By Eric Vandenbroeck
and co-workers
How The West Can Secure Ukraine’s Future
And following up on yesterday's article, importantly, Ukraine’s
long-planned offensive operation is still in its initial phases, and it is not
too early to begin mapping out what comes next. In the short term, the answer
is obvious: the United States and its allies must continue to surge weapons and
training to Ukraine to enable Kyiv to liberate as much of its territory as
possible this year. But planning for the long term is also needed, and that is
far more difficult. As the past 15 months have shown, Russian President
Vladimir Putin is not likely to abandon his goal of dominating Ukraine, even in
the face of military setbacks. Still, the war will eventually enter a
lower-intensity phase, and when it does, security arrangements will need to be
firmly in place to protect Ukraine and bind it more closely to Europe.
In the run-up to July’s
NATO summit in Vilnius, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has been
pressing for his country to be admitted to the alliance. However, he
acknowledges this is “impossible” until the war ends. Ukraine also faces a long
road ahead in its quest to gain membership in the EU, which offers its security
guarantee. A solution in the meantime would be the creation of interlocking
multilateral agreements that can sustain a well-trained and well-equipped
Ukrainian military. The West can bolster this arrangement, modeled in part after
the U.S. defense relationship with Israel, by making clear, codified, long-term
commitments to Ukraine to ensure Kyiv can plan for its future security needs.
This approach would give Ukraine security until it becomes a member of the EU
and—perhaps one day—NATO, without closing the door to an eventual détente with
Russia.
Washington and its
allies will need to forge a strong coalition of like-minded countries to
support such a framework to make clear that Kyiv has the West’s long-term
support. There are encouraging signs that this process has already begun: the
Pentagon has been working with Ukraine to plan its future defense forces, and a
portion of U.S. assistance has been earmarked. The announcement in May that
Ukrainian pilots will begin training on F-16 aircraft in anticipation of the
eventual delivery of those planes signals the desire of Ukraine’s partners to
build the country’s military capabilities beyond what it requires in the here
and now. This must continue. But more is needed to create certainty about the
West’s staying power and disabuse Putin of the notion that time is on his side.
Legally binding commitments from Ukraine’s partners, especially the United
States, would shatter Putin’s war optimism and force him to reckon that Ukraine
will never belong to Russia.
The Israeli Model
Ukraine’s future
security depends on effective planning and credible commitments from its
partners. To that end, its leaders have begun studying arrangements in foreign
countries for clues on how their own country can protect itself. They have
wisely alighted on Israel as a model. Israel’s
capable army and intelligence services, strong defense industry, and deep
military relationship with the United States show how a country without formal
alliances can defend itself and deter hostile neighbors. Last September, the
Ukrainian government unveiled the Kyiv Security Compact, a concept aimed at
turning Ukraine into a European Israel. It envisions a “multi-decade effort” by
Kyiv’s partners to help Ukraine build a “robust territorial defense posture” by
training and equipping its military, providing intelligence support, and
bolstering defense-industrial cooperation. The strategy is shaped around
deterrence by denial—making it impossible for Russia to achieve its objectives
in Ukraine by military force—rather than around threats of future punishment.
Recent speeches by French President Emmanuel Macron and European Commission
President Ursula von der Leyen suggest that Western leaders are discussing how
to make this work in practice.
Ukraine and its partners
might find a functional template in the United States’s long-standing statutory
commitment to Israel’s qualitative military edge, meaning its ability to deter
and, if necessary, defeat a larger adversary by possessing superior
technologies and tactics. But the situations are not precisely analogous. Ukraine’s opponent has the world’s
largest nuclear arsenal, whereas Israel’s adversaries, for the moment at least,
have no such weapons. Moreover, Kyiv, unlike Tel Aviv, does not possess nuclear
weapons. On the other hand, Ukraine is a much larger country than Israel. It
can field a substantial, well-equipped, quick-reaction force capable of
inflicting severe losses on a formidable invader, as its military has
demonstrated against Russia since the war began.
The West should adopt a
new term, such as “qualitative deterrent balance,” that fits Ukraine’s unique
case. In doing so, it should commit to ensuring that Kyiv has a mixture of
superior equipment, training, and technology geared toward matching or
offsetting Russia’s numerical battlefield advantages in the long term. For
example, Russia’s edge in air power is substantial. Ukraine need not, and
indeed cannot, maintain a massive and costly air force that can rival or
surpass Russia’s. However, the Ukrainian Air Force can protect its skies
through a well-considered combination of layered and integrated ground-based
air defenses, supplemented by a nimble air force and other capabilities that
can hold strategic military targets inside Russia at risk.
