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gogosolot Commentary: Last-ditch effort for US support leaves Ukraine with few options
Updated:2024-10-08 04:33    Views:179

BIRMINGHAMgogosolot, England: Winter is coming in Ukraine, for the third time amid its war with Russia. And if Ukraine’s prospects were not rosy before President Volodymyr Zelenskyy’s trip to the United States last week, they are outright bleak given its results.

Mr Zelenskyy went to engage world leaders at the United Nations and to meet with US President Joe Biden, as well as his prospective successors Vice President Kamala Harris and ex-president Donald Trump.

Two main items were on his agenda: Shoring up support at the UN for his peace plan and getting the US to support his strategy for victory in the war against Russia. On both items, the results are mixed at best, further compounding Ukraine’s already precarious situation.

At the UN, Mr Zelenskyy made a passionate appeal in his speeches to the General Assembly and the Security Council for forcing Russia to make peace on the basis of the core principles of the UN Charter – restoring Ukraine’s full sovereignty and territorial integrity within its 1991, internationally recognised boundaries – which would require the full withdrawal of all Russian troops from Ukrainian territory.

Given the current situation on the battlefield and the steady – albeit slow and costly – gains Russia has been making over the past several months, this is clearly a non-starter for Moscow.

An alternative joint initiative by China and Brazil, launched last June just before the Swiss-hosted first so-called global peace summit on Ukraine, envisages a ceasefire along the current frontlines. This would freeze the current status quo and leave it up to subsequent negotiations between Moscow and Kyiv to find a settlement that may, or may not, restore Ukraine in its 1991 boundaries.

Ukraine and its Western partners find this equally unacceptable. Add to that the fact that the Russian President Vladimir Putin has made any negotiations contingent on Ukraine recognising the illegal Russian annexation not only of Crimea in 2014 but also of four regions on the Ukrainian mainland that Russia only partially occupies at the moment, and any talk about negotiations, let alone an actual settlement, is pure fantasy.

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The problem with Mr Zelenskyy’s victory plan seems to be that it is not much of a plan.

It centres on the delivery of more Western military aid, permission to use long-range missiles against targets deep inside Russia, and an official invitation to join the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO).

While Mr Zelenskyy managed to get Mr Biden to authorise a total of US$8 billion in further security assistance, no progress has been made on lifting restrictions that the US and other allies are placing on Ukraine’s use of Western military aid against Russian territory. The prospect of Ukraine joining NATO remains remote, not least as it would require the consent of all 32 current member states.

The renewed nuclear sabre rattling by Mr Putin, who announced changes to Russia’s military doctrine on the use of its nuclear arsenal on Sep 26, just before Mr Zelenskyy’s meeting with Mr Biden, was clearly timed as a signal to the West to think twice: How much support to Ukraine might be too much?

The actual changes may be few and far between but they will create enough uncertainty in Western policy circles to continue the current course of self-deterrence that provides just enough aid to Ukraine to avoid a military defeat at Russian hands.gogosolot

Rescuers work at a site of an apartment building hit by a Russian air strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine, in Zaporizhzhia, Ukraine Sep 29, 2024. REUTERS/Stringer