Russia and Ukraine: What’s Next?

Russia and Ukraine: What’s Next?
(Dr. Stephen Bryen, February 4, 2022)

Transcript available below

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About the speaker

Dr. Stephen Bryen is a leading expert in security strategy and technology. He has held senior positions in the Department of Defense, on Capitol Hill and as the President of a large multinational defense and technology company. Currently, Dr. Bryen is a Senior Fellow at the American Center for Democracy, the Center for Security Policy. He has served as a senior staff director of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, as the Executive Director of a grassroots political organization, as the head of the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, as the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Trade Security Policy, and as the founder and first director of the Defense Technology Security Administration. He is the author of Technology Security and National Power: Winners and Losers, and of three volumes of Essays in Technology, Security and Strategy. Dr. Bryen was twice awarded the Defense Department’s highest civilian honor, the Distinguished Service Medal.

United States and United Kingdom intelligence agencies have recently said that Russian military hackers over the last several years have tried to access the computer networks of “hundreds of government and private sector targets worldwide” and warned that those “efforts are almost certainly still ongoing.” The United States, NATO, the European Union, Australia, Britain, Canada, Japan and New Zealand have accused China of a global cyberespionage campaign. U.S. Secretary of State Antony Blinken said it posed “a major threat to our economic and national security”. Dr. Bryen will address Technology Security and Cyber Insecurity.

Transcript:

Introduction

Robert R. Reilly:

Hello and welcome to the Westminster Institute. I am Robert Reilly, its director. And we are happy today to welcome back to the Westminster Institute, Dr. Stephen Bryen, who is a Senior Fellow at the Center for Security Policy. He is a leading expert in security strategy and technology. He has held senior positions in the Department of Defense, on Capitol Hill and as the President of a large multinational defense and technology company. He served as a senior staff director of the U.S. Senate Foreign Relations Committee, as head of the Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs, and as the Deputy Under Secretary of Defense for Trade Security Policy, and as founder and director of the Defense Technology Security Administration. He is the author of Technology Security and National Power: Winners and Losers, and of three volumes of Essays in Technology, Security and Strategy. Dr. Bryen was twice awarded the highest acknowledgement from the U.S. Department of Defense, receiving the Distinguished Service Medal. Today, he is going to discuss with us: Russia and Ukraine: What’s Next? Welcome back, Stephen.

Stephen Bryen:

Thank you very much for having me back. The Ukraine thing is really a huge problem, a very dangerous problem, and it is impossible to say how it is going to work out. As you know, the Russians have their point of view, NATO and the United States has its point of view, and I would add that the Europeans have their point of view. They are not all the same, at all. Particularly, there is a division between what some of the Western European countries say, especially the Germans, but not only, the French as well, and what the U.S. is saying, so we have lots of disconnects and a lot of activity going on, some of it very harsh. Some of the statements [were] made by our president here in the United States, by the leader of NATO, and by the Russians, by Mr. Putin and Mr. Lavrov, harsh statements, back and forth, a constant kind of chatter that does not seem to want to sort itself out yet.

The hopeful sign, if there is a hopeful sign, are two. The first is that coming up soon will be another meeting in Berlin of what is called the Normandy Group. The Normandy Group was set up in 2014 on the margins of the anniversary of the Normandy invasion where the heads of state were all there, the Russians, the Germans, the French, and the United States, and Ukrainians. The decision was that they would meet from time to time to try and sort out the issue troubling Ukraine at that time. And they have met at various points along the way. There was a meeting last week in Paris that seemed to make a little bit of progress, not enough, and the meeting I think in Germany that will take place soon maybe the critical one. That is to say if there is going to be a solution through that channel, that is when it might be found.

The Three Issues

Donetsk and Luhansk

So, you have to ask what are the issues, and that is not so simple. There is not a clear-cut single issue. There are at least three major issues. The first has to do with the eastern part, the southeastern part of Ukraine, which is the Donbas region, where you now have, ostensibly, two republics, the Donetsk People’s Republic and the Luhansk People’s Republic, which are breakaway provinces of Ukraine. That is one issue. And of course, everyone knows that the Russians have been supplying the armies of those two republics, if we can call them that, with armaments, with intelligence, and with all kinds of other support.

Russia’s Annexation of Crimea

The second issue is Crimea, which is still not off the books even though Russia has annexed Crimea, says it is not going to change its mind about that, that it belongs to them, that it has been incorporated into Russia. End of story from their point of view, but from the Ukrainian point of view it is their land, so they are demanding it back, and that is the second issue.

NATO’s Expansion East

And the third issue is the question of NATO’s involvement in Ukraine, and will Ukraine become a member of NATO as part of NATO’s expansion. It is the expansion of NATO that probably is the most troubling issue for the Russians in the sense that the Russians have always had a kind of xenophobic and paranoic view of the West, and they see themselves being surrounded. And so, they regard Ukraine, if Ukraine became part of NATO, that then their southern flank would be occupied by NATO, the western flank would be NATO, and they would have a serious military, strategic, and security problem. That is what they say. I think they believe that, so there is no point in trying to dissuade them from that view. So, you have this question of NATO.

The NATO position is we have this open door. We can expand to anyone who wants to join. If they meet our requirements, [they] should be allowed to join NATO. NATO expansion by itself is a peculiar thing because the more you enlarge the alliance, the more difficult it is to defend the alliance. That is just a simple military fact. And indeed, when the last parts of NATO were expanded in Eastern Europe, it was very clear that the Eastern Europeans and NATO itself lacked the capability to really have a proper defense if, in fact, some conflict broke out.

NATO is Strengthening its Eastern Defense

And NATO has been working on this with quick reaction forces, with rapid deployments, with movement of equipment, with training, with trying to upgrade the Baltic states, and the Central Europeans, with better army equipment, better aircraft, better tanks, all of that, but most importantly of all, missile defenses because the Russians have a very formidable missile capability. So, all of that is part of a package of things that NATO has been doing to try and strengthen security in that part of the world.

The difficulty is that NATO deploys very few numbers of troops. President Biden has said that he is going to send three thousand troops, mostly to Poland, trying to strengthen the flank of NATO with U.S. troops. But actually, there is only about five thousand available soldiers throughout NATO that can be sent into Eastern Europe if needed. That is very, very few given the size of Russian forces. I mean, in fact, if you look at just around Ukraine, the Russians have already put 107,000 troops, and that number will continue to grow, I think. And they have also moved Russian Army forces, Air Force assets too into Belarus, which also has a long border with Ukraine, and it is a corridor that could be used for an attack on Ukraine.

