By Charles Krauthammer
At his first press briefing
after the beheading of American James Foley, President Obama stunned the assembled
when he admitted that he had no strategy for confronting ISIS, a.k.a. the
Islamic State, in Syria. Yet it was not nearly the most egregious, or
consequential, thing he said.
Idiotic, yes. You’re the leader
of the free world. Even if you don’t have a strategy — indeed, especially if
you don’t — you never admit it publicly.
However, if Obama is indeed
building a larger strategy, an air campaign coordinated with allies on the
ground, this does take time. George W. Bush wisely took a month to respond to
9/11, preparing an unusual special ops-Northern Alliance battle plan that brought
down Taliban rule in a hundred days.
We’ll see whether Obama comes
up with an ISIS strategy. But he already has one for Ukraine: Write it off.
Hence the more shocking statement in that Aug. 28 briefing: Obama declaring
Russia’s invasion of Ukraine — columns of tanks, armored personnel carriers,
artillery and a thousand troops brazenly crossing the border — to be nothing
new, just “a continuation of what’s been taking place for months now.”
And just to reaffirm his
indifference and inaction, Obama mindlessly repeated his refrain that the
Ukraine problem has no military solution. Yes, but does he not understand that
diplomatic solutions are largely dictated by the military balance on the
ground?
Vladimir Putin’s invasion may
be nothing new to Obama. For Ukraine, it changed everything. Russia was on the
verge of defeat. Now Ukraine is. That’s why Ukraine is welcoming a cease-fire
that amounts to capitulation.
A month ago, Putin’s separatist
proxies were besieged and desperate. His invasion to the southeast saved them.
It diverted the Ukrainian military from Luhansk and Donetsk, allowing the
rebels to recover, while Russian armor rolled over Ukrainian forces,
jeopardizing their control of the entire southeast. Putin even boasted that he
could take Kiev in two weeks.
Why bother? He’s already
fracturing and subjugating Ukraine, re-creating Novorossiya (“New Russia”),
statehood for which is one of the issues that will be up for, yes, diplomacy.
Which makes incomprehensible
Obama’s denial to Ukraine of even defensive weapons — small arms, anti-tank and
anti-aircraft missiles. Indeed, his stunning passivity in the face of a dictionary-definition
invasion has not just confounded the Ukrainians. It has unnerved the East
Europeans. Hence Obama’s reassurances on his trip to the NATO summit in Wales.
First up, Estonia. It seems to
be Obama’s new “red line.” I’m sure they sleep well tonight in Tallinn now that
Obama has promised to stand with them. (Remember the State Department hashtag
#UnitedforUkraine?)
To back up Obama’s words, NATO
is touting a promised rapid-reaction force of about 4,000 to be dispatched to
pre-provisioned bases in the Baltics and Poland within 48 hours of an
emergency. (Read: Russian invasion.)
First, we’ve been hearing about
European rapid-reaction forces for decades. They’ve amounted to nothing.
Second, even if this one comes
into being, it is a feeble half-measure. Not only will troops have to be
assembled, dispatched, transported and armed as the fire bell is ringing, but
the very sending will require some affirmative and immediate decision by NATO.
Try getting that done. The alliance is famous for its reluctant, slow and
fractured decision-making. (See: Ukraine.) By the time the Rapid Reactors
arrive, Russia will have long overrun their yet-to-be-manned bases.
The real news from Wales is
what NATO did not do. It did not create the only serious deterrent to Russia:
permanent bases in the Baltics and eastern Poland that would act as a tripwire.
Tripwires produce automaticity. A Russian leader would know that any invading
force would immediately encounter NATO troops, guaranteeing war with the West.
Which is how we kept the peace
in Europe through a half-century of Cold War. U.S. troops in West Germany could
never have stopped a Russian invasion. But a Russian attack would have
instantly brought America into a war — a war Russia could not countenance.
It’s what keeps the peace in
Korea today. Even the reckless North Korean leadership dares not cross the DMZ,
because it would kill U.S. troops on its way to Seoul, triggering war with
America.
That’s what deterrence means.
And what any rapid-reaction force cannot provide. In Wales, it will nonetheless
be proclaimed a triumph. In Estonia, in Poland, as today in Ukraine, it will be
seen for what it is — a loud declaration of reluctance by an alliance led by a
man who is the very embodiment of ambivalence.
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