Seventy-five years ago, at the dawn of the Cold War, US foreign policy thinkers divided into three camps over how to deal with the threat of Soviet expansion.
Those on the left, led by Henry Wallace, Progressive Party candidate in the 1948 US election, argued for accommodating what they regarded as then-Soviet leader Joseph Stalin’s legitimate security concerns over his western flank. Those on the right, including philosopher and polemicist James Burnham (author of the 1947 The Struggle for the World), insisted that Stalin was bent on fostering world revolution and had to be stopped, even at the cost of fighting World War III.
Those in the centre, including the statesmen around then-president Harry Truman, viewed the Soviet Union as a dangerously aggressive power but argued that its expansion could be “contained” until, as US diplomat George Kennan suggested, the regime had mellowed or disappeared.
Today, as Russian President Vladimir Putin threatens to invade Ukraine and upend the international order Truman built, all three of those Cold War tendencies have reappeared.
Columnist in The New York Times Peter Beinart argues for accommodation on the grounds that Putin is asserting a right of dominion over his neighbourhood that the US — liberal pieties notwithstanding — continues to live by. (John Bolton, former US president Donald Trump’s bellicose and brief national security adviser, once declared the Monroe Doctrine “alive and well”.)
On the other side, foreign policy expert Kori Schake in The New York Times called on US President Joe Biden to station US troops in Ukraine as a sign of American unwillingness to yield to Russian revanchism.
Biden, who already resembles Truman in so many ways, seems to be recapitulating Truman’s Cold War role. But it’s not clear what, if anything, containment means in the current crisis.
Contemporary versions of accommodation and roll back are as misguided as their ancestors were. The US cannot yield to Putin’s demands without accepting a worldview radically at odds with its own, for Putin’s belief in his right to control the nations at his frontier includes the idea that lesser states do not enjoy the same sovereign rights as great powers.
Of course if you believe — as researcher Anatol Lieven recently argued in Foreign Policy — that the “rules-based global order” is a euphemism for “US primacy” or, as Beinart claims, that the US regards Central America as cynically as Russia regards Georgia or Ukraine, than nothing is lost by acceding to Putin’s demands.
As for planting US forces in Ukraine and daring Putin to risk a wider war by attacking, the US shouldn’t make a wager it can’t afford to lose.
The US need not doubt the sincerity or depth of Putin’s conviction that the West is seeking to fence Russia out of Europe, and thus that he is in danger of losing a zero-sum game. The fact that Putin really believes it doesn’t make it true even though he’s wrong doesn’t make him any less committed to restoring what he considers Russia’s rightful place.
Deterrence may not work because Putin doesn’t seem to be bluffing. Even if he decides against sending tanks across the border — as he might be signalling with recent news that some troops are being sent home — but rather tries to knock out Ukraine’s infrastructure or reignite hostilities in Donbass, US soldiers won’t be able to give much help.
The Cold War offers no single, compelling analogy to the current situation because, at that time, Russia operated only within a sphere the West had conceded to it: Truman accepted the Soviet coup in Czechoslovakia in 1948 as then-US president Dwight D Eisenhower did in the case of Hungary in 1956. Ukraine, by contrast, is an independent state whose independence Putin does not accept.
What really connects that time to this is Truman, former US secretaries of state Dean Acheson and George Marshall and others had to find a way of acting and speaking that acknowledged the reality of Russian aggression without conceding its legitimacy. Truman neither accepted the 1948 Berlin blockade by the Soviet Union, nor did he agree to proposals to shoot his way in; he found a way around it with the airlift.
What does that mean today? First, it means rejecting proposals to “Finlandise” Ukraine as well as, presumably, Georgia and other former Soviet states — a possibility French President Emmanuel Macron raised. To impose neutrality on an unwilling state to appease a dangerous enemy would be a big step down a very slippery slope. The same might not apply to a regional solution, where states voluntarily accept “non-aligned” status in exchange for security guarantees, as political scientist Samuel Charap recently proposed in Foreign Affairs.
Ukrainian officials have begun to tentatively signal they might accept such a denouement.
If so, it’s not clear that would satisfy Putin. The West doesn’t know if he really just wants the reassurances he claims to want. The draft treaties Russia circulated in December 2021 contained a series of demands that diplomacy might be able to moderate and convert into reciprocal concessions.
For example, NATO could agree to withdraw intermediate-range missiles from Europe or reduce their number if Russia did as well. Or Putin could agree to redeploy Russian troops in exchange for a NATO promise to remove or reduce troops in Eastern Europe (which were only deployed there after Russia seized Crimea in 2014).
Putin’s insistence that NATO bar the door to Ukraine could be massaged with a firm-but-informal commitment that membership would not happen for a stipulated number of years. Even the Cuban missile crisis was ultimately resolved by an informal commitment to remove US missiles from Turkey; the parties simply had to want to do so.
