NEWS
ANALYSIS
Emmanuel Macron Walks a Fine Line on Ukraine
The French president, determined to engage with
Russia, wants to shape a new European security order from crisis — and win the
April election.
Roger Cohen
By Roger
Cohen
Jan. 29,
2022
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/01/29/world/europe/macron-ukraine-russia-putin-nato-eu.html
PARIS — In
2019, Emmanuel Macron invited President Vladimir V. Putin to the French summer
presidential residence at Brégançon, declared the need for the reinvention of
“an architecture of security” between the European Union and Russia, and later
pronounced that NATO had undergone a “brain death.”
The French
leader enjoys provocation. He detests intellectual laziness. But even by his
standards, the apparent dismissal of the Western alliance and tilt toward
Moscow were startling. Poland, among other European states with experience of
life in the Soviet imperium, expressed alarm.
Now a
crisis provoked by Russian troops amassed on the Ukrainian border has at once
galvanized a supposedly moribund NATO against a Russian threat — the alliance’s
original mission — and, for Mr. Macron, demonstrated the need for his own
intense brand of 21st-century Russian engagement.
“Dialogue
with Russia is not a gamble, it is an approach that responds to a necessity,” a
senior official in the presidency, who spoke on the condition of anonymity in
keeping with French government practice, said Friday after Mr. Macron and Mr.
Putin spoke by phone for more than an hour.
Later in
the day, Mr. Macron spoke to the Ukrainian president, Volodymyr Zelensky, a
move that placed the French leader precisely where he seeks to be ahead of an
April presidential election: at the fulcrum of crisis diplomacy on Europe’s
future.
Mr. Macron
is walking a fine line. He wants to show that Europe has a core role to play in
defusing the crisis, demonstrate his own European leadership to his voters,
ensure that Germany and several skeptical European states back his ambitious
strategic vision, and avoid giving the United States cause to doubt his
commitment to NATO.
“He wants
to carve out a special role for himself and Europe, in NATO but at its edge,”
said Nicole Bacharan, a researcher at Sciences Po in Paris. “The case for
modernizing the European security arrangements in place since 1991 is
compelling. But doing it with 130,000 Russian troops at the Ukrainian border is
impossible.”
Until now,
Mr. Macron appears to have held the party line. Cooperation with the United
States has been intense, and welcome. The president, one senior diplomat said,
was involved in the drafting of the firm American response to Russian demands
that the West cut its military presence in Eastern Europe and guarantee that
Ukraine never join NATO — a response judged inadequate in the Kremlin. Mr.
Macron has made clear to Mr. Putin that, as a sovereign state, Ukraine has an
inalienable right to make its own choices about its strategic direction.
Still, the
itch in Mr. Macron to shape from the crisis some realignment of European
security that takes greater account of Russian concerns is palpable.
The French
official spoke of the necessity for a “new security order in Europe,” provoked
in part by the decomposition of the old one.
He
suggested that various American decisions had caused a “strategic disorder,”
noting that there had been “doubt at a certain moment about the quality of
Article 5” — the pivotal part of the NATO treaty that says an attack on any one
member state will be “considered an attack against them all.”
This was a
clear allusion to former President Donald J. Trump’s dismissive view of NATO, a
stance that the Biden administration has taken pains to rectify. For France,
however, and to some degree Germany, the lesson has been that, come what may,
Europe must stand on its own two feet because its trans-Atlantic partner could
go on walkabout again, perhaps as early as 2024.
Mr. Putin
and Mr. Macron have one thing in common: They both believe that the post-Cold
War security architecture in Europe needs refashioning.
The Russian
leader wants to undo the consequences of the Soviet collapse, which he has
called “the greatest geopolitical catastrophe of the 20th century”; push NATO
back out of formerly Soviet-controlled countries to its posture before
enlargement; and enshrine the idea of a Russian sphere of influence that limits
the independence of a country like Ukraine.
What Mr.
Macron wants is less clear, but it includes the development of a strong
European defense capacity and a new “stability order” that involves Russia. As
the French president said of this innovative arrangement in a speech before the
European Parliament this month: “We need to build it between Europeans, then
share it with our allies in the NATO framework. And then, we need to propose it
to Russia for negotiation.”
