Andrew Korybko
He might hypothetically agree that the resumption of
NATO’s present support for Ukraine (arms, intelligence, logistics, etc.) in the
event of another conflict wouldn’t cross Russia’s red lines but he’s unlikely
to compromise on the issue of Western troops in Ukraine once the present
conflict ends
Steve Witkoff’s claim that
Putin allegedly agreed to the US offering Ukraine “Article 5-like protection”
during the Anchorage Summit, which Trump repeated during
his White House Summit with Zelensky and a handful of European leaders, raises
the question of what form this could hypothetically take if true. Assuming for
the sake of analysis that he did indeed agree to this, it’s important to
clarify exactly what Article 5 entails. For starters, it doesn’t obligate
allies to dispatch troops if one of them is attacked.
Per the North
Atlantic Treaty, each member only has to take “such action as it deems
necessary”, which could include “the use of armed forces” but doesn’t have to.
As was explained earlier this year here,
“Ukraine has arguably enjoyed the benefits of this principle for the past three
years despite not being a NATO member since it’s received everything other than
troops from the alliance.” Arms, intelligence, logistical, and other forms of
support have already been provided to Ukraine in the spirit of Article 5.
It might therefore be the case that Putin agreed that such “Article 5-like protection” could be resumed in the event of another conflict without crossing Russia’s red lines. Although Russia objects to Ukraine’s remilitarization after the present conflict ends, it’s possible that it could agree to this too as part of a grand compromise in exchange for some of its other goals being met as explained here. What Russia doesn’t agree to, however, is the dispatch of Western troops to Ukraine after the present conflict ends.
Foreign Ministry spokeswoman
Maria Zakharova declared on
the day of the White House Summit that “We reiterate our long-standing position
of unequivocally rejecting any scenarios involving the deployment of NATO
military contingents in Ukraine”. This position isn’t expected to change since
one of the reasons behind the special operation is
to stop NATO’s expansion inside Ukraine. Western boots on the ground there
afterwards would therefore amount to the perceived failure of Russia’s primary
goal.
This would especially be the
case if they’re deployed along the Line of Contact, but their deployment west
of the Dnieper in parallel with the creation of a demilitarized “Trans-Dnieper”
region controlled by non-Western peacekeepers as proposed here could
hypothetically be a compromise. That said, Russia would prefer for there to
only be non-Western peacekeepers, if any at all. The deployment of foreign
military forces, regardless of the country, could embolden Ukraine to stage
false-flag provocations.
To summarize, in the order of
the most hypothetically acceptable Western security guarantees to Ukraine to
the least hypothetically acceptable from Russia’s perspective, these are: 1)
the resumption of Western support for Ukraine only if another conflict erupts
and without any peacekeepers at all; 2) continued Western support but with
non-Western peacekeepers; and 3) continued Western support, Western troops west
of the Dnieper, and non-Western troops in a demilitarized “Trans-Dnieper”
region.
The scope of Ukraine’s demilitarization and the extent of Western security guarantees to it after the present conflict ends are of the utmost importance for Russia in order to prevent Ukraine from once again being weaponized as a launchpad for Western aggression. It’s therefore highly unlikely that Russia will compromise much on this issue, especially the scenario of Western troops in Ukraine. Russia might be more flexible on other issues, but on this one, it might prove unwavering.
Andrew Korybko, Substack, August 21, 2025
Anteriores:Can Putin Legally Stop The Conflict Without First Controlling All The Disputed Territory?
What’s Standing In The Way Of A Grand Compromise On Ukraine?
Ukraine’s Romanian-Moldovan Flank Might Soon Be Used By NATO Against Russia
Korybko To Multipolarra: A Little Bit About Myself, Alt-Media, & Multipolarity
It’s Surreal That “Slava Ukraini” Was Just Shouted In The Sejm
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