NATO Cannot Defend Ukraine

So, if NATO is really serious about wanting to have Ukraine as a member state, it has to figure out how it could defend it if it needed to, and I do not think it can figure that out. There is no practical way today to do that. Worse than that, if you look at the map and you think about what could happen in a conflict, for the NATO forces to operate even in Ukraine, they are going to need bases in Eastern Europe, so you cannot just isolate a military operation to Ukraine because those bases become suppliers and supporters of a military effort. The Russians know that, and they would target those bases for sure if a conflict broke out, so it is not a simple proposition.

A War over Ukraine Would Not Stay in Ukraine

You cannot just fight a selected battle if you wanted to. It is not possible because I think that all of these places from Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, down to Poland, and then Hungary, Bulgaria, and Romania, that all these places technically could be in the line of fire. And I think they are starting to realize that that is exactly the case, and that is why there is a division emerging in Europe. The Poles have started to make offers to the Russians. The Bulgarians have said, well, we do not really want to be involved in this, maybe we can work out something with you Russians, let us talk about it. The President of Hungary, Orbán, was just in Moscow, talking with President Putin, not only about natural gas deliveries, which Putin promised, but also about stability and security in the area. Clearly, Hungary does not want to be part of any military operation that might develop.

So, it is not clear to me either from the point of view of NATO or even from the point of view of Ukraine that being a member of NATO is necessarily a good thing because it could precipitate rather than not precipitate a conflict, and the Russians have said that the fact of Ukranian NATO membership for them is a red line. And I think they are saying if that happened, they would be obliged to try and push NATO out of Ukraine, so that is sort of the on the ground problem as we see it right now.

An Absolute Lack of Trust Between East and West

There is a lack of trust, [an] absolute lack of trust between the Russians and the United States, and Russians and NATO. As you might know, the Russians had been part of the NATO family on a contingent basis, and they had an office in Brussels, and they were generally meeting with NATO counterparts, although that started to breakdown about a year ago. And about three months ago, the NATO people said the Russians needed to leave except for maybe one or two who could remain. The Russians said that is okay, we are leaving altogether. And on top of that, they kicked the NATO representation that was in Moscow out of the country, so that has become a point of tension between NATO and Russia that was not so much before.

Most of the arms agreements that had been in place, the tactical ones, have broken down. They are not really operating right now, so lack of trust spreads to that area as well. There is less and less transparency between Russian military exercises and NATO military exercises. That was improved on starting around 2011 or so, but now that has gone away, so we have a very harsh situation when it comes to relationships between Russia and let us say NATO and the United States, that is one dimension of it. It is a very serious dimension of it because it makes it very difficult to know how one can move forward with those kinds of tensions, which have become deeper and deeper and deeper.

Russians See NATO as Arming Ukraine

Now, there is another factor that we have to take into account from the Russian point of view. The Russians say that NATO has been arming Ukraine. NATO has been sending trainers and advisers to Ukraine. It has been shipping armaments of all kinds to Ukraine, and this did not just happen yesterday, but it has been going on for a number of years, and the Russians have been very aware of it, and [have been] very unhappy about it almost to the point where the only thing missing is a NATO base in Ukraine, and NATO membership, of course, for Ukraine, but everything else is almost already in place. And the U.S., from the Russian point of view, has been a major provocateur in trying to buildup Ukraine so that it could fight off a Russian attack if one occurred.

The Minsk Agreement

So, let us look at it again from the point of view of the Russians: what should the Russians actually do? I mean they have put down the challenge about NATO. They have amassed troops for some time now on the Ukrainian border. They have been demanding that the Ukrainians negotiate according to what is called the Minsk Agreement or the Minsk Protocols. The Minsk Protocols were put together in 2014, and again in 2015 as a second version of it. Aside from requiring a ceasefire, the biggest item on the list is that they require that Ukraine grant a form of autonomy to the two republics that I mentioned before, that they would still be under Ukrainian law, but they would be rather independent, and they would also have parliamentary representation in Ukraine.

This, the Ukrainians cannot do politically at the moment, and they have been resisting that, negotiating on that subject for some time now, which leaves things in great suspension, and this has been [going on for years]. The fighting in Ukraine started around 2015, actually, 2014. It was very intense for a while. The Ukrainians were finally unable to have a victory, to take back these territories, so it has been a stalemate. There has been occasional fighting along the line of demarcation between the sides. It breaks out, it stops, it breaks out again. It is supposed to be supervised by the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, but they really cannot stop it if someone starts shooting, and they have been shooting from time to time. There has been a lot of casualties.

So, here are the Russians. The Russians do not recognize these two republics legally, that is to say they have not granted them any recognition because the Russians say, and I think they are correct, this should be negotiated under the Minsk Protocols. That was the agreement in 2014, again in 2015. Mr. Zelensky, the President of Ukraine, says yes, the Minsk Protocols are still part of the dialogue, but he has not committed to negotiate the prime issues that are part of that dialogue, so we are in a stalemate, but the stalemate is being leveraged by the Russian troops on the one side, and by the pressure that NATO is building up inside of Ukraine on the other. And the other pressure that NATO is trying to buildup, even though I do not think [they are doing it] very successfully, in Eastern Europe to show the Russians [that] we mean business.

What is on the Table in Berlin?

The language has become harsh, harsh on all sides, so it is hard to see how you bridge this gap, and where we go from here. It is clear that the current situation cannot hold for much longer. I do not think the Russians will tolerate it for much longer, I do not think we will either, I do not think NATO will either. Something has got to give, and as I said before, the best chance at least in my estimation may be the Normandy Group meeting coming up in Berlin. That may be sufficient to defuse the situation or at least lead to a process that defuses the situation.

So, what is on the table? In the Normandy Group, primarily, it is the Minsk Protocols that are on the table. That is the judicial or the juridical basis for the Normandy Group’s deliberations. It really does not have much to say about NATO because NATO is a different alliance that was not part of the Normandy Group discussions, and anyway, if NATO is going to actually negotiate, then the NATO principals have to be involved, and they are not all involved in the Normandy Group. So, it can get to the issue of Luhansk and Donestk, and the Ukrainian autonomy or the possible autonomy that could be worked out. That it can address, but it cannot address the NATO issue. Even so, it is awfully important.

