By Jonah Goldberg
Wednesday, March 05, 2025
I don’t say this often, but let’s give Donald Trump the
benefit of the doubt.
During Trump’s instantly infamous Oval
Office meeting with Volodymyr Zelensky last week, the Ukrainian president
was determined to make one point above all: that Russian President Vladimir
Putin is not to be trusted. Again and again, Zelensky noted that Putin has a
long record of breaking promises. “Twenty-five times he broken his own
signature,” Zelensky explained in clunky English. “Twenty-five times he broken
cease-fire.”
Zelensky kept returning to this point because he knows
Putin’s paper promises are worthless. Putin has made it very clear that he
wants to reclaim as much of the old Soviet empire as he can get away with,
which is why he invaded Georgia in 2008, turned Belarus into a vassal state,
refused to remove troops from Moldova, annexed Crimea in 2014 and launched a
full-blown invasion of Ukraine in 2022.
As Putin once put it, “Russia’s
borders do not end anywhere.”
Trump’s response to Zelensky? Putin didn’t break any
promises while Trump was president.
This is the key to Trump’s entire understanding of the
war. If he were president, he always says, the war never would have happened.
So let’s give Trump the benefit of the doubt and assume
Putin would never violate an agreement brokered by Trump while Trump is in
office.
So what? National security operates on a longer timeline
than a single presidency.
One reason Germany was incorporated into NATO and the
European Union was to ensure that it would never again threaten the continent
or the world. Another was to ensure that the Soviet empire would not expand
further into Europe, beyond the Eastern European states it occupied at the end
of World War II. And the time frame of this alliance wasn’t just as long as
Harry Truman or German Chancellor Konrad Adenauer remained in office. The time
frame was as long as necessary.
Similarly, our European allies are scrambling to adapt to
an international order in which America can no longer be relied upon, but not
because they fear an imminent invasion of Poland or the Baltic states. What
they’re concerned about is the long run.
Indeed, Putin might love a deal allowing him to keep much
of what he’s stolen—and the Trump administration has already said it’s fine
with that—and prepare for another stab at taking all of Ukraine and maybe more
a few years down the road.
Trump doesn’t care about down the road. He wants to be
able to claim he achieved peace in the short term. If Putin invades Ukraine
again on January 20, 2029, that’s not his problem. In fact, he might even like
it: He could point to it as more evidence that Putin would never invade the
country while Trump was president.
This is how Trump thinks about politics, international
and domestic alike. He cares less about serious, lasting policy than what he
can take credit for immediately.
One popular theory for Trump’s dislike of Zelensky is
that the Ukrainian leader failed to help him tarnish Joe Biden’s political
prospects in 2019, which became the subject of Trump’s first impeachment. Trump
just wanted the Ukrainians to say Biden was under investigation for corruption
and let him handle the rest. As an inducement, he threatened to withhold
military aid to Ukraine even though it had been appropriated by Congress.
Trump’s second impeachment revolved partly around a
similar plea to Justice Department officials to, “Just say the election was
corrupt and leave the rest to me and the Republican congressmen.” In both
cases, the talking point was more important to Trump than the truth.
This is the context of his maneuvering to “end” the war
in Ukraine. He wants to be able to say he delivered peace; he couldn’t care
less whether it’s a durable peace. He just wants the talking point.
His foreign policy team understands this, which is why
administration officials scoff at the idea of providing Ukraine with actual
security guarantees. “Everybody is saying security guarantees to secure the
peace,” Secretary of State Marco Rubio said Sunday on ABC News’ This Week.”
“You first have to have a peace.”
Rubio once understood
how deterrence works. As he put
it in 2015, “Vulnerable nations
still depend on us to deter aggression from their larger neighbors. Oppressed
peoples still turn their eyes toward our shores, wondering if we hear their
cries, wondering if we notice their afflictions.”
He endorses a backward notion of deterrence now because
he wants to help Trump secure a talking point, not a lasting peace.
Zelensky isn’t an obstacle to peace; he’s an obstacle to
a talking point. And Trump and company hate him for it.
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