OPINION
THOMAS L.
FRIEDMAN
Putin Is Trying to Outcrazy the West
Sept. 30,
2022
Thomas L.
Friedman
By Thomas
L. Friedman
Opinion
Columnist
https://www.nytimes.com/2022/09/30/opinion/putin-russia-ukraine.html
With his
annexation of parts of Ukraine on Friday, Vladimir Putin has set in motion
forces that are turning Russia into a giant North Korea. It will be a paranoid,
angry, isolated state, but unlike North Korea, the Russian version will be
spread over 11 time zones — from the Arctic Sea to the Black Sea and from the
edge of free Europe to the edge of Alaska — with thousands of nuclear warheads.
I have
known a Russia that was strong, menacing, but stable — called the Soviet Union.
I have known a Russia that was hopeful, potentially transitioning to democracy
under Mikhail Gorbachev, Boris Yeltsin and even the younger Putin. I have known
a Russia that was a “bad boy” under an older Putin, hacking America, poisoning
opposition figures, but still a stable, reliable oil exporter and occasional
security partner with the U.S. when we needed Moscow’s help in a pinch.
But none of
us have ever known the Russia that a now desperate, back-against-the-wall Putin
seems hellbent on delivering — a pariah Russia; a big, humiliated Russia; a
Russia that has sent many of its most talented engineers, programmers and
scientists fleeing through any exit they can find. This would be a Russia that
has already lost so many trading partners that it can survive only as an oil
and natural gas colony of China, a Russia that is a failed state, spewing out
instability from every pore.
Such a
Russia would not be just a geopolitical threat. It would be a human tragedy of
mammoth proportions. Putin’s North Koreanization of Russia is turning a country
that once gave the world some of its most renowned authors, composers,
musicians and scientists into a nation more adept at making potato chips than
microchips, more famous for its poisoned underwear than its haute couture and
more focused on unlocking its underground reservoirs of gas and oil than on its
aboveground reservoirs of human genius and creativity. The whole world is
diminished by Putin’s diminishing of Russia.
But with
Friday’s annexation, it’s hard to see any other outcome as long as Putin is in
power. Why? Game theorist Thomas Schelling famously suggested that if you are
playing chicken with another driver, the best way to win — the best way to get
the other driver to swerve out of the way first — is if before the game starts
you very conspicuously unscrew your steering wheel and throw it out the window.
Message to the other driver: I’d love to get out of the way, but I can’t
control my car anymore. You better swerve!
Trying to
always outcrazy your opponent is a North Korean specialty. Now, Putin has
adopted it, announcing with great fanfare that Russia is annexing four
Ukrainian regions: Luhansk and Donetsk, the two Russian-backed regions where
pro-Putin forces have been fighting Kyiv since 2014, and Kherson and
Zaporizhzhia, which have been occupied since shortly after Putin’s invasion in
February. In a grand hall of the Kremlin, Putin declared Friday that the
residents of these four regions would become Russia’s citizens forever.
What is
Putin up to? One can only speculate. Start with his domestic politics. Putin’s
base is not the students at Moscow State University. His base is the right-wing
nationalists, who have grown increasingly angry at Russia’s military
humiliation in Ukraine. To hold their support, Putin may have felt the need to
show that, with his reserve call-up and annexation, he is fighting a real war
for Mother Russia, not just a vague special military operation.
However,
this could also be Putin trying to maneuver a favorable negotiated settlement.
I would not be surprised if he soon announces his willingness for a cease-fire
— and a willingness to repair pipelines and resume gas shipments to any country
ready to recognize Russia’s annexation.
Putin could
then claim to his nationalist base that he got something for his war, even if
it was hugely expensive, and now he’s content to stop. There is just one
problem: Putin does not actually control all the territory he is annexing.
That means
he can’t settle for any deal unless and until he’s driven the Ukrainians out of
all the territory he now claims; otherwise he would be surrendering what he
just made into sovereign Russian territory. This could be a very ominous
development. Putin’s battered army does not seem capable of seizing more
territory and, in fact, seems to be losing more by the day.
By claiming
territory that he doesn’t fully control, I fear Putin is painting himself into
a corner that he might one day feel he can escape only with a nuclear weapon.
In any
event, Putin seems to be daring Kyiv and its Western allies to keep the war
going into winter — when natural gas supplies in Europe will be constrained and
prices could be astronomical — to recover territories, some of which his
Ukrainian proxies have had under Russia’s influence since 2014.
Will Ukraine
and the West swerve? Will they plug their noses and do a dirty deal with Putin
to stop his filthy war? Or will Ukraine and the West take him on, head-on, by
insisting that Putin get no territorial achievement out of this war, so we
uphold the principle of the inadmissibility of seizing territory by force?
Do not be
fooled: There will be pressure within Europe to swerve and accept such a Putin
offer. That is surely Putin’s aim — to divide the Western alliance and walk
away with a face-saving “victory.”
But there
is another short-term risk for Putin. If the West doesn’t swerve, doesn’t opt
for a deal with him, but instead doubles down with more arms and financial aid
for Ukraine, there is a chance that Putin’s army will collapse.
That is
unpredictable. But here is what is totally predictable: A dynamic is now in
place that will push Putin’s Russia even more toward the North Korea model. It
starts with Putin’s decision to cut off most natural gas supplies to Western
Europe.
There is
only one cardinal sin in the energy business: Never, ever, ever make yourself
an unreliable supplier. No one will ever trust you again. Putin has made
himself an unreliable supplier to some of his oldest and best customers,
starting with Germany and much of the European Union. They are all now looking
for alternative, long-term supplies of natural gas and building more renewable
power.
It will
take two to three years for the new pipeline networks coming from the Eastern
Mediterranean and liquefied natural gas coming from the United States and North
Africa to begin to sustainably replace Russian gas at scale. But when that
happens, and when world natural gas supplies increase generally to compensate
for the loss of Russia’s gas — and as more renewables come online — Putin could
face a real economic challenge. His old customers may still buy some energy
from Russia, but they will never rely so totally on Russia again. And China
will squeeze him for deep discounts.
In short,
Putin is eroding the biggest source — maybe his only source — of sustainable
long-term income. At the same time, his illegal annexation of regions of
Ukraine guarantees that the Western sanctions on Russia will stay in place, or
even accelerate, which will only accelerate Russia’s migration to failed-state
status, as more and more Russians with globally marketable skills surely leave.
I celebrate
none of this. This is a time for Western leaders to be both tough and smart.
They need to know when to swerve and when to make the other guy swerve, and
when to leave some dignity out there for the other driver, even if he is
behaving with utter disregard for anyone else. It may be that Putin has left us
no choice but to learn to live with a Russian North Korea — at least as long as
he is in charge. If that is the case, we’ll just have to make the best of it,
but the best of it will be a much more unstable world.
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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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