OPINION
THOMAS L.
FRIEDMAN
In the War Over Ukraine, Expect the Unexpected
March 15,
2022
Thomas L.
Friedman
By Thomas
L. Friedman
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/15/opinion/russia-ukraine-putin-war.html
Every war
brings surprises, but what is most striking about Vladimir Putin’s war against
Ukraine — and indirectly against the whole democratic West — is how many of the
bad surprises, so far, have been for Putin and how many of the good surprises
have been for Ukraine and its allies around the world.
How so?
Well, I am pretty sure that when Putin was plotting this war, he was assuming
that by three weeks into it he’d be giving a victory speech at the Ukrainian
Parliament, welcoming it back into the bosom of Mother Russia. He probably also
assumed that Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky would be in exile in a
Polish Airbnb, Russian troops would still be removing all the flowers from
their tanks thrown by welcoming Ukrainians, and Putin and China’s President Xi
Jinping would be high-fiving each other for having shown NATO and Sleepy Joe
who’s going to set the rules of the international system going forward.
Instead,
Ukrainians have given Russians a tutorial on fighting and dying for freedom and
self-determination. Putin appears locked into his own germ-free isolation
chamber, probably worrying that any Russian military officer who comes near may
pull a gun on him. Zelensky will be addressing the U.S. Congress virtually.
And, rather than globalization being over, individuals all over the world are
using global networks to monitor and influence the war in totally unexpected
ways. With a few clicks they’re sending money to support Ukrainians and with a
few more keystrokes telling everyone from McDonald’s to Goldman Sachs that they
must withdraw from Russia until Russian soldiers withdraw from Ukraine.
Here’s
another surprise few saw coming — especially China and Russia. China relied on
its own vaccines to fight Covid-19, along with a policy of zero tolerance and
immediate quarantine to prevent spread of the coronavirus. Alas, the Chinese
vaccines seem to be less effective than other Covid vaccines. And because
China’s quarantine strategy has left it with little immunity from prior
infections, the virus is now spreading like wildfire there. As The Times
reported Tuesday: “Tens of millions of residents in Chinese provinces and
cities including Beijing, Shanghai and Shenzhen are under lockdown amid an
outbreak of the Omicron variant of the coronavirus. Travel has been cut off
between cities, production lines have stopped and malls have been closed.”
What is
that doing? It’s killing demand for, and tanking the price of, crude oil —
which, after approaching $130 a barrel because of the war in Ukraine, fell
below $100 on Tuesday. And what country desperately needs high oil prices
because it has so little else to sell to the world to fund its war? Putin’s
Russia. So, China’s Covid strategy is hampering Putin’s oil price strategy —
probably hurting him as much as anything the U.S. is doing. We’re all still a
lot more connected than we might think.
Now that
we’ve passed the opening phase of this war, the surprises just keep on coming.
For me, the three biggest are the extraordinary acts of cruelty, courage and
kindness that this war is revealing and inspiring.
I never had
any illusions that once Putin launched this war, he’d stop short of doing
anything to make sure that he could claim to be the “winner.” Nevertheless, it
is stunning to watch how quickly he has tied himself into knots. In the space
of three weeks, Putin has gone from saying that he came to liberate Ukraine
from its “Nazi” leadership and bring Kyiv back to its natural home with Russia
to crushing its cities and indiscriminately shelling its civilians to break
their resistance to his will.
How does a
leader go from one day saying Ukraine and its people are integral parts of the
soul and fabric of Russia — with shared languages, culture and religion — to,
when rebuffed, immediately pivoting toward turning the place to rubble —
without any explanation to Ukrainians, the world or his own people?
It’s the
kind of vicious madness that you see from a spurned lover or in an “honor
killing.” And it’s shocking and petrifying to see it manifested by the leader
of a superpower with some 6,000 nuclear warheads. There is something about this
guy that portends more ominous surprises.
I am always
amazed by the courage that seemingly average people manifest in war — in this
case, not only by Ukrainians, but also by Russians who refuse to buy Putin’s
lies, knowing that he is turning them into a pariah nation. So I marvel at the
breathtaking courage demonstrated on Monday evening by Marina Ovsyannikova, an
employee at Russia’s Channel 1, a state-run television channel, who burst into
a live broadcast of Russia’s most-watched news show, yelling, “Stop the war!”
and holding up a sign behind the anchorwoman saying, “They’re lying to you
here.” She was interrogated and, for the moment, released — probably because
Putin feared making her into a martyr.
Marina
Ovsyannikova — remember her name. She dared to tell the czar that he had no
clothes. What courage.
And
finally, wars also reveal extraordinary acts of kindness. In this war, some
came spontaneously and by leveraging a platform in ways that no one expected —
the room-sharing site Airbnb. Executives at Airbnb say they basically woke up
in early March to discover that members of their community were spontaneously
using their platform in a novel new way — transforming its booking technology
into a homemade, people-to-people, foreign aid system.
In about
the last two weeks, according to the company, people from 165 countries have
booked more than 430,000 nights at Ukrainian homes on Airbnb with no intention
of using the rooms — but simply in order to donate money to these Ukrainian
hosts, most of whom they had never even heard of. Airbnb has temporarily waived
all guest and host fees for bookings in Ukraine, so those reservations
translated into $17 million going directly to the hosts. Guests from the U.S.,
Britain and Canada are the biggest bookers. Australia, Germany and several
other European countries round out the top 10.
In
addition, as of Sunday, about 36,000 people from 160 countries signed up
through Airbnb’s nonprofit affiliate, Airbnb.org, to welcome refugees fleeing
Ukraine to their homes.
There is no
way that America’s giant Agency for International Development, USAID, could
have such an impact so fast.
Many of the
Ukrainian hosts who have received these booking-donations have written back to
the donors, forging new friendships and enabling foreigners to understand the
impact of this war much more deeply. There is nothing like personally
communicating with people in Ukraine who are hiding in their basement, while
you are explaining why you are happy to rent that basement but never use it. It
creates a community of kindness that alone cannot defeat Putin’s tanks, but it
can help buttress those determined to resist them by reminding them that they
are not alone — Putin is.
I do not
find any of this surprising. I have always argued that globalization is not
just about trade. It is about the ability for countries, companies and now,
increasingly, individuals to connect and act globally. Human beings are
hard-wired to want to connect, and the hard-wiring of today’s world is making
it easier and cheaper for them to do so every day.
All that
said, what makes the pleasant surprises in this war so surprising is that they
were surprises to the people who were responsible for them. Just one caution,
though. There will be more surprises — and they won’t all be pleasant.
Thomas L.
Friedman is the foreign affairs Op-Ed columnist. He joined the paper in 1981,
and has won three Pulitzer Prizes. He is the author of seven books, including
“From Beirut to Jerusalem,” which won the National Book Award. @tomfriedman
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