30 September 2025

The complexities of the Russia-Ukraine war


An article in last month's issue of Harper's Magazine reviewed two newly-published books examining the history of the current war between Russia and Ukraine.
Jonathan Haslam, a historian of Soviet foreign policy and the author of the new book Hubris: The American Origins of Russia’s War Against Ukraine, has a rather different analysis. He starts his story a quarter century earlier, in 1989—two years before Ukraine achieved independence. As for who started it: as the title of the book suggests, Ukraine has less of a role to play in his account than the United States does.

Some tens of thousands of Ukrainians have perished over the past three years, including more than ten thousand civilians; their country lies in ruins. At least one hundred thousand Russian soldiers have died, too. Yet an honest reckoning with the root causes of this death and destruction has largely eluded political leaders, who have instead been guided by demands for moral clarity—the expectation that they oppose the illegal act of invading another country without either U.N. authority or any credible argument for self-defense. In this sense, Putin’s invasion has been treated in much the way many liberals have treated Trump’s rise—as an unprovoked aberration, an alien force from nowhere.

A lone gunman theory has its comforts: if Putin is just an evil man, nothing needs to change except opposing his crimes and follies. If the truth is even a little more complex, however—and Hubris proves that it is complex indeed—focusing blame on Putin alone launders the complicity of a far wider range of participants, and of the long-term policy they helped make. At stake is not only the path to peace in Eastern Europe but the future and purpose of American power in the world...

Like his fellow realist John Mearsheimer, a political scientist at the University of Chicago, Haslam identifies NATO’s expansion eastward as a wound to Russia’s pride. This isn’t to say that he accepts Russia’s nonsensical rationale for the invasion as “self-defense.” But, as he argues, Russia’s leaders and population had been humiliated, and the country found itself increasingly isolated—things American politicians did nothing to counteract and occasionally celebrated. This didn’t guarantee, let alone justify, a war. But it did set up the conditions for one...

Bush continued NATO’s expansion, pushing the alliance into seven new nations, including the Baltic countries sharing a border with Russia, thus raising Russian hackles further. After all, the arrival of NATO in places that had been part of the Soviet Union itself was far less a response to Russian military threats than it was a ratification and recognition of the West’s superior economic and political power. But America’s support for the “color revolutions” in Georgia in 2003–04 as well as Ukraine in 2004–05—coinciding with Bush’s Iraq War—pushed things too far. “The United States,” Haslam explains, “had become accustomed to looking down on Russia as a defeated power of little or no account,” asserting the power to occupy other countries while highlighting the diminution of Russian power. The double standard was glaring, even as the consequence of the Bush years was to normalize illegal invasions—and to destabilize the Middle East, awakening Putin’s interest in the great game of European imperial designs there.
More at the link, which I won't try to summarize or excerpt further.  I will, however, express my dismay at the choices of the color palette for the embedded map of NATO encroachment on Russia.  

14 comments:

  1. Perhaps I should order this book for my library.

    I hesitate to order books on current issues. By the time they arrive on the shelves, they're already out of date--even if they're published immediately at purchase.

    The analysis is familiar. I'm not really invested in it, though. I'd rather that America get out of this dispute and the Israeli-Arab dispute. Let them sort out their own affairs. I favor spending not a single additional penny on Ukraine or Israel.

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    1. The Ferengi pic being incredibly appropriate.

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  2. What my palate finds distasteful if the fact that, if I squint, Sweden and Finland become submerged into the Baltic Sea.

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  3. Can not agree with:
    "After all, the arrival of NATO in places that had been part of the Soviet Union itself was far less a response to Russian military threats than it was a ratification and recognition of the West’s superior economic and political power."

    Baltic states had this as their top security priority from the moment they regained independence. We (I am from Latvia) saw what happened in Transnistria, Abkhazia and later Chechnya during those early 1990ties and we had no illusions regarding russia wanting to keep us under its influence first as satellite states and then to "reunite" in russian empire v2.0.

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  4. I put my starting timeline of the USA's descent into genocide and world domination think on the Vietnam War (used to control China). We lost whatever moral compass we had and just became another tinpot rule the world oligarchy. Sadly I feel we deserve what we are getting.

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  5. >> things American politicians did nothing to counteract and occasionally celebrated

    Restating: it is America's fault that Russia spent so much time and energy to undermine the US political scene and elections, the Russians got caught, and as a result, the Russians were humiliated and so they invaded a third country.

    I am having trouble ginning up any sympathy for this argument.

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  6. Whether Americans sympathize with Russia is one matter, the other is whether they are well enough informed to understand why anyone would. It may be a feel-good position to insist there's a crazy-Hitler-evil-Putin guy out there, f-ing up the world, and we are as pure as the driven snow, heroically containing the Russian beast, but it's just not an adult perspective. I really appreciate the inclusion of this post. Americans are in desperate need of a deeper understanding of this mess, as is true with our entire history of global meddling.

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  7. With this line of argumentation, there is usually little consideration for the self determination of the people in eastern european countries. They lived under Soviet/Russian rule for decades and are willing to do whatever to avoid having to do it again. So the fact that they were so eager to join NATO was Russia's doing more than anything other countries did or tried to do. That tells me more than anything else.

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    1. Exactly this. Plus it was literally Putin who decided to invade, nobody forced him to. There is no reasonable argument to be made that he was afraid of NATO expansion, there is no political way to get NATO to mount an offensive, even trying would break up NATO.

