2022-07-10 update (but not new
thoughts). 2023-10-15: one new item regarding how Biden caused Putin to think he could attack Ukraine with impunity.
We have not (at least not publicly)
supported Ukraine in controlling its airspace or shipping routes nor in being
able to strike points in Russia. Perhaps surreptitiously, we have done
so, which would be a good way to do it.
I don’t think I have to explain
the importance of air space and shipping routes.
If the Ukraine can't hit targets in Russia, the Ukraine can defend itself only by destroying its country and putting its citizens at risk. Furthermore, there is little deterrence for Russia if their sites are safe. And Russian citizens are less likely to understand what is going on if Ukraine can't hit Russian targets.
The Ukrainians are not only defending themselves, they are defending many European countries. We and Europe should help them win the war, rather than hamstringing them with likely increased Ukrainian casualties and compromised territorial integrity at the end.
Here are 10 lessons to learn from Russia’s wanton attack on Ukraine. Unfortunately, we need to learn these lessons over-and-over again, which suggests that our education system, media and politicians need to improve significantly in this regard.
- We believe what we want
to believe; we must get out of our echo chambers.
- “Power
corrupts; absolute power corrupts absolutely.” (Lord Acton, paraphrasing earlier
statements by others.)
- Nuclear
proliferation must be resisted more forcefully.
- To
secure peace, it is important to project strength.
- Short-term
destruction of the coal, oil and gas industries is not a good idea.
- Spending
on guns vs. butter must be balanced.
- CNN
and media attention impact history while reporting it.
- Democracies
must band together to protect each other.
- The
USA is a good country, albeit with flaws that can be addressed.
- Too
little, too late
is insufficient.
1. We believe what we want to believe; we must get out of our echo chambers.
a. This problem seems to be
increasingly widespread and endemic. We
must seek alternate ideas and consider them respectfully.
b. Many Presidents and many
media commentators misread Putin despite ample evidence (Chechnya; Georgia;
Crimea I and II and continual statements about his intent to re-build the
Russian empire). They believed what they wanted to believe then. Now they don’t want to believe/admit they
were wrong, so they claim Putin has changed.
c. Kudos to Madeline Albright
for being an exception, admitting she was wrong to mock Mitt Romney in 2012
when he said “Russia is, without question, our number one geopolitical
foe.” Certainly, you could disagree as to #1, but President Obama, VP
Biden and Secretary of State Albright skewered him for what appeared to me to
be political reasons but may have been due to amazing, serious naïvete.
d. A friend suggested, prior to
the invasion, that an agreement should be reached giving Russia the then-contested
Ukrainian provinces. When I objected that
such an action would whet Putin’s appetite for further aggression, he dismissed
my comment, saying the domino theory had been disproven in Viet Nam. His comment makes no sense but was comfortable
for him because it supported what he wanted to believe. Saying that Viet Nam disproved the “domino
theory” is like saying if a basketball player misses a shot, she will never make
a shot. Furthermore, the Viet Nam domino
theory related to guerilla communist movements; I was talking about the actions
of a bully.
e. The “Speak Your Truth”
movement started admirably, encouraging people to have the courage to speak
up. Alas, it morphed into encouraging
people to tenaciously cling to distorted views, as whatever idea you might come
up with was blessed as your “truth”.
f. Throughout my life, I’ve
heard people say “all human lives have equal value”. But the overwhelming majority clearly don’t
practice what they preach. They are
virtue-signaling, perhaps mostly to themselves.
I’ve asked people if their neighbor’s life is as important as their
family’s life; if the life of someone across town is as important as their
neighbor’s life; if the life of a person living in a far-away USA state is as
important as the life of someone living across town; and if the life of someone
in another country is as important as the life of a USA citizen. Clearly almost everyone puts a higher value
on some lives than others. The Ukraine
situation highlights that inconsistency:
i. Most people consider
Ukrainian lives expendable to keep the rest of us from being exposed to the
risk of WW III.
ii. The lives of Russian soldiers
and the losses their families will grieve rate even less concern.
