By Noah Rothman
Friday, August 08, 2025
With the possible exception of Israel and its ongoing war
against Iran’s terrorist proxies, no foreign pressure point seemed to loom as
large in the minds of Trump administration figures as Russia’s war of conquest
in Ukraine. From the outset of Trump’s second term, administration officials
mounted an urgent diplomatic offensive aimed at securing something the White
House could plausibly call a peace deal.
At first, the president and his subordinates applied
immense pressure to Kyiv and Volodymyr Zelensky as though Ukraine were the
aggressor. It was the result of a bewildering misapprehension of the conflict,
its combatants, and the region’s history. As such, many of this war’s observers
(ahem!) noted that it was doomed to fail. Indeed, after a
depressingly disastrous Oval Office meeting between Zelensky and JD Vance —
Trump was there, too, but he played a bit role — the U.S. cut off weapons and
intelligence sharing to Ukraine, contributing to Kyiv’s retreat from
the tiny sliver of Russian land it briefly occupied in Kursk Oblast. Why making
Ukraine weaker and sacrificing a bargaining chip at the negotiating table would
somehow dissuade Russia’s aggressors from pressing their advantage, perhaps
only Tulsi Gabbard knows.
The misplaced muscle that was applied to Zelensky was a
costly waste of political capital, but the president has been making up for it
of late. The Trump administration has since reauthorized the sale of offensive
weapons to Ukraine, directly and through European intermediaries. In mid-July Trump
threatened to impose penalties on Moscow if it did not
consent to at least a cease-fire agreement within 50 days. Just under two weeks
later, he shortened that timeline to just ten to twelve days. After all, “I
think I already know the answer what’s going to happen,” he said.
The deadline is upon us, and there has been a flurry of
activity in advance of it. Trump’s all-purpose conflict negotiator, Steve
Witkoff, traveled to Moscow this week to meet with his counterparts. As fits
the emerging pattern, all parties came away from that process satisfied, at the
very least, with Steve Witkoff. The Kremlin described the conversation as
“useful” and “constructive.” But only a few hours after the meeting concluded,
Trump announced his intention to substantially hike tariffs on Indian goods as
a punishment for “buying Russian oil, they’re fueling the war machine.”
Notwithstanding the distinctions between tariffs and
sanctions — distinctions Trump himself may regard as cosmetic — Trump’s move
raises the prospect that the U.S. will impose “secondary sanctions” on the
nations that purchase Russia’s already-sanctioned energy exports. One White
House official told the New York Times that they are
“expected to be implemented” as soon as today.
India is one of the biggest buyers of Russian energy,
along with China and Turkey. “India’s oil purchases from Russia grew nearly
19-fold from 2021 to 2024, from 0.1 to 1.9 million barrels a day, while China’s
rose by 50% to 2.4 million barrels a day,” Deutsche Welle reported. New Delhi has bristled at
the president’s maneuver. Narendra Modi’s government protested, quite
correctly, that the Biden administration “actively supported its oil purchases
from Russia” to “help stabilize global oil prices.”
That’s not inconceivable, though the former president said otherwise publicly. Biden was
terrified of the inflationary effect that increased crude oil costs would have
on America’s already overheated economy — hence the “Putin price hike.” Oil
prices have already increased by 1 percent following Trump’s imposition of tariffs
on India. They will rise further still if Trump pursues a broader secondary
sanctions regime against Russia, and American consumers would feel that pain.
But it would be felt more acutely by the targets of those
tariffs — at least, initially. The sanctions on India, for example, are
“threatening Indian companies’ access to the US financial system and exposing
banks, refineries, and shipping firms to serious repercussions given their
integration into global markets,” one analyst told DW. Accordingly,
India’s state-run oil refiners abruptly halted “spot purchases” of Russian
crude, Bloomberg reported Thursday.
Curbing Turkish and Chinese consumption of Russian energy
is another matter. Beijing is a particular challenge. The People’s Republic
regards the preservation of its relationship with Moscow as both an economic
and geopolitical imperative, and it would certainly take retaliatory measures
against the United States if it were targeted with punitive sanctions or
tariffs. But the Russian bear on Beijing’s back has become an increasingly
heavy burden.
Oil exports account for roughly one-third of Moscow’s
government revenues, according to the central bank, and those revenues are
declining rapidly. “Russia’s oil and gas revenues fell sharply for the third
consecutive month in July, driven by weaker oil prices and a stronger ruble,” the Moscow Times reported. “Gas-related revenues
more than halved.” That condition has contributed to sluggish Russian GDP
growth, which underperformed expectations last quarter.
