Time to Make a Deal With Vladimir Putin - How Biden should handle the upcoming U.S.–Russia summit
10-06-2021, 12:33

Font size: [ A+ ] / [ A- ]

President Joe Biden will be meeting Russian President Vladimir Putin in a couple weeks. It is time for a new approach to Russia.

 

British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher played a key role in ending the Cold War. Her most important moment might have been when she observed, “I like Mr. Gorbachev. We can do business together.”

 

She helped convince Ronald Reagan that Mikhail Gorbachev, soon to become the Soviet Union’s Communist Party General Secretary, was different from his predecessors. And he was. It took a few years, but after he took control and kept the Red Army in its barracks across Eastern Europe, the communist Humpty Dumpty tumbled off the wall, never to be put back together.

 

Biden and Putin need to similarly “do business together.”

 

The latter is no democrat. Too many of us who were exhilarated by the collapse of communism underestimated the difficulty of a country never free of imperial oppression — spending centuries under Tsarist autocracy and decades under Soviet totalitarianism — moving to liberal democracy. Boris Yeltsin was well-intentioned but boozily incompetent. Only blatant and unashamed American election interference in 1996 helped him defeat a nominally reform and scarily resurgent communist party candidate. When he resigned on New Year’s Eve in 1999, many people felt relieved.

 

Alas, his successor, Putin, elevated from prime minister to acting president, proved to be more authoritarian and competent. But he never was particularly anti-American. KGB officers tended to be cynical and worldly, not fanatical ideologues. Indeed, they were needed to enforce tyranny precisely because the USSR was so contra human nature and experience.

 

Putin was supportive after 9/11, and Russia long offered logistical assistance for U.S. operations in Afghanistan. Even today there is no conflict between America and Russia over essential interests. There are no contested territorial claims, no global-spanning rivalries, no hostile ideological clashes. The Russian Federation is the Russian Empire reincarnated, sans non-Russian satrapies. And Moscow today behaves like St. Petersburg did then, demanding foreign deference, most importantly consideration of its geopolitical interests, inclusion in international decision-making, and respect for its borders.

 

Unfortunately, Washington and Brussels squandered Putin’s early goodwill. The once-great Russian bear was down, and it seemed for the count. So Western governments ran roughshod over their prostrate counterpart. The allies lied to both Gorbachev and Yeltsin about expanding NATO, dismantled long-time Russian friend Serbia, promoted “color revolutions” in Georgia and Ukraine, promised to bring both into the transatlantic alliance, and encouraged a street putsch against an elected, though corrupt, generally pro-Russian president in Ukraine. All the while the West justified its behavior by insisting that no one is entitled to a sphere of influence and Washington was representing all mankind when it intervened in other states’ affairs.

The West was blind to its hypocrisy. In the aftermath of the war in Georgia, triggered by Tbilisi’s attack on separatist territory containing Russian soldiers, an oblivious John McCain declared that “in the 21st century nations don’t invade other nations.” He apparently forgot that five years before he fervently demanded that the U.S. invade Iraq. (In fact, he was a great enthusiast for war, advocating that America attack multiple countries. He even sang a little Beach Boys ditty about bombing Iran.)

 

One can only imagine how Washington — and especially McCain — would have responded had Russia behaved like America: Expanded the Warsaw Pact into Central America. Sponsored revolutions against elected governments in Ottawa and Mexico City. Proposed Warsaw Pact membership for Canada and Mexico. Dismantled the Washington-friendly state of Colombia. The shrieking would have been heard across the Atlantic, and citations of the Monroe Doctrine would have filled newspapers, airwaves, and cyberspace. McCain would have led a mob from Capitol Hill to the White House demanding war, instant and total.

 

Four points stand out. First, though Ukraine has been badly treated by Moscow, the issue matters not much for American and European security. Ukraine long was part of the Russian Empire (in both old and new variants). Washington never worried about Kyiv’s status since Moscow was the key player.

