By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
Is Worse To Come From Putin?
Shortly after the
West rebuked Russia for its 2022 invasion of Ukraine and imposed financial sanctions
of unprecedented scope, Russian President Vladimir Putin announced that he was
putting his country’s nuclear forces on high alert. Since then, the Kremlin has
issued many more oblique and explicit nuclear threats.
The mere possibility
that Putin might make good on these threats raises great concern. Even before
the war in Ukraine, Russia had reversed its longtime “no first use” policy,
under which it claimed it would never go nuclear unless the enemy did so first.
Some now believe Russia has switched to an approach known as “escalate to
de-escalate,” which holds that nuclear escalation can defuse a crisis by
proving one’s commitment to destruction and forcing the enemy to capitulate. In
Ukraine, that could mean using a handful of tactical, low-yield nuclear weapons
on the battlefield—which CIA Director William Burns and several
high-ranking U.S. military leaders have warned is possible. For
his part, Putin has merely said that Russia reserves the right to use nuclear
weapons if confronting an “existential” threat.
However, what
constitutes an existential threat needs to be delineated in Russian strategic
doctrine. It lies in the eye of the beholder—in this case, Putin, who retains
full control of Russia’s nuclear arsenal, albeit subject to a supposed
requirement that Russia’s defense minister and the chief of the armed forces
general staff authenticate his launch orders. In other words, the answer comes
down to one of the most opaque aspects of the current crisis: the state of
Putin’s mind and outlook on the world.
Much of the debate
around Putin’s psychological disposition has centered on whether the Russian
president acts
rationally. That
discussion is an important one, but it has sometimes lacked nuance. A sounder
approach may be to ask what common psychological biases and pathologies, based
on behavioral theory and research, shape people’s perception of nuclear war—and
how they may apply to the Russian leader. How far Putin will take
his nuclear brinkmanship remains anybody’s guess. But a combination
of known psychological and cognitive biases and some psychological tendencies
characteristic of Putin could prove extraordinarily dangerous if he feels
backed into a corner, with potentially massive implications as Ukraine begins
its spring offensive.
Shield And Sword
A nuclear shadow has
hung over the Ukraine conflict from the start. Although the war has been fought
by conventional means, Putin would not have started it without his nuclear
shield. And his repeated attempts at nuclear coercion have been a central
element of his plan to achieve several war aims, although that strategy has met
with decidedly mixed success.
For one thing, Putin
has raised the specter of nuclear war to deter direct NATO intervention on the
battlefield. This has undoubtedly worked, and it provides an ominous lesson to
other countries—nuclear and nonnuclear alike—about the room for aggression
below the nuclear threshold.
Putin also hoped that
his threats would deter, or at least cap, the provision of Western military aid
to Ukraine. The level of aid indeed appears to be limited by fears of
nuclear escalation. But the success of Russia’s coercive efforts on this front
is declining. A coalition of backers has slowly increased its level of support
to Ukraine and has accepted at least some risk of nuclear escalation to do so.
Its latest step—a joint allied program to train Ukrainian pilots on F-16
fighter jets—even opens the door to a future transfer of these highly coveted
fighter aircraft.
Putin’s
saber-rattling has likewise failed to halt the expansion of NATO. Finland
abandoned its long-standing neutrality and joined the alliance, adding another
800 miles to NATO’s border with Russia. Sweden is only awaiting Turkey’s
approval to join next.
Last, and perhaps
most important, is Putin’s desire to force Ukraine’s surrender. The Russian
president may be tempted to engage in more overt nuclear brinkmanship to
support that goal. Overall, in a war that has gone very badly for him, nuclear
weapons remain crucial to his plans and future moves.
Blind Spots
In weighing nuclear
use, Putin would confront difficult but inevitable tradeoffs between
conflicting goals. In his mind, nuclear escalation might hasten victory in a
grueling war, but he must weigh any potential short-term benefits against the
immediate and long-term assured harms. These include destruction, loss of life,
and punishing retaliatory strikes beyond Ukraine’s borders, as the Biden
administration and its allies have threatened, as well as irreversible
damage—to survivors, to the environment, to the norms of domestic and
international politics, to the very integrity of human civilization. This
equation, if given due thought and effort, would not encourage nuclear
escalation.
According to
psychological research and historical evidence, the trouble is that people
generally struggle to weigh conflicting risks and benefits—including those
involving nuclear weapons. Faced with complexity, we simplify, narrowing our
focus until a clear choice emerges. Rather than creating a common currency, so
to speak, with which to weigh diverse values and objectives in a compensatory
manner, we prioritize our goals and focus on achieving the highest one. As the
scholars Kenneth Hammond and Jeryl Mumpower have
observed, when our values compete, we retreat into “singular
emphasis on our favorite value.” This narrowing of attention is known as “the prominence effect.”
Like a spotlight, the
prominence effect focuses our attention on what we perceive as the most
inherently important attributes of a decision, causing those attributes to
assume great and sometimes extreme priority, making a difficult choice appear
much easier. In politics, this helps explain the phenomenon of single-issue
voters who value a
candidate’s position on, say, gun control, abortion, or immigration to the
exclusion of any other factor.
