Andrew Korybko
He should do this on his first day in
office if he’s serious about implementing his foreign policy agenda
New York Times contributor
Rajan Menon wrote in
a mid-December op-ed that Trump is unlikely to agree to give Ukraine the
security guarantees that Zelensky is demanding in temporary lieu of NATO
membership. He’s apparently unaware that Trump will soon inherit the bilateral security agreement that the Biden Administration reached with Ukraine
in June. It essentially institutionalizes existing US military aid for Ukraine
and obligates it to resume the present scale and scope of such if the conflict
reignites.
Nevertheless, Menon’s
factually inaccurate assessment raises the question of whether Trump would
terminate that agreement as part of his plan to “Pivot (back) to Asia” for more
muscularly containing China, which his administration could never do in full if
it maintains such commitments to Ukraine. Last June’s document stipulates that
“Either Party may terminate this Agreement by providing a written notification
through diplomatic channels to the other Party” within six months of planning
to abandon it.
It's therefore legally feasible, but Trump would predictably get a lot of flak from his “deep state’s” Russophobic hawks, though he’d then free the US up to “Pivot (back) to Asia” without worrying about being dragged back into another proxy war with Russia in Europe. Moreover, by depriving Ukraine of the US security guarantees that it took for granted, he’d make it less likely that Kiev would violate the ceasefire in an attempt to manipulate America and others into fighting Russia on its behalf afterwards.
Far from reducing the chances
for peace, Trump would greatly raise them by withdrawing the US from the
so-called “coalition of the willing” that Ukraine aims to pit against Russia
through its machinations. Without American participation, Ukraine would be much
less likely to provoke another conflict with Russia since it couldn’t take for
granted that its other security guarantee partners (e.g. the UK, Germany, Poland,
etc.) would risk war with Russia if NATO’s core member isn’t willing to do so anymore over this.
Another important point is
that Trump’s reported plan for NATO, whereby he’d pressure them to spend more on defense
and assume more responsibilities for their own security, would automatically
become a fait accompli in this scenario. He wouldn’t have to bargain with or
threaten them since they’d do this on their own out of their self-interests.
Knowing that there’d be no chance of the US directly intervening to save
Ukraine if the conflict reignites, they’d step up and begin doing what they
should have decades ago.
The years of freeloading off
of the US would instantly end, thus enabling Trump to accelerate America’s
“Pivot (back) to Asia” and redirect the resources that he’d save in Europe to
that theater instead. It’s therefore a win-win from the perspective of the US’
grand strategic interests, albeit one that requires tremendous political will.
If Trump is serious about implementing his foreign policy agenda, then he
should terminate the US’ bilateral security agreement with Ukraine on his first
day of office.
Andrew Korybko, Substack,
Janvier 1, 2025
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