Confirmed Cold War warriors like Eisenhower and former US president Ronald Reagan combined inflexible rhetoric with flexible tactics; hopefully, Biden is doing the same. But what if Putin looks at the US bid and sweeps it off the table? What if he gambled on rejection as a pretext to invade Ukraine or overthrow the regime to gain full control over a troublesome neighbour?
More broadly, Putin seems persuaded that for Russia to rise, the West must fall. In their joint communique, Russia and China, after much high-minded bilge about democracy, pledged to resist colour revolutions, which overturned Russian client regimes in both Georgia and Ukraine. If they mean it, something larger is at stake than a readjustment of the border between the East and West.
Biden needs to take some real risks in the hopes of satisfying conditions that are acceptable, especially because his European allies would have to live with the consequences of confrontation in a way the US would not. But Putin must also have a piercingly clear understanding of the price to be paid if he decides to pursue his most grandiose ambitions. The liberal world order, tattered though it is, is still very much worth defending.
Every year the US – the world’s largest military by far – holds large military exercises as close as possible to the Korean DMZ, the Chinese coast and the Russian border. All defensive, apparently. These exercises practice US-led forces in such defensive peace-preserving operations as amphibious landings and dropping airborne troops behind enemy lines.
Following the Iraqi WMD farrago as cynical pretext for a ruinous war of aggression, it is surely the duty of responsible media to exclude uncorroborated ‘intelligence’ from reporting on international tensions. Stick to the evidence, which is that there has been no invasion, just a lot of hyperventilating from the usual warmongering suspects.
He never did, please quote any threats from him. The rest of article is usual smorgasbord from US media.
Fake news.
What are those massed Russian troops up to then?
Whatever bored squaddies deep in their country’s boonies usually do – football, cards, bull sessions, the odd punch-up?
I agree. Putin seems to just be posturing. He is putting forward ambit claims to see what he can get.
Despite the fact that the West does not like Putin or Russia for that matter, Putin is not a fool, and would not easily embark on a full scale war.
It would also help if a lot of these so called “experts” need to step back and look at the issues from Russia’s point of view.
NATO and the West in general have over time been positioning armory and even troops closer to Russia, and they may see that at a threat to their sovereignty.
What is required is the art of Diplomacy and finding some form of common ground where the conceding of some minor concessions on both sides would enable a de-escalation. However, it seems the West, mainly the USA are more than keen to forge into battle.
The west has dispensed with diplomacy for demanding and yelling, as is the way with bullies. The rest of the world treats them with the contempt they now deserve.
Depends whom one means by ‘the West‘ – no European wants a bar of the anglosphere B/S.
The Fulda Gap is sooo preRealPolitik – this idiocy would not have even interrupted Mutti‘s morning coffee.
Why do most Russians and Ukrainians, especially working age, youth and of course oligarchs and officials, prefer to live in the EU, UK or US if the ‘west’ is so culpable and Putin is a cuddly liberal democrat?
Your usual monomaniacal, idées fixes are weird enough but “...most Russians & Ukrainians…prefer to live..” elsewhere jumps several sharks, a blue whale or three and a USUKA sub.
Still shooting messengers and offering nothing, hence, you do not care about citizens, but the authority of corrupt autocratic leaders or elites who use top down authority, faux nationalism and conservative Christianity to win elections; suppose like the LNP in Australia?
This is evidence of how dumbed down and autocratic ageing Australians have become, both left and right, reflecting suboptimal media, US/GOP/Koch influence, lack of education and critical literacies vs. the preferred US GOP style of shooting messengers, encouraging confusion and supporting corrupt strong men, very courageous and consequential, not.
Do you akshally write words or is it ALL just F7 hot key pre-set?
Please, no more of this erroneous and pro-fascist propaganda – we would subscribe to such hasbara rags if desired.
Putin is just a normal psychpathic narcissist. He has pretty much got all he wanted out of this
General acceptance that his war in Crimea isnt that bad after all
Hestitation in the west about admitting anymore NATO countries
He is the centre of everyones attention
He has got everyone running around like headless chooks trying to second guess him.
No narcissist could ask for more.
However he will keep people guessing for a while to see if he can get a better result.
But no one should think he is doing this for the benefit of the Russian people, this is all about him.
You have obviously not read about or studied Putin in the least, but are regurgitating standard western media “demonisation of a rival” descriptions to make yourself feel good! Putin – highly intelligent, degree in International Law and 16 years as a Foreign Intelligence officer in the KGB – not, as it seems to be implied, a viscious, murdering agent..
