Monday, 27 November 2023

Is This Ukraine’s Munich Moment?

 


“The settlement of the Ukrainian problem, which has now been achieved is, in my view, only the prelude to a larger settlement in which all Europe may find peace. This morning I had another talk with the Russian President, Mr Putin, and here is the paper which bears his name upon it as well as mine. Some of you, perhaps, have already heard what it contains but I would just like to read it to you: " ... We regard the agreement signed last night and the Western-brokered Russo-Ukrainian Peace Agreement as symbolic of the desire of our peoples never to go to war with one another again”.

What Neville Chamberlain might say about a possible Russo-Ukrainian ‘peace’ agreement

November 28th. Is this Ukraine’s Munich moment?  It certainly looks that way.  News that the Americans and Germans (ironically) are pressuring the Ukrainians to negotiate with the Russians looks to any historian of any worth like a prelude to a very European ‘peace’ deal in which the aggressor gets rewarded and the victim compensated.  The flurry of visits to Kyiv last week by US Secretary of State Tony Blinken and US Secretary of Defense Lloyd Austen, not to mention the German Defence Minister Boris Pistorius were for a reason.  Naturally, the visits were given political top cover by announcements of increased support for Ukraine’s hard pressed armed forces but that was not the real aim.  Word is that President Biden does not want the war hanging over him during the US presidential election campaign or the NATO 75 summit in Washington in July.  The mercantilist Germans simply feel very uncomfortable being at loggerheads with the Russians, which explains why so many of the European companies who have set up in Turkey and other places to get around EU sanctions on Russia are German.    For once, at least the appeasers are not British.

In 1938, as part of the settlement of the “Czechoslovak problem” Chamberlain negotiated away 20% of the then Czechoslovakia. Any such deal would doubtless require Ukraine to hand over 20% of its territory to the Russians who would get to keep much of the Donbas and Crimea it has taken illegally by force, as well as Mariupol, a major Ukrainian grain port on the Black Sea.  I do not want to say I told you so, but I told you so. Back in August I wrote, “…it will also become apparent that the Allies have already given 90% of what they are going to give Ukraine, whether it is delivered as promised or not.”  I also wrote that in May that the 28 Western-trained and equipped Ukrainian brigades lacked the military weight to break through the Russian defensive lines in the south and east of Ukraine.  This was partly because the Russian General Staff had learned some painful lessons, but also because the West took so long to deliver the relatively limited supplies of arms it had promised.  Artillery is the defining feature of this very Russian war and it now transpires that the EU will fail to deliver the promised 1 million artillery shells by next March mainly due to an inability to upscale rapidly European arms production.  Meanwhile, Russia has received over 1 million artillery shells since early August from North Korea, and clearly with Chinese backing. In other words, Russia is winning the artillery war.

Why is this demarche happening now?  Keeping Ukraine alive IS a vital Western interest, restoring Ukraine’s 2014 borders, let alone its 1991 borders, is not.  There are several other factors, the most salient of which is the lack of a coherent Western strategy since the February 2022 Russian invasion of Ukraine.  The West has got into a habit of giving Ukraine just enough weapons to prevent Russia from conquering the whole country, but never signed up to Ukraine’s war aim of recapturing all the territory the Russians had taken.  Frankly, the risk of a wider war with the Russians over the Donbas and Crimea has self-deterred the West, which several European countries see as Ukraine having only borrowed from Russia, whilst for many Americans Ukraine is a large country faraway about which they know little.  Hard but true.

How would the West justify such a retreat (and it would be)? First, should there be negotiations (there are already extensive contacts with the Russians) the Americans and the Germans would play up the ‘victory’ of a rump Ukraine.  Second, Berlin and Washington, and no doubt Brussels and Paris (not to mention in time London) would say that by simply surviving as an independent country the sacrifice of so many brave Ukrainians was worth it.  Third, they would hint how much cheaper it would be for the West, with Europeans to the fore, to rebuild Ukraine if they do not have to pay for the war-torn Donbas and occupied Crimea.  Fourth, they would have secured an end to the killing by sacrificing some Ukrainian territory in support of Ukrainian sovereignty.    

