OPINION
THE
EDITORIAL BOARD
No Justification for a Brazen Invasion
Feb. 23,
2022
By The Editorial Board
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/02/23/opinion/ukraine-biden-putin-invasion.html
The
editorial board is a group of opinion journalists whose views are informed by
expertise, research, debate and certain longstanding values. It is separate
from the newsroom.
Explosions
were reported in cities across Ukraine early Thursday morning after President
Vladimir Putin of Russia vowed in a speech to “demilitarize” the neighboring
nation, and any hope for a peaceful resolution to the crisis appeared all but
snuffed out. On Wednesday, Ukraine declared a 30-day state of emergency, called
up military reserves and warned its citizens to leave Russia. The European
Union announced it was preparing to handle a large influx of refugees uprooted
by war. Financial markets are bracing for the turmoil that a land war and
sanctions could unleash across the global economy.
As the
cause of all of this, Vladimir Putin is giving a master class in dangerous and
destructive leadership and making it all the more important that President
Biden and other nations stand resolutely together in the face of threats,
feints and misinformation and remain disciplined and energized in confronting
Mr. Putin. He is clearly playing a long game, and the West should continue to
prepare for that and make clear, as Mr. Biden has done, that the Russian
president is acting unacceptably and will pay consequences for his actions.
The scope
of Mr. Putin’s professed ambition is alarming and bewildering for much of the
world. As Mr. Biden asked, “Who in the Lord’s name does Putin think gives him
the right to declare new so-called countries on territory that belonged to his
neighbors?”
All this
makes clear that Mr. Putin’s attack is not primarily about NATO or security.
It’s all about his xenophobic, imperial and misguided notion that Ukraine was
inherently an appendage of Russia, its independence a historical fluke and its
rulers usurpers. His recognition of separatist states in Ukraine extended not
only to enclaves controlled by pro-Russian forces but also to entire provinces,
amounting to a major chunk of Ukrainian territory that includes the important
port of Mariupol.
The
magnitude of the Russian gambit is staggering. Whatever Mr. Putin’s ideas on
how Ukraine should relate to Russia, whatever his grievances over Western
encroachment on what he perceives as Russia’s sphere of influence, whatever his
views on Russia’s place in Europe and the world, an unprovoked invasion of a
sovereign European state is an unprovoked declaration of war on a scale, on a
continent and in a century when it was thought to be no longer possible.
If nothing
else, Mr. Putin should consider what this means for his people, to whom he has
lied, day after day, about purported threats and slights from Ukraine and the
West. There will be body bags coming home to Russia and economic dislocation
and global ostracism for a nation that has suffered terribly over the past
century from war and totalitarian rule.
Mr. Biden,
for his part, has managed this crisis with toughness, patience, resolve and
dignity, revealing regularly what American intelligence knew about Mr. Putin’s
schemes. It was a novel approach to crisis management in the age of social
media and probably helped harden European resolve during the ambiguous
monthslong buildup of Russian forces. Mr. Putin should see that this is the
resolute face of the world’s premier democracy and most powerful nation.
Secretary
of State Antony Blinken canceled a meeting scheduled for this week with the
Russian foreign minister, Sergey Lavrov. In a letter to Mr. Lavrov, Mr. Blinken
said that diplomatic offramps exist “if Russia is prepared to take demonstrable
steps to provide the international community with any degree of confidence it’s
serious about de-escalating and finding a diplomatic solution.”
Mr. Biden
and America’s NATO allies have properly declared going to war with Russia over
Ukraine unthinkable. Ukraine, far weaker militarily than Russia, will have to
bear the brunt of the attack alone, though, as Mr. Biden warned, the sanctions
against Russia will have far-reaching economic costs for Europe and the United
States, starting with an inevitable increase in the cost of energy.
Mr. Biden
was right not to unleash the full arsenal of sanctions yet. As long as there is
the slightest chance of deterring a full-scale invasion, he and his allies and
partners must retain sticks and carrots, however few remain. That could include
declaring Mr. Putin and his lieutenants war criminals, subject to arrest
anywhere outside Russia. Many more banks can be added to the few that have been
barred from the global financial system; trade in a broad array of technologies
needed by Russian industry can be banned.
These
sanctions will also hurt the West, especially Germany, and Russia may well
retaliate through cyberattacks or other means that could shake global energy
markets. Any such costs should be weighed against the gravity of what Russia
has done.
Analysts
and historians will long debate whether Mr. Putin’s grievances had bases in
fact, whether the United States and its allies were too cavalier in expanding
NATO, whether Russia was justified in believing that its security was compromised.
There will also be heated questioning over whether Mr. Biden and other Western
leaders could have done more to assuage Mr. Putin.
But no,
there is absolutely no justification for a brazen invasion of a weaker
neighbor. To answer Mr. Biden’s anguished question, nobody and nothing have
given Mr. Putin the right to seize territory or decide the fate of neighboring
nations. The consequences of his aggression will be terrible for Ukraine and
painful for the West and will exact a huge cost on Russia in lives and stunted
development. For all this, Mr. Putin carries the full responsibility.
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