By Rich Lowry
Tuesday, March 15, 2022
More than a year into the Biden presidency, Vladimir
Putin has invaded a sovereign neighboring country and, of course, everyone
knows who’s to blame — Biden’s predecessor.
In an instance of misdirection for the ages, a spate of
commentary has pointed the finger at Donald Trump for supposedly creating the
predicate for Putin’s brutalizing of Ukraine.
There’s no doubt that Trump has long had an apparently
uncontrollable reflex to say warm things about Vladimir Putin. He foolishly
mused about pulling out of NATO. And his withholding of aid to Ukraine for a
partisan political purpose — to pressure the Ukrainian government to uncover
dirt related to the Bidens — was a tawdry abuse of power (and led to his first
impeachment).
No one should hold Trump up as a paragon, but to blame
him for sparking a delayed-fuse geopolitical cataclysm that just happened to
explode on Biden’s watch is wholly ridiculous.
Retired Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Vindman, a Trump
critic who had a star turn as a witness at Trump’s first impeachment, says
Trump emboldened Putin and left Ukraine unprepared to defend itself. Marie
Yovanovitch, a former U.S. ambassador to Ukraine, says Trump sent the world the
message that Ukraine was a mere pawn. A piece in the New York Review of
Books says Trump “paved Putin’s way.”
There is no support for this argument in a world where
facts and logic — or basic chronology — mean something.
First of all, Russia had grabbed Crimea and started a
long-running war in Eastern Ukraine in 2014, long before anyone had any idea
that Donald Trump would run for president, let alone win. It clearly didn’t
take Trump to give Putin the idea that he could get away with invading Ukraine
— he invaded Ukraine and got away with it under the administration of Barack
Obama, when, by the way, Joe Biden was vice president.
It is now widely acknowledged that the sanctions back
then were too timid, a concession that Obama officials let Putin off too
lightly. Surely that must have figured into the Russian leader’s calculation of
whether to invade yet again.
Then there’s the fact that Barack Obama steadfastly
resisted providing Ukraine lethal aid — after it had already
been invaded. Bipartisan opposition to Obama didn’t move him. He believed
deeply in the appeaser’s logic that it would be too “provocative” to give
Ukraine weapons simply to defend itself.
Again, Trump had nothing to do with this misbegotten
decision; indeed, he criticized it.
Trump’s offense in 2019 was to delay military aid —
including Javelin missiles — that Congress had approved for Ukraine, in a
reversal of Obama’s policy. If Trump never should have engaged in this
self-interested gamesmanship, he released the assistance by September 2019.
Another line of argument is that the reason Putin didn’t
invade Ukraine during the Trump administration was that the Russian leader was
already getting everything he wanted from Trump, including the destabilization
of NATO. The outward expression of Trump’s doubts about the alliance, though,
largely took the form of loud complaints about European countries skimping on
defense spending — complaints that were completely justified.
Indeed, it’s perverse that Angela Merkel was made into a
great heroine of Western statesmanship at the same time she maintained a
pathetic level of defense spending and deepened Germany’s energy dependence on
Russia — this was more dangerous than anything Trump said or tweeted.
And it wasn’t Trump who told Biden to execute a
humiliating withdrawal from Afghanistan, to give Putin the gift of a summit
after he menaced Ukraine the first time, to remove sanctions on the Nord Stream
2 pipeline, to speak forthrightly about Western divisions at a pre-invasion
press conference, or to forgo preemptive sanctions.
All of that is on Biden, and all of it — especially the
Afghan fiasco — had to make an impression on Putin. Now, it may well have been
that Putin was undeterrable, but that makes it all the more outlandish and dumb
to blame a former U.S. president for his depredations.
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