How would Moscow and Beijing see such a Russian victory for that is how Putin would present it?  They would doubtless point again to the lack of Western resolve and the wide gap between Western rhetoric about values at the beginning of the war and the West’s interests during it. They would also point again to the West’s lack of collective strategic patience evident in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, and Syria and may well be shaping the response to Gaza’s 7/10 attack on Israel and Tel Aviv’s response. They would cite further proof that the West, Western Europeans in particular, are profoundly risk averse to the point of appeasement and all Moscow and Beijing must do is to out-wait them.  They would also highlight the seemingly eternal lack of Western cohesion and any really meaningful relationship between the ends the West claims to believe in, and the ways, means and risks the West is willing to invest to realise them - action without strategy. Above all, Moscow and Beijing would suggest that if the Americans and Germans acquiesced in such a ‘peace’ it would be little different from that imposed on Afghanistan, although its consequence for NATO and Europeans would be far more immediate and more dangerous.

Putin would see his vision of a Novorossiya and the rebuilding of a Russian Empire vindicated and doubtless believe he had successfully completed phases one and two. Phase one was the seizing of Crimea. Phase two, the successful if costly occupation of Donbas and Mariupol.  Phase 3? After he had rebuilt Russian forces, say 2030, he would move to seize Odessa and cut Ukraine off from the Black Sea. He would also seize all of Ukraine east of the River Dnieper, including the bread-basket. Phase 4 would take a tad longer, the timing of which would depend on the extent to which the Americans were preoccupied with the Indo-Pacific and the extent to which Putin could lure the Germans back into strategic somnolence and energy dependency.  The target?  Well, that is fairly obvious. The Baltic States.

In other words, the Americans and Germans had better understand the longer-term geopolitical consequences of any fix they impose on Ukraine for short-term political relief. If they fail to learn the real lesson from the Russo-Ukraine War that Putin really is a militarist and an adventurer and if Europeans again fail to properly rearm then all Europe would have gained is a strategic pause. It is also hard to believe Kyiv could possibly accept such a deal unless what is left of Ukraine is offered NATO membership the moment any such agreement comes into force.  That begs a further question: would all NATO members sign up to Ukrainian membership? 

The Munich Agreement is a warning.  In March 1939, Hitler broke the agreement and occupied Prague and the rest of Czechoslovakia made defenceless by Munich.   The irony was that Neville Chamberlain did understand the consequences and I should know. I wrote my Oxford thesis on British rearmament in the 1930s.   Britain brought time to further repair its defences by selling Czech sovereignty.  Are ‘we’ about to do the same thing to Ukraine?

Julian Lindley-French       

   

    

 

Thursday, 16 November 2023

What Jinping Really Said to Joe

 


November 16th. Understandably focused on the grief, death and mire of Israel, Gaza, and Ukraine there has been little coverage in much of the media of yesterday’s ‘walk in the woods’ by US President Joe Biden and Chinese President Xi Jinping (first given name Jinping). And yet, historians might look back on their stroll through the carefully coiffured gardens of a Californian estate as one of the most important moments in what President Xi rightly calls the “most important bilateral relationship in the world”.  So, how did the conversation go?

Joe:  Things have gotten pretty testy between us of late, Jinping.  We don’t want a war any more than you do but sometimes you make it very hard.  We need each other if we are going to survive politically, even you, Mr Dictator.

Jinping: Agreed, Joe, and thanks for the compliment. Why don’t you try dictatorship? Still, you also fail to understand that my position as President-for-Life is not as easy as you may think.  There are a host of factions defying me within the Chinese Communist Party and all of which are more not less nationalistic than I am.  If you want a war then let those morons replace me.  You see, as ever you Americans cannot be bothered to learn anybody else’s history but your own much-exaggerated greatness. The world looks very different from where I sit given what those imperialistic bastards the British did to us a few years ago back in the 1840s.  The Chinese people want payback and at the very least some contrition from you arrogant, ever weaker and not to mention very ugly Westerners.  A bit of kow-towing would not go amiss either.