Now, the second development that has begun to emerge, and there has been the release of some letters that purport to be what the U.S. has proposed to the Russians, opens the door to some measures that could be worked out in Eastern Europe, not in Ukraine but in Eastern Europe to try and lower the profile of conflict. Among those things are suggestions that maybe the Russians could come and inspect the air defense missile systems that are in Eastern Europe, and maybe some of the NATO members, particularly Poland, could go and inspect some that are on Russian territory close to Poland, especially Kaliningrad, which is a salient that puts its nose out into the Baltic, and which concerns the Poles a great deal because it is very heavily reinforced with missiles and with air defenses as well.

Russia Worries about the MK41

There is a launching system – I want to give you the right number if I can, called the MK41. Now, the MK41 is a vertical launcher, a standard one that can be used for air defense missiles, but the Russians say it takes no effort whatsoever to load it up with Tomahawk missiles because they fit right in it, and these MK41s are in Poland and in other Eastern European locations, so the Russians say that is a concern to them because that is an aggressive weapon and while Tomahawk is a conventional system today, it started out as a nuclear system, but it is now, supposedly, conventional. The Russians do not necessarily believe that, so that is one of the issues.

There is a Lack of Clarity on All Sides

There is a lack of clarity, actually, in understanding both the Russian point of view, and the U.S. point of view, and the NATO point of view on this because it is not clear what things have to be changed that would stabilize [the situation] and make Eastern Europe potentially more peaceful. What about the Russian Army? Where does it sit in relation to Poland or to Lithuania, or Latvia, or Estonia, or any of the others? What about NATO forces? The Russians say they have got to go, they cannot be on the edge, they have to move back. How can that be done, and why are you worried about 5,000 troops? It is a reasonable question to ask. So, all of this is just sitting there unresolved, unresolved at this point.

The Russians keep saying they are interested in those kinds of measures, kinds of deconfliction measures that could be put in place. They are willing to talk about it, but it has not really been a negotiation yet. There have been some letters. Every time there is a letter, someone says it is no good and we do not agree with it. That does not get us very far. And there is not a forum. As I said, there is a forum for the Luhansk and Donetsk issue through the Normandy Group, that forum exists, but there is not a forum to handle the NATO and Russian Army issues, the territorial issues. There is no platform for it yet.

And unfortunately, and I will make a criticism of NATO, NATO has not opened itself up very well to that kind of process. It could, but the current NATO leader has been rather aggressive in his statements, and hostile to Russia, very hostile I would say, unnecessarily so. I think we need to find out if it is possible to reach some kind of modus vivendi, some kind of agreement or at least a process that leads to agreements. That needs to be put in place, and I do not see that yet, so I think if our President, President Biden, and some of the European leaders, Mr. Macron especially because he has taken some initiative in this, and the German government, if they could agree to set up a process through – let us call it a strategic process with Russia to negotiate this on a serious basis with the real experts, [that would be good]. I mean you cannot do this with some political leaders mouthing off. It does not work very well. There are so many missiles or so many armored personnel carriers or so many tanks or so many this, this, and that that you really have to sort it out, and no one has done that.

Will the Russians be interested in that?

They say they will, they claim they will. In fact, we are the ones who are not exactly interested in it, although according to the leaked letters that have now appeared in the Spanish press, we are moving in that direction but very slowly, and we are still conflating it with Ukraine. I think the important thing would be to try to separate those. Let the Normandy Group deal with the Ukraine issue from a political point of view. Let us call it a political point of view. And let the NATO family deal with the Russia side from a military, strategic, and security point of view, and those security discussions are vastly important. Now, a lot of people have said (NATO especially) we are not going to go back on our principle, we are going to expand as we like, and if somebody wants to join NATO, and we think they are worthy, we are going to take them in, which means we are going to take in Ukraine.

But one thing that is forgotten in this part of the dialogue, and I would like to just spend a moment to talk about it, is NATO requires the consensus of all its members to take any action. You cannot get someone into NATO if one member objects. And it seems to me that one way out of this morass is a letter from the German Chancellor to his counterparts in Russia that says we guarantee [that] we are not going to vote for the inclusion of Ukraine in NATO, period, we guarantee it. If they will not [vote for Ukrainian accession], it will not happen. It is that simple. NATO can keep its principles. There is a great, great line by Groucho Marx that said I have my principles, and if you do not like them, I have other principles. Maybe that is where we are.

NATO can keep its principles, but I think the Russians are extraordinarily too nervous about NATO coming into Ukraine. And as I said earlier, I am far from sure that it is a good thing for Ukraine because it will probably trigger some fighting, some war, and that is something we do not want. Now, there is one other thing from the Russian mind as I understand it. From the Russian mind, the buildup of Ukrainian forces by the United States and by its NATO partners, including the UK, which has just shipped a bunch of stuff in ([and] we just shipped 500 tons of weapons into Ukraine), that buildup the Russians see as an effort to strengthen the Ukrainian Army so it can take back Luhansk and Donetsk. That is their view.

In other words, the size of Luhansk and Donetsk is not very big, it is about 30,000 soldiers altogether. The Ukrainian Army is much larger. Up until now they have not been able to break the impasse, but if it is built up, and they are getting all of these high-end anti-tank weapons, the armored vehicles, all kinds of stuff, if it is built up, maybe it could overcome [the separatists], relaunch war against Luhansk and Donetsk, and win. And that is why I think the Russians see that, and that puts the Russians in a real, tough spot from their point of view and from our point of view. I mean it is absolutely intentional to put them in a tough spot, but is it wise? I do not think it is wise because I think we should at least let the diplomatic process take place before we turn to anything else.

And there are elements in Ukraine. The current Ukrainian government would be regarded I think on the political scale as a reasonably moderate government, but there are elements in the Ukrainian military that are not so moderate, that are very nationalistic, some say even fascist, and we do not want to see – first of all, it would be a bloody war, but we do not want to see any war, and we certainly do not want to see a situation develop that spreads and becomes even a bigger conflict, so that is my sort of summary of where we are.