 

Ukraine is closer to Europe, which therefore should have a greater interest in that nation’s stability. The Europeans, however, recognize that Russia’s mistreatment of Ukraine — seizing Crimea and backing separatism in the Donbass in the east — is sui generis. Putin has done nothing to indicate he wants to try to swallow Ukraine, an impossible task, and if he won’t do that he isn’t likely to launch a blitzkrieg to overrun Europe (with three times Russia’s population).

The main impact of Moscow’s Ukrainian misadventure is making Kyiv’s membership in NATO unlikely, since present rules bar admitting a country with active border disputes with a neighbor. But that fits with European opposition to Ukraine’s inclusion. Since the conflict started in 2014, the more distant U.S., pushed by a curious coalition of pro-war Republicans and anti-Trump Democrats, has been most determined to confront Moscow.

 

Second, Putin’s government doesn’t threaten the United States. A direct attack on America is inconceivable. As for the Europeans, even they, at least those not on Russia’s border, dismiss the likelihood of war: if they were worried, they would be spending more than 1 percent plus change on their militaries. There is a lot of sparring between America and the Russian Federation in peripheral areas — Syria, Cuba, Venezuela, Libya — but these are of marginal importance. And if Washington did not treat Moscow as an enemy through sanctions and more, the latter would be less likely to reciprocate by routinely challenging U.S. interests. Russia’s human rights situation is atrocious, but murder, kidnapping, torture, mass imprisonment, and foreign aggression don’t bother American officials when conducted by Egypt, Bahrain, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, and more.

 

Third, current U.S. policy is bizarrely pushing Moscow and Beijing together. Richard Nixon transformed the Cold War by engaging China and turning the geopolitical gap between them from a ditch into a chasm. Now Russia and the People’s Republic of China are working together against America. Some analysts seek to reassure by insisting that the two will inevitably break up. Others counsel that nothing can be done to prevent such cooperation.

 

More likely, however, the future is uncertain and will be influenced by U.S. behavior. There is much mischief that the two could do together against the United States. The worse America’s relationship with Moscow, the greater Russia’s inclination to obstruct Washington as a matter of course. At the margin, a Beijing–Moscow axis could play a greater (and malign) role in Burma, Iran, Cuba, Venezuela, Syria, Libya, North Korea, Central Asia, the Balkans, and elsewhere.

 

Fourth, the U.S. can’t afford any grand new international crusades. Washington squandered trillions of dollars — and thousands of lives — in Afghanistan and Iraq. Indeed, the U.S. is effectively bankrupt. President Donald Trump and the Republican Congress went wild, simultaneously hiking outlays and cutting revenues. The COVID-19 pandemic, by increasing social expenditures and depressing taxes, will end up adding as much as $16 trillion to the national debt. The Biden administration is pushing a tsunami of spending unconnected to personal and national need. As a result, America will soon break its previous record of debt at 107 percent of GDP, set in the aftermath of World War II. Alas, the impact of an aging population will only intensify. By 2050 the Congressional Budget Office figures that number will be an astounding 200 percent.

 

It’s time for America to make a deal. President Donald Trump had an opportunity to do so, but he didn’t. But his room to maneuver was constrained by false claims of election collusion in 2016, supplemented by a bipartisan smear campaign. Republicans didn’t want to give up their traditional Cold War enemy, Moscow, which Democrats suddenly found politically convenient to denounce. The president’s appointees joined the permanent bureaucracy to consistently undercut his approach, continuing Washington’s previous anti-Russia policy, increasing sanctions and further alienating relations.

 

In contrast, Biden has been denouncing Russia for years. Indeed, he called Moscow a threat while describing China as a “competitor.” But that gives him an opportunity to play a modern Richard Nixon. Biden can “go to Russia” metaphorically — the summit is being held in Switzerland — and stabilize a relationship that is too important to lose.

 

The outlines of an offer aren’t hard to draw. Election interference should be verboten by both sides — the U.S. actually is far more guilty of such meddling than is Russia. So should be cyber-expeditions, other than intelligence-gathering, which is an inherent part of international relations. Washington should be prepared to retaliate, but cutting diplomatic staff in response is perverse and counterproductive.

