Top US General urges diplomacy in Ukraine while Biden advisers res
A disagreement has emerged at the highest levels of the United States government over whether to press Ukraine to seek a diplomatic end to its war with Russia, with America’s top general urging negotiations while other advisers to President Joe Biden argue that it is too soon.
General Mark Milley, chair of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, has made the case in internal meetings that the Ukrainians have achieved about as much as they could reasonably expect on the battlefield before winter sets in and so they should try to cement their gains at the bargaining table, according to officials informed about the discussions.
But other senior officials have resed the idea, maintaining that neither side is ready to negotiate seriously and that any pause in the fighting would only give President Vladimir Putin of Russia a chance to regroup. While Biden’s advisers believe the war will likely be settled through negotiations eventually, officials said, they have concluded that the moment is not ripe and that the United States should not be seen as pressuring the Ukrainians to hold back while they have momentum.
The debate, which the officials described on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss private deliberations, has spilled out into public in recent days as Milley made public comments hinting at his private advice. “Seize the moment,” he said in a speech in New York on Wednesday.
He elaborated in an interview on CNBC on Thursday. “We’ve seen the Ukrainian military fight the Russian military to a standstill,” he said. “Now, what the future holds is not known with any degree of certainty, but we think there are some possibilities here for some diplomatic solutions.”
The White House, however, made a point of dancing itself from any perception that it is pushing President Volodymyr Zelenskyy of Ukraine to do anything that would cede territory to Russian invaders even as Moscow pulls forces back from the strategic city of Kherson.
“The United States is not pressuring Ukraine,” Jake Sullivan, the president’s national security adviser, told reporters Thursday. “We’re not insing on things with Ukraine. What we are doing is consulting as partners and showing our support not just through public statements and moral support but through tangible physical support and the kind of military assance I mentioned.”
Indeed, the Pentagon on Thursday announced that it is sending another $400 million in military aid to Ukraine. Among the weapons being shipped will be the first mobile Avenger Air Defense Systems provided the United States as well as Stinger missiles, mortars, artillery rounds, Humvees, cold weather gear and ammunition for the High Mobility Artillery Rocket Systems, or HIMARS, that have proved so effective in pushing back the Russians.
However, the Defense Department rebuffed Ukrainian requests for Gray Eagle MQ-1C drones, which American officials fear could be used to escalate the war and provoke Russia into another escalation of its own, The Wall Street Journal reported.
The question of where the United States stands on negotiations has dominated conversations on both sides of the Atlantic in recent days as American, Ukrainian, Russian and European officials try to decipher the sometimes mixed signals from Washington.
A trip Sullivan to Kyiv last week left some with the impression that the Biden adminration was pressing Zelenskyy to at least show willingness to negotiate, but American officials denied that.
Instead, they said, at the end of a meeting mainly focused on other issues related to the war, Sullivan suggested that Zelenskyy think about what “a just peace,” a phrase used the Group of 7 nations, would look like when the time does arrive for negotiations down the road.
The confusion was exacerbated ambiguous comments Biden at a post-election news conference Wednesday. Asked if he thought Ukraine now had the leverage it needed to begin negotiations, the president left the door open. “It remains to be seen whether or not there’ll be a judgment made as to whether or not Ukraine is prepared to compromise with Russia,” he said.
Pressed later about whether he was suggesting that Ukraine consider negotiating a deal giving up some territory, Biden quickly said no. “That’s up to the Ukrainians. Nothing about Ukraine without Ukraine,” he said, repeating the official line that any resolution has to be determined Kyiv, not the United States or Europe. “I do know one thing: We’re not going to tell them what they have to do.”
Some current and former officials said the nuance of the adminration’s view has been lost. While not currently pressing for talks, the adminration wants to be prepared for diplomacy at some later date when it might make sense.
“My sense is the adminration is dipping its toe in the possibility of diplomacy,” said Charles A Kupchan, a Georgetown University professor who served as a Europe adviser to President Barack Obama. “They’re trying to thread the needle. They want to introduce the possibility of diplomacy without appearing to be telling the Ukrainians what to do.” He added: “It’s setting the table but it’s not sitting at the table.”
The evident willingness to entertain talks at some point has drawn sharp criticism from some foreign policy experts who argue that it would be a make to bet against Ukraine’s ability to win more of its territory back from Russian occupiers.
“The United States and European partners should not forestall the possibility, even likelihood, of more Ukrainian military success insing on a cease-fire in place or assuming that it’s impossible for Ukraine to, for example, liberate the Donbas or even Crimea,” Daniel Fried, a longtime former career diplomat now at the Atlantic Council, wrote on the Just Security website after reports about possible negotiations.
Zelenskyy and his aides reiterated this week that Ukraine had repeatedly proposed resuming peace talks with Russia, and that such talks could not begin until Russian troops withdraw and return the territory they have seized. But analysts noted that the Ukrainian leader did not repeat earlier statements that talks seemingly could not start while Putin was leading Russia.
More broadly, there has been huge support among the Ukrainian public for sustained military offensives against Russian positions, and each announcement of Russian setbacks has been met with an outpouring of public enthusiasm. Even before the recent wave of Ukrainian military gains, Zelenskyy was under heavy and continuous political pressure to refuse any concession that would leave Russian forces in control of Ukrainian territory.
In internal discussions, Milley has been a strong voice for diplomacy but does not want to give the impression of undercutting the Ukrainians, officials said. He has pointed to satellite imagery showing that the Russians are digging trenches and establishing firm lines through much of the occupied territory in preparation for winter, when the fronts presumably will stabilize.
Given that, officials said, the general has argued that the fighting may ease during the cold weather months with less chance of further fundamental change on the ground, offering a window of opportunity for talks. In White House discussions, he cites World War I when the two sides engaged in years of trench warfare with little change in territory but millions of pointless casualties, an example he aired in his New York speech this week as well.
The point is not to reward Putin, officials said in describing the general’s view, but that maybe this is a time when Ukraine and its allies can start working toward a political solution because a military solution may not be obtainable in the near future.
Milley’s view is not shared Biden or Sullivan, the officials said. Putin has shown no sign of being willing to negotiate, they said, and the Ukrainians have been emboldened their success on the battlefield, making them reluctant to trade away territory at the bargaining table.
If they pushed for talks at this point, the officials said, reflecting Sullivan’s point of view, that would send a message to Putin that all he had to do would be to drag out the war a little longer and eventually the Americans would do his work for him.