2. “Power corrupts; absolute power corrupts absolutely.” (Lord Acton, paraphrasing earlier statements by others.)
a. See my earlier blog about the
importance of Separation of Powers.
Sadly, too many of us support centralized power because they think it is
more efficient and/or more fair or because they believe that centralized power
will produce desirable political outcomes.
b. As a young person, I strongly
subscribed to the “more efficient and more fair” perspective, but I’ve learned
that I was naïve in that regard. Benjamin Disraeli said “A man who is not a liberal at 16 has no
heart. A man who is not a conservative
at 60 has no head.” (Anselme
Batbie is the first person documented to have made such an observation; George
Clemenceau is another.) I certainly have
observed that the idealism of my youth, while admirable, did not lead to
conclusions that would most benefit mankind.
c. Term limits is an attempt to reduce this
impact. Although I appreciate the
intent, I have a preferred approach.
d. The idea of packing the
Supreme Court is a cardinal example of undermining Separation of Powers. It is one of many “slippery slopes.”
3. Nuclear proliferation must be
resisted more forcefully
a. Please see my earlier blog in
which I explained how our governments have encouraged countries to develop
nuclear weapons. If a country develops
nuclear weapons, we offer huge enticements to discontinue. The return on investment is attractive. Meanwhile their military strength is
recognized by other countries and their leaders can strut in local politics.
b. Now, we’ve spotlighted that
countries should never agree to surrender their nuclear weapons. In 1994, the USA, UK and Russia convinced
Ukraine to surrender their nuclear weapons in return for guarantees that they
would not threaten Ukraine sovereignty.
Russia has now flagrantly broken that treaty. The USA and UK position is that they have not
violated the treaty and did not promise, in the treaty, to provide defense if a
party violated the treaty. The USA and
UK position is consistent with the treaty wording, but why should a country
surrender nukes in the future?
c. Nuclear war is clearly an
existential threat. World leadership should
dramatically alter its approach, as per my blog on the topic.
4. To secure peace, it is
important to project strength.
a. Putin
invaded Ukraine because he had a reasonable expectation that he would get away
with it. Excuse me for addressing this
at length below. It seems important
because some people with whom I’ve discussed this issue have clearly
significantly misunderstood the image that the world has had of the USA.
b. The
US government, led by President Biden, and the West, in general, projected
weakness. We led Putin to believe he could invade Ukraine at little
cost. Shame on us.
c. To
be fair, Biden was handicapped coming into office by President Obama and his
involvement in that administration, by President Trump (cuts both ways; in some
ways an advantage) and by some of his own past actions.
d. Campaigning
for President the first time, then-Senator Obama urged mediation when Putin
invaded Georgia while Senator McCain took consistently stronger stances against
Russia. At the time, Obama’s position
did not stand out as particularly weak, but with his subsequent actions, the pattern
became clear.
e. The
“Obama administration deferred to German
Chancellor Angela Merkel’s concern that lethal-arms assistance to
Ukraine would only prolong a war that that country was bound to lose, and it
refused to provide such support.”
f. President Obama reacted mildly
to Russia’s incursion into Crimea.
g. He declared a “red line” in
Syria, then decided he did not want to enforce it (he pretended to change his
mind as to his authority, so he could blame Congress for not enforcing
it). Under his watch, USA influence in Syria dropped and Russian
influence grew dramatically.
h. The above comments d-g should
not generate much disagreement from readers. However, some people might
disagree with my belief that President Obama showed weakness relative to Iran,
Cuba and by undermining Israel, etc. and that candidate Biden indicated that he
would resume some of those positions.