His main crime, to the west, is rescuing Russia from the avaricious hands of western businesses and governments, allied with local oligarchs, who were lining up to plunder Russia dry and break it up into several smaller states! He will be seen as the saviour of Russia, which has now been rebuilt, much to the horror of the Russophobic west, which can’t control it. That’s what this last little show has been about – Russia standing up and saying enough….hold a series of exercises on it’s own borders, which frighten the west and Nato stupid, and watch them run around like headless chickens.
Expect to see Russia turn away from Europe and with the new Chinese accord, help build a strong Eurasia to replace the Western economy, which is crumbling…….
And he is cornered, like others e.g. Erdogan, and it’s of his own making with much hubris.
Hero worshippers in the west, or those who view Russia through a sepia tinted cold war or Czarist lens, egregiously ignore the desires of both Russian and Ukrainian working age and youth, the future.
They respect EU nations for open society, liberal democracy, functioning health/social security systems, freedom of speech, rule of law and social mobility; all those oligarchs choosing not to live in Russia must be onto something but a threat for Putin?
The situation in Ukraine is historically and politically a little more complicated than your cold-war simplification would have us believe. And your rosy view of nirvana in EU nations is a little out of place for the eastern European nations newly admitted to NATO.
Distorts my comment, I am accusing others of using base, lazy and old cold war etc. stereotypes; nor do I claim that everything in the EU is rosy but society and life for citizens is far superior to Russia, Turkey, and one could add, Australia.
You seem to preclude the desires of Central Eastern European and Russian youth, working age and the future, by ignoring the fact that Russian elites, officials and oligarchs choose the west over their own nation i.e. Russia, what’s that all about, why?
Do you actually have anything to say versus shooting messengers and playing ‘whataboutery’?
Not interested in shooting messengers or whataboutery, Drew. I’m just struggling to see the relevance of where people prefer to live, or the personality of Putin to a discussion thread on the historical and geo-political factors currently threatening war in Europe.
Unless you are supporting the aggressive American exceptionalism that they think gives them the right to commit industrial-scale terrorism and destruction on any nation/leader/people they don’t like or agree with, or who they think needs ‘freedom’ brought to them at the point of a gun – estimated direct and indirect death toll of 12,000,000 people since 1945.
No, you and you have offered nothing of substance, but are wallowing round in history, bypassing reality by ignoring youth and working age who are well educated (K-12+), mobile and independent, the future of their nations, including Ukraine and Russia.
You deflect from these nations’ authoritarian, illiberal and corrupt leaders by simplistically blaming ‘American exceptionalism’ (there are US interests seemingly shared with Putin et al. anyway i.e. climate science denial and attacking the EU); while ignoring problems created by ‘Anglo exceptionalism’ e.g. GOP and Tories, with Koch think tanks, which wish to dismember the EU, and they managed to pull off Brexit, which is going really well for UK citizens……
A British academic who is familiar with the region, states how embarrassing it is when old Anglosphere conservatives of left and right, rely upon ideology, history, tropes and perceptions as they are absolutely ignorant of the region or simply ‘my enemy’s enemy is my friend’; this also helps support disinformation and astroturfing for and by Russian interests.
There is much credible analysis in the public domain, but mostly avoided by Australia e.g. Edward Lucas, Anne Applebaum, Private Eye on Russia/City etc., in favour of encouraging respect for white Christian conservative nationalist leaders; how smart are Australians?
I don’t disagree with what you’ve written, Drew – I just can’t see how it justifies the US-dominated NATO being allowed to station it’s anti-Russian missiles closer and closer to Russia – the primary (but not only) cause of the current crisis IMHO. Surely the economic aspirations of Ukrainian youth do not require Ukraine to join a belligerently anti-Russian NATO alliance in breach of promises made to Russia that NATO would not move ‘one inch eastward’ if Russia supported the reunification of Germany.
How would the US react if Cuba wanted Russian missiles to protect it from further US invasions? 1962 provides the answer to that question.
Maybe you’d care to provide your explanation for the current crisis in Europe.
And I’m not sure joining the EU has done much for Polish and Hungarian youth, apart from allowing them to live and work in richer Western European nations.
a worldview radically at odds with (the US), for Putin’s belief ….. includes the idea that lesser states do not enjoy the same sovereign rights as great powers.
Yeah, radically at odds.
Strange….the latest speeches and meetings with China would lead to an opposite view.
It’s a shame no western media take any notice of them…particularly the recent China/Russia accord and blueprint for the future.
Yes, only an ignoramus or an idiot could write that, after the US has interfered nefariously in the affairs of 80 countries, regularly subverts UN decisions and processes for its own interest, and doesn’t hesitate to bully with sanctions and favours. Maybe he means Putin’s belief is at odds with the US’ because the US believes no states (even other great powers) have the same rights as American exceptionalism grants to the US.
And then he puts an “if you believe” in front of:
“that the ‘rules-based global order’ is a euphemism for ‘US primacy'”.
I shake my head that I’m reading this crap in Crikey.