And just the two main points again: the Normandy process has some prospect to help resolve, under the Minsk Accords, the Luhansk and Donetsk situation. It may or may not work, but it is there. And we are still missing a platform, a modus operandi, to have Russia and NATO, including the United States, figure out how to stabilize and lower the profile of conflict or potential conflict in Eastern Europe. We need a platform. We do not have one right now. That is really necessary, so I will wrap it up there, and maybe we can talk about it.

Q&A

Why Now?

Robert R. Reilly:

Steve, why now? In other words, this is seen as a crisis that Putin manufactured, and there is nothing imminent either in a Ukrainian application for membership or its consideration. Putin has undertaken this large military buildup, and he is already enjoying – let us say the political effects of having done so. Now, what would you say about his timing? And also, maybe if you could add to that, the military consideration that you can only keep troops deployed in or near the field when you have brought them from as far away as Siberia for a certain period of time because it is a huge logistical challenge, and those troops need something to do other than provide political leverage.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Right. Well, I think the timing of this relates very strongly to the buildup of Ukrainian forces, by NATO and by the U.S. especially, from the Russian point of view. Again, you know you have to look at it from their angle. Remember, this is the second deployment. There was a big one. There was a summit between President Biden and Mr. Putin. The Russians stood down that deployment, and they waited for things to happen that did not happen.

Now, we do not really have as good a readout as we would like to have of what they talked about, but it was pretty clear that they talked about resolving both questions, both the question of Luhansk and Donetsk and Ukraine on the one side, and the NATO question on the other. I think those were both discussed. The Russians had some expectations of progress. Nothing happened. There was not any progress. The Working Groups kind of went nowhere, it deteriorated, and the Russians then brought the troops back. [It was as] simple as that, okay?

You have to go back to the original timing, I guess, to understand. I mean I think Putin did put some cards on the table. By deploying those troops in the first place he tried to leverage the U.S. They met, they had a summit, [and] it was allegedly a productive summit. They were happy with the results. The Russians were happy. The Americans were happy. Then, there was not any follow-up. It kind of descended into nothing. And I think then the Russians got angry, and they are angry about a lot of things, but that was one of them, and so they put troops back, and this time more just to make a point, so I think that is the timing part. I mean I cannot explain it any more than that.

Was it a gamble on the Russian part? Yes, it sure was. But was it wise? I would not say so. I think it was the reverse, but they did it. But they also took Crimea. Was that wise? They could have probably tried to work out something on Crimea, but they did not, they just grabbed it. So, they can be very opportunistic, and then they complain that we do not follow the rules, so this is traditional behavior from Moscow. We are used to it. But they also have certain legal arguments on their side that they throw up every now and then, particularly deals that were made with the Organization for Security and Co-operation in Europe, which they participated in, and those were not very well kept, and they are complaining about that now, so I think why now is largely a result of those things that have been boiling up on the Russian side.

Putin Does Not Want to Go to War

On a broader, more national basis the Russians feel that we have given them the back of the hand, that we have not respected them. We know this kind of language. We have seen it before. And they want to be taken seriously. Does Putin want to go to war? I do not think he does because I think there are two reasons why he would not want to. One is there is no guarantee that it would be quick and that it would resolve itself in a victory for Russia. There is no guarantee of that at all, and he knows that.

And the second is I do not think he wants to turn over his foreign policy and national security portfolio to the military. The Russian Military does not have a really good reputation about how they conduct themselves. If you want evidence, take a look at Chechnya. I mean that is the perfect case. I mean they are bulldozers. Now, sometimes that is good. It was a great way to get rid of Hitler, and I applaud it, but sometimes not good. And I do not think in any case that Putin, who is a very smart guy, I mean no one would say he is not, that he would want to take that kind of risk, that he would want to get into a war if he can avoid it.

The question is [can he avoid it]? He is going to be pushed. You know, he is being pushed now. I am sure he is hearing from [those around him]. I cannot even imagine. I mean you mentioned it, keeping those troops there in the winter. It is February. It is cold, very cold. It is not a pleasant place to be, and it is costly. It is logistically difficult. It also has home political effects. The Russian Army is a kind of people’s army, whether you believe it or not, in the sense that the public has a great affection for its military.

It does not at all like casualties. It gets very upset when there are casualties.

Remember when a bunch of Russians were killed in Syria, and it was a very negative event. When the Kursk submarine sank, and they brought the bodies back, it as a terribly negative event in Moscow and in the rest of Russia. Going back to the Afghan War when the Russians were involved, the body bags that came back to Russia helped destroy the Soviet Union. [They care] that much. That is how big [a deal] it is, so while it is not exactly a ringing democracy, it is nothing of the sort, but political leaders in Russia, whether they are communist or not communist, have to pay attention to the public on these things. I think Putin understands that very, very well. And I think he has kind of put himself in a bad spot politically because how is he going to get out of this?

Robert R. Reilly:

Well, as people have suggested in other movements that Putin has made with the Russian military, whether it was in Georgia, which they bungled at the first part, but then got it right from their perspective, and then in Crimea, though through what is called the little green men, particularly Crimea was very popular in Russia, and this nationalistic feeling in Russia reinforces support for Putin. Now, how this current situation is playing out in that respect I do not know, but you alluded to the fact that there is a widely shared sense of grievance, and this feeds into it, and therefore one would think it would reinforce support for Putin.

Now, Stephen, on another subject –

The Drawbacks of Economic Sanctions

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Before you go on can I just pushback on that? Not pushback, but just make a comment that we – we being the U.S., especially, but also NATO and also the British – are screaming sanctions, sanctions, sanctions, sanctions. Now, first of all, I have a lot of doubts about sanctions because the Russians have a lot of leverage over Europe, natural gas being one of the most important ones, but not the only one. But when you think about it, who suffers from sanctions? The Russian people, so this threat of sanctions I think angers the Russian people, so I do not think it is productive. First of all, I am not sure we would ever do it in any real way. Secondly, it does not work very well. And thirdly, the mess of being dependent on Russian oil and gas is largely the fault of the Europeans. It is not anyone else’s fault.

The Yamal Pipeline

I was in the Reagan administration in the 1980s when we fought against what was called the Yamal pipeline, which was the first big pipeline to come from the Yamal peninsula and bring natural gas in large volume into Germany. And at that time, we warned (and we strongly warned) that if Germany became dependent on natural gas from Russia, it would put us at a really big risk in terms of how we could conduct security policy because we basically would be under a hostage situation, if you want, especially in the winter when you need all that natural gas for heating homes, but you also need it to run the factories and the powerplants. Sadly, European dependence has grown more since then, not less, and while we stopped the Yamal pipeline for a few years, it finally was built anyway.