 

European governments should take a similar approach. For instance, they could offer to drop repeated complaints that Russia is not a democracy — were they really shocked to discover this fact? — in return, say, for Moscow halting assassinations on European soil. After all, the Europeans’ humanitarian sensitivities instantly disappear when it comes to accepting Saudi money for weapons used to kill Yemeni civilians. Brussels has similarly accommodated Turkey, which has kidnapped perceived enemies, meaning most anyone who criticizes President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, from Europe.

 

Even more important, the U.S. and its NATO allies should offer to end NATO expansion. Inclusion of North Macedonia and Montenegro (at least the latter is a great movie set!) demonstrate that the process has outrun any potential usefulness. What’s next? Bringing in the Duchy of Grand Fenwick? Most important, the U.S. should pledge that neither Georgia nor Ukraine will be added. Indeed, this decision should have been reached long ago. Including them is not in America’s interest — they would bring conflict and controversy into the alliance — and could trigger escalation by Russia.

 

In return, Moscow should end its support for Ukrainian separatists, while Kyiv should follow its promise and grant greater autonomy to the Donbass region. Ukraine would be politically and militarily neutral but left to decide its own economic destiny. Such a compromise might displease Ukrainians, who of course would remain free to set their own course. But they have no right to NATO membership and defense by America. The U.S. should simply make clear the Americans won’t be coming — whether it is military aid today or soldiers (and possibly nukes) tomorrow.

 

Beyond the big issues, the U.S. and Russia should accept that there will be geopolitical competition. Then Biden and Putin might engage in some horse-trading. Washington and Moscow could cooperate on counter-terrorism after Washington leaves Afghanistan. The Russians could drop their involvement in Cuba and Venezuela and tighten sanctions on North Korea, while the U.S. could exit Syria and leave Libya for Moscow to work out with the medley of European and Mideast states involved. Any number of additional deals might beckon.

 

Candidate Biden promised to “defend our democratic values and stand up to autocrats like Putin.” He’s already backed away from a similar pledge regarding Saudi Arabia. Russia, as a nuclear-armed great (though no longer super) power, deserves even greater consideration. Not because of Putin’s innocent or Moscow’s benign conduct but because the authoritarian bear is the present reality. America is better off dealing with Moscow productively than imagining isolation and confrontation will result in a nicer Russia and a safer world.

 

Someday, hopefully, the Russian people will enjoy a system that is democratic, honest, and open. In the short term, maintaining peace and solving common problems should be Washington’s priority.

 

Secretary of State Antony Blinken recently met Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and declared, “There are many areas where our interests intersect and overlap, and we believe that we can work together and indeed build on those interests.” That would be a worthy agenda for the upcoming Biden–Putin summit.

Washington already has been through one cold war with Moscow. With an increasingly powerful China on the horizon, America should avoid a repeat.

 

 

Doug Bandow is a Senior Fellow at the Cato Institute. A former Special Assistant to President Ronald Reagan, he is author of Foreign Follies: America’s New Global Empire

 

https://spectator.org/ 

 

Comments: 626
#366   Franziska
      
Thanks a bunch for sharing this with all of us you really realize what you are talking about!

Bookmarked. Kindly additionally talk over with my
site =). We can have a link exchange arrangement between us

Here is my blog post http://www.reuters.com/press-releases/bonusetu-market-analysis-finland-online-ca
sino-monopoly-ends-whale-economy-offshore-2026-01-12/
17 February 2026 20:29
#365   Torri
      
pills steroids


https://cameradb.review/wiki/Anavar_Ist_dieses_anabole_Steroid_sicher_zu_verwend
en https://cameradb.review/wiki/Anavar_Ist_dieses_anabole_Steroid_sicher_zu_verwend
en


https://p.mobile9.com/radarfan9/ https://p.mobile9.com


https://aryba.kg/user/porchmakeup7/ aryba.kg


https://wifidb.science/wiki/29_Best_Diet_Pills_for_Weight_Loss_in_2026_That_Actu
ally_Work https://wifidb.science/


https://elearnportal.science/wiki/Les_pilules_pour_la_prise_de_poids_sontelles_s
res_et_efficaces elearnportal.science


https://wikimapia.org/external_link?url=https://celiacosmurcia.org/wp-content/pg
s/buy_hgh_39.html wikimapia.org


