The
west’s reckless escalation of the war in Ukraine will cause more suffering, for
no strategic gain
Simon
Jenkins
Putin is an
isolated dictator, devoid of scruple. Firing missiles into Russia will only
lead to more hardship for the people of Ukraine
Thu 21 Nov
2024 15.34 GMT
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2024/nov/21/ukraine-war-west-missiles-russia-putin
This is how
big wars start, when small ones go wrong. Nato politicians are deliberately
playing with fire along the Ukrainian frontier, as UK-made missiles have been
launched into Russia for the first time since the beginning of the conflict.
The attack came a day after Kyiv used US-supplied long-range weapons to strike
within Russia. Every military comment on British and US authorisation of
missile attacks on Russia has said the same. They are “too little, too late”,
and unlikely to affect a war that has increasingly turned to Russia’s
advantage.
So why are
the attacks happening? The answer of Britain’s defence secretary, John Healey,
is that he wants to “continue doubling down” on Britain’s support for Ukraine
and give a morale boost to its president, Volodymyr Zelenskyy, before Donald
Trump takes power in Washington. He clearly thinks the obvious risk involved in
the escalation is worthwhile.
The west had
been scrupulously careful in treating aid to Ukraine as strictly for its
defence. Putin reacted by warning the west that any escalation in that aid to
an attack on Russia by a nuclear-armed power would justify a Russian nuclear
response. Then, this week, he approved changes to Russia’s nuclear doctrine to
declare that an attack from a non-nuclear state, if backed by a nuclear power,
would be treated as a joint assault on Russia. Putin regards Ukraine – its army
overwhelmingly sustained by Nato – as just such a state. He also officially
redefined “attack on Russia” to cover any attack on Russian territory or that
of its ally, Belarus, that posed a “critical threat” to their sovereignty or
“territorial integrity”. He is clearly feeling paranoid, as has long been the
custom of Russia’s rulers towards incursions on to their soil.
Nato had
refused to call Putin’s bluff. Attacks on Crimea and Ukraine’s reckless
invasion of Russia’s Kursk region were considered exceptions. Otherwise, the
west had agreed that powerful rockets fired deep inside Russia were a step too
far. Besides, Moscow has had ample time to move its supplies to new quarters.
All that
this escalation seems certain to provoke is a savage Moscow retaliation against
Ukrainian targets, notably energy and other utilities over the course of the
winter. There may well be a wild response against “hybrid” electronic targets
in the west, such as cyber-attacks on western infrastructure and utilities. It
might be appropriate to ask how long the people of Ukraine are to be expected
to satisfy the craving for a proxy “victory against Russia” of a succession of
western leaders.
All western
moves against Russia over the past two years – including the toughest ever
economic and political sanctions – have served merely to entrench Moscow’s
aggression. They have isolated Putin from the diplomatic pressures that
customarily bring these disputes to a settlement, as with the Cuban missile
crisis and the Vietnam war. They have encouraged him to savage his internal
critics and draw sympathy and material support from China, India, Iran and
North Korea. At a huge cost to the global economy, western sanctions have
secured a new eastern trading bloc to aid Putin. Was all this not forecast by
the massed ranks of thinktank Kremlinologists, or is British and US foreign
policy brain dead?
Putin’s
criterion for a nuclear response is impossible to imagine. The deployment of
battlefield nuclear weapons is at least possible, though what tactical
advantage it might yield is awful to envisage. He is an isolated dictator
devoid of scruple and subject to unpredictable moods. There is also concern
among western agencies at his state of mind. There can be no conceivable
argument for escalating his paranoia just now, for no strategic gain.
Putin has
failed in his bid to eradicate the democratic regime in Kyiv. He has succeeded,
as in the Caucasus, in establishing a buffer statelet on his border. It must be
the moment for compromise in the cause of peace. At present there is no
evidence of any individual or institution capable of opening up such an
opportunity, not the UN or Nato or any other international body.
If any
lesson can be drawn from 80 years of east-west confrontation, it is that
western guardians of freedom, democracy and peace have a special duty to behave
responsibly in a crisis. Belligerence, machismo, risk-taking and bluff-calling
are qualities that may go down well with military lobbies and tabloid media. We
cannot risk them, given the current occupant of the Kremlin. Yet they are
exactly what Britain’s government seems eager to do.
Simon
Jenkins is a Guardian columnist
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