The prominence effect
has led people to disregard humanitarian values, such as protecting human lives
or the environment, in favor of more imminent and defensible security goals or
salient personal objectives. (Single-issue voting, for example, is particularly
common in national security matters, especially under threat conditions.) In
decisions on developing and using nuclear weapons, leaders must weigh
short-term military and political benefits against vast but hard-to-assess
human, social, cultural, and political consequences. The difficulty of doing so
in any even-handed way may push long-term consequences, no matter how great
their intrinsic importance, outside the spotlight of attention and thus
lower the threshold for escalating conflict when under threat or in the face of
losses.
The Deadly Arithmetic Of Compassion
Another cognitive
bias tipping the scale is our difficulty in computing mass suffering. Most
people are familiar with the aphorism that “the death of one man is a tragedy;
the death of a million is a statistic,” even if not all realize that the saying
is frequently attributed to the mass-murdering Soviet leader Joseph Stalin.
Like other dictums—“statistics are human beings with the tears dried off”—it
well captures our flawed arithmetic of compassion. We care about individual
lives, but the fates of nameless, faceless collectives leave us cold, and we
become easily inured to large losses of life. This is known as “psychic
numbing.”
A single life holds
great importance, enough for some people to perform acts of heroism to save
strangers. It is much harder to appreciate the humanity of groups or entire
populations. This defect in our humanitarian accounting has been documented in
numerous experiments on life-saving behavior, showing that our intuitive
feelings, which we trust to guide us in making all manner of decisions, do not
scale up. As the number of lives at risk increases, psychic numbing
desensitizes us. In some cases, the more who die, the less we care.
Push the numbers high
enough, and our feelings of compassion may fade or collapse entirely. A 2015
photograph of Aylan Kurdi, a two-year-old Syrian
refugee whose body washed up on a beach in Turkey, generated far more outrage and concern around the world than statistics documenting the
hundreds of thousands
of deaths in the Syrian civil war up to that point. Larger and larger numbers
of dead do not necessarily compound the sense of horror, much less the outrage
against those who perpetrate war or genocide. Likewise, a leader willing to
countenance nuclear war may not be swayed by the prospect of mass casualties.
Past a very low threshold of sensitivity to individual suffering, these numbers
may cease to affect decision-making.
Fatal Tradeoffs And Choices
Research into the
prominence effect and psychic numbing suggests general psychological dynamics
that could shape Putin’s decision-making. But what do psychologists know about
how people think specifically about the use of nuclear weapons? Empirical
evidence on this question is understandably difficult to come by. Many public
opinion polls have measured Americans’ support for using nuclear weapons. Yet
these polls usually fail to posit the tradeoffs that a leader might face in
real life, such as the choice between risking the lives of U.S. soldiers and a
nuclear strike that will kill large numbers of foreign noncombatants. This was
the dilemma at the heart of U.S. President Harry Truman’s decision to drop
nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. And
this impossible tradeoff is the kind of decision-making environment that allows
the prominence effect and psychic numbing to go into overdrive.
In an
illuminating 2017 survey experiment, the scholars Scott Sagan and Benjamin
Valentino tried to approximate how Americans today would perceive tradeoffs
like those Truman once faced. The survey introduced respondents to a
hypothetical scenario involving a difficult ground war between the United
States and Iran. Respondents were shown a news story that indicated that the
war was not going well and estimated that 20,000 additional U.S. military
personnel might die if it continued. They were then asked whether they approved
of a nuclear strike on Iran’s second-largest city to end the war and protect
the lives of American troops. Participants were told the strike might kill
100,000 Iranian civilians. The projected death toll was raised to two million
Iranian civilians in a second scenario.
The survey results
were disturbing. More than half the respondents supported the nuclear
option—and, consistent with the effects of psychic numbing, it made little
difference whether the strike would kill 100,000 Iranians or two million.
Respondents’ willingness to potentially kill millions of civilians to protect
20,000 American service members also points to the prominence they attribute to
national security—and the nonprominence of enemy
civilian lives.
A study co-authored by one of us (Slovic) replicated Sagan
and Valentino’s but probed deeper into the participants’ worldviews. Views on
abortion, the death penalty, gun control, and immigration were combined into a
single quantitative measure of the degree to which a person generally supported
punishing those they viewed as deserving of harsh treatment. The more someone
supported punitive policies against others who offended or threatened them
(e.g., banning abortion once a heartbeat is detected without exception for rape
or incest), the more they supported dropping a nuclear bomb on enemy civilians.
A follow-up survey
added questions about racial justice (including racial disparities in prison
sentencing, which often lead to Black people serving harsher sentences than
other people who committed the same crimes) and belief in Hell—the ultimate
punishment. Respondents who endorsed six or more out of eight ways to punish or
restrict the rights of people were almost ten times as likely to approve a
nuclear strike on Iranian civilians as those who rejected such punitive
approaches. The survey findings have also demonstrated a sense of moral
righteousness among supporters of nuclear escalation, who tended to believe
that the Iranian victims deserved their fate and that bombing them was ethical.
