New discord between Ukraine and US plays right into Putin's hands
(CNN)New signs of a fracture between the US and Ukraine over the imminence of a possible Russian invasion could seriously undermine President Joe Biden's muscular front against Vladimir Putin in their escalating standoff.
Frustration
in Kyiv has mounted in recent days over escalating US rhetoric on the
crisis, even as Moscow pours more troops into positions near the
Ukrainian border. Washington and its allies have been waging an
unusually open and vocal public relations warfare campaign -- an
approach that primarily appears rooted in genuine fears of a major
conflagration in Ukraine.
But
there are clear signs that the strategy is also designed to pile
pressure on Putin and to sharpen his strategic dilemma while compelling
US allies in Europe into taking tougher stands. It may offer political
cover to Biden by showing that he was not caught off guard if Russia
does invade. The strategy also shields a President, who is wobbling at
home, from attacks by Republican hawks keen to portray him as a weak
appeaser ahead of midterm elections.
Yet
it also threatens to cause a clash between the wider interests of Biden
and those of Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, who is trying to
maintain calm at home even as he tries to enlist international arms and
support for his country's defense.
A telephone call that 'did not go well'
A
call between Zelensky and Biden on Thursday should have been used to
get on the same page. But the Ukrainians made it known ahead of time
they would ask the US President to tone down his rhetoric. After the
leaders spoke, a senior Ukrainian official told CNN's Matthew Chance in
Kyiv that the call "did not go well" and that Zelensky had asked his US
counterpart to "calm down the messaging" while arguing the Russian
threat was still ambiguous.
According
to the Ukrainian official, Biden warned an invasion was now virtually
certain once the ground freezes in February, making it more passable for
military vehicles. National Security Council spokesperson Emily Horne
disputed the account of the call and said "anonymous sources are
'leaking' falsehoods." She noted that Biden had warned that a February
invasion was a possibility, a position she said he had adopted for
months.
Zelensky's
spokesman also disputed the Ukrainian official's characterization of
the call. The Ukrainian President himself tweeted that he and Biden had a
long call and "discussed recent diplomatic efforts on de-escalation and
agreed on joint actions for the future."
Whatever
the specifics of the private conversation, it is no secret that the US
and Ukraine have been publicly at odds over the scale of the threat. The
government in Kyiv was, for instance, taken by surprise earlier this
week when the State Department said it would reduce staff levels at the US embassy, beginning with the departure of nonessential staff and families of diplomats.
The
disconnect is notable between two friendly governments and reflects the
extreme high stakes of the moment. It's also an odd public drama since a
nation under apparently imminent threat of an invasion has a lower
assessment of its own vulnerability than the United States, which has
marshaled an international effort in its defense. Most damagingly, signs
of a public disagreement between Biden and Zelensky would play directly
into Russian hands. Moscow has already highlighted Ukraine's more
temperate position to argue that Washington is exploiting the country to
escalate against Russia. In fact, the opposite is the case, with Putin holding Ukraine hostage in a bid to wring concessions from Biden that would change post-Cold War Europe.
Suggestions
that the US and Ukraine are on a different page on the likelihood of a
Russian attack might also cause political problems for Biden back home
-- from critics on the radical wings of both political parties who have
criticized his hawkish approach. After all, why should the United States
be more worried about the security of a country in Russia's backyard
than its own leader is?
Information warfare
As
Russia has built up its massive force around Ukraine, the United States
has responded by deploying information warfare against a proven master
of the genre -- Putin. Biden and his aides have not pleaded with the
Russian leader not to invade. They have instead said repeatedly that
they think he will do so and used the word "imminent."
The Pentagon said Thursday that Russia had poured more troops in to the region in the previous 24 hours.
Last week, Britain released intelligence that it said showed Putin was
trying to replace the Kyiv government with a puppet regime, bolstering
US warnings that Ukraine is in immediate danger. In another development
on Thursday, the Center for Strategic and International Studies think
tank released open source satellite imagery and analysis
on the Russian build-up. This kind of information offensive from
Washington is not the typical approach to a standoff with a foreign
power. So it's raised questions about the administration's intentions.