Joe: Look, Jinping, we are not the British.  In fact, not even the British are any longer the British, just an irrelevant and utterly chaotic little island off Europe led by a bunch of inbred aristocratic buttheads. In other words, get over it!  The real problem is you Chinese and your enormous historical chip on your shoulders. Sure, we’ll show you respect, but we will never kowtow before you because we know the price we would pay. We also know you are facing your own self-inflicted economic time-bomb caused by your imploding property bubble.  Your aggressive regional policies and restrictive corporate policies have also seen many Western companies flee China just at the moment you need them.  So, knock yourself out.  

Jinping: You over-state our problems, Joe. Our economy is sound, tremendously resilient and has great potential. My problem is not economic at all but political.  In the wake of a little local difficulty in 1989…

Joe: You mean the 1989 Tiananmen Square massacre…

Jinping: …our little local difficulty in 1989, Joe, we promised the Chinese people the Party would improve their living standards year on year so long as they NEVER contested our authority.  Sadly, COVID and some other minor difficulties mean that we can no longer offer that deal and the people are getting a little uppity.   

Joe: So, what do you plan to do about it? 

Jinping: Well, that’s what I here to tell you about so we can avoid any further unnecessary friction. First, do a deal with you to dial down your anti-Chinese rhetoric so that you Westerners calm down as we go back to what you call ‘globalisation’, but what we call ‘China-isation” and return to making us rich and powerful by buying what we make.   Second, do what we must do to steal from you what you want and then simply sell it back to you more cheaply.  Third, use the money to continue investing in the People’s Liberation Army to shore up the position of the Party domestically and project our, erm, peaceful influence internationally. Fourth, mire your in any case useless European allies in debt thus weakening the Western Alliance.  We will even give them some money so that can pretend to share the burdens of NATO. Fifth, and above all, reunite the breakaway province of Taiwan with the Chinese fatherland which you must understand is “unstoppable”.  None of what I have said is in the least anti-American.  In fact, if you let us do what we need to do in our sphere of influence, we will let you do what you need to do in your own. No names, no pack drill. What possible problem could you have with that?  You get rich, we get rich, and the rest simply don't matter.

Joe: Well, hold on there a moment, Jinping. We may have a few minor concerns. Is it really in the American interest to make you so strong that in time you force us out of East Asia?  The fool you support in Russia has already revealed to us your global dominance strategy by trashing international law by invading Ukraine with his two-bit military.  Even though most Americans don’t give a damn, just a few of us do!  We also know that your whole PLA gig is to make our already complicated lives in DC even more complicated by stretching US forces globally so that when you do decide to act against Taiwan you will ensure we are busy in places like Ukraine and the Middle East. The kind of investments you are making in the PLA, your so-called String of Pearls, not to mention your support for Pyongyang are very clearly designed force us out of the Indo-Pacific and subjugate our fellow democracies in the region. 

Then there is Taiwan.  Good luck with that. Your military men might have noticed that the shortest distance between mainland China and Taiwan is just about the same as the shortest distance between England and Normandy. When we and the Brits did D-Day we had already practiced such operations several times elsewhere, we were already the world’s leading maritime-amphibious powers, and we enjoyed complete air superiority. What you really want is for us Americans to turn a blind eye whilst you use whatever means necessary to subjugate the Taiwanese, as you did in Hong Kong, and as you are doing against the Uighur people.

By the way, it’s your wife’s birthday next Monday. My intelligence people tell me you have forgotten.

Jinping: Joe, its none of your bloody business. You accept that Taiwan is legally part of the People’s Republic of China.  In other words, you accept our sovereignty over Taiwan and all you are doing is quibbling over how we do it.  Do you really want to go to war over a small island faraway about which you know nothing? Your Allies?  They cannot even defeat my useful idiot in Moscow.  So, I think not.

The bottom-line is this, Joe: I have come all this way for a four hour meeting as a courtesy to tell you we ARE going to bring Taiwan back into the Chinese family. We would prefer you accepted that reality and we both got back to mutually enriching ourselves. If you do not, then we have a REAL problem and much sooner than you think because I must do this. You Americans really must wake up and smell your own appalling coffee… you really are not the power you used to be.  We, on the other hand…

In any case, there is always President Trump for us to deal with when we have arranged his re-election…

Julian Lindley-French