OPINION
ROSS
DOUTHAT
Putin Is Losing in Ukraine. But He’s Winning in
Russia.
April 2,
2022
By Ross
Douthat
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/04/02/opinion/putin-ukraine-russia.html
Right now
Vladimir Putin is losing the battle for Ukraine. His maximal goals have been
abandoned (for now), his troops around Kyiv are in retreat, his imperial dreams
are being disavowed. He has more modest goals to fall back on, resources and
territories that he may be able to hold — but a month of Ukrainian valor and
Western support have dealt his ambitions a devastating blow.
Putin is
not losing, however, in the battle for Russia. From the start of hostilities,
the Western answer to his maximalist ambitions — not an official goal, but a
hope that informs policy and punditry and slips out of Joe Biden’s lips in
excited moments — has been regime change in the Kremlin, a failed war toppling
Putin and bringing a more reasonable government to power.
This was
always a thin hope, but despite military quagmire and unprecedented economic
sanctions, it appears even thinner now. In polling and anecdote alike, Putin
appears to be consolidating support from the Russian public, rallying a nation
that feels itself to be as he portrays it — unjustly surrounded and besieged.
His
approval ratings, according to Russia’s main independent pollster, look like
George W. Bush’s after 9/11. His inner circle has always been unlikely to break
with him, for reasons sketched by Anatol Lieven in The Financial Times a few
weeks ago: Its members mostly come from the same background, share the same
geopolitical assumptions, and are far more likely “to fight on ruthlessly for a
long time” than to suddenly turn against their leader. But even in the wider
circle of Russian elites, the war so far has reportedly generated more
anti-Western solidarity than division.
“Putin’s
dream of a consolidation among the Russian elite has come true,” the journalist
Farida Rustamova reported from her recent conversations. “These people
understand that their lives are now tied only to Russia, and that that’s where
they’ll need to build them.”
It is, of
course, reasonable to question both anecdote and data from a system that
punishes dissent. But these kind of patterns should not be surprising. Yes,
failed wars sometimes bring down authoritarian regimes — like the Argentine
junta after its misadventure in the Falkland Islands. But externally imposed
sanctions, economic warfare, often end up strengthening the internal power of
the targeted regime. In the short run, they supply an external scapegoat, an
obvious enemy to blame for hardship instead of your own leaders. In the long
run, the academic literature suggests, they may make states more repressive,
less likely to democratize.
Just
consider the list of bad-actor countries that the United States has used
sanctions against for long periods of time. From Cuba to North Korea, Iran to
Venezuela — not to mention Iraq before our 2003 invasion — the pattern is predictable:
The people suffer, the regime endures.
It should
be our assumption — not a certainty, but a guiding premise — that the same will
be true of a sanctioned and isolated Russia. Even if the rally to Putin fades
as the economic pain increases, the forces empowered by Russian suffering will
not be liberal ones. And any leadership change is more likely to resemble
Nicolás Maduro succeeding Hugo Chávez than it is the revolutions of 1989.
This
assumption has two implications. The first is for the war itself: In the near
term, whatever Ukraine regains, it will regain on the battlefield, not through
some deus ex Moscow delivering a friendlier Russian government to the
negotiating table. This does not imply the United States should suddenly
escalate militarily, dancing closer to a nuclear conflict. But it does imply
that sustaining support for the Ukrainian military is our most important
policy, with sanctions playing only a supporting role.
The second
implication is for the long term, once peace in some form is established.
Especially if that peace is a frozen conflict, in which Putin claims victory by
holding onto some Ukrainian territory, there will be pressure to leave the
sanctions in place, to continue the war indefinitely by other means.
There will
be an argument for doing exactly that, but we should be clear on the nature of
the case: Namely, that even absent open war, Russia will remain a generational
enemy to peace in Europe and a generational threat to American interests —
making policies that diminish Russian wealth and power a justified form of
self-defense, both for Europe’s eastern borders and for the wider Pax
Americana.
The
argument will not be that sanctions are likely to deliver the Russian people
from Putin’s rule, or that collective economic punishment is likely to be
somehow worth it for the Russians themselves, come some hypothetical future
revolution.
No, if we
intend to make economic war on Russia for a generation, we should be cleareyed
about the calculus. In the hopes of making a dangerous great power as weak as
possible, we will make it more likely that Putinism rules for decades, and that
Russia remains our deadly enemy for as long as anyone can reasonably foresee.
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Ross
Douthat has been an Opinion columnist for The Times since 2009. He is the
author of several books, most recently, “The Deep Places: A Memoir of Illness
and Discovery.” @DouthatNYT • Facebook
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