[Disclosure: I voted for Barack Obama the first time he ran for
President, but not the second time. I voted
for Biden in 2020.]
i. President Trump handicapped
Biden and encouraged Putin by disrupting NATO politically and with harmful
tariffs. He espoused what sounded like an isolationist policy. (Trump’s actual behavior was more volatile,
not consistently isolationist, which I think Putin recognized. Trump fired missiles at Russians twice in Syria, once in combination with the French and British.) However, Trump’s behavior made Biden’s
election very well-received. NATO
welcomed a President who would bring them together. Trump’s demand that NATO countries honor
their commitment to spend 2% of their budget on defense made it easier for
Biden to re-build relations but to insist on the 2% (Biden abandoned the 2% as
far as I know, but I may be wrong).
Biden was harmed in that even if he proved to be a strong ally for NATO
members, Trump caused NATO members to fear that a future president might shy
away from NATO again.
j. Note: Biden has done a good
job of bringing NATO back together, but Putin seems to have stimulated the NATO
rapprochement more than Biden did. When Biden abandoned Afghanistan, he did not
coordinate with NATO allies who were supporting our efforts. He also has kept damaging tariffs in place.
k. Biden may have been hurt by
his past, but I am not expert in that regard.
Gates said that Biden was wrong on foreign policy a remarkable
percentage of the time. Even if that were
accurate, “wrong” does not necessarily mean “weak”. Biden has been criticized for not wanting to
attack Osama bin Laden’s compound. Not
having been involved in the discussion, I can’t criticize that position, but it
may have contributed to Putin thinking Biden is weak. (Even sound decisions may be
(mis)-interpreted to be weakness.)
l. Biden’s precipitous
withdrawal from Afghanistan certainly encouraged Putin. Biden’s repeated statements that he took full
responsibility (while blaming the Afghans, Trump, and his own staff) exposed a
very weak leader. When the Bay of Pigs
invasion failed, President Kennedy took responsibility. He did not try to shift it to the victims or
his staff. Although the Bay of Pigs plan
was developed in the Eisenhower administration, JFK was silent about that,
taking responsibility. President Biden
said Trump’s agreement with the Taliban bound his hands, but the agreement was dependent
on conditions the Taliban did not meet.
It was Biden, not Trump, who decided to waive those requirements. Furthermore, Biden actually did change the agreement,
delaying its date, despite later saying that he couldn’t change it. [Disclosure: I did not support Trump’s
agreement with the Taliban; excluding the Afghan government from the
discussions seemed to me to be a bad idea.]
m. Biden promoted a budget
overwhelmingly tilted toward “butter”, not “guns”. The European democracies have done that for a
long time, increasingly relying upon protection from the USA. The USA has underfunded the military for a
while.
n. Demands to de-fund the police
and the presumption that police were guilty when incidents occurred were
significant to foreign observers. We were
unwilling to defend our cities from lawless looting. If the USA lets lawless people take over
Seattle, why would Putin think the USA would defend Kiev?
o. Biden focused his
administration on climate change and choosing leadership based on identity not
just capability. Climate change is a
real issue and I applaud some of Biden’s steps, such as procuring environmental
vehicles for the government. Asking the
military to assess and consider climate change is a good idea, but should be
done quietly to avoid the impression that Biden was taking his eye off
security. For political reasons, Biden
preferred to spotlight it, which I thought was not a good idea. If he wanted to spotlight it, he should have
at least kept a public focus on security as well, but he did not. People like to say that perception is
reality. I don’t agree. The perception that Biden was focusing the
military on climate change may not have been reality. But perception impacts reality!
p. Clearly, we have many people
of minority races, religions, sexual preferences, etc. who are
outstanding. Because their talents have
not been recognized in the past, it makes sense that they would comprise a
higher percentage of appointments than their percentage of the population (this
could be partially offset by their lack of experience if they have been held
back by prejudice). Here, again,
President Biden’s approach may not have reflected reduced concern about
competency, but it added to an impression that the USA is weak.