This is consistent with the notion that the perpetrators of harm almost always
believe their violent acts are virtuous. When violence toward the enemy appears
justified and virtuous, the threshold for withholding the use of force or
avoiding escalation diminishes greatly.
“Mean, Hungry, Ferocious”
It remains impossible
to assign a precise probability to a potential nuclear escalation by Russia in
Ukraine. However, it might be easier to predict what one might observe if
a Russian nuclear strike in Ukraine is imminent. The nuclear weapons
expert Pavel Podvig, for instance, has cited four
signs to watch for more specific nuclear threats from the Kremlin, a rout of
Russian forces for which Putin is personally blamed at home, the movement of
tactical nuclear weapons from storage into the field, and intercepted
Russian communications suggesting possible intent to use nuclear weapons.
But signs that Russia
is gearing up for a strike could also be a bluff that frightens Ukraine’s
allies into standing down. And such signals would only come late in
intelligence gathering, meaning there would be little time left to evaluate
their meaning properly. Insights from psychological research, however, could
shed light on earlier stages of the decision-making process.
Factors such as the
prominence effect, psychic numbing, and the concept of purportedly “virtuous
violence” can help reveal how a leader such as Putin assesses risk—and
therefore offers a sense, earlier on, of the relative likelihood that he will
go nuclear.
Many of his past
statements indicate that Putin’s wish to maintain power securely and his
ambition to lead a modern Russian empire into a new golden era are among his
most prominent objectives. Both aims will be in jeopardy if the war in Ukraine
continues to falter. Still aggrieved by the perceived humiliation of the
dissolution of the Soviet Union, Putin sees himself as occupying a unique place
in Russian history. To hear him tell it, he is a latter-day Peter the
Great capable of winning back lost lands and restoring his country to its
previous position as a major world power. Such narcissistic traits tend to
amplify the power of psychic numbing and diminish one’s perception of the
value of the lives of others—if those lives are even considered.
Putin’s cruelty is
legendary and has served him well in acquiring and maintaining power. His
vengefulness toward those who criticize him or stand in his way is well
documented. He has a long record of imprisoning and assassinating political
opponents and sanctioning war crimes in Chechnya and Ukraine. He portrays the
war in Ukraine as a righteous fight against Nazis. He dehumanizes those who
dare criticize him, referring to opponents of his invasion as gnats who fly
into one’s mouth and should be spat out on the pavement.
Biographers trace
this disposition—the belief that brutality is a survival skill—to Putin’s
youth. “Post-siege Leningrad,” the journalist Masha Gessen has written of the Russian president’s hometown, was “a
mean, hungry,
impoverished place that
bred mean, hungry, ferocious children.” The young Putin was commensurately
quick to anger. If anyone offended him, a friend of Putin’s told Gessen, he
“would immediately jump on the guy, scratch him, bite him, rip his hair out by
the clump—do anything at all never to allow anyone to humiliate him in any
way.” In addition, Putin was heavily influenced by his experience as a young KGB officer in
Dresden in 1989, when the Berlin Wall fell. He was shocked by the speed with
which the power of the people caused East Germany to implode, and he felt
betrayed by the lack of response from Moscow. His subsequent desire for
control, wealth, and an enduring social network can be traced back to this
early experience of rapid social change.
As a leader, Putin
has scaled up his siege mentality into what the journalist Michel Eltchaninoff has described as a perpetual sense of victimhood, a fixation
on apparent humiliations and insults directed against Russia. Over the decades,
he has developed a vision of the paranoid but coherent world. In his mind,
Russia has been the victim of attempts to contain and dismember it for
centuries. And in Ukraine, Putin is taking it upon himself, once again, to
fight back.
Hope For The Best, Prepare For The Worst
Neither heavy losses
on the battlefield nor crippling economic sanctions have led Putin to waver. He
appears singularly preoccupied with national security and his need for control.
He certainly considers his attack on the Ukrainians virtuous, claiming that he
is “denazify” a state led by a Jewish president whose
grandfather fought the Nazis in World War II. All of this—the psychic numbing,
the extreme prominence of security considerations, the purportedly
virtuous violence—portends that he will not seek peace short of Ukrainian
surrender.
Of course, it is
impossible to precisely assess the odds that Putin will use nuclear weapons in
Ukraine. But uncertainty and imprecision are not the same as ignorance.
Psychological theory and evidence, backed by the history of warfare, point to a
high enough risk that Western governments must plan. They should weigh now
their possible responses to an escalation that would come as a shock but should
not come as a surprise. Unlike opinion surveys that posit a hypothetical risk
to U.S. soldiers, Putin’s vulnerability is real and considerable. Russia’s
losses have been staggering, far more than the 20,000-soldier threshold that
many members of the American public would say warrants the use of nuclear
weapons.
That Putin has not
yet taken that step, even in the face of huge casualties, is cold comfort. He
may wager that time is still on his side and that even a drawn-out,
nonnuclear war of attrition will wear out the Ukrainian war machine and its
backers. But his narcissistic focus on maintaining his hold on power could
drastically shrink the time horizon. As his generals and mercenaries continue
infighting, he may take more risks to end the war sooner. He is a
man whom humanity will wish it had kept away from its most dangerous weapons.
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