theamericanconservative.com
Trump’s Ukraine Proposal Is the Least Bad Option
Reid Smith
7–9 minutes

Foreign Affairs

An imperfect peace is better than a worsening war.

TOPSHOT-SWITZERLAND-US-UKRAINE-RUSSIA-CONFLICT-DIPLOMACY

To paraphrase a viral retort from 2023: What did you think ending the Ukraine 
war meant? Vibes? Speeches? Essays?

At some point you need an actual deal.

What has been lost in the noise surrounding the Trump administration’s proposed 
peace plan is the recognition that the bargain at hand accomplishes the primary 
objective: It ends the war. Moreover, it preserves a sovereign Ukrainian state 
and establishes a U.S.-backed security guarantee reflecting the strongest 
commitment Kiev might expect to receive from the West. The proposal delivers a 
generous reconstruction package, serious investment in critical Ukrainian 
infrastructure, and key stabilization mechanisms governing nuclear safety and 
food exports.

These are real, tangible achievements. And yet we need not pretend that this is 
a perfectly balanced settlement. The terms favor the side that is and has been 
winning the war. To be clear, it neutralizes Ukraine’s NATO ambitions, locks in 
territorial gains for Russia, and reintegrates Moscow into something resembling 
the polite society of Western powers through sanctions relief, economic 
partnership, and an invitation to rejoin the G8.

But why this deal? And why now?

Much will be made about Trump’s impatience with Volodymyr Zelensky or affection 
for Vladimir Putin. Already, allegations have emerged that sections of the 
proposal have been translated directly from Russian demands. But the fact 
remains that time is not on Ukraine’s side. Wars of maneuver reward the side 
with agility and morale. Wars of attrition favor the combatant boasting better 
manpower and industrial output. Over the past three years, the battlefield has 
shifted decisively toward Russia. Meanwhile, Ukraine’s demography has been 
decimated. Its energy grid is shattered, Western stockpiles have shrunk, and 
foreign funding has dried up. The latest corruption scandal in Kiev only 
compounds the problem. That members of President Zelensky’s inner circle are 
now implicated in the largest corruption investigation since the war 
began—allegedly laundering more than $100 million from the state-owned nuclear 
power company amid rolling blackouts—is certain to weaken Kiev’s bargaining 
position with allies and adversaries alike.

To demand a better deal is to assert improved leverage which, in turn, requires 
better battlefield prospects. If Washington or Brussels wanted materially 
better terms, Ukraine would require some combination of additional manpower, 
more shells, a defensive air umbrella, or a willingness on the part of NATO to 
directly escalate against Russia. Considered in that order, these aims are 
either impossible, infeasible, unimaginable, or absurd.

Ukraine cannot mobilize additional recruits because its population is 
exhausted. Western lines of ammunition production are stretched. A defensive 
air umbrella would require NATO forces to enter the conflict directly and such 
escalation carries the very real risk of nuclear confrontation with Russia.

In an alternate timeline, perhaps a better peace was possible. Think back to 
2022. Ukraine had secured victories around Kiev, Kharkiv, and Kherson. With 
Russia on its heels, Zelensky might have negotiated from a position of relative 
strength. The Istanbul framework, established that spring, envisioned 
neutrality but traded nonalignment for a full Russian withdrawal to 
pre-invasion lines and a process to address Crimea.

Policy—especially of the sort that determines the high politics of war and 
peace—often involves selecting the least bad option at a moment of opportunity. 
Late 2022 presented such a moment. Instead, leaders in Washington and London 
could taste victory. Expectations swelled in Kiev. The good guys were on the 
march.

But since Ukraine’s failed offensive of 2023, the war has progressed in the 
other direction.

The hotly anticipated push toward Melitopol and Tokmak demonstrated the basic 
and unfavorable structural conditions of the war. Ukraine sustained severe 
losses while Russia’s layered defenses held. Western armor could not break 
through fixed lines without air superiority. Ammunition shortages crippled 
operational tempo while manpower scarcities bled Ukrainian armed forces 
dangerously thin. Speeches, sanctions packages, and expressions of solidarity 
have yet to reverse this reality.

None of this is meant as a criticism of the Ukrainian people, who have fought 
gallantly and endured barbarity.

But from the perspective of the Trump administration, or any policymaker 
willing to put America first, the national interest cannot be ignored. The past 
three years of war have depleted U.S. ammunition and air defense stockpiles 
faster than our defense industrial base could replace them.

Beyond these material shortfalls, the war has also dominated strategic 
attention and political deliberation to the detriment of other pressing 
matters. The termination of hostilities would allow Washington to begin setting 
its own priorities rather than reflexively responding to crises on the outer 
edges of the European security perimeter. For an administration elected in part 
on its promise to reduce foreign entanglements and restore focus at home, 
closing out the largest land war in Europe since 1945 is an important 
imperative.

Subscribe Today
Get daily emails in your inbox

As such, realism provides clarity. A settlement secured after three years of 
attrition will not resemble the deal Ukraine might have had when it held the 
initiative. But the question confronting us now is not whether the agreement is 
perfect. Rather, are the alternatives worse? Keep fighting? Toward what end? To 
endure more casualties, greater destruction, and dwindling American support in 
hope that a weaker position will yield a better deal at some later date?

Nor should ending the war be confused with rewarding Moscow. To the contrary, 
Russia will emerge from the carnage having absorbed catastrophic casualties, a 
battered economy, and a severely degraded international standing. Ukraine, for 
its part, and despite the bruising it has taken, will arise stronger, better 
armed, and more fully integrated into the West economically. A more stable and 
sustainable future awaits.

In the meanwhile, war rarely rewards wishful thinking. The window for the 
better deal came and went. What remains is the difficult choice between an 
imperfect peace and a failing war. Ending hostilities now is the only path to 
avoiding something worse.
https://www.theamericanconservative.com/trumps-ukraine-proposal-is-the-least-bad-option/

-- 
http:www.antic.org
--- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"SERBIAN NEWS NETWORK" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To view this discussion visit 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/senet/PH3PPF7D1BBD56652D0BBE3A2109D417F71AEA8A%40PH3PPF7D1BBD566.NAMP223.PROD.OUTLOOK.COM.

Reply via email to