Biden has wrecked western unity with his loose talk. Can war be averted? | thearticle

Biden has wrecked western unity with his loose talk. Can war be averted? | thearticle


Play all audios:


Nobody knows whether Vladimir Putin will launch an invasion of Ukraine — possibly not even the Russian President himself. As Robert Fry argues in an important strategic assessment today, any


such invasion and subsequent occupation would be fraught with hazards for the Russians. As a Lieutenant General with experience of several wars, including Iraq and Afghanistan, Sir Robert


knows what he is talking about. So I shall leave the military analysis to the soldier in order to focus on the politics and diplomacy. Here what was a clear-cut situation has recently become


utterly confused — and not in a good way. At a disastrous press conference on Wednesday, President Biden suggested simultaneously that Putin probably would “move in” to Ukraine, that Nato


was hopelessly divided and implied that the alliance might not retaliate at all if there was a “minor incursion” rather than an “invasion”. It is hard to conceive of a worse example of mixed


messaging. Indeed, Putin may be inclined to think that he has already won without a shot being fired. What was Biden thinking of when he lifted the lid on what must have been strictly


confidential conversations with other Western leaders? And what did he mean by distinguishing between an invasion and an incursion? “It’s one thing if it’s a minor incursion and we end up


having to fight about what to do and what not to do,” he mused. In Kyiv, where the Secretary of State, Antony Blinken, was meeting President Zelensky, the Ukrainians were aghast. An unnamed


official there told CNN that Biden had just given “the green light” to Putin. How did the Commander in Chief suppose his speculation about nuclear war would be received in the Kremlin? “I am


hoping that Vladimir Putin understands that he is — short of full-blown nuclear war — he is not in a very good position to dominate the world. It is a concern…” This was another own goal:


nothing could be easier than for Putin to mock the leader of the West for accusing him of world domination, when he is merely dealing with a little local difficulty. Equally muddled was the


suggestion that the Russians “had to do something”. Why? Officially the massing of Russian forces on the border is a purely internal affair, a mere exercise, which could all be scaled down


again without loss of face. By raising the stakes, Biden has made it more likely that Putin will gamble on a token response from a weak and divided Nato, which will leave the Ukrainian Army,


outnumbered and outgunned, to its fate. Worst of all was the implication that Nato is so lacking in unity that “we have to be very careful about how we move forward in making clear to him


that there are prices to pay”. What is that all about? During the many weeks of diplomatic exchanges (including phone calls with Putin not only involving Biden but all the major European


leaders) one simple message has been consistent: if the Russian Army invades, its economy will be crippled by sanctions. Until now, that is. We learned earlier this week that, in deference


to Germany, the US has dropped its threat to cut off Russia from the Swift international banking system. But the assumption was still that other, almost equally severe sanctions would


automatically be applied. Now it looks very much as if a graduated response is contemplated, with anything short of an armoured offensive towards Kyiv resulting in no more serious


consequences than the annexation of Crimea and de facto occupation of the Donbas in 2014. If that is indeed what the White House has in mind, Ukraine is now as good as abandoned and, at no


cost in blood or treasure, the Kremlin will have pulled off its greatest diplomatic triumph since the end of the Cold War. The American tendency to treat Europe as a single entity has seldom


been less appropriate. The new Social Democrat-led coalition in Berlin has apparently refused to permit RAF planes to overfly Germany in order to supply purely defensive anti-tank weapons


to Kyiv. While Chancellor Scholz has been tight-lipped, it is clear that behind the scenes he has been urging an ultra-cautious policy, not only because of the notorious German energy


dependency on Russia, but also because of business lobbying. The new German opposition leader, Friedrich Merz, appears particularly eager to appease these vested interests. The Germans hold


a trump card: the Nordstream 2 gas pipeline. Yet they seem disinclined to allow it to come into play in negotiations with Moscow. As for France: President Macron has just announced his own


side-deal with Putin. This week he proposed a “new security and stability order” between the EU and Russia. As France holds the European presidency, this proposal is bound to be seen as an


attempt to cut the US and UK out of the picture. It is the worst kind of unilateral French initiative and it has more to do with Macron’s election campaign than with Ukraine’s security.


Where does this leave the British Government, which has been notably more hawkish than its US counterpart, let alone our “friends and partners” in Europe? Not in a good place. Boris Johnson


is fighting for his political life. The defence establishment is worried about possible miscalculations by the Russians. The Foreign Secretary, Liz Truss, is said to be angling for a visit


to Moscow, but as she can see from the failed attempts by Secretary Blinken and NATO’s Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, the Russians are in no mood to make concessions. The time for


jaw-jaw is visibly running out. Perhaps the last and only chance of preserving peace in Europe and preventing potentially the most dangerous crisis since 1945 is for us to rekindle the old


Special Relationship. Biden and Johnson should issue a joint declaration by the US and the UK that they stand by the 1994 Budapest Memorandum, which both nations signed and which was also


signed by Russia, to guarantee Ukrainian sovereignty. No ifs or buts. Let Putin be in no doubt that an invasion of Ukraine would be an abrogation of a solemn international agreement and


leave Russia as an outlaw, a rogue state, with all the consequences that implies. Does Putin wish Russia to become another North Korea, excluded from the comity of nations? Or will he stand


down his armies and talk seriously? The ball belongs in his court, not NATO’s.