Opinion
Guest Essay
The
Terrifying Prospect of Trump’s Peace Plan for Ukraine
April 25,
2025, 5:04 a.m. ET
https://www.nytimes.com/2025/04/25/opinion/trump-ukraine-peace.html
James
Kirchick
By James
Kirchick
Mr. Kirchick
is a contributing Opinion writer and the author of “The End of Europe:
Dictators, Demagogues and the Coming Dark Age.”
Days after
threatening to abandon peace talks between Ukraine and Russia, the Trump
administration last week produced the outlines of a proposal to end the war
between the two countries. The proposal, which is being viewed as President
Trump’s “final offer,” completely blindsided Ukraine and America’s European
allies, and for good reason: It heavily favors the aggressor. Ukraine has
already rejected it.
In addition
to reportedly freezing the current territorial lines, prohibiting Ukraine from
joining NATO, and lifting sanctions on Russia that have been in place since
2014 when it annexed the Crimean Peninsula, the proposal offers Moscow a
diplomatic gift that would set an extremely dangerous precedent: formal
recognition of its control over Crimea.
Acceding to
Russian control of Ukraine would break with an over-eight-decade, bipartisan
tradition of opposing the changing of international borders by force. This
policy was first articulated in 1940, after the Soviet Union annexed the three
Baltic States: Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.
The acting
secretary of state, Sumner Welles, issued a statement that would come to have a
profound impact on American foreign policy and international relations. “The
people of the United States are opposed to predatory activities no matter
whether they are carried on by the use of force or by the threat of force,”
Welles said. “Unless the doctrine in which these principles are inherent once
again governs the relations between nations, the rule of reason, of justice and
of law — in other words, the basis of modern civilization itself — cannot be
preserved.” More than 50 countries followed America’s lead in refusing to
recognize the puppet governments installed by Moscow in the three annexed
countries.
The United
States maintained its nonrecognition policy after allying itself with the
Soviet Union in June 1941. Later that year, President Franklin D. Roosevelt and
Prime Minister Winston Churchill of Britain produced the Atlantic Charter,
envisioning a postwar world order governed along liberal principles like
self-determination, democracy and free trade. The two nations also expressed
their “desire to see no territorial changes that do not accord with the freely
expressed wishes of the peoples concerned.” Over the next 50 years, the United
States stayed true to the letter and the spirit of the Welles Declaration,
acknowledging the exiled governments of the Baltic States as the legal
sovereigns of the territories they did not actually control.
Along those
lines, offering de facto recognition of Russia’s control over Crimea, as the
Trump plan proposes with regard to Ukraine’s eastern regions, would be a
reasonable concession. Russian troops and military matériel are facts on the
ground that cannot be wished away. But the U.S. providing formal recognition of
the Crimean annexation would overturn the policy of every American president
since Roosevelt, including Mr. Trump.
In 2018,
during his first administration, secretary of state Mike Pompeo reiterated the
basic tenet that the United States would not legitimize territorial
aggrandizement by recognizing Crimea as Russian territory. “As we did in the
Welles Declaration in 1940, the United States reaffirms as policy its refusal
to recognize the Kremlin’s claim of sovereignty over territory seized by force
in contravention of international law.” Nothing that has occurred over the past
nearly 7 years justifies a repudiation of this commitment to principle and
tradition.
Alas,
longstanding principles and traditions have never had much influence on Mr.
Trump’s decision making. The most charitable explanation for this impetuous
plan is that it’s a product of his impatience with diplomacy and desire to win
a Nobel Peace Prize. During the 2024 presidential campaign, Mr. Trump
repeatedly said that he would end the war within 24 hours of being inaugurated.
When that didn’t happen, he tasked an envoy, the retired Lt. Gen. Keith
Kellogg, with solving the conflict within 100 days.
The likelier
motive for Mr. Trump’s proposed acquiescence to Russian colonialism is that
it’s a genuine reflection of his worldview, namely, the principle that might
makes right. Mr. Trump either doesn’t know or doesn’t care that this conflict
began 11 years ago when Russia launched an unprovoked invasion of Ukraine. That
this act was gravely immoral, never mind illegal, does not factor into Mr.
Trump’s geopolitical calculus.
Threats to
run for a third term notwithstanding, Mr. Trump is a lame-duck president, which
makes him more prone to take rash actions on the international stage. As his
own threats to take over Canada, Greenland and the Panama Canal suggest, he is
sympathetic to the idea of big countries taking over smaller ones, and he is
behaving far more erratically in the realm of foreign affairs than he did in
his first term. That he might become the first American president to confer
legitimacy on the annexation of another country’s territory is a real, and
terrifying, possibility.
The war in
Ukraine is not, as another British prime minister once said about a European
territorial dispute that quickly escalated into the most destructive conflict
the world has ever seen, just a “quarrel in a faraway country, between people
of whom we know nothing.” Assenting to Russia’s annexation of Crimea would have
global consequences.
Other
dictatorships, having witnessed the world’s leading democracy endorse such a
flagrant violation of the most basic principle governing the relationship among
sovereign states, would feel emboldened to do the same. “Giving Russia de jure
recognition of occupied territories would send the world the signal: Go ahead,
invade a sovereign country, change its borders; it’s all good,” the former
Estonian president Toomas Hendrik Ilves told me. If the United States were to
recognize Crimea as Russia it would join the august company of Afghanistan,
Cuba, Nicaragua, North Korea, Syria and Venezuela.
Those who
support bestowing an imprimatur of legality upon Russia’s annexation of Crimea
contend that, like the territories Russia controls in its other frozen
conflicts, the land Ukraine has lost is never coming back. The same, however,
was said about the Baltic States. For most of the Cold War, the prospect of
Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania regaining their independence seemed remote, if
not fantastic. In 1975, The Times reported that, while American officials
doubted that “formal recognition” of the Soviet occupations would “come soon,”
they believed it was “inevitable.”
Yet the
United States and its allies persisted in refusing to accept the subjugation of
the Baltic States, and when the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, they were
liberated. Today, they are members of the European Union and NATO with
consolidated democracies, market economies and increasingly confident places on
the world stage.
After 11
years of grinding conflict, it’s entirely understandable that Mr. Trump wants
to end this war. But he must not mistake a temporary cessation of hostilities —
which is all that his proposal would achieve — with a just and lasting peace.
Unless Ukraine is provided with an explicit security guarantee (which in all
likelihood means NATO membership), Russia will just bide its time until the
moment is opportune for it to invade again.
Whether Mr.
Trump is in or out of office when this happens, it will destroy his legacy.
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