      The fact is he thought he could get away with it, it's that simple.

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  8. Thank you anonymous, the Nato expansion east argument has always fallen flat for me. These countries voted to join Nato, Ukraine voted on the basis of removing that was considered a Russian puppet and joining Europe so do we in the west just ignore that? Do we actually believe in our own principles of self determination and democracy or do we throw them away when it suits us?

    I live in the UK, I have many friends from the Baltic and Balkan countries and a few partners from the likes of Romania and Poland before I met my wife. They all tell the same stories and it's not an accident they all came west. Think about how bad things must have been for the Polish under Russian occupation to consider them as bad as the Nazis at the time and worse after the war.

    It's not just Putin. Successive Russian governments have done much to isolate the country and then use political sleight of hand or just outright blame the west and claim victimhood perpetually which is a cultural trait shared and embraced among much (not all) of the population.

    Billions, perhaps trillions at this point have been spent on attempting to peacefully integrate Russia into the global economy after the fall of the USSR because not a single sane person on the planet wanted its utter collapse and their nuclear arsenal to dissappear into the wind like all that money did and yet I've heard Putin and average Russians dismaying how the west set out to economically ruin the country after the fall of the union which is not just incorrect but the opposite of truth.

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    1. For a different perspective, please scroll down to the Sachs essay: https://www.dropsitenews.com/p/jeffrey-sachs-a-front-row-seat-to

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    2. Thank you Crowboy and I'll certainly take a look. Excuse me as I'm more of a talker than a writer so this will be a long ramble but as a chronic overthinker and staunch centrist I try to analyse all sides but as always when it comes to war we can go back and forth forever on who is ultimately to blame, who started what and when, who is good, who is bad, who is right, who is wrong and I think it's all barking up the wrong tree. It's just tale as old as time national interest vs national interest.

      In the end for me I believe it boils down to humans being humans and war being war where it's all tragedy and everyone loses until we start talking honestly again and hope our leaders can come to some imperfect compromise and approximation of consensus somewhere in the grey middle.

      But as long as the war continues as individuals all we can really do is pick a side. Seeing as I happen to have grown up, love and continue living in the west I'm inclined to have them win this and future conflicts which I freely admit is not the most satisfying stance for many and may even be perceived as a bit of a shrug of the shoulders but it works for me and stops me losing my mind agonising over the morality of it all.

      That doesn't mean I endorse all of our actions either, but Russia is certainly no victim and I won't undermine my own side by metaphorically opening the gates for them. I don't want to go too deep into history because honestly you can go back centuries but just in the 21st century alone, they didn't stop in Chechnya, they didn't stop in Georgia, they aren't stopping in Ukraine and they are simply not trustworthy to be taken at their word that they aren't eyeing the rest of eastern Europe or even north east Asia and not just the former Soviet sphere as has been proven time and time again.

      Like all resurgent expansionist powers before them, they needed to BE stopped so frankly, and excuse the language, fuck their pride, fuck if they feel humiliated. You don't get to be oppressor and oppressed at the same time. How did all those conquered people feel? We tried diplomacy, we tried financial support, we tried integration, we tried "change through trade", the KGB / Mafia / Oligarch cartel that actually stole the country after the Unions breakup took full advantage of what was offered, stripped the assets and gave nothing in return except to corrupt and undermine institutions and political systems in the west.

      To attempt to be fair I won't shy away from criticising our side either and to quote Smedley D. Butler "War is a racket" which leads to my major bone of contention with the wests handling of this debacle and how impotent and antithetically self serving and self defeating it has been in regard to providing weak military and I'm sure exhorbitantly expensive financial support for Ukraine while insanely buying up Russia's oil which has propped up their war machine and prolonged the conflict that we are leaving for the Ukrainians to hopelessly die for alone.

      It's repulsive. There's fault on all sides, I just want it to end as fast as possible for whatever that wish is worth and whatever that means but I don't believe Putin is evil, I don't believe he is stupid, I don't believe he is insane, I don't believe anyone wants nuclear escalation so I feel short of that we in the west should put our money where our mouth is and push the Russians back through conventional military means, which is why it's probably for the best that I'm not in charge of such decisions.

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    3. Just to add one last addendum in regard to Russia not stopping,

      They killed Alexander Litvinenko and we did nothing
      They poisoned 2 and killed a third person with a nerve agent in Salisbury and we did nothing
      They annexed Crimea, Donetsk,Donbas, Luhansk for the oil and gas and we did nothing
      They shoot down a passenger plane and we did nothing
      They cut underwater cables and we do nothing
      They sail tankers with transponders switched off and we do nothing
      They almost routinely fly fighters/bombers/drones into our air space to test our responses and we do nothing
      They hack businesses and organisations and education, medical, military, political institutions daily to extort and sabotage and we do nothing

      I do of course believe plenty of fault also lies with the west (the rest of Europe and my country in particular) for tacitly enabling and encouraging their tactics as viable but only so far as to say we should have been confronting them much firmer, much sooner on these issues. We have bent over backward against our own principles and ideals to spare Russian national pride (feelings?) after all of this for decades as again the stated policy was "change through trade"and again all we got for it was corruption, division and adverse change in our own countries from the deal.

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  9. I didn't know about Austria. The fact that they are not in NATO is probably somehow a legacy of Proporz.

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