And the technology transfers, which was how we were trying to stop it, were lifted. They were lifted in the Clinton administration. And our allies put themselves in a very weak position, and it is still a very weak position today. And now there is the Nord Stream 2 pipeline, which is not running yet, but it could be, which will bring even more natural gas into Europe from Russia, so sanctions are going to make a mess from the point of view of the Europeans, and this also angers the Russian people. I do not see how that is an answer to the problem.

Robert R. Reilly:

But what this points to, Steve, is something that you have written on so well. Russia has other measures it can take short of the military, and certainly the gas is one of those measures. I saw a statistic that Europe as a whole now receives 43 percent of its gas from Russia.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Poland [gets] 60 percent [of its natural gas from Russia].

Robert R. Reilly:

And Germany is higher than 43 percent, I am sure.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Over 50 [percent].

Inconsistent and Incomprehensible U.S. Energy Policy

Robert R. Reilly:

So, I mean Putin can simply – probably not shut it off, but he could slow it down until there are shivers in every home in Germany. I am sure that is why Germany is, let us say, the most reluctant, along with Hungary, member of NATO to do anything serious here because they are so vulnerable. I mean we were already in the situation you just described when the Reagan administration warned Europe [that] this will make your defense quite difficult. And it is almost semi-comical to see Biden asking Qatar and other countries [to help]. He is running around, shopping for gas for the Europeans, and particularly the Germans, who cannot even receive it because they have not really built new LNG ports, so we are at the point that was predicted.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Even worse than that, one of the things that would have relieved southern Europe (Italy, Greece) would have been a pipeline that would have gone from Israel, Cyprus into there, and the Biden administration opposes it. It is incredible to me, aside from cutting off a pipeline for the United States, now they have cut off a pipeline to southern Europe. I mean it is inconsistent, it is incomprehensible, it is bad policy.

Every expert – and I am not an oil and gas expert by any stretch of the imagination, although in the ’80s I learned more about it than I ever thought I would, but every expert that has talked about trying to substitute [says] there are two substitutes, LNG and coal, that is it. LNG, it is probably impossible to import enough LNG even if we had it, which we do not. And coal, yes, you can do coal, but not every powerplant can be converted to coal, so it has to be a powerplant that is capable of being converted to coal, and that would take months to convert to coal. And then the Europeans will have to explain to somebody, I am not sure who that person is, maybe our president, that the climate accords will not allow that, which they are very strong advocates of, so it gets to [the point where] you wonder who makes policy, and how they go about it because it is really foolish. It is really nonsensical.

Robert R. Reilly:

Well, it would have been nice if Germany had not shut off their nuclear powerplants.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Yeah, exactly, but they are doing it anyway, so they are going to become more dependent both on coal and on natural gas, by the way, and they make no bones about that because, after all, nuclear is bad or so they say. Well, I do not know if nuclear is bad. What is bad about it? It does not pollute. It is very cheap to run it. But the only ones who have been sensible about nuclear [power are the] French, and they have done it for how long now, fifty years? Something like that. It has been a great success, and they are the ones least dependent on imports of natural gas for the same reason. I do not think they burn any coal. Maybe they do, I am not sure. In any case, let us face it, Europe is in trouble if they get to the point where the Russians really want to retaliate. They can do natural gas [supply cuts] easily.

The Threat of Russian Cyberattacks

The other thing they can do, and we are already seeing some signs of it, are cyberattacks. We have been hit in this country in our critical infrastructure by cyberattacks against things like oil and gas pipelines, banking and finance, communications, transport. Just this week, Antwerp was hit by a very big cyberattack to its oil and gas terminals, so I think what we are seeing is that maybe the Russians are probing a bit now to see whether by doing a few of these here and there they can wake up their colleagues in Western Europe to the fact that they could suffer cyberattacks.

Ransomware is where they basically encrypt your entire computer network, and will only decrypt if you pay the ransom, that is how it works. We have no practical way today to stop a ransomware attack, nobody does. If somebody can penetrate your network, they can encrypt everything in a matter of minutes, and basically tell you [that] you have to pay ten million dollars in minutes or more, and we had that with the pipeline in New Jersey, the Colonial Pipeline. But think about it for a minute. Suppose they do not give you the key, they just say ransom is when you surrender. You tell your government to surrender, and then we will talk to you.

So, the Russians have a big threat out there, and they can get the help of the Chinese. They can get the help of the North Koreans, who, by the way, have become good hackers. That is another whole story. I have written a lot about it over the years because we are completely and utterly dependent on commercial computer equipment, much of which today is manufactured in China. It may have an American name on it. It may say Dell or it may say Google or something, but it is made in [China]. And if it says Lenovo, we know it is Chinese because they own it. But all this is Chinese stuff. They know exactly how it works. They put bugs in some of it, but more than that, they have very experienced hackers, and we have had a very difficult time trying to stop them on a normal basis, not in a war situation, but if there is a real conflict and they raise the balloon, I think we are going to see a lot of our services and our capabilities really compromised in Europe as well.

The Larger Picture: Russia’s Relationship with China

Robert R. Reilly:

Since you mentioned China, let us talk about the larger strategic picture. At a time when the United States, as almost everyone agrees, is facing its biggest security challenge from China.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

I think so.

Robert R. Reilly:

…a vastly wealthier country than Russia with a huge amount of technical sophistication and modern military forces that our antagonizing Russia now simply sends Putin further into the arms of President Xi, when now is exactly the time in which we should be trying to show Russia that its long-term interests are not in Asia but in Europe, not with China but with a Europe that can at least accommodate its concerns, but I mean that has been said before. Others say forget it, Russia will never come around to that point of view. But it seems to be that what we are doing makes it impossible.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Well, as you know, the Russians and the Chinese say they are more or less an alliance. There is no formal one, but they are trying to behave as if there was [an alliance]. The difficulty for the Russians in the big picture is, geopolitically, China is a bit of a problem for them. It has always been, and they worry about that a great deal.