That’s a problem for a country with an economy on a
wartime footing, in which the equivalent of 6 percent of GDP is devoted to
defense, and where inflation is running officially at 9
percent. To the extent that inflationary pressure has eased modestly in
recent months, that is attributable to the central bank’s tight monetary
policy. But with interest rates set at a staggering 20 percent, Russian consumer spending has declined
commensurately, forcing Moscow to rely even more on its state-subsidized arms
industry for economic growth. This is not a sustainable situation.
Moscow is burning through cash, inviting inflation, and
killing off a sizable portion of its adult male population on Ukraine’s
battlefields, contributing to a worker shortage (which doesn’t help to cool
inflation). That may be why, perhaps for the first time since the outset of his
second invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, the autocrat in the Kremlin may be
genuinely looking for an offramp. Trump is still as eager as ever to provide
him with one.
On Wednesday the president told his European counterparts
that he is prepared to hold an in-person meeting with Vladimir Putin as soon as next week. It would be the first episode of
bilateral U.S.-Russia summitry since April 2021, when Joe Biden held a similar
meeting with Putin aimed at dissuading him from invading Ukraine for a second
time. One imagines the conversation in the Oval Office mirroring a classic
sequence from Arrested Development: Oh, rewarding land-hungry
despots with summits never works, even though so many peace-loving Westerners
convince themselves it will — but it just might work for us! Still, Trump
is set on rolling the dice. The risk in it is that it could be Trump who gets
rolled.
“If [Putin] gets a summit with Trump without Zelensky,
and without a Ukraine ceasefire deal — that’s a Kremlin dream come true,” the Wall
Street Journal’s Yaroslav Trofimov wrote. Beyond the
semiotics of summitry, which the Kremlin would trumpet as evidence that its
diplomatic isolation is over, Putin is promulgating the notion that he is open
to trading some of his battlefield gains for temporary peace. “The most
important thing for Putin is NATO and these ironclad guarantees that Ukraine
will not be in NATO and that NATO countries will not develop a military
presence inside Ukraine, plus a set of political demands on Ukraine itself,”
Carnegie Russia Eurasia Center fellow Tatiana Stanovaya told the Times.
Of course, it is. Why wouldn’t Putin trade the
battle-scarred moonscape he’s created in Kyiv for diplomatic structures that
isolate a rump Ukrainian state — a state that Moscow can subvert internally
until, eventually, he wages a third campaign to subjugate a people he doesn’t
believe should exist?
Yet, if Russia is finally feeling the pressure, Ukraine
is feeling it more intensely. The aerial bombardment of Ukraine’s cities over
the last several weeks has been the most intense and deadliest of the war. In
fact, Russian attacks on Ukraine’s cities have doubled since Trump took office. And Moscow’s forces continue to
advance in the East, albeit at a snail’s pace, as they attempt to envelop
population centers “to facilitate Russia’s long-standing objective of seizing
the remainder of Donetsk Oblast,” the Institute for the Study of War reported.
And if the latest Gallup survey of Ukrainians is
close to accurate, morale in the embattled country is collapsing. Today, “69%
say they favor a negotiated end to the war as soon as possible, compared with
24% who support continuing to fight until victory.” That’s a “complete
reversal” from 2022, when nearly three-quarters of Ukrainian respondents
favored holding out for victory over the Russian invaders.
Someone in this dynamic is going to break. We can only
hope that Trump is steadfast enough to ensure that it is Moscow. Either way,
next week looks like it could be a pivotal one for Russia’s three-year-long
expansionist war in Ukraine.
ADDENDUM: The Trump White House announced its
intention to conduct a new census to account for the errors in 2020 that led to
population overcounts in blue states (save Ohio and Utah) while a handful of
red states got shafted. In addition, Trump said that he intends to alter the
census methodology to ensure that states do not count illegal residents as part
of their populations.
This sounds uncontroversial unless you’re MSNBC’s Steve
Benen. “As for the legality of such a move, there’s no reason to think such an
effort would pass constitutional muster,” he wrote, “not only because the plan would deliberately
exclude people living on American soil, but also because there’s no legal
mechanism to allow for a mid-decade process.”
There’s nothing unconstitutional about the government
collecting data, mid-decade or otherwise. Where it would run into legal
trouble is if state governments used that data “for apportionment of
Representatives in Congress among the several states” or “prescribing
congressional districts.” If that becomes the GOP’s plan, Democrats will have a
real case on their hands. So far, though, the reaction to Trump’s still vague
census plan looks like yet another expression of general Democratic anxiety.
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