Antony Blinken was asked about the open-door policy. “There
will be no change,” he said. “There are core principles that we are committed to
uphold and defend,” he added, including “the right of states to choose their
security arrangements and alliances.”
But the last year has
demonstrated that this approach is insufficient, partly because it failed to
account for Russian agencies. Faced with the prospect of Ukraine’s slipping out
of its orbit and being unable to achieve any concessions from Western states,
Putin opted to gamble on a risky and costly military expedition instead. And
even as the military campaign has experienced significant setbacks, he has been
willing to take even more dramatic steps to control Ukraine, from the mass
mobilization of Russian troops to the widespread bombardment of civilian
infrastructure.
The results have
certainly been catastrophic for Russia: it has achieved almost none of its
original aims, Kyiv remains independent, the Russian economy is in decline, and
tens of thousands of Russian soldiers are dead. But the invasion has also
imposed immense costs on the people of Ukraine along with high costs and the
risk of escalation for Europe and the United States. If the war in Ukraine is a
success story for the Biden administration or its predecessors, it is a pyrrhic
one.
Great-Power Competition Doesn’t Mean What You Thinkin
In a 2008 speech, Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice proclaimed her
confidence in a vision of “a world in which great power is defined not by
spheres of influence or zero-sum competition, or the strong imposing their will
on the weak.” Yet 15 years later, all these features are back with a vengeance.
Far from refuting the brutal nature of international politics, the war in
Ukraine has demonstrated the unpleasant realities of contestation over spheres
of influence between the great powers.
At the same time,
however, Washington’s foreign policy elites show little recognition that the
principle of avoiding a great-power war over peripheral interests might apply
elsewhere. Take Taiwan: public opinion strongly
opposes fighting China
directly over Taiwan, and war games suggest that such a choice could be disastrous for
the United States. Yet
American policymakers continue to toy with the idea of shifting from the U.S.
government’s long-running policy of strategic ambiguity toward a firmer stance
of open military support for Taiwan. Given Beijing’s apparent growing
determination to achieve “reunification” with the island, such a move by the
United States may amount to making the same mistakes it made in Ukraine. Any
attempt to clarify that Taiwan is outside Beijing’s sphere of influence could
provoke the war that the United States wishes to avoid.
No matter what critics
say, accepting that certain countries can exercise more power in the regions
closest to them does not necessarily condemn small countries to conquest by
their larger neighbors. Consider the last year again: despite accepting that
direct intervention would be too costly, for example, the United States has not
abandoned Ukraine to its fate. In contrast, the U.S. government has provided
substantial military and financial aid, carefully calibrated to remain below
the threshold that might lead to a broader war. Ukraine may be outside the U.S.
sphere of influence, but the United States is helping it resist being
incorporated into a Russian sphere.
Such strategies can
and should be applied elsewhere. Small states can build up their military
capabilities and receive support from other countries to make themselves an
unappetizing meal for their larger neighbors. Rather than performative
gestures that suggest
support for Taiwanese independence, for example, policymakers should invest now
in helping the island defend itself through an appropriately diversified
“porcupine” strategy. It is far more effective to conduct such buildups before
any potential war, but if executed wisely, this approach may even prevent that
war from ever happening.
To adopt these strategies,
however, policymakers must learn the proper lessons from the war in Ukraine. If
policymakers can reject premature triumphalism, acknowledge the practical
limits to American power, learn to delegate defense to the states at the pointy
end of the spear, and grow more comfortable with the ambiguity needed to
navigate the dangerous areas where spheres of influence overlap, they may be
able to avoid disaster.
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