https://lovewiki.faith/wiki/March_des_pilules_amaigrissantes_sur_ordonnance_tend
ances_et_opportunits_2032 lovewiki.faith


http://humanlove.stream//index.php?title=stougaardlorenzen0788 http://humanlove.stream/


https://chessdatabase.science/wiki/Is_Anavar_Legal_In_The_UK chessdatabase.science


https://yogicentral.science/wiki/N1_Appetitzgler_Kapseln_forte_42_St_kaufen_1829
5958 https://yogicentral.science


https://pediascape.science/wiki/Quels_sont_les_complments_alimentaires_minceur pediascape.science


http://mozillabd.science/index.php?title=bennetsenterrell4022 mozillabd.science


https://bookmarkspot.win/story.php?title=bruleur-de-graisse-pilules-brule-graiss
e bookmarkspot.win


https://socialisted.org/market/index.php?page=user&action=pub_profile&id=317036 socialisted.org


https://telegra.ph/Anavar-02-06-2 https://telegra.ph/


https://xypid.win/story.php?title=german-medico-anavar-kaufen xypid.win


https://gaiaathome.eu/gaiaathome/show_user.php?userid=1841267 gaiaathome.eu


https://p.mobile9.com/porchokra9/ p.mobile9.com

References:
https://livebookmark.stream/
17 February 2026 19:29
#364   Jolie
      
steroid body


http://historydb.date/index.php?title=sylvestbanks5021 historydb.date


https://falkenberg-thornton-2.blogbright.net/complement-alimentaire-pour-maigrir-top-7-des-produits-naturels falkenberg-thornton-2.blogbright.net


https://sciencewiki.science/wiki/Wirkstoff_zur_Gewichtszunahme_Anavar_Wie_und_in
_welcher_Dosierung_fr_den_Sport_zu_nehmen_Kaufen_in_Apotheke_online sciencewiki.science


https://empirekino.ru/user/pajamagauge5/ empirekino.ru


https://skitterphoto.com/photographers/2224711/falkenberg-bowden skitterphoto.com


https://yogaasanas.science/wiki/Anavar_10_mg_MultiPharm_kaufen_jetzt_online_best
ellen_ab_127_00 yogaasanas.science


https://aryba.kg/user/foxcorn4/ aryba.kg


https://fakenews.win/wiki/Kaufen_Online_Oxandrolon_Anavar fakenews.win


https://lovewiki.faith/wiki/Is_Anavar_Legal_In_The_UK lovewiki.faith


https://yogicentral.science/wiki/Des_pilules_amaigrissantes_qui_passent_mal_Radi
oCanada https://yogicentral.science


https://intensedebate.com/people/italytitle6 https://intensedebate.com/people/italytitle6


https://dreevoo.com/profile.php?pid=1067008 dreevoo.com


https://marvelvsdc.faith/wiki/Die_10_besten_Appetitzgler_Pillen_zur_Kontrolle_vo
n_Heihunger https://marvelvsdc.faith/


http://ezproxy.cityu.edu.hk/login?url=https://cerraelx.es/wp-content/pgs/?pastil
las_para_adelgazar_1.html ezproxy.cityu.edu.hk


https://donaldson-hermansen.blogbright.net/les-meilleures-pilules-amaigrissantes
-classement-2024-top-20-1770386497 donaldson-hermansen.blogbright.net


https://p.mobile9.com/targetheart2/ https://p.mobile9.com


http://jobs.emiogp.com/author/movealley7/ http://jobs.emiogp.com


http://historydb.date/index.php?title=ruizblaabjerg3307 historydb.date
17 February 2026 16:39
#363   Dalene
      
doctor prescribed steroids

References:
dokuwiki.stream
17 February 2026 13:56
#362   Augustina
      
17 February 2026 13:50
#361   Jerome
      
Hey there would you mind letting me know which webhost you're using?
I've loaded your blog in 3 completely different browsers and I
must say this blog loads a lot faster then most.
Can you suggest a good web hosting provider at a fair price?
Cheers, I appreciate it!

