OPINION
ROSS
DOUTHAT
We Can’t Be Ukraine Hawks Forever
June 4,
2022
Ross
Douthat
By Ross
Douthat
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/06/04/opinion/ukraine-russia-putin-war.html
Sure, it
works in practice, but does it work in theory? Over the years I’ve heard this
parody of academic pomposity put in the lips of various targets, from French
intellectuals to University of Chicago economists. Lately, though, I’ve begun
thinking it myself — about the hawkish side in the debate over the Ukraine War,
whose practical policies have so far achieved favorable results but whose
deeper theories of the conflict still seem implausible, unworkable or
dangerous.
I was not a
Ukraine hawk before the war came. I felt the United States had overextended
itself with its half-open door to NATO membership, and that eastern Ukraine, at
least, wasn’t defensible against Russian aggression without a full-scale
American military commitment. Sending arms to Kyiv probably made sense, but as
a means of eventually bogging down a Russian incursion, not stopping it
outright. And a Ukrainian collapse, of the kind we saw from our client
government in Afghanistan, seemed within the realm of possibility.
The war
itself has defied those expectations. The hawks were proven right about
Ukraine’s simple capacity to fight. They were proven right that American arms
could actually help blunt a Russian invasion, not just create an insurgency
behind its lines. And their psychological read on Vladimir Putin has been
partially vindicated as well: His choices suggest a man motivated as much by
imperial restoration as by anti-NATO defensiveness, and his conduct of the war
offers little evidence that there is a stable, permanent peace available even
with Ukrainian concessions.
So in the
realm of practical policy to date, I have joined the hawks. Our military
support for Ukraine has worked: We have safeguarded a sovereign nation and
weakened a rival without dangerous escalation from the Russian side. And for
now, with Russia continuing to mount offensives while mostly avoiding the
bargaining table, there isn’t any obvious “off-ramp” to peace that we ought to
force Kyiv to take.
Yet when I
read the broader theories of hawkish commentators, their ideas about America’s
strategic vision and what kind of endgame we should be seeking in the war, I
still find myself baffled by their confidence and absolutism.
For
instance, for all their defensive successes, we have not yet established that
Ukraine’s military can regain significant amounts of territory in the country’s
south and east. Yet we have Anne Applebaum of The Atlantic insisting that only
Putin’s defeat and indeed “humiliation” can restore European stability, while
elsewhere in the same magazine Casey Michel calls for dismantling the Russian
Federation, framed as the “decolonization” of Russia’s remaining empire, as the
only policy for lasting peace.
Or again,
the United States has currently committed an extraordinary sum to back Ukraine
— far more than we spent in foreign aid to Afghanistan in any recent year, for
instance — and our support roughly trebles the support offered by the European
Union. Yet when this newspaper’s editorial board raised questions about the
sustainability of such support, the response from many Ukraine hawks was a
furious how dare you — with an emphasis, to quote Benjamin Wittes of the
Brookings Institution, on Ukraine’s absolute right to fight “until every inch
of their territory is free”; America’s strictly “modest” and “advisory” role in
Ukrainian decision-making; and the importance of offering Kyiv, if not a blank
check, at least a “very very big check with more checks to follow.”
These
theories all seem to confuse what is desirable with what is likely, and what is
morally ideal with what is strategically achievable. I have written previously
about the risks of nuclear escalation in the event of a Russian military
collapse, risks that hawkish theories understate. But given the state of the
war right now, the more likely near-future scenario is one where Russian
collapse remains a pleasant fancy, the conflict becomes stalemated and frozen,
and we have to put our Ukrainian policy on a sustainable footing without
removing Putin’s regime or dismantling the Russian empire.
In that
scenario, our plan cannot be to keep writing countless checks while tiptoeing
modestly around the Ukrainians and letting them dictate the ends to which our
guns and weaponry are used. The United States is an embattled global hegemon
facing threats more significant than Russia. We are also an internally divided
country led by an unpopular president whose majorities may be poised for
political collapse. So if Kyiv and Moscow are headed for a multiyear or even
multi-decade frozen conflict, we will need to push Ukraine toward its most
realistic rather than its most ambitious military strategy. And just as
urgently, we will need to shift some of the burden of supporting Kyiv from our
own budget to our European allies.
Those goals
are compatible with what we’ve done to date, and they can obviously be adapted
if better opportunities suddenly arise. But a good strategic theory needs to
assume difficulty, challenge, limits. The danger now is that the practical
achievements of our hawkish policy encourages the opposite kind of theorizing,
a hubris that squanders our still-provisional success.
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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