Ukraine’s advances into Russia seem to have shocked many – certainly the once smug Mr. Putin — and were front page news for several days.
True there are articles every day about Ukraine’s offensive, Russian reaction and what it all might mean, but most of these articles are sliding off the front pages. Ukraine’s action is huge news and important to Ukraine, the United States, and certainly to Europe. It is time to make related headlines by announcing Ukraine can use American-made weapons to hit any and all Russian military targets in Ukraine and in Russia.
This is the same country – Ukraine – we have slow-walked military assistance to through three United States Administrations (and Congresses). Think what Ukraine could have done if supported as it should have been starting with Putin’s initial invasion in 2014.
But let us separate the past from the future. Now is the time to make sure Ukraine has everything it needs to defeat Russia and is finally given permission to use American-made weapons to hit targets inside Russia to force a complete Russian withdrawal.
And it is time to repudiate any suggestions for a negotiated settlement. Those who keep talking about a negotiated settlement ignore the barbaric realities of Russian occupation – the killing of clergy, the torture of civilians (remember, on liberated lands, there have been found torture chambers, including ones designed for children), the destruction of churches, and other savagery. As President Zelenskyy has said, these are not just Ukrainian lands, there are Ukrainian people that must be freed.
Ambassador Kurt Volker has just published an excellent article on what the United States and the West should be doing to assure a Ukrainian victory.
Among many other major positions Kurt was U.S. Ambassador to NATO and is a member of the U.S.-Ukraine Foundation’s Friends of Ukraine Network, I highly recommend the article.
CEPA
By Kurt Volker | August 14, 2024
Vladimir Putin has become the first Russian leader since World War II to have provoked an invasion of his own country and to have lost sovereign territory. Having previously compared himself to Peter and Catherine the Great, Putin may end up looking more like the final czar, Nicholas II.
Ukraine’s Kursk offensive has already achieved several goals. It has:
Despite these tactical gains, however, we are still far from an end to the fighting, let alone a just and lasting peace. Russia bombs Ukrainian cities and civilian infrastructure on a daily basis, attacks along the front line in eastern Ukraine, occupies significant Ukrainian territory (around 20%) and insists on eradicating Ukraine as a people and as an independent state.
US equipment and ammunition are again arriving in sufficient quantity, and Western F-16s are now extending Ukraine’s intelligence collection and power projection capabilities well beyond the front lines, forcing Russia to retrench.
At the same time, the US and other allies continue to place restrictions on their military assistance to Ukraine, and non-military support continues to lag behind. Unless new decisions are made later this year, Western military aid to Ukraine will hit another wall in early 2025.
What was meant to have been a summer of summit decisions — all addressing some aspect of helping Ukraine defeat Russian aggression — was instead a summer of disappointments.
The coming year can and should be better. Ukraine is taking full advantage of long-range firepower (much of it home-grown), enhanced air power and air defenses, and superior leadership and command and control. It is strengthening its position in the face of what could be significant political pressure in 2025 to negotiate a deal with Russia.
The West should do better as well. Here are some suggestions:
Italy should seize the reins of the Ukraine Recovery Conference process and immediately launch steps designed to ensure real results when the conference convenes in the summer of 2025. After all, a thriving Ukrainian economy, in contrast to an extraction-based, sanctioned Russia, is the most important guarantee of Ukraine’s long-term victory.
What can Italy do? Most importantly, the so-called “multi-donor coordination platform” should be upgraded by establishing a permanent executive body that sets goals, an agenda, and pursues them with diligence throughout the year. There must also be much higher-level and “plugged-in” private sector engagement in Ukraine’s economic recovery.
If pushed by the Meloni government, the Italian private sector (in infrastructure, finance, housing, and more) could be well-positioned. And no one could be better to lead such a senior-level international body and to inspire the private sector than former Prime Minister Mario Draghi.
NATO’s new Secretary General Mark Rutte should pick up where Jens Stoltenberg left off — pushing the alliance to establish a $100bn fund for military aid to Ukraine, paid by member states according to existing cost-share formulae, to smooth over the inevitable bumps in the road of US and European funding due to our normal democratic processes.
It should also begin consultations in the NATO-Ukraine Council about how Article 5 could apply to Ukraine, and on that basis invite Ukraine to join NATO at the Netherlands-hosted NATO Summit in 2025.
Canada should use its G7 chairmanship to seek agreement on a legal framework for seizing already frozen Russian assets (something Canada has already done on a national basis). This is a unique and necessary compensation to Ukraine for the damage caused by Russian aggression and other war crimes, and need not wait until the 2025 G7 Summit in Canada.
The Swiss-hosted peace summit should stand firm on the UN-based principles of respect for Ukraine’s sovereignty and territorial integrity, and rejection of the crime of aggression. No action beyond support for these principles should be taken.
The EU should prioritize chapters in Ukraine’s accession talks dealing with energy and the rule of law. These are the two most strategic dimensions that will link Ukraine and Europe and lay the foundations for European and other businesses to engage directly in Ukraine.
Ukraine continues to play a bad hand very, very well, while Russia’s decrepit governing system continues to negate every other advantage Russia might enjoy in terms of size, population, and resources.
The West needs to step up its game as Ukraine has done. We should worry far more about the consequences of a Russian victory through attrition than we currently worry about the risks of escalation.
Ambassador Kurt Volker is a former US Ambassador to NATO and a former US Special Representative for Ukraine Negotiations. He is currently a Distinguished Fellow at the Center for European Policy Analysis.
ROBERT MCCONNELL
Co-Founder, U.S.-Ukraine Foundation
Director of External Affairs, Friends of Ukraine Network
The introduction is Mr. McConnell’s and does not necessarily represent the views of the U.S.-Ukraine Foundation or the Friends of Ukraine Network (FOUN).