A credible future force
of this sort requires long-term funding. In determining its levels and
sustainability, Western leaders should, again, look to Israel as an example.
Since 1999, U.S. and Israeli leaders have signed a series of ten-year
memorandums of understanding that lay out U.S. security assistance levels. The
most recent MOU, signed in 2016, was worth $38 billion. Congress has largely
appropriated funds according to the levels set by these agreements. In the case
of Ukraine, a transparent vision for long-term financing, as set out in a
series of bilateral MOUs, would provide cost efficiencies by enabling sound
long-term planning and the acquisition of major defense systems. It would also
address concerns in Congress about giving Ukraine a “blank check” through
repeated supplemental budgets outside the regular appropriations process. Over
time, a multiyear funding framework would also balance out U.S. and European
support for Ukraine insofar as European leaders will be more willing to make
significant pledges if they are confident in Washington’s enduring commitment.
Developing a cost model
for Ukraine’s future force will be complex. Uncertainty about the conflict’s
trajectory complicates firm planning assumptions. If the war continues at a
high intensity, sustaining Ukraine’s immediate battlefield needs will supersede
those of its future force. But as soon as the war enters a less intensive
phase, perhaps after this year’s counteroffensive, Ukraine’s military
reconstitution should begin. An initial round of MOUs from the United States
and European powers should finance rearmament, which should be planned to
unfold over several years. Later on, Ukraine and its partners can look to a
country such as Poland, with its similar population size and proximity to
Russia, for clues for sustaining a modern, well-trained armed force in
peacetime.
Don’t Fool Me Twice
A future security
arrangement for Ukraine must be built on solid legal and political foundations.
Ukrainian officials bitterly remember signing the Budapest Memorandum of 1994.
In this agreement, Russia, the United Kingdom, and the United States provided Ukraine
with security assurances in exchange for dismantling its nuclear arsenal.
Ukraine honored its side of the deal, but Russia has repeatedly ignored its
pledges to respect Ukraine’s territorial integrity, annexing Crimea and sending
undeclared military units into eastern Ukraine in 2014 and then invading the
rest of the country in 2022. The Ukrainians are naturally wary of basing their
future security on any agreement not binding on all parties.
Instead, the United
States and European countries should work with Kyiv on a new framework
agreement to define their strategic goals and collective commitments. These
should include the financial and practical parameters of long-term support for
Ukraine’s self-defense and mechanisms for consultation and support for
Ukraine’s defense industry. Choosing which countries to invite to the
negotiating table will be tricky. Ukraine should avoid casting too wide a net,
as too broad a coalition might result in a watered-down accord. But the
country’s primary military and economic backers must be signatories, including
France, Germany, Poland, the United Kingdom, and the United States. Once the
agreement has been negotiated and signed, other countries should be eligible to
join.
This agreement should
provide the guiding principles for the signatories’ MOUs, in which their
specific commitments should be enumerated. To make these actionable and
compatible, the framework text should empower a high-level steering group akin
to NATO’s North Atlantic Council, with the mandate to develop joint threat
assessments, share intelligence, coordinate policy responses, and ensure that
all signatories meet their obligations. If Ukraine believes it is threatened,
it must be guaranteed the right to convene the member parties to request
additional emergency support.
With clear cross-party
backing, the signatories’ commitments must be codified in law. Support for
Ukraine cannot depend on electoral cycles or leadership changes. This is
especially important for the United States, where the possibility of a
significant policy reversal after the 2024 presidential election has frayed
Ukrainian nerves and fueled Putin’s confidence in the future. That is why the
Biden administration must begin working with Congress on a solution.
Congressional action could take many forms. Ideally, the framework text would
be a formal international treaty ratified by each signatory. For the United
States, this would require a two-thirds majority in the Senate, which would be difficult
but not impossible to achieve.
If that threshold proves
too high, Congress could pass a new law similar to the Taiwan Relations Act,
which has been a central pillar of U.S. defensive support for Taiwan for more
than four decades. This would enshrine the U.S. commitments to Ukraine in the
MOU and multilateral framework text. Congress could alternatively consider
replicating its obligations to Israel. This would require the president to
consult Congress regularly and provide reports certifying that Kyiv is
receiving sufficient support from its partners to match or offset Russian
military advantages. This legal framework would ensure that a security
arrangement has broad political buy-in, regardless of who occupies the White House.
