WASHINGTON , APR 16 -
President Barack Obama is once again faced with the complicated reality
of following through on his tough warnings against overseas
provocations as the White House asserts that Russia is stoking
instability in eastern Ukraine.
Obama has vowed repeatedly to enact biting sanctions against Russia's
vital economic sectors if the Kremlin tries to replicate its actions in
Crimea, the peninsula it annexed from Ukraine, elsewhere in the former
Soviet republic. Despite those warnings, Russian President Vladimir
Putin appears to be testing Obama's limits, instigating protests in
eastern Ukraine, the White House says, and massing tens of thousands of
troops on the border, but so far stopping short of a full-scale military
incursion.
"They have been willing to do things to provoke the situation that no
one anticipated," Matthew Rojansky, a regional analyst at the Wilson
Center, said of Russia. "It's such a high-stakes, high-risk situation,
and here they are right in the middle of it."
For Obama, the U.S. response to the chaos in Ukraine has become more
than a test of his ability to stop Russia's advances. It's also being
viewed through the prism of his decision last summer to back away from
his threat to launch a military strike when Syria crossed his chemical
weapons "red line" — a decision that has fed into a narrative pushed by
Obama's critics that the president talks tough, but doesn't follow
through.
While there has been no talk of "red lines" when dealing with Putin,
Obama has said repeatedly that the Kremlin's advances into eastern
Ukraine would be a "serious escalation" of the conflict that would
warrant broad international sanctions on the Russian economy. But
perhaps trying to avoid another Syria scenario, White House officials
have carefully avoided defining what exactly would meet Obama's
definition of a "serious escalation," even as they make clear that they
believe Russia is fomenting the violence in cities throughout Ukraine's
vital industrial east.
"We are actively evaluating what is happening in eastern Ukraine, what
actions Russia has taken, what transgressions they've engaged in," White
House spokesman Jay Carney said Monday. "And we are working with our
partners and assessing for ourselves what response we may choose."
As with the situation in Syria, Obama faces few good options as he
watches Russia destabilize Ukraine, the former Soviet republic that has
sought greater ties with Europe.
There's little appetite in either the U.S. or Europe for direct
military action, and the White House said Monday it was not actively
considering sending Ukraine lethal assistance. That's left Obama and his
international partners largely reliant on economic and diplomatic
retaliation.
The president has wielded some of his available options since the
situation in Ukraine devolved in late February, but those actions so far
have had little success in stopping Russian advances.
Obama's initial warning that Putin would face "costs" if he pressed
into Crimea was largely brushed aside by the Russian leader, who went so
far as to formally annex the peninsula from Ukraine. Economic sanctions
on several of Putin's closest associates followed, as did Russia's
suspension from the exclusive Group of Eight economic forum, but neither
appears to have discouraged Moscow from making a play for eastern
Ukraine.
On Friday, the U.S. slapped sanctions on more individuals connected to
the Crimea takeover, and White House officials are weighing another
round of targeted penalties against additional Russian and Ukrainian
citizens.
But tens of thousands of troops massed on Russia's border with eastern
Ukraine, Obama is facing calls from some Republicans to take tougher
action now. Tennessee Sen. Bob Corker, the top Republican on the Senate
Foreign Relations Committee, sent Obama a letter over the weekend
calling on the administration to immediately ratchet up economic
penalties against Moscow.
"Rather than wait for a Russian invasion of eastern Ukraine to
implement additional sanctions, which seems to be U.S. policy at the
moment, we must take action now that will prevent this worst-case
scenario before it becomes a reality," Corker wrote.
Privately, some of Obama's advisers are also pushing for more robust
penalties now to serve as a deterrent against a full-on Russian military
incursion. But questions remain about Europe's commitment to take the
kind of coordinated action that would stand the best chance of changing
Putin's calculus.
Europe has a far deeper economic relationship with Russia than the
U.S., meaning its sanctions would hurt Moscow more. But leaders on the
still economically shaky continent fear that the impact of those
sanctions could boomerang and hurt their own countries just as much.
European foreign ministers met Monday to debate whether additional
sanctions should be enacted on Russia. A high-ranking European Union
official said they did decide to sanction more Russians with asset
freezes and visa bans, but they appeared to stop well short of targeting
Russia's broader economy.
No comments:
Post a Comment