Feel free to visit my page 바이낸스
가입
17 February 2026 03:30
#360   Keira
      
Hello to all, since I am in fact eager of reading this webpage's
post to be updated regularly. It contains pleasant information.

My web-site; mobile radiography
16 February 2026 12:08
#359   Melisa
      
three risks of using anabolic steroids and other
performance-enhancing drugs

References:
wikimapia.org

adenosine monophosphate injections bodybuilding

References:
http://mozillabd.science/index.php?title=longsheppard4388
16 February 2026 08:32
#358   Diane
      
Every weekend i used to go to see this website, because i want enjoyment, as this this web site conations
genuinely pleasant funny material too.

My blog - 거래소 가입 가이드
16 February 2026 07:16
#357   Keeley
      
Please let me know if you're looking for a author for your weblog.
You have some really good posts and I feel I would be a
good asset. If you ever want to take some
of the load off, I'd absolutely love to write some content
for your blog in exchange for a link back to mine. Please blast me an e-mail if interested.
Thanks!

my blog click here
16 February 2026 04:54
#356   Iva
      
What's Taking place i am new to this, I stumbled upon this I've found It absolutely useful
and it has helped me out loads. I am hoping to give a contribution & aid different
customers like its aided me. Great job.

Here is my web blog please visit
16 February 2026 03:06
#355   Enriqueta
      
Hey there! This is my first visit to your blog!
We are a group of volunteers and starting a new project in a community in the
same niche. Your blog provided us useful information to work
on. You have done a marvellous job!

Look at my web-site; bybit register
16 February 2026 01:20
#354   Dorie
      
I know this if off topic but I'm looking into starting my
own weblog and was curious what all is required to
get setup? I'm assuming having a blog like
yours would cost a pretty penny? I'm not very internet smart so I'm not 100% certain. Any recommendations or advice would be
greatly appreciated. Appreciate it

My blog post; đánh giá sàn giao dịch

My spouse and I absolutely love your blog and find the majority of your
post's to be just what I'm looking for. Does
one offer guest writers to write content to suit your needs?
I wouldn't mind creating a post or elaborating on many of the subjects you write with regards to here.
Again, awesome weblog!

Also visit my blog post ... exchange research blog
15 February 2026 09:22
#353   Forest
      
Hi there i am kavin, its my first time to commenting anyplace, when i read this piece of writing i thought i
could also create comment due to this good piece of
writing.

Here is my page: please visit
15 February 2026 06:43
#352   Elva
      
This is my first time visit at here and i am truly
impressed to read everthing at alone place.

my webpage ... read
more
15 February 2026 02:30
#351   Buck
      
bodybuilding stack for mass

References:
https://may22.ru/user/israelspruce5
14 February 2026 08:07
#350   Sal
      
Wonderful site you have here but I was wondering if you knew of any discussion boards that
cover the same topics discussed in this article? I'd really like to be a part of group where I can get feedback
from other experienced individuals that share the same interest.
If you have any recommendations, please let me
know. Thanks!

My site trx generator
14 February 2026 05:50
#349   Therese
      
If you are going for best contents like I do, only pay a quick visit this web
site all the time since it gives quality contents, thanks

Feel free to visit my site ... click here
14 February 2026 04:04
#348   Micah
      
Sweet blog! I found it while browsing on Yahoo News.
Do you have any tips on how to get listed in Yahoo News? I've been trying for a
while but I never seem to get there! Thanks

my blog post: please
visit
14 February 2026 02:48
#347   Indira
      
You're so awesome! I do not think I've truly read anything like this before.
So wonderful to discover another person with
a few genuine thoughts on this issue. Really.. thank you for starting this up.
This site is one thing that is required on the internet, someone
with a bit of originality!

Feel free to surf to my site - cheap sex webcams
13 February 2026 23:29
Add Comments

Name:*
E-Mail:
  Geo Keyboard  
 

Dear reader, guardian.ge welcomes your comments. Please express your views on topic and be respectful of others.

bold italic underline strike | align left centered align right | Ensert smilies insert linkInsert protected URL Choice the color | hidden text insert quote Convert selected text from transliteration to Cyrillic alphabet Insert spoiler

Code: *


Back1 ... 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 ... 32Next