On the other hand, though, China is a market for them. It is probably the most important market they have right now for their military hardware. Sadly, I guess – I think we can say sadly – and I knew it even when I was still in the government in the ’80s, that Russia produces weapons. It does not produce much of anything else that anybody wants especially, so from a market point of view what they have to sell are air defense [systems] like the S-400 system, aircrafts like the Sukhoi 35, jet engines, rocket engines, all kinds of things like that. That is their industry.

Well, who is going to buy it in any quantity? Right now, it is China who is the big buyer, but the Chinese like to copy everything, so at some point they are going to squeeze the Russians out. I think that is coming. There are actually some signs of it already. One of the areas is jet engines, which is something the Russians have been struggling with a bit, although they are trying to solve the problem. One of their jet engines which is used in their new Su-57 jet fighter has not matured properly, so the Chinese decided to make their own, and they are pretty close to having that solved, so at that point they will stop buying Russian engines. And then they will stop buying Russian aircrafts, and then they will stop buying other stuff from Russia.

Russia’s Future Arms Sales to the West

And I think at some stage not in the very distant future, Russia is going to lose its arms business in China. Then you wonder what do they get for their relationship with China? What does it buy them? They are not going to get the money for the weapons. Who is going to buy the weapons? The Russians are starting to sell some of their weapons to the West. Turkey has bought the S-400. India is buying the S-400. The UAE and the Saudis have been talking under the table to the Russians about buying the S-400. The UAE has also said oh, we are interested in that new jet that you are going to build. Maybe we could do it together.

You are starting to see a shift in Russia’s interests, let us call it that, its practical, financial interests [like] natural gas. Oil, of course, is a big one, but manufacturing is also hugely important because they have to pay those people that they employ, and they can only absorb so much stuff themselves, so they need to market, they need to sell. I think we are seeing a change, but it is going to take some years before it plays out. That is the way to get the Russians on the Western side.

Robert R. Reilly:

But certainly, they are going to sell more energy to China, not less, so that is increasing.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Yes, they are selling energy, but I think their preference would be to [change] because there is a finite amount of energy that the Russians have, and they have to be careful, and I think they know that. In the ’80s, we thought they were going to run out altogether, and then thanks to the West, which came in and helped restore their oilfields, and helped them develop the gas resources in the Siberian area, they found they had much more. But I think there is a point you reach where you are going to run out again, so I do not think you can live on that in the long term. They need to supply their industry, and the best way to do that, the most direct way to do that is to be able to sell what they make, and what they make are weapons.

Robert R. Reilly:

…or make other stuff.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

You would wonder about that, I would wonder about that, but they have never done it. What do they make, caviar? I mean, you know.

Robert R. Reilly:

Grain.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Grain. Actually, they are the largest grain exporter in the world right now, but I think that does not take care of your industry, it is farming.

Robert R. Reilly:

Well, so that suggests that there may be some developing grounds for rapprochement or foresight on the Russian side that they do not want to totally alienate the West.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

That is right. Look, they played it pretty cleverly in the Middle East, I think, up to a point, but they have trapped themselves into being a big supporter of Iran, which I think is negative to them for a couple of reasons. One is they want to run Syria, they do not want the Iranians to run it directly or through Hezbollah, which is their proxy. And it also cuts them out from being able to do deals with the Saudis, with the UAE, and with others where they would like to have influence, and even Egypt, which just is a good target for the Russians. It has always been.

Robert R. Reilly:

And I think is going to be buying some of that Russian military equipment.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

They are buying some of that equipment, yeah. They are starting to buy.

Robert R. Reilly:

Also, just to reinforce your point, Steve, the Russians are doing joint naval exercises with the Iranian Navy and the Chinese Navy.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Yes, they are, but I think, again, that puts them on the wrong side of where they need to be if they want to be able to have good relations with the other Gulf states, and to be able to do business into the broader Middle East. They were able to work out pretty well practical deals with the Israelis, which is interesting, I think, very interesting. It is not always smooth sailing, but they have worked out some arrangements, including deconfliction of some Israeli operations, but also some technology changes, a lot of back-and-forth, a lot of process going on.

Russia has a lot of internal problems. They are no good at capitalism. They are very paranoid about Western investors, people coming in from outside. They made a mess of it in the first round, but maybe there is hope there. I do not know. It is like chasing rainbows a little bit, I mean it is a little hard to be sure where this is going to lead, but in the broader context, I think they are going to try. The Russians are certainly going to try to do more business with the West, and that is going to ameliorate their behavior. It has to or they are not going to get the business with the West. It is that simple.

Robert R. Reilly:

Back in the European situation, I am going to quote you something you wrote.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

That is always dangerous.

Robert R. Reilly:

“As NATO has become wider, it has become shallower and less able to meet its own standards for the defense of its members. And a weak NATO may in fact be worse than no NATO at all.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

That is right. I stand by that 100 percent.

Robert R. Reilly:

And let us say consideration of Ukraine’s membership. Does that make NATO weaker?

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

It would be fatal to NATO.

Robert R. Reilly:

Fatal?

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Fatal.

Robert R. Reilly:

Why?

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Because it will split the Europeans, and then NATO will get frozen. It will not be able to act. The Europeans have already been playing around with their own defense force separate from NATO. I think that will get new impetus, but I think NATO could go by the boards. And I do not think that is in our interest, by the way, but I think it is very risky to keep broadening it as I said.

Robert R. Reilly:

Well, is NATO capable of acting now? It has thirty members.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Capable of doing what?

Robert R. Reilly:

[Is NATO capable of] defending its members, which is the purpose for its existence?

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

[I am] not sure. I am really not sure. I mean what does ‘defend’ mean? If the Russians attacked the Baltic states, just as an example, which have very small militaries, very small, and we can put some troops and some equipment there, and we get pushed out of the Baltics, is that defending them?

Robert R. Reilly:

Well, it is only a trigger for a larger conflict.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Right, they do not want that either, but no one wants that, and it would not go there because I think then the Europeans would gang up and say hey, we do not want any more war, let us sue for peace, let us make a deal. Okay, we lose the Baltics, goodbye, good luck, that simple. Well, it is not that simple, but it sounds simple. But I mean it is a consequence of being relatively weak and proximity. I mean these are weak states, [and] you have a big Russia there that is a strong state. There is not much we can do about it in any immediate way. Yes, we will fight a little bit. We will get pushed out. Those countries’ governments will fall, they will put in pro-Russian governments, okay. And then the Germans will say, wait a minute, that makes them closer to us, we do not want them that close, let us sign a deal with the Russians. And I think that is how it would go. I mean that is the reality.

