By David
Ignatius, Published: March 3
The Washington Post
Napoleon is
said to have cautioned during an 1805 battle: “When the enemy is making a false
movement we must take good care not to interrupt him.” The citation is also
sometimes rendered as “Never interrupt your enemy when he is making a mistake.”
Whatever the precise wording, the admonition is a useful starting point for
thinking about the Ukraine
situation.
Vladimir
Putin has made a mistake invading Crimea, escalating a crisis for Russia that has
been brewing for many months. It might have been beneficial if President Obama
could have dissuaded him from this error. But Putin’s move into Crimea appeared
to spring from a deeper misjudgment about the reversibility of the process that
led to the breakup of Soviet Union in 1991.
The further Russia
wades into this revanchist strategy, the worse its troubles will become.
The Russian
leader’s nostalgia for the past was on display at the Sochi Olympics. As David
Remnick wrote last week in the New Yorker, Putin regards the fall of the Soviet
Union as a “tragic error,” and the Olympics celebrated his vision that a strong
Russia
is back. That attitude led Putin to what Secretary of State John Kerry described
on Sunday as a “brazen act of aggression” and a “violation of international
obligations.”
Kerry
called on Putin to “undo this act of invasion.” The Russian leader would save
himself immense grief by following Kerry’s advice, but that seems unlikely. His
mistake in Sevastopol
may lead to others elsewhere, though hopefully Putin will avoid reckless
actions. But the more Putin seeks to assert Russia ’s strength, he will actually
underline its weakness.
Perhaps
inevitably, given Washington ’s political
monomania, the big subject over the weekend wasn’t Putin’s criminal attack on Crimea but whether Obama had encouraged it by being
insufficiently muscular. There are many valid criticisms to be made of Obama’s
foreign policy, especially in Syria ,
but the notion that Putin’s attack is somehow the United States ’ fault is perverse.
For two
months the Obama administration has been prodding the European Union to take
the Ukraine
crisis more seriously. I’m told that U.S.
reporting showed that Putin was impatient with Ukraine ’s
pro-Russian president, Viktor Yanukovych, and wanted him to crack down even
harder on the protesters in Kiev ’s
Maidan Square .
Putin’s distaste for Yanukovych has been obvious since he fled the capital a
week ago.
What Putin
misunderstands most is that the center of gravity for the former Soviet Union has shifted west. Former Soviet satellites
such as Poland and the Czech Republic
are prosperous members of the E.U. The nations that made up what was once Yugoslavia have
survived their bloody breakup, and most have emerged as strong democracies. Ukraine was set to join this movement toward the
European Union last November when Yanukovych suddenly suspended trade and
financial talks with the E.U. and accepted what amounted to a $15 billion bribe
from Putin to stay in Russia ’s
camp. To the tens of thousands of courageous Ukrainians who braved the cold and
police brutality to protest, Yanukovych’s submission to Moscow looked like an attempt to reverse
history.
The
opportunity for Putin is almost precisely opposite his atavistic vision of
restoration. It is only by moving west, toward Europe, that Russia itself
can reverse its demographic and political trap. Year by year, the Russian
political system becomes more of a corrupt Oriental despotism — with Moscow closer to Almaty than Berlin . The alternative is for Ukraine to pull Russia with it toward the West.
As former
national security adviser Zbigniew Brzezinski explained in a 2008 book, “If
Ukraine moves to the West, first to the EU and eventually to NATO, the
probability that Russia will
move toward Europe is far greater. . . .
Russians will eventually say, ‘Our future will be safest, our control over the
Far East territories most assured . . . if there is a kind of Atlantic
community that stretches from Lisbon to Vladivostok.’ ”
Putin’s Russia may well make more mistakes: We may see a
cascading chain of error that brings Russian troops deeper into Ukraine and
sets the stage for civil war. Those are the kind of miscalculations that lead
to catastrophic consequences, and Obama would be wise to seek to deter Russian
aggression without specifying too clearly what the U.S. ladder of escalation might be.
But
Americans and Europeans should agree that this is a story about Putin’s
violation of the international order. I’d be happy if we could interrupt Russia ’s
mistakes, but so far Putin insists on doing the wrong thing.
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