The
first explanation is that the US actually believes what it is saying --
that Russian tanks could soon start rolling in one of the most serious
threats to an independent nation in greater Europe since World War II.
While direct clashes between US and Russian forces are unlikely, there
would be global implications from such a conflict. The principle would
be established that powerful autocracies could swallow smaller
democracies. Reverberations between the US and Russia, possibly
including cyber exchanges, could follow. All of that would explain why
the administration is working so hard to put the world on notice.
Democratic Sen. Jeanne Shaheen of New Hampshire co-led a bipartisan delegation to Kyiv last week. She told CNN on Thursday: "I believe the threat is very real and could happen at any time based on the information that I've seen."
Pressure on Putin
Washington
may also be driven by a desire to deprive the Russian leader of any
element of surprise for his mobilization. If Moscow does invade, or
bites off another chunk of Ukrainian territory to add to its 2014
annexation of Crimea, the administration's urgency will have been
vindicated. If Putin eventually backs down, Biden can argue that his
strong stand worked, and the Russian leader may look diminished in the
eyes of the world. But the strategy also risks putting the Russian
leader into a corner and could force him to act to save his strongman
image.
While
praising Biden for refusing to accept Russian concessions, Thomas
DiNanno, a former senior State Department arms control official in the
Trump administration, said it might be wise to cool the language.
"I
would encourage the administration to return to the notion of strategic
ambiguity, you know, don't tip your hand. And I think maybe they've
done that a little bit too aggressively," DiNanno, now with the Hudson
Institute, said on CNN "Newsroom" on Thursday.
One
reason why Biden and Zelensky's messages are clashing is that they are
addressing different audiences. Biden is speaking to Russia, Europe and
the American people. Zelensky is trying to guard against panic at home.
He responded to previous warnings by the US that an invasion could be
imminent by telling his people to take a deep breath and to stay calm.
Yet his aides may have seriously erred in their readout of the Biden
call. The US President has stuck his neck out to support Ukraine.
Embarrassing him is no kind of payback and Zelensky risks his own
stature in Washington.
More importantly, Russia will take advantage of such splits.
"I
am a little bit worried that disclosing a lot of this in the public is
not going to help anything, it will help just Mr. Putin," John Tefft, a
former US ambassador to Moscow, said on CNN's "Erin Burnett OutFront" on
Thursday.
Upping the heat on Europe
Robust
American rhetoric on the crisis also appears to have another purpose --
convincing America's less hawkish European allies that their own
security is at risk.
To
begin with, the US approach only exposed transatlantic differences.
Biden was criticized last week by Republicans for suggesting that allies
might not back a full implementation of sanctions in the event of a
"minor incursion" by Russia into Ukraine. But he was telling the truth.
In another sign of discord, French President Emmanuel Macron called for a
European Union channel to Moscow. The head of Germany's Navy had to resign after remarks sympathetic to Putin.
But Biden's strong line now appears to be working. EU Commission President Ursula von der Leyen
told CNN's Christiane Amanpour Thursday that "nothing was off the
table" including killing the Nord Stream 2 pipeline project designed to
bring Russian gas to Europe and the removal of Russia from the SWIFT
financial transfers system. And Germany's new foreign minister, Annalena
Baerbock, said Berlin was working on strong sanctions should Russia
invade Ukraine -- including on Nord Stream, a shift in a previous German
position. Biden announced on Thursday that new German Chancellor Olaf
Scholz will visit him at the White House next month in a further sign of
a converging position.
Still,
the US diplomatic effort also reflects Putin's underlying advantage. He
knows his own mind and few others do. The question will soon start to
be asked how long the United States can continue to warn that an
invasion that doesn't come is "imminent." Prolonging the alert might
eventually open up new divides between the US and Ukraine and Washington
and its European allies.
And Putin may spot an opening.
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