By Mark Antonio Wright
Wednesday, August 13, 2025
Noah Rothman’s recap of the long history of U.S.-Russian
summits ending badly for overeager American presidents should be sobering for
anyone who hopes for a dramatic breakthrough in Anchorage this Friday.
The Russians, Noah writes, want “Ukraine to surrender
vast swaths of unoccupied territory, including major industrial towns and
cities, and to ratify the legitimacy of Russia’s previous conquests.” But
Vladimir Putin and the Kremlin “will likely accept something short of that if
it leaves Ukraine vulnerable to internal subversion and, eventually, a third
invasion.”
On the other hand, “we know what Trump’s goal for this
summit is: peace, or something he can plausibly call peace.”
It’s unclear what tactics he will
deploy in the pursuit of that goal, but there is an imbalance of objectives
that favors Russia. Moscow is not suing for peace, nor is Kyiv. It’s Trump who
has that goal in mind, and it is he who is putting that ask to Putin. The
Kremlin’s acquiescence will come at a cost.
That’s why it’s so important for President Trump to be
prepared to walk away from a bad deal. A diplomatic surrender to the Kremlin
that sells out the Ukrainians in exchange for a cease-fire would not redound to
America’s interests or Trump’s political fortunes, even if it gets the
president the short-term headlines he wants, i.e., anything that includes the
word “cease-fire.”
Indeed, I’d argue that Trump would benefit politically,
and his stature would be raised in many quarters, if he’s widely seen by the
American people as having turned down an unserious and self-serving offer by
the Russian dictator. If Trump walks away from a bad deal, he would strengthen
his position and his support for whatever comes next, especially if that “next”
includes unsatisfactory and difficult pills to swallow. And that, in my view,
goes for not only pro-Ukrainian Americans and our European allies but also the
Ukrainians themselves.
I think it’s likely that Trump and his advisers know
this: The White House has spent the last week telegraphing that while Trump
wants a deal that leads to peace, he knows that the Russians have been
untrustworthy interlocutors and that they have played fast and loose with his
patience. That said, anyone who remembers Trump’s political self-immolation the
last time he met Putin face-to-face (in Helsinki in 2018) can be forgiven for
wondering whether President “Art of the Deal” will actually know when to walk
away if presented with a bad deal sweetened with weapons-grade Russian flattery
and blandishments. We shall see.
No comments:
Post a Comment