The idea of
Europe negotiating its strategic posture with Mr. Putin — who has threatened a
neighboring country, part of whose territory he has already annexed, without
any apparent Western provocation — makes European nations closer than France to
the Russian border uneasy.
When Mr.
Macron visited Poland in early 2020 — after the scathing comment about NATO and
the blandishments to Mr. Putin — he was assailed at a dinner for Polish
intellectuals and artists.
“Don’t you
know who you are dealing with?” demanded Adam Michnik, a prominent writer and
historian imprisoned several times by the former Communist regime, according to
a person present. “Putin’s a brigand!”
A brewing
conflict. Antagonism between Ukraine and Russia has been simmering since 2014,
when the Russian military crossed into Ukrainian territory, annexing Crimea and
whipping up a rebellion in the east. A tenuous cease-fire was reached in 2015,
but peace has been elusive.
A spike in
hostilities. Russia has recently been building up forces near its border with
Ukraine, and the Kremlin’s messaging toward its neighbor has hardened. Concern
grew in late October, when Ukraine used an armed drone to attack a howitzer
operated by Russian-backed separatists.
Ominous
warnings. Russia called the strike a destabilizing act that violated the
cease-fire agreement, raising fears of a new intervention in Ukraine that could
draw the United States and Europe into a new phase of the conflict.
The
Kremlin’s position. President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia, who has increasingly
portrayed NATO’s eastward expansion as an existential threat to his country,
said that Moscow’s military buildup was a response to Ukraine’s deepening
partnership with the alliance.
Rising
tension. Western countries have tried to maintain a dialogue with Moscow. But
administration officials recently warned that the U.S. could throw its weight
behind a Ukrainian insurgency should Russia invade.
To which
Mr. Macron responded that he knew very well whom he was dealing with, but given
the American pivot to Asia it was in Europe’s interest to develop a dialogue
with Russia and avoid a strengthened Russian-Chinese partnership. The Poles
were unimpressed.
Mr.
Macron’s approach to Mr. Putin is consistent with his relations with other
strongmen. He has engaged with President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi of Egypt and
Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia — men whose views of human
rights and liberal democracy are far removed from his own — in the belief that
he can bring them around.
Up to now,
the results have appeared paltry, as they were when he tried to forge a bond
with Mr. Trump that proved short-lived.
The French
president’s own views on the critical importance of the rule of law and respect
for human rights have been a constant of his politics. His strong condemnation
of the treatment of Aleksei A. Navalny, the imprisoned Russian dissident, irked
Mr. Putin. He has made it clear that the annexation of Crimea will never be
accepted by France. Engagement has not meant abandonment of principle, even if
its endpoint is unclear.
Mr. Macron
has also maneuvered effectively to use the Normandy Format, a grouping of
France, Germany, Ukraine and Russia, to bolster the cease-fire agreement the
countries brokered in eastern Ukraine in 2015. This diplomatic format has the
added attraction for him of showcasing Europeans trying to solve European
problems. The French goal in the crisis is clear: “de-escalation,” a word often
repeated.
If the
president can be seen to have played a central role in achieving that, he will
bolster his position in the election, where he currently leads in polls. The
downside risk of his Russian gambit was put this way by Michel Duclos, a
diplomat, in a recent book on France in the world: “The more it appears that
Mr. Macron gains no substantial results through dialogue, the more that
dialogue cuts into his political capital in the United States and in
anti-Russian European countries.”
Nonetheless,
Mr. Macron seems certain to persist. He is convinced that Europe must be remade
to take account of a changed world. A degree of mutual fascination appears to bind
him and Mr. Putin.
The senior
French official observed that the Russian president had told Mr. Macron that
“he was the only person with whom he could have such profound discussions and
that he was committed to the dialogue.”
That will
be music to the French president’s ears.
Roger Cohen
is the Paris bureau chief of The Times. He was a columnist from 2009 to 2020.
He has worked for The Times for more than 30 years and has served as a foreign
correspondent and foreign editor. Raised in South Africa and Britain, he is a
naturalized American. @NYTimesCohen
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