Robert R. Reilly:

In my recent reading on World War II, I came across an interesting thing about Poland as before they were invaded by Germany, they had not fully mobilized, and I presume two reasons for that. One is it could have been seen as an antagonistic act toward Germany, but the second reason and perhaps the stronger one is that, well, now we have the guarantee of Great Britain and France, so Germany will not attack us, and there is no need for us to fully mobilize, so they were weaker than they needed to be even though they fought valiantly.

Now, NATO, because of the U.S. guarantee in it, seems to have behaved in a somewhat similar fashion. Instead of meeting the defense commitments that they themselves have made, their militaries have shrunk.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Big time.

Robert R. Reilly:

Big time, and the German military, even the British military, is at the point where, as you said, if Russia deploys 130,000, 140,000 troops, what could NATO do in a conventional respect in meeting that demand? How long would it take them to mobilize a land force or the troops to meet a challenge like that? Weeks? Months?

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Many months, and if at all.

Robert R. Reilly:

So, it is over?

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

If at all. I mean I think that the Russians would probably want to take back in some form or another the Eastern European countries that left the Warsaw Pact and became independent.

Robert R. Reilly:

Well, I think that is what those countries are worried about, yeah.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

They should be.

Robert R. Reilly:

And do you think that is actually an objective of Russia?

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Some people say yes. I do not have a feeling for it, actually. I do not know. I do not think the Russians really want to do that so much. I do not think that is their agenda. I think the Russians would be satisfied – this is just me guessing, of course, everyone is guessing, but I kind of watch Putin very carefully. I listen to everything he says. I do not necessarily believe everything he says, but I listen to what he says, and what I hear is that is not his goal. It may be the Russian Army’s goal or the Russian military’s goal, [but] it is not his goal.

And one of the things we have to be really careful about is precipitating a situation where there is a change of leadership in Russia, and we get a real nationalistic or even a military leader. Then we are in trouble, the world is in trouble. I mean Putin is a very crafty fellow, but I think that I do not think it is his goal to take over Eastern Europe by any means. I think it is his goal to be recognized as a partner in Europe.

Robert R. Reilly:

Well, I too read what Putin says in his 7000 word essay on Ukraine’s history and its association, historical association with Russia, and that he has a dream of restoring Rus, greater Russia, but like you I have not seen Eastern Europe included in that.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

No, he is not Stalin.

Robert R. Reilly:

So, he is not Stalin. He does not have the communist ideology of world conquest, but he does want to restore Russia to its greatness. And I have provocatively suggested to others that any Czar or Secretary General of the Communist Party would behave very much the way Putin is behaving now if they did not want their name mud in Russian history because Russia considers itself, its own defense compromised with the loss of Ukraine. Putin has made clear that he is perfectly fine having Ukraine as its own country just as long as it is friendly toward Russia, and does not allow this foreign military alliance into it.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

That is right, that is exactly what he said.

Robert R. Reilly:

So that is what he said if you take him at his word, because any Russian if you pointed it out that if the eastern border of NATO moves to the eastern border of Ukraine, then the distance to Moscow becomes less than 300 miles.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

That is right.

Robert R. Reilly:

And if you look at Russian history, Russians would worry about their defense in depth, which has provided the security of their country. Poland, obviously, and other countries are saying, well, if Ukraine comes back under Putin’s influence, there goes our defense in depth.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Partly. [There is a] border with Belarus as well.

Robert R. Reilly:

Right, no, yeah.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Yeah, but I mean it does complicate their life. There is no doubt about it, but again, I do not think that is his goal even in Ukraine. I mean he has not said that. And you know people say, well, he is going to take Kiev. And do what with it? He was very happy when there was a pro-Russian government in Ukraine.

Robert R. Reilly:

Yeah, [which] is why the British and I forget who else were predicting that they are aiming at a regime change there or a coup d’état that would emplace a pro-Russian leader or they are agitating and have their agents in Ukraine, which would be an obvious thing, to create that kind of agitation.

On the other side of things, while we have talked about Russia’s interests for a moment. One thing that is consistent in the behavior of Russia, and the Soviet Union before it, is its principal objective was to create fissures in NATO, and most of all, of course, to get the United States out because those countries rely principally on the United States for their security, and they (as you have pointed out) are not doing enough to provide for their own [defense].

Another little group, which I do not think you mentioned, Steve, is that the Great Britain and Poland and Ukraine are forming another little group for consultation, and I do not know if it is for negotiation, so they are all kinds of different negotiating groups. And of course, Victor Orbán was with Putin for a five-hour meeting in Moscow, and [he] has made clear that he is not in favor of this. You look at this these developing fissures within NATO, the position of Germany, and you see [that], well, in a way Putin is already enjoying some of the political benefit of his creating this crisis because it is displaying these differences within NATO, and causing political troubles for it.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Maybe. I mean I will take that point. I do not how you enjoy something like this, but again, I say we need a forum that would work on the security issues. That has to be France and Germany and the U.S., [but] less so the UK. Mr. Boris Johnson went to Ukraine yesterday for a few hours. For what reason? Like you know trying to save his prime ministership, I suppose.

Robert R. Reilly:

Well, would you say that, for instance, [during] Boris Johnson’s trip there, the statements by our own Secretary of State Blinken as well as President Biden [and] the statements of other Western leaders on the inviolability of Ukrainian sovereignty and that we are behind you 100 percent would instill in Ukraine a kind of possible recklessness, that they can calculate on security guarantees which actually are not going to be provided because there are not any [guarantees], and no European wants to fight there, and neither does the United States. And President Biden has made clear that we will not fight there.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Biden said they will not, Boris Johnson has said they will not, the Germans said they will not. Who is going to fight?

Robert R. Reilly:

So go at it, Ukrainians.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Yeah.

Robert R. Reilly:

And, of course, they would lose.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Well, I think the Russians would make sure they lose. I mean one could see a scenario where the Ukrainians feel they have enough arms, enough capability that they can go take Luhansk and Donetsk, and they will try. The Russians will have to respond.