Daily management of the
new arrangement for Ukraine could take place through dedicated working groups
of the signatories’ defense policy officials, planners, and procurement
specialists. These working groups should be mandated to plan capabilities and
move the country toward interoperability with NATO forces. The process of
building Ukraine’s armed forces will mean that partner countries will
inevitably compete for big-ticket contracts, and solid multinational
coordination mechanisms will be needed to referee that process. In concert with
policies set out in the framework text and bilateral MOUs, these mechanisms
must ensure that Ukraine reforms its defense sector by making its contracts
transparent and mitigating the risk of weapons and sensitive technology making
their way into Russia’s hands or onto the black market.
Made In Ukraine
A defense industrial
component will also be critical to the success of a new security arrangement
for Ukraine. Very high consumption rates of munitions on the battlefield have
left U.S. and European defense firms struggling to keep up with demand.
Explicit multiyear funding pledges from signatory countries would signal to
firms that they can safely scale up production of the critical systems and
munitions that are desperately needed. Dedicated partner-country support for
Ukraine’s defense industry would also reduce the cost of the arrangement over time as indigenous
production capacity grows to meet an increasing share of the country’s
requirements.
This will not require a
wholesale realignment of the West’s defense industrial base. Instead, the
United States and the EU should ramp up their critical systems and munitions
production with smart, targeted investments. A recent deal between EU member
states and Norway to supply Ukraine with one billion euros in ammunition shells
and jointly procure another one billion euros’ worth is a good start.
Successful European-level joint procurement could turn the heavily fragmented
EU defense industrial base into a major asset for Ukraine’s long-term security,
not to mention for Europe’s strategic autonomy.
Western aid must include
provisions to support the revitalization of Ukraine’s defense firms, which were
once the pride of the Soviet military-industrial complex. A robust Ukrainian
defense industry integrated into the European supply chain will, over time,
reduce the country’s dependence on Western aid. The West’s strategy should
mirror what the United States has done for Israel. Washington has long
permitted Tel Aviv to use a portion of its military aid to procure capabilities
from domestic firms. The policy, known as “off-shore procurement,” turned
Israel’s defense sector into one of the world’s most vital. The same must now be
done for Ukraine. German arms giant Rheinmetall’s recent move to form a joint
venture with Ukraine’s state-owned defense conglomerate is a step in the right
direction. Kyiv must also introduce transparent corporate governance practices
and partner with Ukrainian entrepreneurs, whose tenacious wartime innovations
have contributed to the country’s battlefield successes.
Clubbing Together
Eventually, the EU and
NATO must decide whether to admit Ukraine. Membership in either organization
confers security guarantees. The EU’s mutual defense provisions, codified in
its treaties, should not be dismissed as inferior to NATO’s Article 5 simply
because the United States is not a signatory to them. The chances that Putin or
a successor would attack the EU are slim, and most EU member states are also in
NATO. Therefore, a security arrangement for Ukraine must be closely linked to
its EU accession process, which should begin as soon as possible.
Opening formal EU
accession talks would incentivize Ukraine to accelerate rule-of-law and
economic reforms. The EU will no doubt insist that Ukraine adhere to its strict
standards for admission. But it must avoid an onerous, decades-long accession
timetable that squanders a unique opportunity to bind Ukraine to Europe.
Instead, a staged process in which Kyiv becomes more involved in EU
decision-making structures as the country passes specific benchmarks might
offer a way to sidestep the “in or out” binary that has caused other aspiring
members to lose faith in Brussels.
Ukraine’s long-term
security relationship with the West must be decided without Russian input.
Crucially, however, the arrangement opens the possibility of a future
confidence-building dialogue with Moscow along the lines of the prewar proposals
floated by the United States and its allies. In late 2021 and early 2022, NATO
allies were prepared to assure Russia they would not deploy offensive
ground-based missile systems or station permanent combat forces in Ukraine.
Moscow rejected these proposals and invaded anyway. In the future, the
arrangement’s political framework and consultative mechanisms would lay the
groundwork for the United States, Europe, and Ukraine to negotiate these issues
jointly with Russia if the Kremlin changed course and accepted Ukraine’s
independence and borders.
The return to a Cold
War–like security order in Europe is now a fact of life. Ukraine has become the
fulcrum of this new order. NATO membership might not yet be in the cards for
Kyiv, but leaving Ukraine without a reliable security arrangement would be a
grave mistake. The United States and Europe must begin now to devise a workable
plan, even as the war rages on.
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