q. Strongly favoring the left
wing of his party, Biden strengthened Putin’s hand by his positions related to
coal, oil and gas. He reversed the USA’s
opposition to Nord Stream 2 and lifted sanctions against one of the construction companies, thereby undermining Ukraine as well as helping
Putin make Europe more dependent on Russian gas. He declared that he wanted to put the coal
industry out of business and also warred with the USA oil and gas
industry. He then begged other countries
to boost production of energy that he was trying to quell in the USA. Why did it make sense to shift energy production
(and jobs) to other countries whose industries pollute more than ours? Why did it make sense to undermine our
security and ability to wean Europe off Russian oil? Clearly, President Biden put domestic
politics (catering to the left wing of his party) above sound practices. Of course, that’s going to encourage Vladimir
Putin to attack Ukraine!
He publicly contradicted President Zelensky's claim that NATO was ready to accept Ukrainian membership. (Inserted on 15Oct23; quoting from Walter Russell Mead in the Wall Street Journal of October 10, 2023.
r. As mentioned in my blog about
voting rights, President Biden’s rhetoric has continually divided us rather
than bringing us together. I recognize
that most other people who voted for President Biden will not agree, but I
think that gets back to point #1.
s. When Putin amassed his
forces, President Biden immediately encouraged him by emphasizing that the USA
would not defend Ukraine. Does anyone
really think that President Biden’s declarations that the USA would not get involved
somehow discouraged Putin from attacking Ukraine?
t. President Biden even made the
horrendous mistake of indicating that Russia might make a “slight incursion”
that might warrant a softer reaction.
u. President Biden and the West
have done an excellent job of creating tough sanctions, but only after the
fact. Likely, President Biden would not
have been able to convince NATO allies to take a strong stance sooner. Likely, he did not want to do so himself
either. What possibly could Putin have
expected? Any intelligent person other
than an extremely cautious person would have expected that the threatened
sanctions would be weak.
v. President Biden did a very
good job of exposing what Putin was preparing to do, but his wording was
injudicious. He kept saying "Putin
is going to attack” rather than saying that “Putin has marshalled his forces in
a way that would support an attack”. His
choice of wording would have made Putin look weak if he backed down. Putin is not someone who wants to be viewed
as backing down.
5. Short-term destruction of the
coal, oil and gas industries is not a good idea.
a. I’ve explained this above in
4p, so I won’t re-hash it. But it is an
important strategic position hence deserves to be highlighted.
b. It is worth understanding that
I have been an environmentalist for at least 60 years and have lived my life,
done advocacy and invested consistently with those principles. I’d love to see renewables replace coal, oil
and gas and have worked to help that to occur.
So, when I argue against the left’s vendetta on conventional energy, it
is not an attack on environmentalism. It
is simply a call for sanity.
c. I have always feared radioactive nuclear waste. However, I’ve grew to recognize that nuclear might be a good transitional source of energy. And nuclear fusion avoids the risk of radioactive waste or at least hugely reduces it.
6. Spending on guns vs. butter
must be balanced
a. As noted above, President
Biden over-emphasized (in my opinion) butter over guns. It is clearly a tough issue.
b. Note: I have mixed feelings
about gun control. Hunters don’t need
Uzis and it makes sense to restrict gun rights for stalkers. Other restrictions may also make sense. But I am haunted by the Dutch, who put in gun
control immediately before WWII. When
the Germans rolled into the Netherlands, they found a government list of the
guns that were owned, allowing them to go door-to-door to confiscate those
guns. What if Ukrainian citizens were
not allowed to have guns now or if Russia got their hands on a list? People often tell me “that could never happen
here" (on issues other than guns as well as related to guns) but such
attitudes increase our risk.
7. CNN and media attention can
impact history as well as reporting it
a. I remember CNN reporting from
Tiananmen Square in 1989. It was an incredibly revolutionary moment (please
excuse the pun). For people around the
world to see what was going on in real time was incredible.
b. When CNN showed Boris Yeltsin
getting on that tank, I realized that CNN’s presence not only is educational,
it actually changes history. Yeltsin’s
efforts might have ended differently without CNN.
c. Now in Ukraine, CNN’s efforts
have made the world more aware and more united in opposition to Russia’s
efforts. CNN has undermined Russia’s
disinformation campaign. The question
now is “How long will the world’s resolve last?”