Robert R. Reilly:

Would that not that be a little touchy? I mean we have not mentioned Turkey yet in the role they are playing, but of course, Ukraine has been buying drones from Turkey, and they employed one of those drones.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

It was in Donetsk, and they knocked out a Howitzer.

Robert R. Reilly:

And this alarmed Russia quite a bit, and they did not do it again because I think they understood there might be real, serious blowback, but it did demonstrate a capability at least in the use of this kind of weapon, which was so effective for Azerbaijan in the recent war with Armenia.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

It certainly was [effective].

Robert R. Reilly:

One has to admire the determination of Ukraine to arm itself militarily, that their civil defense groups are there, [and] obviously, a great deal of patriotism has developed in that country. And one thing the Russians would have to take into account is that they really would fight.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

I think they would, and I think it would be bloody.

Robert R. Reilly:

Yeah, but as others pointed out, that is not what Putin wants to do, and as you have said there would be some body bags from that, so it would be perhaps something more partial.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

If that happens, the Minsk agreements are dead for sure, the Normandy Group is dead for sure, and I think the Russians will then recognize Luhansk and Donetsk as countries, and they will provide whatever military support is necessary openly, not just crossing the highway at night, but openly moving troops, hardware, everything, and maybe even bringing in the Russian Air Force, which Ukrainians cannot deal with. And somehow people in Washington have forgotten about the Russian Air Force, but it is quite a good air force, quite capable. We just do not want that to happen. I think that that scenario is a terrible scenario.

Robert R. Reilly:

Well, Putin cannot afford to be seen politically to back down after making this large, visible investment. What could NATO or the United States give him that would provide to him the excuse to back down and the appearance of at least a partial victory? You mentioned Germany saying, well, we are not going to let Ukraine into NATO, though politically I do not know whether Germany would be capable of doing that. Is it something like that that would walk this thing back and calm it down?

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Well, I think we have to stop supplying arms to Ukraine in the massive quantities we are doing. That is a signal to the Russians that okay, we got it, we understand, we are going to try to sort this out. The language we are using in this is absolutely to my mind the wrong language. We are going to put the worst sanctions you ever saw! We are going to personally sanction Putin! What kind of talk is that? I mean what is he trying to achieve with that nonsense? I mean that is not how you solve a problem, that is how you cause a problem.

Robert R. Reilly:

There were also discussions about removing Russian banks from the SWIFT banking system.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

But the Chinese already said we will fix it, and we will stop using the dollar. There are things that the Chinese can do to us that we would not like, so I mean why do we want to provoke that kind of thing?

Robert R. Reilly:

This would be too much of an exaggeration in this situation, but it does provide a certain lesson about economic warfare. Japan, of course, had a very aggressive war cabinet back in the 1930s, and had attacked Manchuria in China. And the United States was pro-Chinese and was trying to pressure Japan to get out of China. We were unwilling to undertake any military steps to achieve that political objective, but Roosevelt chose an embargo in oil and steel.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

That is correct.

Robert R. Reilly:

Japan knew it could not survive or at least it could not keep its burgeoning empire without that oil, and they would either have to capitulate to the United States or find other sources of oil. And they chose the latter by going into Indonesia, but first by hitting the United States in Pearl Harbor, thinking if we do not do this now, we will be weaker later.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

…which was an incorrect decision.

Robert R. Reilly:

In other words, what the United States was unwilling to do militarily, it thought it could achieve economically, and that got us into a war.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Not that it was not going to happen anyway, but [yes].

Robert R. Reilly:

Right, but we might have been readier.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Well, we were an isolationist country. We did not want it. We were not ready at all.

Robert R. Reilly:

The thinking that we can use economic measures to achieve political ends where the Russians have shown their willingness to put military cards on the table, and saying this is a red line for us, this is a vital national security interest, and if you cross over, we will use our military assets. I do not think they could be clearer about that.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

No, that is absolutely clear.

Robert R. Reilly:

And we say oh, if you do that, we are going to take these drastic economic measures against you. To which, Putin responded, if you do that, then we break relations, we will no longer have diplomatic relations with the United States. Then that is it, it is over.

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Yeah, but then you are in a nascent state of war no matter how you look.

Robert R. Reilly:

Well, that is that is my point. Are we trying to achieve [economically what we are unwilling or unable to achieve militarily]?

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Why do we want to have a war like that?

Robert R. Reilly:

What is the answer to that question?

Dr. Stephen Bryen:

Well, I do not think we should. I mean the answer is we should not want to have a war like that, we do not need it, and anyway, who guarantees anything in Ukraine? Since when? Where is the piece of paper that says we guarantee anything? There is no such thing. We have no alliance with the Ukrainians. There is nothing written. There is no defense agreement, nothing.

I mean these statements are reckless, I think, and the Russians find them extraordinarily offensive to them. And they think, well, this is America, these Americans are going to come and get us. I mean you can see the mentality of it. Do I applaud what the Russians did? Absolutely not. Do I think this is the way you handle this kind of crisis? Absolutely not. We are handling it the wrong way. We are not facilitating solutions, we are facilitating standoff, and a standoff cannot last forever.

If there was one message to [for the president], if I could talk to the president, which I cannot, I would say wise up. You and Blinken have gone way off in the wrong direction. You have got to pull it back. You have got to pull it back because there is too much involved, and you do not have any idea what the outcomes are, so why the nonsense? Let us get on with trying to sort it through. I think the Russians will take half a loaf, probably even less than half a loaf. but it is important that we preserve their prestige. You cannot humiliate the Russians. If you do, it will not happen, it will not work. It is important that we meet them somewhere on the security issues so that they can have some confidence that we are serious about that. We are not trying to clobber them on the head with a bat, and we have to recognize that Ukraine is in their backyard. It is not our backyard.

Robert R. Reilly:

Well, I think Putin was trying to get that message to the United States by saying he was going to deploy troops to Venezuela and to Cuba. Yeah, that is the way he tried to communicate that. But Steve, I am afraid we are out of time right now. I would like to thank our guest, Dr. Stephen Bryen from the Center for Security Policy, for discussing with us: Russia and Ukraine What’s Next? I want to invite our viewers to go to the Westminster Institute website, not only for the video of this talk, but to see Dr. Bryen’s earlier talk with the Westminster Institute and also to see the other lectures that have been given on Russia and Ukraine, on China, and on other foreign policy and human rights issues. Thanks for joining us today. I am Robert Reilly.

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