Jeffrey Sachs on Negotiating Peace in Ukraine
An esteemed economist suggests sanctions and weapons are not the way to achieve peace in Ukraine.
An earlier post, which included a dialogue with Noam Chomsky that primarily dealt with the current situation in Ukraine, generated considerable online discussion, pro and con. Noam argued that the only reasonable endgame for Ukraine, Russia, and the US involved agreeing on might be viewed as a poor diplomatic solution that involved constraining NATA expansion, and also possibly ceding some territory to Russia. While I understood his reasoning, and concurred that I didn’t see another easy out of this quagmire, I felt that such a proposal was also unlikely to be politically viable at the current time in the US.
The distinguished economist Jeffrey Sachs and I have spent many hours discussing science, as well as economics and politics together, both privately, and in public events. He is an astute observer of the international scene, and he can rationally dissect complex problems—most often supporting his arguments with data—while pointing out potentially simple solutions. I have been struck how Jeffrey’s conclusions often mesh with Noam’s, even if he approaches problems from a different perspective.
Jeff produced a piece today for CNN arguing cogently for a negotiated peace, centered on limiting NATO enlargement. He points out that sanctions, which have been at the heart of the West’s response to the Russian invasion of Ukraine, are notoriously ineffective, and moreover that they are not supported by much of the rest of the world. And he, like Chomsky, once again lays the US instance on enlarging NATO as being a central obstacle to peace.
I found the article a cogent and provocative contribution to the ongoing debate about how to end a conflict that otherwise could grow to encompass a far greater portion of the globe. It also presents an international perspective that is strongly needed in the US and which receives little airplay. I received permission to reprint Jeffrey’s piece here, for which I thank him. A link to the original piece is also given a the bottom of this post.
LMK
A negotiated peace is the only way to end Russia's war on Ukraine
Jeffrey D. Sachs | April 20, 2022 | CNN.com
(CNN) There is only one answer to the war in Ukraine: a peace deal.
The two-pronged US strategy, to help Ukraine overcome the Russian invasion by imposing tough sanctions and by supplying Ukraine's military with sophisticated armaments, is likely to fall short. What is needed is a peace deal, which may be within reach. Yet to reach a deal, the United States will have to compromise on NATO, something Washington has so far rejected.
Putin started the war in Ukraine and has said negotiations have reached an impasse, without slamming the door on them. But before the war started, Putin presented the West with a list of demands including, most notably, a halt to NATO enlargement.
The US, pointedly, was not willing to engage on that point. Now would be a good time to revisit that policy. Putin also would have to show a willingness to make concessions for negotiations to succeed.
America's arms-and-sanctions approach may sound convincing in the echo chamber of US public opinion, but it doesn't really work on the global stage. It enjoys little support outside of the United States and Europe, and eventually may face a political backlash inside the US and Europe as well.
To anyone familiar with the Russian war effort and the horror it has unleashed on civilians, it may seem obvious that Russia would be relegated to pariah status globally. But that's not the case: Developing countries, especially, have declined to join in the West's campaign of isolation, as seen most recently in a US-led vote to remove Russia from the UN Human Rights Council. It's true that 93 countries supported the move, but 100 other countries did not (24 opposed, 58 abstained, and 18 did not vote). Even more striking, those 100 countries are home to 76% of the world population.
Countries may well have had nonideological reasons for opposing the US initiative, including trade ties with Russia. But the fact remains that much of the world has rejected isolating Moscow, especially to the degree Washington would like.
Sanctions are a big part of the US strategy. They are not likely to defeat Russia, but they are likely to impose high costs around the world. At best, they can push Russia toward a peace agreement and therefore should be deployed in conjunction with an intensive push for a negotiated peace.
There are countless problems with economic sanctions.
The first is that even as sanctions cause economic distress in Russia, they are unlikely to change Russian politics or policies in any decisive way. Think of the harsh sanctions the US has imposed on Venezuela, Iran and North Korea. Yes, they've weakened these economies, but they've not changed the politics or policies of these countries in the ways the US government has sought.
The second problem is that sanctions are easy to evade at least in part, and more evasions are likely to emerge over time. The US sanctions apply most effectively to dollar-based transactions involving the US banking system. Countries seeking to evade the sanctions find ways to make transactions through non-bank or non-dollar means. We can expect a rising number of transactions with Russia in rubles, rupees, renminbi and other non-dollar currencies.
The third and related problem is that most of the world does not believe in the sanctions -- and also does not take sides in the Russia-Ukraine war. Add up all of the countries and regions imposing sanctions on Russia -- the US, UK, European Union, Japan, Singapore, Australia, New Zealand and a handful of others -- and their combined population comes to just 14% of the world population.
The fourth problem is the boomerang effect. Sanctions on Russia hurt not just Russia but the entire world economy, stoking supply-chain disruptions, inflation and food shortages. This is why many European countries are likely to continue to import gas and oil from Russia, and why Hungary and perhaps some other European countries will agree to pay Russia in rubles. The boomerang effect will also likely hurt Democrats in this November's midterm elections as inflation eats away at the real earnings of voters.
