https://thebulletin.org/2023/01/ending-the-war-while-ensuring-russia-does-not-gain-territory-via-nuclear-coercion/

Ending the war while ensuring Russia does not gain territory via nuclear
coercion

By Robert J. Goldston <https://thebulletin.org/biography/robert-j-goldston/> |
January 4, 2023

 Bucha main street after Russian invasion of Ukraine. Photo: Oleksandr
Ratushniak Wikimedia Commons / CC-BY-SA

There is a wide-ranging debate about what NATO’s goal should be in Ukraine,
from immediate cease-fire
<https://responsiblestatecraft.org/2022/10/17/on-ukraine-the-us-is-on-the-hook-to-find-a-way-out/>
at
the present line of contact to full return
<https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/archive/2022/11/russia-ukraine-negotations-mark-milley/672198/?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=share>
of
occupied Ukrainian territory, including all of the Donbas and Crimea. This
wide range of views arises from the uncertain balance between concern, on
the one hand, that one country should not be permitted to seize territory
from another by force and, on the other, concern about the catastrophic
consequences of triggering a nuclear war.

Neither NATO’s mandate nor its resources permit it to prevent all
inter-state military aggression. However, as a nuclear-armed alliance it
has specific interest in resisting, by conventional means, nuclear-backed
conventional military aggression. This is because the demonstration of the
lack of utility of nuclear weapons as a shield for conventional territorial
aggression would be of great stabilizing and nonproliferation value for
NATO and for the world. It would reduce the temptation of nuclear-armed
states to seize nearby territory by force and also reduce the impetus for
non-nuclear-armed states to acquire nuclear weapons for self-defense.
Furthermore, it would make a future NATO policy of “no first use” of
nuclear weapons much more palatable to our allies.

Let us posit, then, that NATO should define its overarching strategic
objective in Ukraine to be that “Russia should not gain territory through
nuclear coercion.”

At the outset of Russia’s February 2022 invasion of Ukraine, President
Vladimir Putin put his nuclear forces on a “special regime of combat duty,”
and in his speeches of September 21
<http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/69390> and September 30
<http://en.kremlin.ru/events/president/news/69465>, 2022, he threatened to
use nuclear weapons to achieve his territorial objectives. Therefore, the
strategic objective posited here clearly implies that NATO should back
Ukraine in regaining territory occupied by Russian forces since its 2022
invasion. In 2015, Putin indicated
<https://www.cnn.com/2015/03/16/europe/russia-putin-crimea-nuclear> that he
had been ready to put Russian nuclear forces on alert during the crisis
over its 2014 annexation of Crimea. Thus, while the strategic goal defined
here indicates that NATO should prioritize aiding Ukraine in regaining
territory lost since February 2022, it also provides justification for
aiding Ukraine to return fully to its internationally recognized borders.
This flexibility is consistent with NATO’s policy of “Nothing about Ukraine
without Ukraine.”
RELATED:
“When it comes to Russia, it’s like living in a volcano” — Interview with
Farida Rustamova, an independent reporter in Putin’s Russia
<https://thebulletin.org/premium/2022-09/when-it-comes-to-russia-its-like-living-in-a-volcano-interview-with-farida-rustamova-an-independent-reporter-in-putins-russia/>

The statements by the Biden administration about the “catastrophic
<https://www.voanews.com/a/us-warns-russia-of-catastrophic-consequences-if-it-launches-nuclear-attack-in-ukraine-/6762441.html>”
consequences for Russia of nuclear use seem to have been effective in
causing the Kremlin to moderate
<https://www.miragenews.com/full-text-of-putin-speech-and-answers-at-valdai-884161/>
its
threats of late. Realistically, the use of one or a few battlefield nuclear
weapons would have little military utility. The scale of nuclear weapon use
needed to be militarily significant, by contrast, is large, resulting not
only in immense destruction but also widespread nuclear contamination. If
Russia were to commit the horrific atrocity of attacking Ukrainian cities
with nuclear weapons, full international isolation would be certain and
President Biden’s statement about the risk of Armageddon
<https://www.nytimes.com/2022/10/06/world/europe/biden-armageddon-nuclear-war-risk.html>
would
be particularly apt. Thus, Russia is strongly deterred from using nuclear
weapons at any scale—but this does not mean that the risk can be neglected.
The near and longer-term risks of nuclear war should motivate NATO to
provide President Putin with a means to vacate Ukrainian territory without
disgrace, while strengthening strategic stability in Europe.

If NATO achieves the overarching strategic objective posited
here—demonstrating the uselessness of a nuclear arsenal as cover for
military aggression—this will be a valuable lesson for all nations. To
provide an incentive for Putin to accept such an outcome, the United States
and NATO should offer to negotiate with Russia on a set of strategic
stability arrangements that addresses the concerns implicit in the
proposals by Russia to the United S
<https://mid.ru/ru/foreign_policy/rso/nato/1790818/?lang=en>tates and NATO
<https://mid.ru/ru/foreign_policy/rso/nato/1790803/?lang=en&clear_cache=Y>
before
the invasion. These arrangements, however, should benefit NATO as well as
Russia. Indeed, the Biden administration is attempting to re-open such
discussions.  Elements of such arrangements
<https://thebulletin.org/2022/04/the-day-after-the-ukraine-war/> could
include:

   - A renewed Conventional Forces in Europe (CFE) agreement that limits
   conventional forces and pulls them back from borders. This could include a
   renewal of the Open Skies agreement that allows overflight for verification.
   - A renewed Intermediate-range Nuclear Forces (INF) agreement in Europe,
   in this case excluding all sub-strategic nuclear weapons from Iceland to
   the Urals.
   - A renewed Anti-Ballistic Missile (ABM) agreement with verifiable
   limits to numbers of launchers and their capabilities.
   - An extended Strategic Arms Reduction (New START+) agreement, reducing
   the number of deployed warheads by eliminating all silo-based ICBMs, due to
   their threat to strategic stability.
   - An agreement among the five permanent members of the UN Security
   Council on the consideration of nuclear use only in case of “imminent
   existential threat,” as a step toward an agreement to abide by a policy of
   “no first use” of nuclear weapons—and their eventual abolition.

RELATED:
Nuclear injustice: How Russia's invasion of Ukraine shows the staggering
human cost of deterrence
<https://thebulletin.org/2022/10/nuclear-injustice-how-russias-invasion-of-ukraine-shows-the-staggering-human-cost-of-deterrence/>

In sum, NATO should adopt an overarching strategic objective in Ukraine
that Russia should not gain territory through nuclear coercion. The Biden
administration’s clarity about the consequences of nuclear weapon use have
been effective, but the risk remains. Therefore, the United States and NATO
should offer Moscow win-win steps towards strategic stability in Europe.
These steps would be beneficial to the West, address concerns Putin raised
in the months before the invasion of Ukraine, and make it politically
feasible for Putin to withdraw Russian forces from Ukrainian territory,
providing for a more stable Europe, and world, in the future.

-- 
Peace Is Doable

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