8. Democracies must band
together to protect each other
a. Martin Niemoller said it more
effectively than I can: “First they
came for the Socialists, and I did not speak out— because I was not a
Socialist. Then they came for the Trade Unionists, and
I did not speak out— because I
was not a Trade Unionist. Then they came for the Jews, and I did not
speak out— because I was not a
Jew. Then they came for me—and there was no one left to speak for me.”
b. I made this point in my January email to my Congresswoman, Sharice Davids (see my January 22nd blog).
c. Ukrainian President Zelensky has argued effectively that Ukrainians are fighting to protect democracy everywhere.
a. I’ve never been an “America,
love it or leave it” person. Patriotism
includes helping the USA live up to its ideals.
b. Clearly, it is important for
us to understand our history and our weaknesses. A person or country who does not acknowledge
its weaknesses handicaps its ability to improve and a person or country which
does not acknowledge its past mistakes is likely to repeat them.
c. Nonetheless, we have reason
to be proud of our country. Our
constitution and principles totally changed the world, putting people in charge
of the government and, as I’ve explained, elevating the most critical
principle: separation of powers. While
we are flawed, we’ve improved significantly.
d. I believe we can improve
further. It is healthier for us to
identify as USA citizens and work for our common interest rather than to band
according to various subcategories, focus on real and imagined victimhood and
fighting on behalf of those subcategories.
e. My local newspaper (the KC Star) published an editorial calling upon those who oppose pandemic restrictions to calm their "tyranny" rhetoric, recognizing the difference between the USA and Russian or Chinese tyranny. I agree, but it was unfortunately characteristic that the KC Star would observe such lack of appreciation of our country only on the right and would ignore it on the left. To achieve their goal of bringing us together, they should have been non-partisan.
f. It is clear to me that I
should have done more to help the USA improve but I sadly seem to have a better
track record in this regard than most people.
(I say “sadly” because it would be much better if most people had made
efforts greater than mine.) My point
here is not to brag but simply to make clear that I am not an apologist for
improper behavior.
10. Too little, too late is
insufficient.
a. I fear that the support we
are providing to the Ukrainians is “too little; too late”. As President Zelensky said, strong sanctions
on Russia for gobbling up the Ukraine do not help the Ukraine, as it will have
already been sacrificed.
b. I recognize the counterargument
that supporting the Ukraine more strongly could have enflamed Russia’s fears or
at least have enabled a Russian disinformation campaign. But what friend tells you that you aren't going to be admitted into NATO because doing so would encourage Russia to attack you, then says they won't defend you if Russia attacks you anyway?
c. Such issues need to be
discussed more fully in our government circles and by non-government citizens
(see #1).
d. Defensive weaponry may have
been a good solution.
e. A non-aggression pact may
have helped.
f. Will the Western resolve hold
up? Once the shooting stops, many people and countries are likely to want to end sanctions. Some will want to end sanctions to benefit their economies. Others will say the sanctions have no purpose at that time. Still others will argue that we need to end the sanctions so that we have the threat of re-applying them if Putin attacks another country. These arguments miss the point: The sanctions were widely and appropriately characterized as a "punishment"; they were not intended to protect Ukraine; they were intended to dissuade future attacks. If they turn-out to be short-term sanctions, their deterrent value will be reduced. I agree that they should not be permanent, but a strong case could be made that they will continue until Ukraine is again free. Practically speaking, that seems very unlikely. So what is the proper sentence for such aggression and killing? Ten years does not sound unreasonable and could be a strong deterrent. However, I fear our weak-kneed Western "leadership" will abandon peace efforts again by eliminating the sanctions relatively quickly.
g. I know I don’t have all the
answers.