The fifth problem is the inelastic (price-insensitive) demand for Russia's energy and grain exports. As the quantity of Russian exports is reduced, the world prices of those commodities increase. Russia can end up with lower export volumes but nearly the same or even higher export earnings.
The sixth problem is geopolitical. Other countries -- and most importantly China -- see the Russia-Ukraine war at least in part as a war in which Russia is resisting NATO enlargement to Ukraine. That's why China repeatedly argues that Russia's legitimate security interests are at stake in the war.
The US likes to say that NATO is a purely defensive alliance, but Russia, China and others think otherwise. They look askance at the NATO bombing of Serbia in 1999, NATO forces in Afghanistan for 20 years after 9/11, and the NATO bombing of Libya in 2011, which toppled Moammar Gadhafi. Russian leaders have been objecting to NATO's eastward enlargement since it began in the mid-1990s with the Czech Republic, Hungary, and Poland. It is notable that when Putin called on NATO to stop its enlargement into Ukraine, Biden pointedly refused to negotiate with Russia over the issue.
In short, many countries, certainly including China, will not back global pressures on Russia that could lead to NATO expansion. The rest of the world wants peace, not a victory by the United States or NATO in a proxy war with Russia.
The US would love to see Putin defeated militarily, and NATO armaments have dealt a huge and heavy blow to Russian forces. But it's also true that Ukraine is being destroyed in the process. Russia is unlikely to declare defeat and retreat. Russia is much more likely to escalate -- even, potentially, by using nuclear weapons. Thus NATO arms can inflict huge costs on Russia but cannot save Ukraine.
All of this is to say that the US strategy in Ukraine can bleed Russia but can't save Ukraine. Only a peace deal can do that. In fact, the current approach will undermine economic and political stability throughout the world and could divide the world into pro-NATO and anti-NATO camps to the deep long-term detriment of the United States.
American diplomacy is therefore punishing Russia, but without much chance of real success for Ukraine or for US interests. Real success is that Russian troops return home and Ukraine's safety and security are achieved. Those outcomes can be achieved at the negotiating table.
The key step is for the US, NATO allies and Ukraine to make clear that NATO will not enlarge into Ukraine as long as Russia stops the war and leaves Ukraine. The countries aligned with Putin, and those choosing neither side, would then say to Putin that since he has stopped NATO's enlargement, it's now time for Russia to leave the battlefield and return home. Of course, negotiations might fail if Russia's demands remain unacceptable. But we should at least try, and indeed try very hard, to see whether peace can be achieved through Ukraine's neutrality backed by international guarantees.
All of Biden's tough talk -- about Putin leaving power, genocide and war crimes -- will not save Ukraine. The best chance to save Ukraine is through negotiations that bring the world onside. By prioritizing peace instead of NATO enlargement, the US would rally the support of much more of the world and thereby help to bring peace to Ukraine and security and stability for the entire world.
https://edition.cnn.com/2022/04/20/opinions/sachs-ukraine-negotiation-op-ed/index.html
Perhaps I should apologize for the tone I took on the Chomsky post. This is not Twitter, where indignant polemic - in anticipation of invective - is the only way to communicate. This is a place of reasoned debate and will be treated as such.
Now, to Mr. Sachs' arguments: I think he is making the same mistake Chomsky made - he is treating the situation as if Ukraine was a puppet government of the United States, when it is very much not. The Ukrainians are not fighting because the West told them to fight, they are fighting because they want to fight for their own freedom. It's as if Mr. Sachs is talking about a deal between the United States and Russia over the Ukraine crisis - and forgot to include Ukrainian participation in the negotiations about their own country. And he assumes that the Russians would abide by that peace agreement, even though they violate every other agreement (such as the 1994 Budapest Memorandum on Security Assurances and the 2014 Minsk agreements). He also assumes that the Russians have made their final territorial demands, a classic appeasement delusion. So when he writes that we should "try very hard, to see whether peace can be achieved through Ukraine's neutrality backed by international guarantees" he ignores that they've tried that before and all the "international guarantees" were worthless.
As to NATO - once again, he hasn't considered that the Russians are lying. The Russians are not afraid of a NATO invasion of Russia, the Russians are upset that they can't invade the Eastern European NATO countries the way he invaded non-NATO Ukraine and Georgia. Putin has spoken many times about how humiliating it is that Russia gave up all this territory at the end of the Cold War. It makes him feel bad. That's too bad, but it's not a reason to let him invade democratic Europe.
He says that sanctions "enjoys little support outside of the United States and Europe". So what? The technology and finances he needs most are concentrated in the United States and Europe - that's why all his oligarchs live there, and not in China or wherever else. I guess he's unfamiliar with the history of how western companies were what built and sustained the Soviet Union's industrial and military machine (as Stalin told Averell Harriman: "two-thirds of all the large industrial enterprises in the Soviet Union had been built with United States help or technical assistance.") Keep in mind that one of the big reasons the Russian advance on Kyiv failed was because their cheap Chinese tires failed. Let's keep it that way. And yes, we should keep selling weapons to Ukraine. Without them they are at Russia's mercy. Obviously.
Anyway, that's my take - as long as the Ukrainians want to fight for their freedom, we should support them in any way we can. Hopefully Russians get tired of being poor, isolated and having their young men drafted and turned into worm food by the tens of thousands