OPINION
THOMAS L.
FRIEDMAN
Putin Has No Good Way Out, and That Really Scares
Me
March 8,
2022
Thomas L.
Friedman
By Thomas
L. Friedman
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/03/08/opinion/putin-ukraine-russia-war.html
If you’re
hoping that the instability that Vladimir Putin’s war on Ukraine has wreaked on
global markets and geopolitics has peaked, your hope is in vain. We haven’t
seen anything yet. Wait until Putin fully grasps that his only choices left in
Ukraine are how to lose — early and small and a little humiliated or late and
big and deeply humiliated.
I can’t
even wrap my mind around what kind of financial and political shocks will
radiate from Russia — this country that is the world’s third-largest oil producer
and possesses some 6,000 nuclear warheads — when it loses a war of choice that
was spearheaded by one man, who can never afford to admit defeat.
Why not?
Because Putin surely knows that “the Russian national tradition is unforgiving
of military setbacks,” observed Leon Aron, a Russia expert at the American
Enterprise Institute, who is writing a book about Putin’s road to Ukraine.
“Virtually
every major defeat has resulted in radical change,” added Aron, writing in The
Washington Post. “The Crimean War (1853-1856) precipitated Emperor Alexander
II’s liberal revolution from above. The Russo-Japanese War (1904-1905) brought
about the First Russian Revolution. The catastrophe of World War I resulted in
Emperor Nicholas II’s abdication and the Bolshevik Revolution. And the war in
Afghanistan became a key factor in Soviet leader Mikhail Gorbachev’s reforms.”
Also, retreating from Cuba contributed significantly to Nikita Khrushchev’s
removal two years later.
In the
coming weeks it will become more and more obvious that our biggest problem with
Putin in Ukraine is that he will refuse to lose early and small, and the only
other outcome is that he will lose big and late. But because this is solely his
war and he cannot admit defeat, he could keep doubling down in Ukraine until …
until he contemplates using a nuclear weapon.
Why do I
say that defeat in Ukraine is Putin’s only option, that only the timing and
size is in question? Because the easy, low-cost invasion he envisioned and the
welcome party from Ukrainians he imagined were total fantasies — and everything
flows from that.
Putin
completely underestimated Ukraine’s will to be independent and become part of
the West. He completely underestimated the will of many Ukrainians to fight,
even if it meant dying, for those two goals. He completely overestimated his
own armed forces. He completely underestimated President Biden’s ability to
galvanize a global economic and military coalition to enable Ukrainians to
stand and fight and to devastate Russia at home — the most effective U.S.
coalition-building effort since George H.W. Bush made Saddam Hussein pay for
his folly of seizing Kuwait. And he completely underestimated the ability of
companies and individuals all over the world to participate in, and amplify,
economic sanctions on Russia — far beyond anything governments initiated or
mandated.
When you
get that many things wrong as a leader, your best option is to lose early and
small. In Putin’s case that would mean withdrawing his forces from Ukraine
immediately; offering a face-saving lie to justify his “special military
operation,” like claiming it successfully protected Russians living in Ukraine;
and promising to help Russians’ brethren rebuild. But the inescapable
humiliation would surely be intolerable for this man obsessed with restoring
the dignity and unity of what he sees as the Russian motherland.
Incidentally,
the way things are going on the ground in Ukraine right now, it is not out of
the realm of possibility that Putin could actually lose early and big. I would
not bet on it, but with every passing day that more and more Russian soldiers
are killed in Ukraine, who knows what happens to the fighting spirit of the
conscripts in the Russian Army being asked to fight a deadly urban war against
fellow Slavs for a cause that was never really explained to them.
Given the
resistance of Ukrainians everywhere to the Russian occupation, for Putin to
“win” militarily on the ground his army will need to subdue every major city in
Ukraine. That includes the capital, Kyiv — after probably weeks of urban
warfare and massive civilian casualties. In short, it can be done only by Putin
and his generals perpetrating war crimes not seen in Europe since Hitler. It
will make Putin’s Russia a permanent international pariah.
Moreover,
how would Putin maintain control of another country — Ukraine — that has
roughly one-third the population of Russia, with many residents hostile to
Moscow? He would probably need to maintain every one of the 150,000-plus
soldiers he has deployed there — if not more — forever.
There is
simply no pathway that I see for Putin to win in Ukraine in any sustainable way
because it simply is not the country he thought it was — a country just waiting
for a quick decapitation of its “Nazi” leadership so that it could gently fall
back into the bosom of Mother Russia.
So either
he cuts his losses now and eats crow — and hopefully for him escapes enough
sanctions to revive the Russian economy and hold onto power — or faces a
forever war against Ukraine and much of the world, which will slowly sap
Russia’s strength and collapse its infrastructure.
As he seems
hellbent on the latter, I am terrified. Because there is only one thing worse
than a strong Russia under Putin — and that’s a weak, humiliated, disorderly
Russia that could fracture or be in a prolonged internal leadership turmoil,
with different factions wrestling for power and with all of those nuclear
warheads, cybercriminals and oil and gas wells lying around.
Putin’s
Russia is not too big to fail. It is, however, too big to fail in a way that
won’t shake the whole rest of the world.
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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