Zelensky Inflexibility Supports US-Russia Reconciliation

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Still stuck on territorial issue

​It is no surprise that the Ukraine negotiations are, once again, stuck on the territorial issue. You do not need to look far on that to see the problem. Vice President J.D. Vance said, “the thorniest issues have never been resolved, including who will control the Donbas region.”

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Vice President J.D. Vance

While the US is saying there is some reason for guarded optimism, some European voices go further and argue the negotiations are bearing fruit. The Finnish President thinks “we are closer to an agreement than at any time.”

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x44nantouf4&embeds_referring_euri=https%3A%2F%2Fweapons.substack.com%2F

The test will come soon as the Russians are briefed on the dialogues in Miami. Meanwhile, Witkoff, in a joint statement with Ukraine’s Rustem Umerov, called Sunday’s talks “productive and constructive”, saying they “focused on a “shared strategic approach between Ukraine, the United States and Europe”.

Russia has compelling reasons to try and stay in the negotiations. For Russia success is not defined as settling the conflict in Ukraine, which they claim they are winning. The Russians are looking for a strategic relationship with the United States as the desired outcome.

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Kiril Dimitriev

Not all the potential elements of a Russian-US strategic relationship appear, so far, to be on the table. What is known is that the main Russian negotiator, Kirill Dmitriev, has been discussing various investment and business schemes with US negotiator, Steve Witkoff. Such business arrangements might include joint projects in the Arctic region, a Trump target where Russia appears ahead of the United States, and potential cooperation in technology and minerals, including rare earth and uranium. Connected to these economic talks are the various US sanctions that would have to be lifted.

Because Dimitriev is an investment specialist and does not have a mandate to discuss strategic military issues, such discussions are in the future. The Russians have often said they want to normalize relations with the United States and NATO and work out strategic agreements that stabilize US-Russian and Russian-European relations.

The same can be said of Witkoff and his associate, Jared Kushner. In fact, it isn’t even clear if either has the necessary security clearances to participate in strategic dialogues with Russia.

It may be that the latest outburst from French President Emanuel Macron, suggesting a face to face dialogue with Russian President Vladimir Putin, strongly hints that the French are looking for a way out. Putin needs to balance the Macron initiative by not confusing the US-led peace effort. So far, the Russians have said they welcome dialogue with Europe, sidestepping Macron operating on his own.

The Russians have reasons to want to put strategic military, diplomatic and political agreements in place with the US and NATO. Putin no doubt understands that he will need to reorient Russia’s economy after the Ukraine war ends. Russia has become increasingly dependent on China for electronics, advanced machine tools, sophisticated metallurgy, robotics and quantum computing, all of which is missing or only weakly supported inside Russia. The lack of a vigorous commercial sector and years of limited investment, have left Russia looking too much like a third world country with nuclear weapons, a condition Putin’s twice-removed predecessor, Mikhail Gorbachev realized forty years ago. Russia has restored its aerospace capabilities, even being able to manufacture commercial aircraft locally without imports from the west, a significant achievement. But Russia has not proven that these advances are commercially viable, although maybe Moscow does not care. While the west is stepping up investments in artificial intelligence, and China is hot on the trail, Russia remains stuck, only showing some AI capabilities in drones and other weapons. A modern army today needs a high level of integration and AI-supported decision making, something Russia mostly is missing.

The central question for Russia is whether it can get away with deals with the United States, possibly with some of the bigger NATO countries in future, particularly France that once had a number of business deals in the Soviet period, without doing a deal on Ukraine. Zelensky, by stonewalling on territory, is facilitating an outcome that, ironically, will help Russia and the US find peace by means other than Ukraine.

Source: author’s blog

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